Society's Child
Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, 18, a Saudi national, says she intended to seek asylum in Australia but a representative from the Saudi Embassy seized her passport in Bangkok airport on Sunday.
She has barricaded herself in a hotel room in the airport's transit zone out of fear that she will be deported to her home country. Thai immigration officials initially indicated that the woman would be sent back on Monday, but later clarified that she wouldn't be deported immediately, citing safety reasons.
"If deporting her would result in her death, we definitely wouldn't want to do that," immigration chief Surachet Hakparn noted.
Al-Qunun's lawyers, meanwhile, said that an injunction calling for deportation procedures to be blocked was rejected in court. The legal team is planning to appeal the decision.
Yesterday afternoon, immediately after the Dallas Cowboys' hard-fought victory over the Seattle Seahawks, Fox's Erin Andrews interviewed Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott. She asked Elliott what he thought when he saw Prescott take off for a key run that set up the winning touchdown.
"It's simple," Elliott responded, "He's a grown-ass man. That's what it is. That's how he played today, and he led us to this win."
That's a phrase you hear a lot in sports. "Grown man." There's grown-man football. There's grown-man basketball. It speaks to a certain style of play. Tough. Physical. Courageous. Overpowering. It's also fundamentally aspirational. It's quite safe to say that millions of young boys desire to become a grown man - a person who is physically and mentally tough, a person who can rise to a physical challenge and show leadership under stress. In fact, that's not just an intellectual goal, it's a deeply felt need. It's a response to their essential nature.

Screen shot of students on a Birthright study abroad program. From the video"Birthright Academic"/Taglit-Birthright Israel.
Earlier that day, I spent Christmas morning with participants from Taglit Birthright, the free trip to Israel for Jews under age 32, who were attending one of the new study abroad Birthright trips, Israeli Multiculturalism, from December 24 to January 6. I met them at Kibbutz Afik, a collective community in the southern Golan Heights. Afik was established in 1972 by Israelis who did their military service in the Golan Heights and helped Israel occupy the land from Syria in 1967. Today about 250 people live in the kibbutz.
Last year Birthright began offering academic study abroad programs to U.S. college students. Now, in addition to getting a free trip, students can earn three college credits. Birthright also partners with several different organizations like Sachlav, Hillel International, Mayanot, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Hinam, Center for Social Tolerance-an encounter program that "promotes acquaintance" between Arab and Jewish citizens of Israel through principles like "colorblindness" and a "positive attitude," according to their About Us page.
The academic-themed courses Birthright offers are: Eco-Israel: Sustainability and Conservation; Food and Wine of Israel; Archeology: Uncovering the Hidden Past; Conflict Management & Counter-Terrorism; Innovation and Entrepreneurship; Diplomacy in the New Middle East; and Israeli Multiculturalism. At the end of the program, students have two weeks to write a 7 to 9 page paper that is graded by a professor contracted with Birthright. For just $250, the three credits can be transferred to the student's college. Given that three-credit courses at colleges can cost students thousands of dollars, the Birthright Israel Study Abroad program is a heck of a deal.
I was able to get hold of the Birthright course outline from one of the chaperones. According to the syllabus, the course focuses on five groups that contribute to Israel's multicultural society: the LGBTQ community, the Ethiopian community, members of the settlement movement, the Ultra-Orthodox community, and the Arab community.
According to investigators, the victim was inside the women's bathroom at Milk Bar on Dec. 9 when she was sexually assaulted by two other women. Authorities said the assault continued at the bar, where a bartender saw what was happening and repeatedly told the two women to stop.
Amber Harrell, 38, and Jessica Fowler, 31, are both charged with second-degree kidnapping and sexual battery in connection with the incident.
Harrell, who was arrested over the weekend, was out of jail Tuesday on a $50,000 bond. Fowler was released on a $30,000 bond.
Fowler turned herself in at the Wake County Detention Center on Tuesday afternoon.
That dystopian future, though, may be much closer than you think. I only properly appreciated this recently when the podcast I've been doing for the last few years was mysteriously dropped by my regular employer, forcing me to seek funding sources from elsewhere.
If I were impeccably 'progressive', this would be a doddle. I could monetize my content through ads on YouTube, I could crowdfund donations through Patreon, I could promote my work with regular appearances on CNN. But if you're snarky and irreverent and you won't play the virtue-signaling game than your options are much more limited. Any deviation from the path of 'woke' righteousness - even just a misjudged joke or a remark taken out of context - can get you branded a 'far right' extremist and your audience won't be allowed to pay you even if they want to.
Comment:
- Patreon's deplatforming policy leaves content providers facing an uncertain future...just in time for Christmas
- As users leave Patreon due to censorship based on political bias, the rabbit hole goes deeper
- Jordan Peterson speaks out on Patreon's deplatforming controversy (UPDATE)
- Visa Again Blockades WikiLeaks' Credit Card Donations
- Jordan Peterson: NYT showing 'willful blindness' on free speech threats by tech companies
Comment: The following is an anonymous post posted to reddit. We can't verify the authenticity of the poster, however Damore himself weighs in on the lengthy discussion (see original link) and says it contains information only someone working for Google at the time would know.
I was involved in the internal decisions involving James Damore's memo, and it's terrible what we did to him.
First of all, we knew about the memo a month before it went viral. HR sent it up the reporting chain when he gave it as internal feedback, but we did nothing. There wasn't anything we could do, except admit to wrongdoing and lying to our employees. We just hoped that no one else would see his document.
Unfortunately, the memo started spreading within the company. The floodgates opened and previously silent employees started talking. To quell dissent, we: told executives to write to their employees condemning the memo; manipulated our internal Memegen to bias the ratings towards anti-Damore posts (the head of Memegen is an "ally" to the diversity cause); and gave every manager talking points on what to tell their reports about the memo. In all our communications, we concentrated on how hurt employees purportedly were and diverted attention from Google's discriminatory employment practices and political hegemony, never mind the science.
Comment: See also:
- Court grants Google's request to seal documents in the James Damore case
- Damore, diversity, and disruption at Portland State University panel discussion
- NLRB rejects Damore's claim because memo 'constituted sexual harassment'
- Damore's lawsuit exposes Google's internal culture of intolerance
- Damore Lawsuit Exposes Extremist Ideology And Social Intolerance at Google
- James Damore's lawsuit: 19 insane details regarding Google's SJW office environment
Because I chose not to disavow Peterson's views before airing the clip, I was brought into a subsequent disciplinary meeting. The supervisor for the course in question, Nathan Rambukkana, as well as the coordinator for my M.A. program, Herbert Pimlott (also known, at times, as "Hillary X Plimsoll"), and Gendered Violence and Sexual Assault Prevention manager Adria Joel accused me of breaking the law by airing a clip of Peterson in a classroom, as well as threatening and targeting trans people, thereby creating a toxic environment. All of this is well-known because I taped the whole meeting.
Apparently, "one or more" students had complained about the class in question - though that claim later turned out to be false. Both Rambukkana and Wilfrid Laurier University President Deborah MacLatchy apologized to me, and I was cleared of any wrongdoing after a neutral third-party fact-finding investigation concluded I hadn't done anything wrong. The investigator also determined that "basic guidelines and best practices on how to appropriately execute the roles and responsibilities of staff and faculty were ignored or not understood."
Comment: What happened to Lindsay Shepherd is a chilling example of how Bill C-16 can be interpreted as they see fit when it suits their purpose and why it's so dangerous. Thankfully she had the foresight to see where it was going and recorded the meeting, thus exposing the insanity that radical left ideology has become in our schools. Kudos to her for sticking to her convictions and not backing down. See also:
- The Strange Saga of Lindsay Shepherd: From Inquisition to Exoneration, But The Crime of Being White Remains
- It might be too late to save our universities
- Jordan Peterson launches defamation suit against Wilfrid Laurier University for statements suggesting he was 'analogous to Adolf Hitler'
- Laurier teaching assistant, Lindsay Shepherd, launches $3.6M lawsuit for university free speech abuses
The shutdown has left approximately 800,000 federal workers in financial limbo. Around 420,000 "essential" employees are working without pay, while another 380,000 have been ordered to stay home, according to calculations provided to CNBC by Paul Light, a professor of public service at New York University.
In some cases, the furloughs have forced government employees to tap into their savings, rely on credit cards or crowdsource funds to make ends meet.
Government workers are far from alone in feeling stressed about not getting paid. Nearly 80 percent of American workers (78 percent) say they're living paycheck to paycheck, according to a 2017 report by employment website CareerBuilder. Women are particularly vulnerable: 81 percent of them report living paycheck to paycheck, compared with 75 percent of men.
Comment: If even high wage earners aren't saving money, this doesn't necessarily translate to mean these people are unable to save. It probably means there are common habits where people are probably overspending on the things they do buy without considering the consequences. In many cases this is a lifestyle choice, and often a detrimental one. To put things in perspective, if you make $33,000 or more then you are in the top 1% of wage earners in all the world. This doesn't negate the suffering caused by loose spending, but there is some individual responsibility here. Improving conditions is well within reach for many Americans. It's not entirely accurate to compare the workers affected by government shutdown with the saving habits of Americans.
Khadija made history when she became the first black woman to take the crown at the annual beauty pageant on Saturday, but her win has since been tainted by online trolls who flooded Facebook and Twitter with comments about her appearance.
When other social media users began to call out those spouting racist abuse, some Twitter users maintained it had nothing to do with race. "She just wasn't that pretty," one person wrote.
"I started to see clearly. In Ukraine it is said that everything in Donetsk was destroyed. Here everybody is walking around, I saw a Christmas tree... Here there is only one thing to do: make peace. Here we are all the same, both you and I. Whether you speak Russian or Ukrainian, it is the same. I understand you, and you understand me," said the former Ukrainian serviceman.Whilst walking around Sladkov showed the Ukrainian soldier inscriptions in the Ukrainian language and monuments to famous Ukrainians in the center of Donetsk to show him that Donetsk residents have no hatred towards the ordinary citizens of Ukraine.














Comment:
UPDATE: Alqunun has left the airport under the care of the UN after Thai authorities allowed her into the country while the UNHCR processes her case and arranges for her to travel to another country. It is expected to take about five days to find a country to accept her. She will be under care of the UN during the transition and Thai authorities will also provide additional security to guarantee her safety and plan to hold talks with the Saudi Embassy regarding her situation.
UPDATE 2: Australia considers granting Ms. Algunun a visa: Update (Jan 9): The Australian gov't has announced that the UN High Commissioner for Refugees granted refugee status to the young woman. She has been referred to Australia for resettlement and "will not receive special treatment", according to Australian Minister for Home Affairs Peter Dutton.