Society's ChildS


Books

The celebrity college-admissions scandal has unearthed a deeper fraud

college grad selfie
The celebrity college-admissions cheating scandal has two clear takeaways: an elite college degree has taken on wildly inflated importance in American society, and the sports-industrial complex enjoys wildly inflated power within universities. Thirty-three moguls and TV stars allegedly paid admissions fixer William Singer a total of $25 million from 2011 to 2018 to doctor their children's high school resumes-sending students to private SAT and ACT testing sites through false disability claims, for example, where bought-off proctors would raise the students' scores. Singer forged athletic records, complete with altered photos showing the student playing sports in which he or she had little experience or competence. Corrupt sports directors would then recommend the student for admission, all the while knowing that they had no intention of playing on the school's team.

None of this could have happened if higher education had not itself become a corrupt institution, featuring low classroom demands, no core knowledge acquisition, low grading standards, fashionable (but society-destroying) left-wing activism, luxury-hotel amenities, endless partying, and huge expense. Students often learn virtually nothing during their college years, as University of California, Irvine, education school dean Richard Arum writes in Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses. They may even lose that pittance of knowledge with which they entered college. Seniors at Princeton, Yale, Cornell, Duke, and Berkeley scored lower in an undemanding test of American history than they did as freshmen, according to a 2007 study commissioned by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. College is only desultorily about knowledge acquisition, at least outside of the STEM fields (and even those fields are under assault from identity politics).

Horse

Outrage culture goes after U of Wyoming's cowboy slogan but school administration stands its ground

cowboy
The Wall Street Journal last week published an editorial, titled, "It Pays to Be A Wyoming Cowboy." The story behind that headline goes back to July 2018 when, as Campus Reform reported at the time, the University of Wyoming stood its ground against about two dozen professors who took issue with the school's newly-unveiled slogan, "the world needs more cowboys."

The slogan, critics said was sexist and xenophobic, among other things.

"I am not the only person for whom the word 'cowboy' invokes a white, macho, male, able-bodied, heterosexual, U.S.-born person," associate professor of kinesiology and health Christine Porter said at the time. "The history of cowboys, of course, is much more diverse than that racially, and presumably also for sexual orientation. But the image-what the word 'cowboy' means off the top of almost everybody's head in the U.S.-is the white, heterosexual male."

Despite the criticism, however, the university stood its ground and continued its marketing campaign with the slogan.

And, according to the Wall Street Journal, the university's bet on cowboys has so far paid off.

Briefcase

Kaspersky Lab slams Apple with antitrust complaint, accuses megacorporation of muscling out competition

apple building
Cybersecurity firm Kaspersky Lab has filed an antitrust complaint against Apple, alleging that the tech giant removed Kaspersky's 'safe kids' app from the Apple Store to make way for its own rival product.

The Russian firm claims in its suit that Apple removed its 'Safe Kids' app from the online marketplace, ostensibly for a configuration violation but in reality to eliminate competition to its own 'Screen Time' feature. Both apps allow parents to monitor and control their children's device usage and to restrict inappropriate content.

"From our point of view, Apple appears to be using its position as platform owner...to dictate terms and prevent other developers from operating on equal terms with it," a spokesperson told WinBuzzer.

Blackbox

Is 'free capitalism' able to save the millennials?

Millennials
The outlook for the millennial generation, those who were born in the two decades before the new millennium, are bleak. Student debt is only one of the burdens. There is also the lack of attractive jobs. Even worse are the inclinations toward socialism that comes attractively packaged as more democracy. Yet there is a solution.

This way out is more capitalism. In as much as free capitalism works as an engine of rising productivity, the living standards can rise. Capitalism creates wealth and promotes prosperity.

Millennials need not worry when their income gives them high purchasing power. Then, even a precarious job situation will provide a good living, quite different from the overall misery that would come with more socialism.

The vision of an anarcho-capitalist order with a highly productive economy and a stateless society stands in stark contrast to the contemporary social-democratic, 'liberal' system of governance which marches on to more government spending, more public debt, more regulation, lower productivity, and less purchasing power of the salaries.

Comment: The author seems to be a bit of an idealist. We always have - and we always will - have politicians of some variety or another. The real trick is to weed out the ones who are pathological.


Chalkboard

The Who's Roger Daltrey likens the EU to 'a f***ing mafia'

Roger Daltry
Rock Star and front man of The Who, Roger Daltrey, has given the European Union both barrels and compared it to the "mafia" during an interview at Wembley.

Asked by Sky News if Brexit would somehow be bad for British rock music (wtf?), Daltrey hit back hard and said: "No. What's it got to do with the rock business?"

He was then asked (for some reason) how they would tour Europe and hit back: "Oh dear. As if we didn't tour in Europe before the fucking EU. Oh give it up!"

Daltrey then adds: "If you want to sign up to be ruled by a fucking mafia you do it."

Comment: Daltry certainly has a good idea of what's going on!

See also: The EU's 'Reichstaat' in Germany is in major disarray: A long cultural and political war is underway


Books

Florida Representative introduces bill making it easier to ban books from schools

child at library
Some lawmakers are working to make it easier to ban certain books in Florida public schools.

State Representative Mike Hill filed HB 855 in February. The bill was introduced to the House earlier this month.

Rep. Hill believes the bill is essential to protecting children from 'inappropriate' content at school.

"To remove pornography out of our public schools. It doesn't need to be there," said Rep. Hill.

The bill prohibits school employees from providing materials that could be 'harmful to students' or depict sex.

Comment: On the one hand, there IS material out there that children shouldn't be exposed to! At the same time, in this age of fake news and faux reality - one might ask how subject to abuse, in the form of ideological and cultural group-think, this type of legislation may become?


Megaphone

Venezuela: Voices from on the ground vs. the media's spin circus

Juan Guaidó y Nicolás Maduro
© DesconocidoJuan Guaidó and Nicolás Maduro
British photojournalist Alan Gignoux and Venezuelan journalist-filmmaker Carolina Graterol, both based in London, went to Venezuela for a month to shoot a documentary for a major global TV channel. They talked with journalist Paul Cochrane about the mainstream media's portrayal of Venezuela compared to their experiences on the ground.
Paul Cochrane (PC): What were you doing in Venezuela, how long were you there and where did you go?

Alan Gignoux (AG): We went in June 2018 for a month to shoot a documentary; I can't disclose what channels it will be on right now, but it should be on air soon. We visited the capital Caracas, Mérida (in the Andes), Cumaná (on the coast), and Ciudad Guayana (near the mouth of the Orinoco river).

PC: How did being in Venezuela compare to what you were seeing in Western media?

Carolina Graterol (CG): I am a journalist, I have family in Venezuela, and I knew the reality was very different from what the media is portraying, but still I was surprised. The first thing we noticed was the lack of poverty. Alan wanted to film homeless and poor people on the streets. I saw three people sleeping rough just this morning in London, but in Venezuela, we couldn't find any, in big cities or towns. We wanted to interview them, but we couldn't find them. It is because of multi disciplinary programmes run by the government, with social services working to get children off the streets, or returned to their families. The programme has been going on for a long time but I hadn't realized how effective it was.

2 + 2 = 4

Half of Americans now agree Trump is victim of a 'witch hunt'

Trump
© Reuters / Jonathan Ernst
Amid signs that special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference may be near its conclusion, a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds that trust in Mueller has eroded and half of Americans agree with President Donald Trump's contention that he has been the victim of a "witch hunt."

Support for the House of Representatives to seriously consider impeaching the president has dropped since last October by 10 percentage points, to 28 percent.

Despite that, the survey shows a nation that remains skeptical of Trump's honesty and deeply divided by his leadership. A 52 percent majority say they have little or no trust in the president's denials that his 2016 campaign colluded with Moscow in the election that put him in the Oval Office.

2 + 2 = 4

How Belgian kids protesting 'climate change' turned me into a climate skeptic

climate change NWO
I need to break it to you. I have become a climate skeptic. I have been following the matter quite closely over the last long years.

It's the massive amount of media attention however which triggered me.

I can't help but think we are lied to again. Climate change is a hoax. It's not true. There is no correlation between the "human" excrement named CO2 and global warming. None. Although there is between all kinds of human excrement and "the environment"; the world we live in. This part I do not doubt: we are polluting our single stellar vessel but that's not discussed anywhere in mainstream. More on that later.

Comment: Also see: Why we should all be terrified of 'children's crusader' global warming activist Greta Thunberg


Bacon

Trade War? 1 million pounds of smuggled Chinese pork seized in New Jersey over African swine fever fears

meat supermarket
© CC0
US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials seized 1 million pounds of pork products at the Newark, New Jersey maritime point of entry Friday. The meat is believed to have been smuggled from China, where there is currently an outbreak of the African swine fever (ASF).

During a Friday news conference, officials announced the seizure of over 50 shipping containers containing pork products.

"Agriculture specialists made a critical interception of these prohibited animal products, and stopped them from entering the US before they could potentially cause grave damage," Troy Miller, director of CBP field operations for the cities of New York and Newark, announced, NewJersey.com reported.

Comment: The African swine fever outbreak has made its way to Europe. : The US' apparent concern is notable considering its own producers feed their swine a growth drug, Ractopamine, which is banned in almost 200 countries.