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Evolution denialism is back, but this time it's coming from left-wing activists who do hold power in academia

girl covering ears
Evolutionary biology has always been controversial. Not controversial among biologists, but controversial among the general public. This is largely because Darwin's theory directly contradicted the supernatural accounts of human origins rooted in religious tradition and replaced them with fully natural ones. The philosopher Daniel Dennett has described evolution as a sort of "universal acid" that "eats through just about every traditional concept, and leaves in its wake a revolutionized world-view, with most of the old landmarks still recognizable, but transformed in fundamental ways." Fearing this corrosive idea, opposition in the US to evolution mainly came from Right-wing evangelical Christians who believed God created life in its present form, as described in Genesis.

In the 1990s and 2000s there were repeated attempts by evangelicals to ban evolution in public schools or teach the so-called "controversy" by including Intelligent Design - the belief that life is too complex to have evolved without the aid of some "Intelligent Designer" (i.e. God) - in the biology curriculum alongside evolution. But these attempts failed when scientists demonstrated in court that Intelligent Design was nothing more than Biblical Creationism gussied up in scientific-sounding prose. Since then, however, Creationism and Intelligent Design have lost a tremendous amount of momentum and influence. But while these right-wing anti-evolution movements withered to irrelevancy, a much more cryptic form of left-wing evolution denialism has been slowly growing.

Comment: While neo-Darwinist evolutionary theory is not above criticism, the attack from the social justice mob is completely ignorant and does nothing but fuel their corrupt and ridiculous ideology. This is not how science, or indeed the human race, makes progress.

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Fire

Far left group BAMN agitating migrant caravan to rush US border

migrants border mexico US
© Associated Press/Gregory Bull
Migrant Caravan Migrants from Central America yell through a border wall at a U.S. Border Patrol agent after he pulled down a banner Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018, in San Diego. Migrants approaching the U.S. border from Mexico were enveloped with tear gas Sunday after a few tried to breach the fence separating the two countries.
Human rights groups in Tijuana are sounding the alarm about a far left organization that is trying to agitate members of the migrant caravan into rushing the U.S. border again.

The group By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) is calling for all migrants to gather on Saturday morning at one of the shelters and then to make their way to the U.S. border, where they will demand it be opened for everyone or they will "shut it down." In addition to posting the information on their website, BAMN members have taken to social media encouraging other protesters and members of the migrant caravan.

Comment: The majority of the caravan are people being used as pawns in a larger globalist game.

Some caravan migrants going back home: 'They tricked us - our dreams have gone to hell'


Bizarro Earth

Paris in chaos amid Yellow Vest rallies, over 260 arrested, nearly 100 injured - UPDATES

Yellow vest protests in Paris
© Agence France-Presse / Alain Jocard
A demonstrator walks near a burning car during a protest of Yellow vests in Paris on December 1, 2018.
Police have deployed tear gas and water cannons against firecracker-hurling Yellow Vest protesters in Paris. Some 260 arrests have been made and 92 people injured amid the mayhem, triggered by fuel price hikes and high taxes.

December 1 rallies are being held with the slogan "on the way to Macron's resignation." As the unrest gained momentum, the area close to the iconic Champs-Elysees avenue has been covered by thick smoke.

While pelting law enforcement with various projectiles, protesters have also resorted to symbolic yellow paint during the standoff. To their delight, quite a few shots have landed on the shields of riot police.

Comment: The level of violence is escalating on both sides:
The third consecutive weekend of anti-government demonstrations in France were marred by intensive clashes with police, who used water cannons and tear gas to disperse the protesting crowds.


Officials say that at least 90 people, among them 16 police officers, were injured in violent protests in the French capital, and over 260 have been arrested. Thousands of police were deployed in Paris to try to contain the protests.
Ironically, most of the police force support the protesters:
"Most of us back the Gilets Jaunes (Yellow Vests), because we will be directly affected by any rise in fuel prices," Alexandre Langlois, the secretary-general of the VIGI police union told RT France from their studio in Paris. "Most of us can't live where we work, because it is either too expensive, or we would be arresting our next-door neighbors, so we drive significant distances."

Langlois agrees that the movement has been exploited by more radical elements, but says that cops are still reluctant to be sent out against the Yellow Vests, who took their name from the hi-visibility road workers' jackets they have chosen as their symbol.

"It is difficult, because in our heart we support the protesters," said Langlois. "The assigned cops tell themselves: 'We will again look like villains, like attack dogs for the ministry and the government.'"

While Langlois is clear that some areas, such as the heart of the French capital are volatile and dangerous arenas for demonstrations, he also blames the higher-ups for repeatedly mishandling the response.

"Our colleagues on the ground have no operational freedom, they are merely following orders issued by those sitting somewhere else in police headquarters. At least once it would be right if the blame was assigned to the bosses, not those on the streets, who are doing what they can," said Langlois.
The Gilets Jaunes protests have many evoking the centuries-old French revolutionary spirit:
French revolution painting
© Eugene Delacroix / Wikimedia
‘Liberty Leading the People’
Intentionally or not, the poignant image evoked the innately French revolutionary symbolism, inherited from past upheavals. Like the world-famous painting by Eugene Delacroix, which depicts Marianne - the embodiment of liberty and one of the symbols of France - leading the people over the barricades.
yellow vest protester french flag
© Ruptly/Screenshot
The Yellow Vest protests erupted after President Emmanuel Macron introduced a controversial fuel tax. The anti-government rallies were spearheaded by the nation's leading trade unions.


Update: December 2nd: Violence across France is spreading:
More than 50 people, most of them police officers, were injured in Toulouse during protests against fuel price hikes. Yellow Vest demonstrations turned into riots, making the southern French city and Paris look like battlefields.


As France struggles to come to grips with the intensity of widespread protests against increasing fuel prices, which have grown violent over the past weeks, authorities in Toulouse said on Sunday that 57 people, including 48 police officers, had been injured in clashes during Saturday's riots. Five police officers were hospitalized.


Sixteen people were arrested following the disturbances, four of them for "looting two shops in the city center" during the demonstration, a statement said. France's southwestern city was the scene of unabated violence for hours on Saturday as angry Yellow Vest protesters, who are opposing the French government's plans to impose new fuel taxes, scuffled with police forces deployed to the area.



Arrow Down

South African lawmakers call for end to captive lion trophy hunting

The King
© Earth.com
A committee of lawmakers who oversee environmental affairs in South Africa is calling for an end to captive lion trophy hunting.
The captive lion breeding industry has been a black-eye on the South Africa's tourism industry for years. An industry centered on breeding lions for hunters to shoot in an enclosed area is sure to draw controversy, especially when unsuspecting tourists are deceived into paying to visit the facilities. Now, a committee of lawmakers who oversee environmental affairs in South Africa is calling for an end to the industry.

This month, the committee released their report on a two-day colloquium on the captive breeding of lions for hunting and the bone trade. In the report, the committee calls on the Department of Environmental Affairs to "initiate a policy and legislative review of Captive Breeding of Lions for hunting and Lion bone trade with a view of putting an end to this practice."

As Earth.com reported earlier this year, there are an estimated 260 captive breeding facilities in South Africa holding around 7,000 lions.

The report states, "The animals, which are born in captivity are taken away from their mothers within hours of being born so they can be used in petting facilities, where unwitting tourists visit these farms and pay money to look at or touch young lion cubs. They do not know that they are supporting a horrific industry, an industry that even many hunting associations reject as being unethical. The farms often advertise as wildlife sanctuaries to lure in foreign volunteers under the pretence of helping save the species."

Once the lions become too old to interact with tourists they are sold for canned hunting, where they are hunted in an enclosed space. The lions are an easy target; they are acclimated to humans after spending years as tourist props. Some lions are even baited or sedated to help guarantee a kill. The lions are basically given to the hunters "on a silver platter", the report explains.

Eye 2

A predatory-debt-collecting marshal is NYC's highest paid employee: $1.7 million last year

Vadim Barbarovich new york city marshal asset seizure
© New York Post
Vadim Barbarovich
A brand new expose by Bloomberg shines light on modern day loan sharks: city officials that are armed with badges like Vadim Barbarovich, who earned $1.7 million last year, easily giving him the most lucrative job within the government of New York City. His official title is City Marshal, and he's one of 35 that the mayor has appointed to compete for fees from recovering debts. While traditionally marshals evict tenants and tow cars, Barbarovich has found his place in part of a debt collection industry that allows them to use their legal authority on behalf of predatory lenders.

It's a practice that dates back to the 17th century. Back then, jobs across the Hudson River for marshals yielded the highest fees. Under current law, marshals are entitled to keep 5% of cash that they collect. The city also has a Sheriff's office that does similar work, but those employees get a salary. Several mayors have called for an end to the marshal system over the last few decades, but nobody has been successful in getting the state legislature to act upon it.

Comment: In the first of its four-part series Bloomberg explains the loophole that let the sharks loose:
The lenders' weapon of choice is an arcane legal document called a confession of judgment. Before borrowers get a loan, they have to sign a statement giving up their right to defend themselves if the lender takes them to court. It's like an arbitration agreement, except the borrower always loses. Armed with a confession, a lender can, without proof, accuse borrowers of not paying and legally seize their assets before they know what's happened. Not surprisingly, some lenders have abused this power. In dozens of interviews and court pleadings, borrowers describe lenders who've forged documents, lied about how much they were owed, or fabricated defaults out of thin air.

Confessions of judgment have been part of English common law since the Middle Ages, intended as a way to enforce debts without the fuss and expense of trial. Concerns about their potential abuse are almost as old. In Charles Dickens's 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers, a landlady who's tricked into signing one ends up in debtors' prison. Some U.S. states outlawed confessions in the middle of the 20th century, and federal regulators banned them for consumer loans in 1985. But New York still allows them for business loans.

[...]


New York's courts are especially friendly to confessions and will accept them from anywhere, so lenders require customers to sign documents allowing them to file there. That's turned the state into the industry's collections department. Cash-advance companies have secured more than 25,000 judgments in New York since 2012, mostly in the past two years, according to data on more than 350 lenders compiled by Bloomberg Businessweek. Those judgments are worth an estimated $1.5 billion. The biggest filer by far, with a quarter of the cases: Yellowstone Capital.



Beer

The UK town where over half the pubs have vanished

Pubs vanish in Accrington, UK
© Mark Waugh for the Observer
The Arden Inn in Accrington town centre.
Fifteen years ago, taxi driver Basharat Khan would drive past the Hyndburn Inn on Accrington's Blackburn Road and marvel at how packed it was. He never went inside - he doesn't drink - but he noted its reliably heaving beer garden.

These days, Khan is inside the building most days: six years ago he converted it into a halal butcher's shop, which he runs with his son, Waqar. Instead of pints of bitter, the pair sell 3kg of keema (mince) for £10.50 and give out Indian sweets rather than peanuts to their customers.

The Hyndburn Inn is one of 50 pubs in the east Lancashire district of Hyndburn to have closed since 2001, when the borough boasted 95 - a drop of 53%. Only Newham in east London has lost a higher percentage in that period, according to official figures released last week that show more than a quarter of the UK's pubs have closed since 2001.

Khan thinks he knows why: "The smoking ban. I've been driving a taxi for 29 years and since the ban people don't go out nearly as much. They think 'sod it, I'll stay at home.'"

Map

Russia's Franz Josef Land in the Arctic may become major tourism attraction

Bell Island
© Sputnik / Ilya Timin
Rocky mountain on Bell Island, Franz Josef Land.
The world's northernmost archipelago, Russia's Franz Josef Land, could be a key tourist attraction in the Arctic, according to the International Union of Arctic and Far East's Marine Natural Reserves.

Its managing director Valery Korovkin told a tourist forum in Vorkuta that "the Franz Josef Land Archipelago may become a wonderful alternative to Spitsbergen," pointing out that this is the opinion of many experts. He explained that "every other tourist visiting Spitsbergen wants to visit Franz Josef Land."

According to Korovkin, by serving tourists every year, Spitsbergen earns an equivalent of five billion rubles ($74.5 million), with the international airport there serving about 80,000 tourists. "From the Norwegian side, everything is ready and works fine, so we should have a similar tourist center on the Russian side, especially since we all know about the high tourist interest to the archipelago," he said.

Map

Comparing China and America: One rises while the other flounders

USA vs China

However, it has neglected the fact that the trade war it wages with the world could backfire.
I have followed China's development, its stunning advance in forty years from impoverished Third World to a huge economy, its rapid scientific progress. Coming from nowhere it now runs neck and neck with the US in supercomputers, does world-class work in genetic engineering and genomics (the Beijing Genomics Institutes), quantum computing and quantum radar, in scientific publications. It lags in many things, but the speed of advance, the intense focus on progress, is remarkable.

Recently, after twelve years away, I returned for a couple of weeks to Chungdu and Chong Quing, which I found amazing. American patriots of the lightly read but growly sort will bristle at the thought that the Chinese may have political and economic systems superior to ours, but, well, China rises while the US flounders. They must be doing something right.

In terms of economic systems, the Chinese are clearly superior. China runs a large economic surplus, allowing it to invest heavily in infrastructure and in resources abroad. America runs a large deficit. China invests in China, America in the military. China's infrastructure is new, of high quality, and growing. America's slowly deteriorates. China has an adult government that gets things done. America has an essentially absentee Congress and a kaleidoscopically shifting cast of pathologically aggressive curiosities in the White House.

Die

Asteroids, war, and economic collapse: Is the world heading for imminent disaster?

lava
© Global Look Press
Thanks to the internet, we are bombarded 24/7 with news of disasters and impending disasters, to the point of ennui. Are things really as bad as the media and Hollywood say? Or are we headed for a happy techno future?

The other evening, in search of some entertainment, I stumbled upon a film by Australian director John Hillcoat entitled, The Road (2009). This riveting post-apocalyptic drama focuses on the travails of a father and son as they set out on foot across a devastated American wasteland following some cataclysmic disaster.

What motivates the characters to persevere in their impossible journey, which presents them with every sort of imaginable and unimaginable nightmare, is simply the quest for survival. Why anyone would want to survive amid such total devastation is another question.

An interesting element of the film is that we are never told what caused so much destruction. All we know is that some overnight event turned America, and possibly the entire planet, into a scorched wasteland. Hillcoat plays on our modern fears that some uncontrollable event, either by force of nature or man-made, is lurking just around the corner, waiting to devour us. The media is certainly culpable for giving life to these fears.

By way of a few examples, consider the terrors lurking in deep space. It seems that every month or so NASA discovers some new asteroid or, worse, a gang of asteroids that "just missed" hitting earth by millions of miles, sparing us yet again the fate of the dodo bird.

Comment: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." - George Santayana

History is replete with the rise and fall of civilizations who did not learn from the mistakes of the past. For those willing to look at all of the data, all of the signs noted in the article, along with many others, such as erratic weather, plagues and mass hysteria. accompany the great shifts on our planet.

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Info

Pakistani protesters who demanded the execution of Christian woman get charged with terrorism

Lohore protest
© AP Photo / Pervez Masih
In October, Pakistan's Supreme Court acquitted Asia Bibi, who had been put on death row for blasphemy several years ago, bringing thousands of protesters to the streets, demanding that the mother of three be executed in public.

Pakistani authorities announced Sunday that leaders behind the Pakistani Tehreek-e-Labbaik (TLP) party will face charges of terrorism after they were in charge of violent protests across the Middle-Eastern state seeking execution of a Christian woman acquitted of blasphemy, the ABC news reported.

According to Pakistani Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry, Tehreek-e-Labbaik (TLP) party leader Khadim Hussain Rizvi had been "charged under sections of sedition and terrorism" in a police station in the city of Lahore. At the same time, three more top figures will face similar charges.

Comment: See also: