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Is this clickbait, or is this column as raciest as it seems?

For the record i am not entirely against countries limiting immigrations if they wish to.

Edited by Clockwork
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15 minutes ago, Clockwork said:

Is this clickbait, or is this column as raciest as it seems?

For the record i am not entirely against countries limiting immigrations if they wish to.

Camilla Tominey is GB News right wing troll

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16 minutes ago, Vesper said:

Camilla Tominey is GB News right wing troll

She is as thick as pigshit, just spouts her right wing masters agenda with zero original thought

Talking about GB news theres a hilarious clip of failed right wing former Home Secretary Suella 'married to a zionist' Braverman being blanked by Cambridge students

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Who the hell do they think they are?

create-a-photo-quality-picture-of-an-ang

Backlash over NFL player Harrison Butker’s commencement speech has reached a new level

https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/16/sport/harrison-butker-commencement-speech-analysis-cec/index.html

The NFL is distancing itself from controversial comments by Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker during a recent commencement address. In addition to calling Pride Month a “deadly sin” and bemoaning diversity and equity initiatives, Butker set off waves of criticism when he suggested that women find more fulfillment through getting married and having children than by pursuing careers – directly after quoting a song by Taylor Swift.

The backlash has been building since Butker made the comments Saturday in an address to graduates at Benedictine College, a small Catholic school in Atchison, Kansas.

The NFL issued a statement Wednesday, saying Butker’s comments don’t reflect the views of the league.

“Harrison Butker gave a speech in his personal capacity. His views are not those of the NFL as an organization,” said Senior Vice President Jonathan Beane, the league’s chief diversity and inclusion officer. “The NFL is steadfast in our commitment to inclusion, which only makes our league stronger.”

GLAAD also issued a statement calling Butker’s speech “a clear miss” and “woefully out of step with Americans about Pride, LGBTQ people and women.”

The Chiefs, defending Super Bowl champions and one of the NFL’s marquee teams, have not responded to requests for comment.

However, plenty of women (and Taylor Swift fans) have made their feelings plainly known, including the sisters of Mount St. Scholastica monastery, a founding institution and sponsor of Benedictine College.

“The sisters of Mount St. Scholastica do not believe that Harrison Butker’s comments in his 2024 Benedictine College commencement address represent the Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts college that our founders envisioned and in which we have been so invested,” they said in a statement. “Instead of promoting unity in our church, our nation, and the world, his comments seem to have fostered division.”

Such pushback could keep Butker’s social media feeds clogged with criticism for the foreseeable future. It also could be an optical problem for the NFL and the Chiefs, who have both enjoyed increased support from female fans in the past year.

What Butker said about women — and Taylor Swift

harrison-butker-benedictine-college-mc-2

In front of the crowd of about 485 male and female graduates, Butker suggested that a woman’s accomplishments in the home are more valuable than any academic or professional goals.

“I want to speak directly to you briefly because I think it is you, the women, who have had the most diabolical lies told to you,” he said.

“How many of you are sitting here now about to cross this stage and are thinking about all the promotions and titles you are going to get in your career? Some of you may go on to lead successful careers in the world, but I would venture to guess that the majority of you are most excited about your marriage and the children you will bring into this world.”

Butker also praised his wife Isabelle, saying she “would be the first to say her life truly started when she began living her vocation as a wife and as a mother.”

Judging from the hundreds upon hundreds of critical comments on Butker’s Instagram posts and about him on X and TikTok, his remarks did not sit well with many people.

“This wasn’t a case of foot-in-mouth. It was a well-prepared speech,” wrote columnist Sam McDowell in the Kansas City Star. “Women listening in the audience, rather than being rewarded with a diploma on graduation day, were made to listen as he promoted the role of homemaker — not as an acceptable choice, but as their duty as a husband’s servant.”

It also didn’t sit well with many people that Butker invoked Swift, the pop star who is dating Kansas City Chiefs star Travis Kelce and who was a frequent sight at Chiefs games this past season, including the Super Bowl.

Butker likely became the first person in history to quote a Taylor Swift song while criticizing Catholic priests for catering too much to the feelings of their parishioners. “As my teammate’s girlfriend says: ‘Familiarity breeds contempt,’” Butker said at one point, quoting Swift’s song “Bejeweled” (and, by extension, a common turn of phrase).

Conservative voices have praised Butker’s speech for being “100% correct” and for reflecting his self-professed deep Catholic faith. However, his reference to Swift — a childless, unmarried superstar and feminist figure who by Butker’s own definition is not living up to her potential — has prompted additional outcry.

Feminists and Taylor Swift fans have fired back

f_webp

Butker, 28, has been with the Chiefs for seven seasons. He kicked four field goals as the Chiefs edged the San Francisco 49ers, 25-22, in February to win the Super Bowl.

Before his speech, Butker’s Instagram account was rather innocuous: Mostly photos of his gameday outfits paired with Bible quotes, posed shots next to conservative figures and bits of Christian wisdom, all met with generally hospitable commentary from fans.

Now, nearly every recent post on his account has been overrun with insults, some questioning how Butker feels about women like Swift, who have found success outside of marriage and motherhood:

“I feel bad for those poor women who looked forward to their graduation and had you inflicted upon them.”

“Have a talk with Travis about how you can be successful, masculine AND still incredibly supportive of your girlfriend’s career.”

The deluge of criticism reached almost every corner of social media, and people took notice.

“As a woman, does watching Harrison Butker get cooked online count as being in the kitchen,” reads one popular post on X.

“I’ll let the Swifties handle Harrison Butker,” reads another.

Commenters and social influencers also picked up on another piece of information that appears at odds with Butker’s worldview. His mother, Elizabeth Keller Butker, is a medical physicist at Emory University’s Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta and holds, among other academic accolades, a degree in chemistry from Smith College, a private women’s liberal arts college in Massachusetts.

“What does your mom think about your little speech, Harrison?” asked Vicki Chan, a doctor and TikTok creator with more than 500,000 followers.

CNN has reached out to Benedictine College, where Butker gave his address, and is awaiting a response.

The backlash comes as the NFL is trying to court female fans

While the fallout from Butker’s address is messy enough already, there’s another complicating detail to consider.

The NFL has tried to woo female fans for years. When Swift began appearing at Chiefs games last fall to support her boyfriend Kelce, female interest in the NFL skyrocketed. Super Bowl LVIII, in which the Chiefs beat the San Francisco 49ers and the superstar couple shared picture-perfect embraces after the victory, was the most-watched Super Bowl ever. Even NFL commissioner Roger Goodell acknowledged the “Taylor Swift effect” on the season.

To many, Butker’s comments are a kick in the face to a burgeoning, and valuable, demographic of NFL fans.

“Hey NFL. If you want to continue to grow your female fan base and any other marginalized group (straight white men are already watching your product), come get your boy,” tweeted former “Monday Night Football” reporter Lisa Guerrero.

Some commenters also asked the Chiefs to issue a response to Butker’s remarks in the interest of their female fans. So far, the Chiefs have not made a public comment.

0516_HarrisonButker.png

Butker’s speech contained other polarizing comments

While Butker’s remarks about women and Taylor Swift inspired a very specific sort of backlash, critics had plenty to say about the other parts of his speech, too. A few details in particular have stirred up discontent:

• Butker criticized President Joe Biden, who is Catholic, and other unnamed Catholic leaders for “pushing dangerous gender ideologies onto the youth of America” — an apparent reference to transgender rights.

• In a swipe at LGBTQ communities, Butker encouraged graduates to have Catholic pride, but “not the deadly sin sort of pride that has an entire month dedicated to it.”

• Butker also waded into the DEI debate, saying, “The world around us says that we should keep our beliefs to ourselves whenever they go against the tyranny of diversity, equity and inclusion.”

In response to his comments about diversity, Tennessean reporter Andrea Williams pointed out Butker shares the field with Patrick Mahomes, who is considered one of the best players of his generation and is one of only a handful of Black quarterbacks to win a Super Bowl.

“Harrison Butker doesn’t have three Super Bowl rings without Patrick Mahomes,” she wrote. “And without those Super Bowl rings, he doesn’t have the aforementioned praise or platform.”

Some women also pointed out that Butker’s understanding of Catholicism — and what the faith asks of its adherents — is far from universal.

Journalist Yvette Walker wrote a faith-based critique for the Kansas City Star, noting the many women of the Bible who contributed to their communities outside of traditional gender roles.

“I hope the women in the audience who didn’t agree with everything Butker said remember that they can think for themselves, read the Bible for themselves, and choose the reasoning God granted to live a full and worthwhile life whether you have a family or not,” she wrote.

 

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'Unified Reich': Trump campaign goes full Nazi

Donald Trump's campaign adopts Nazi framing, again

https://www.theframelab.org/unified-reich-trump-campaign-goes-full-nazi/

IMG_4968.jpg

In a shocking development – even by the Republican Party's low, low standards – Donald Trump has directly framed his campaign using Nazi terminology.

A video posted on his social media accounts yesterday promised a "unified Reich" if he wins the presidency in 2024.

From the Associated Press:

A video posted to Donald Trump’s account on his social media network Monday included references to a “unified Reich” among hypothetical news headlines if he wins the election in November.
The headline appears among messages flashing across the screen such as “Trump wins!!” and “Economy booms!” Other headlines appear to be references to World War I.
The word “Reich” is often largely associated with Nazi Germany’s Third Reich, though the references in the video Trump shared appear to be a reference to the formation of the modern pan-German nation, unifying smaller states into a single Reich, or empire, in 1871.

Trump promises "unified Reich"

As the AP story points out, this is not the first time Trump has framed his campaign in Nazi terms. In recent years, he has used the words of Adolf Hitler to attack immigrants, has dined with Holocaust deniers and has downplayed "the 2017 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where white nationalists chanted 'Jews will not replace us!'" Retired Marine General John Kelly, Trump's former chief of staff, quoted Trump as praising Hitler.

 

The Trump campaign says the 30-second ad was erroneously posted by a staffer and says it wasn't aware of the "reich" language before it shared the video with Trump's millions of social media followers.

We don't buy this excuse. There's no way a presidential campaign would post a video without conducting a thorough vetting at multiple levels. This was clearly an intentional provocation as part of Trump's "trial balloon" strategy in which he floats offensive or outrageous ideas to test public reaction.

taxonomy-pic.jpg

Trump is telling us exactly what he plans to do if he gets another term. He is framing his return to power as an authoritarian effort, and he is overtly using Nazi language and symbolism to drive home the point.

This wasn't a mistake. It isn't a joke. American freedom and democracy are on the line in 2024. The main headline in Trump's ad asks: "What's Next for America?" Trump's answer: authoritarianism and fascism.

So what can you do? For starters, you can make sure to send the AP story to everyone you know by sharing this link: https://apnews.com/article/trump-election-2024-rhetoric-germany-antisemitism-31002afb91b642c0314223d19e51f427#fa

The stakes of this election couldn't be any higher. Trump is telling us exactly who he is – and what's in store for our future if he gets a second term.

Every one of us has a moral duty to prevent that from happening.

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Rishi Sunak takes gamble by calling UK general election for 4 July

PM announces date with Tories trailing Labour by 20 points in polls, saying: ‘I’m confident about what we can do in the future’

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Posted (edited)

How phoney are the right wing loonies ?
Just answered a question in quora about guns in America.
The Trump man above had posted a pic from Schindler's list, the one with Amon Goth trying to shoot Itzhak Stern but finds that his pistol does n't fire.
He says "this is what will happen to the Americans when Biden takes away our guns".
I tried to reason with him.
I says "my good man if the nazis attack then only Jimmy Doolittle saves America - you can't do it with your toy gun".
I go on and explain to him that private guns to combat common criime are likewise near useless and that guns are useful only if somebody is on his toes 24-365.
Further I says "if you still think you have a point, tell us what to do about the psycho killers who are roaming America and represent the main danger. Must n't we address all problems ?"

After that the man is in stitches.
He calls me all the names in his nazi book: filthy inferior African specimen - antisemite (!) - commie ...
Closes the conversation by heil hitlering me, disallows further replies.

Similar things happen with me and the (true) lefties. Mercy !
 

Edited by cosmicway
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Posted (edited)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_San_Pedro_Garza_Garcia_Stage_Collapse

2024 San Pedro Garza Garcia Stage Collapse

On May 22, 2024 a political campaign rally pertaining to the mexican political party Movimiento Ciudadano in San Pedro Garza Garcia collapsed on a group of spectators leaving many injured and 4 dead as of right now.

https://www.mystateline.com/news/international/ap-high-wind-topples-part-of-stage-and-sends-a-mexican-presidential-candidate-running-for-safety/

Stage Collapses at Political Rally in Mexico - LIVE Breaking News Coverage (Nuevo León)

 

 

Edited by KEVINAA
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Medical experts are unwilling to give evidence in gender cases

Trolling and the toxic debate surrounding giving children puberty blockers or hormonal treatment is putting specialists off appearing in court
c8cb7e19-9878-460d-8185-c89cc2adb3ad.jpg

Courts are struggling to find experts willing to give medical evidence in family law disputes about young people who want hormone treatment to change gender.

Judges in two High Court rulings this month in disputes over whether puberty blockers or gender-affirming hormones should be given to a person younger than 18 noted the lack of any medical expert in the UK willing to give evidence.

In one Mrs Justice Judd lifted an interim order that had been in place since last October preventing a father from arranging for Q, then 15, to access treatment for gender dysphoria from a private clinic. The mother had agreed that Q should join the waiting list for NHS treatment, but did not agree to the child accessing it privately. Waiting lists mean that Q would not be assessed or treated by the NHS until after turning 18.

The father of the child, now 16, who was born female but identifies as male, agreed to an undertaking not to fund or facilitate a referral to an offshore body such as Gender GP while Q remains younger than 18. The judge said it had “proved to be impossible to find a consultant endocrinologist in this country who was prepared to give expert evidence”.

In the first ruling on transgender medical issues that considered the Cass review — which found there was “no good evidence” to support giving young people potentially life-altering hormone treatment — the judge blamed “the toxicity of the debate” for the fact that it had not been possible to get medical evidence.

“Whilst there is a paucity of experts in some disciplines … I have never encountered a case where there was simply no one willing to provide such evidence for the court,” the judge said.

Quoting from the Cass review, the judge said: “There are few other areas of healthcare where professionals are so afraid to openly discuss their views, where people are vilified on social media, and where name-calling echoes the worst bullying behaviour.”

A week earlier, Sir Andrew McFarlane, the most senior family court judge, said in a ruling that there was “very significant concern” over children “accessing cross-hormone treatment from any offshore, online, unregulated private clinic”.

He had heard evidence from a paediatric endocrinologist based in Australia that the dosage of hormones prescribed to one teenager by the clinic, GenderGP, after a single online consultation with a counsellor, was so high it was “dangerously high” and “frankly negligent”.

Despite an “extensive” exercise, McFarlane said that it had been impossible to identify an endocrinologist in the UK who was prepared to give evidence.

In a speech in 2018 McFarlane highlighted the “acute problem” of finding medical experts for cases in the family courts, which he said was in part because of strict court timetables and exacerbated by cuts to legal aid fees.

McFarlane established a working group to look at the problem. Its report, published in 2020, confirmed country-wide difficulties and a “diminishing” pool of experts in specialisms, including child and family psychiatrists and psychologists, paediatricians, radiologists, neurosurgeons, ophthalmologists, haematologists, neonatologists and geneticists.

As well as low fees, court timetabling, processes and the volume of material, and a lack of support and training, it found that criticism by lawyers, judges and the press contributed to the unwillingness to appear.

Half of the 635 polled in the 2022 Bond Solon expert witness survey said that they would refuse to act in “highly contentious” matters, such as those involving transgender issues.

Mark Solon, a solicitor and founder of the expert witness training company, says: “As society changes, so does the need for expert witnesses to assist courts with an independent opinion on issues in disputes that are often highly contentious, and where new attitudes and evidence need examination. Gender is one such issue.”

Solon says it can be difficult to find an expert with the relevant qualifications and experience, knowledge and skills to produce a court-compliant report and be able to handle potentially hostile cross-examination. He predicts that using experts from abroad to fill the gap may become more common.

In addition to criticism that the limited number of trans specialists may receive if they comment on the “highly contentious” subject, Simon Berney-Edwards, the chief executive of Expert Witness Institute, says they are also likely to be subjected to vexatious complaints and harassment.

Paul Conrathe, the solicitor at Sinclairslaw who represented Q’s mother, says that he has spoken to many potential expert witnesses, who express “concerns about being personally vilified and that the grief is not worth it”. In particular he argues that there is a “hostile and intimidating environment for anyone that seeks to question an affirmative approach to hormonal treatment”.

Conrathe argues that anonymity may encourage more experts to participate in the court process — something that judges already have the power to grant if circumstances allow.

James Roberts KC, chair of the Family Law Bar Association, says that the difficulty in identifying experts in trans cases results from the complex issues in dispute — but he accepts the wider problems of finding experts at legal aid rates.

The Association of Lawyers for Children adds that the Cass review and wider public debate about the treatment of children with gender dysphoria, is “likely” to act as a further disincentive. While others suggest that the pilot to allow journalists to report on family court proceedings, which started in January, may add to the problem.

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Posted (edited)
5 minutes ago, Vesper said:

Medical experts are unwilling to give evidence in gender cases

Trolling and the toxic debate surrounding giving children puberty blockers or hormonal treatment is putting specialists off appearing in court
c8cb7e19-9878-460d-8185-c89cc2adb3ad.jpg

Courts are struggling to find experts willing to give medical evidence in family law disputes about young people who want hormone treatment to change gender.

Judges in two High Court rulings this month in disputes over whether puberty blockers or gender-affirming hormones should be given to a person younger than 18 noted the lack of any medical expert in the UK willing to give evidence.

In one Mrs Justice Judd lifted an interim order that had been in place since last October preventing a father from arranging for Q, then 15, to access treatment for gender dysphoria from a private clinic. The mother had agreed that Q should join the waiting list for NHS treatment, but did not agree to the child accessing it privately. Waiting lists mean that Q would not be assessed or treated by the NHS until after turning 18.

The father of the child, now 16, who was born female but identifies as male, agreed to an undertaking not to fund or facilitate a referral to an offshore body such as Gender GP while Q remains younger than 18. The judge said it had “proved to be impossible to find a consultant endocrinologist in this country who was prepared to give expert evidence”.

In the first ruling on transgender medical issues that considered the Cass review — which found there was “no good evidence” to support giving young people potentially life-altering hormone treatment — the judge blamed “the toxicity of the debate” for the fact that it had not been possible to get medical evidence.

“Whilst there is a paucity of experts in some disciplines … I have never encountered a case where there was simply no one willing to provide such evidence for the court,” the judge said.

Quoting from the Cass review, the judge said: “There are few other areas of healthcare where professionals are so afraid to openly discuss their views, where people are vilified on social media, and where name-calling echoes the worst bullying behaviour.”

A week earlier, Sir Andrew McFarlane, the most senior family court judge, said in a ruling that there was “very significant concern” over children “accessing cross-hormone treatment from any offshore, online, unregulated private clinic”.

He had heard evidence from a paediatric endocrinologist based in Australia that the dosage of hormones prescribed to one teenager by the clinic, GenderGP, after a single online consultation with a counsellor, was so high it was “dangerously high” and “frankly negligent”.

Despite an “extensive” exercise, McFarlane said that it had been impossible to identify an endocrinologist in the UK who was prepared to give evidence.

In a speech in 2018 McFarlane highlighted the “acute problem” of finding medical experts for cases in the family courts, which he said was in part because of strict court timetables and exacerbated by cuts to legal aid fees.

McFarlane established a working group to look at the problem. Its report, published in 2020, confirmed country-wide difficulties and a “diminishing” pool of experts in specialisms, including child and family psychiatrists and psychologists, paediatricians, radiologists, neurosurgeons, ophthalmologists, haematologists, neonatologists and geneticists.

As well as low fees, court timetabling, processes and the volume of material, and a lack of support and training, it found that criticism by lawyers, judges and the press contributed to the unwillingness to appear.

Half of the 635 polled in the 2022 Bond Solon expert witness survey said that they would refuse to act in “highly contentious” matters, such as those involving transgender issues.

Mark Solon, a solicitor and founder of the expert witness training company, says: “As society changes, so does the need for expert witnesses to assist courts with an independent opinion on issues in disputes that are often highly contentious, and where new attitudes and evidence need examination. Gender is one such issue.”

Solon says it can be difficult to find an expert with the relevant qualifications and experience, knowledge and skills to produce a court-compliant report and be able to handle potentially hostile cross-examination. He predicts that using experts from abroad to fill the gap may become more common.

In addition to criticism that the limited number of trans specialists may receive if they comment on the “highly contentious” subject, Simon Berney-Edwards, the chief executive of Expert Witness Institute, says they are also likely to be subjected to vexatious complaints and harassment.

Paul Conrathe, the solicitor at Sinclairslaw who represented Q’s mother, says that he has spoken to many potential expert witnesses, who express “concerns about being personally vilified and that the grief is not worth it”. In particular he argues that there is a “hostile and intimidating environment for anyone that seeks to question an affirmative approach to hormonal treatment”.

Conrathe argues that anonymity may encourage more experts to participate in the court process — something that judges already have the power to grant if circumstances allow.

James Roberts KC, chair of the Family Law Bar Association, says that the difficulty in identifying experts in trans cases results from the complex issues in dispute — but he accepts the wider problems of finding experts at legal aid rates.

The Association of Lawyers for Children adds that the Cass review and wider public debate about the treatment of children with gender dysphoria, is “likely” to act as a further disincentive. While others suggest that the pilot to allow journalists to report on family court proceedings, which started in January, may add to the problem.

They need a back bone, giving children such things isn't only stupid it's disgusting, children can't drink can't smoke can't drive can't work, still in education some can't even do there times tables yet are in a position to decide if they want to change sex? The fact this is even a debate is beyond belief and the parents who allow this should have there kids taken of them for abuse, because 9x out of 10 it's these idiots forcing it onto them in the first place!!!

Edited by YorkshireBlue
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Sunak facing election exodus of Tory MPs

Number of Conservatives standing down rises to 72

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/uk-general-election-live-latest-news-rishi-sunak-3wgrf5nl2

d572f20f-e452-4d97-a714-7247a1aabcff.jpg

Key moments

 

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer held a series of events across the UK on the first full day of the general election campaign.

Sunak has begun a two-day tour of the four nations as he seeks to pull off the biggest political comeback in history at the general election on July 4. Starmer, meanwhile, hosted an event with Angela Rayner as he seeks to kickstart his own campaign after the prime minister’s surprise announcement yesterday.

aa7aff7d7bb2b5b53e93c5b04c06fbe1.png

 

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