Society's Child
The incident happened in a shopping center in the Danish city of Horsholm on Friday, after police were called to a public disturbance upon the outbreak of a scuffle after another woman attempted to forcefully remove the woman's niqab, according to local media.
"During the fight her niqab came off, but by the time we arrived she had put it back on again," police officer David Borchersen told the Ritzau news agency. They took a photograph of the woman and obtained security camera footage of the incident.
Borchersen added that the woman was informed she would receive a fine of 1,000 kroner ($156) in the post for wearing the facial covering, and that she would need to remove the veil or leave the public space.
A couple of weeks ago I took a road trip around the British Isles. We went from London up to southwest Scotland, then on through Northern Ireland - via Derry and Strabane - to County Sligo, before returning via Dublin and Holyhead and home through north Wales. We took in five countries in six days, crossed five borders, and I never once had to show my passport at any of them. I hadn't expected to do so. But for how much longer will this be so?
Though the countries of these islands are very different in many ways, and all are assertive about their identities, we are all used to the boundaries between them being more cultural than political. Only Scotland had even erected a road sign that announced that here was a different place from the one we had just been. The others simply merged into one another. I increasingly came to suspect that this is because, in spite of their differences and their histories, all five countries of these islands still have at least as much in common as they do that separates and divides them.
Dad believed the measure of a person was whether or not they were a worker. He believed that working was a virtue. So do I.
Crimea is a good option for South African farmers, according to farmer Adi Schlebusch, who has already visited Russia. About 30 families of Boer descendants of Dutch colonists in South Africa have expressed their willingness to move to the southern regions of Russia.
A sample of Ms. Jeong's "Old-Gray-Lady-Worthy" opinions:
Comment: Apparently The Old Grey Lady feels it will be able to 'guide' its new hire. It will be interesting to see if that's possible. The state of NYT's readership stats in six months may surprise them. Look what is happening to the BBC.
The self-described "alt-media" pair was swinging by Auckland on the final stop in their antipodean tour, fresh off the back of visiting Australia, where Southern begged God not to "nuke Melbourne" for it's supposed Biblical sins. Dogged by controversy, it appears that strife followed them across the Tasman with their only New Zealand venue canceling at the last minute.
Due to a raft of complaints, owner of Auckland's Powerstation venue Gabrielle Mullins canceled the event, citing a disagreement with the speakers' message. "As soon as we found out [what their message was], we weren't comfortable at all because it goes against quite a lot of things that we say," the owner told the NZ Herald. "They can say whatever they want but personally I don't want it in my venue."
Southern took to Twitter, lampooning yet another cancellation by quoting the Lord of the Rings, a film New Zealand is famous for. "One does not simply walk into a venue in New Zealand," she wrote to her 387,000 followers.
Comment: See also:
- Far right activist, Lauren Southern, permanently banned from the UK for handing out 'Allah is gay flyers'
- Populist MEPs invite Lauren Southern to speak regarding UK's use of terrorism act to censor free speech
- Porn OK, political dissent not OK: Patreon CEO Jack Conte cashes in on smut while banning Lauren Southern
The Carnegie Endowment scholar and former editor of Foreign Policy had a dialogue on twitter with Jerusalem journalists who blamed Netanyahu's government for the law. One of them, Noga Tarnopolsky, responded that American Jews have "a duty to save Israel by standing firm vis-à-vis the Israeli government."
"Why? Why is there a duty? How long does that duty remain?" Rothkopf shot back.
We Have Overcome: An Immigrant's Letter to the American People by Jason Hill, Bombardier Books, New York, July 10, 2018 (192 pages, $19.07, hardcover)
One can scarcely imagine the ideological venom generated among leftists by a well-spoken black professor with a doctorate in philosophy who has the temerity to make public statements like these:
Oldham resident Michael Marler was sentenced to life in prison at Manchester Crown Court on Friday. He will now serve a minimum of 21 years behind bars for the "brutal" killing of Danielle Richardson, who he stabbed multiple times in February 2018 in what investigators described as a manic attack.
The moment Marler desperately attempted to evade justice has now been released by the Greater Manchester Police, showing how the killer jumped from a second story window. Police say Marler had only seconds earlier stabbed his girlfriend Richardson, "leaving her with no chance of survival".
Sullivan's article, published in the New York Magazine on Friday under the headline "When Racism Is Fit to Print," points out that conservatives consider Sarah Jeong's tweets racist, while the political left considers that "simply impossible... by virtue of being an Asian woman."
Making it clear that he doesn't want Jeong fired, Sullivan then says "we all live on campus now," a society in which "we are all mere appendages of various groups of oppressors and oppressed, and in which the oppressed definitionally cannot be at fault."
'How dare he!' thundered the representatives of what Sullivan called the "liberal media," denouncing his column as "complete garbage," his worldview "stupendously dishonest" and his entire opus "a long jam of reactionary bad columns."















Comment: It seems that as the established (and thoroughly corrupt) order begins to fade questions of what the new one should like are being asked:
- Brexit Has Exposed The Rotten Foundations of Britain's Political System
- Clusterf*ck: Theresa May left red-faced as Brexit deal between UK, Ireland and EU is scuppered by DUP
- May's mistake bungles Brexit: The DUP border demands
- Where European populism is going in 2018
- Cycles of History: 2018 brings echoes of Europe's nationalist rebellions of 1848
Also check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: What's The Problem With Nationalism?