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2021-


2021-09-21 e
THE GREAT REPLACEMENT IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE
(Democrats and Globalists want to replace competent, productive, traditional Americans with the dregs of the Third World who will likely be life-long welfare parasites or criminals. These are people who do not share our history, culture or values. If you don't understand the consequences or you mistakenly think I'm a racist, go to Haitian enclaves around Miami. Go in broad daylight and keep the doors locked. THIS IS VERY SIMPLE. I DO NOT WANT AMERICA TO BECOME A THIRD WORLD COUNTRY.)

Melugin with another fact-check: “So the narrative out there right now is that these horse-backed agents were whipping migrants & that is just blatantly false. First off, these agents don't have whips...[T]hey have what are called split reins...to control the horse.”
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"Local law enforcement out here are on-the-record describing this [migrant] camp as 'third-world-like conditions'" and "really hard to believe this is the United States of America."
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Around 4 am - Haitian migrants released into the U.S sleeping outside the Del Rio airport awaiting flights to Florida. Migrants did not tell us who paid the flights.
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.@TxDPS
says they are tracking intel indicating another group of Haitian migrants are currently trying to get to Reynosa, the Mexican city across from the US city of McAllen in the RGV. Intel is the migrants are encountering resistance in Mexican state of Tamaulipas.

*

According to
@TxDPS as of this AM there were 332 husband & wife combos where the wife is pregnant under the bridge in Del Rio.
6,728 family units
1,579 single males
493 single females
[Pregnant women should be the No. 1 priority for deportation to Haiti
so long as the idiocy of "birthright citizenship" is maintained.]
*

More details. The bus was headed from Del Rio to Brownsville. The migrants forced their way off the bus and fled. All were caught. Governor Abbott says they committed a crime and he wants them all jailed and prosecuted.
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At briefing with TX Governor Greg Abbott, the Border Patrol union informs him that [illegal] migrants on a transport bus being driven from Del Rio to the RGV [Rio Grande Valley] overtook the staff and fled from the bus. The bus was operated by a DHS contractor and had no law enforcement on it.
*

We’re told by folks at the airport that these flights are coming and going every hour or two and that they are taking the [illrga] migrants to other Border Patrol facilities for processing.
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We are at Del Rio airport where we witnessed dozens of migrants being loaded onto a U.S. Coast Guard aircraft to be flown out of Del Rio. Destination unknown. Group includes family units and kids along with single adults. Some men appeared to be cuffed or zip tied
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Back at the migrant camp under the international bridge in Del Rio this morning, where I’m told the population has dipped just below 10,000 people. Per federal sources, 1,772 migrants were processed in Del Rio sector in last 24 hrs, short of BP’s goal of 3k per day
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If anyone in the White House actually came down here and spoke to some migrants, they would realize these people have zero intention of leaving the US & every intention of trying to stay permanently. You don’t travel that far to spend a day or two in Del Rio & then leave.
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Of 3,300 migrants processed Sunday from the 15,000 group under the Del Rio bridge, 327 were deported to Haiti. That would suggest 90 percent remain indefinitely in the US with a “notice to appear” which we know isn’t worth the paper it’s written on
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Important fact-checking worth reiterating from
@MarthaMacCallum and @BillFOXLA Melugin about DHS, Title 42, and Covid. Here's the last one --
MacCallum: "And no Covid testing going on down there, right, Bill?
Melugin: "Nope. Nope. No vaccine mandates, no Covid testing."
*

"When [Jewish] Secretary Mayorkas said, once again, that the border is closed, I can tell you that is a tough pill for border agents to swallow. They talk to us off the record and they roll their eyes...This is the U.S. border right now. Take a look at it."
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A law enforcement source tells me 8,000 people part of family units will be processed by
@CBP then will continue the journey into the US— many go to live w/family. They will be given a notice to appear before a judge within 12-36 months — at their final destination.
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.
@pdoocy asks Jen Psaki if illegal immigrants are being asked for their proof of vaccination when they cross into the US. (They aren’t). She says it’s not comparable because they aren’t planning to stay long & are being expelled. Not always. Tens of thousands have been released [into the U.S.A.].
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“It’s like another world down here … the conditions here are absolutely horrible.” [for a pampered white boy like me, but not for the illegals whose only skill is working in sugar cane plantations.]
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Border Patrol calling in the cavalry, literally, at the international bridge here in Del Rio. Mounted units heading to the river’s edge to patrol for any more migrants trying to cross illegally. Yesterday, they forced several [illegal] migrants back into Mexico who tried to cross.
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Per source, single adult male illegal immigrants are being loaded onto a U.S. Coast Guard aircraft at Del Rio airport, likely for repatriation. Not all [illegal] migrants will be sent back. Many family units will be processed & released into US w/ a future court date.
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[U]nder the international bridge in Del Rio, TX this morning, where upwards of 12,000 migrants remain after crossing into the US illegally. Mostly Haitians and Africans. Port of Entry above us remains closed to legal migration.
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[Illegal] migrants under Del Rio’s International Bridge have started crossing back to Mexico to avoid deportation [back to Haiti].

2021-09-21 d
FEDERAL SUPPRESSION OF SCIENCE

BREAKING PART 1: Federal Govt @HHSgov Whistleblower Goes Public with Secret Recordings

‘Government Doesn’t Want to Show the [COVID] Vaccine is Full of Sh*t’

They ‘Shove’ Adverse Effect Reporting ‘Under the Mat' #CovidVaxExposed pic.twitter.com/zV93DLrq2W

— veritastips@protonmail.com🇺🇸 (@EricSpracklen) September 21, 2021


2021
-09-21 c
SCIENCE VERSUS SUPPRESSION OF SCIENCE

An appeal for an objective, open, and transparent scientific debate about the origin of SARS-CoV-2

Published:September 17, 2021 DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)02019-5

On July 5, 2021, a Correspondence was published in
The Lancet called “Science, not speculation, is essential to determine how SARS-CoV-2 reached humans.”. The letter recapitulates the arguments of an earlier letter (published in February, 2020) by the same authors, Which claimed overwhelming support for the hypothesis that the novel coronavirus causing the COVID-19 pandemic originated in wildlife. The authors associated any alternative view with conspiracy theories by stating: “We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin”. The statement has imparted a silencing effect on the wider scientific debate, including among science journalists. The 2021 letter did not repeat the proposition that scientists open to alternative hypotheses were conspiracy theorists, but did state: “We believe the strongest clue from new, credible, and peer-reviewed evidence in the scientific literature is that the virus evolved in nature, while suggestions of a laboratory leak source of the pandemic remain without scientifically validated evidence that directly supports it in peer-reviewed scientific journals”. In fact, this argument could literally be reversed. As will be shown below, there is no direct support for the natural origin of SARS-CoV-2, and a laboratory-related accident is plausible.

There is so far no scientifically validated evidence that directly supports a natural origin. Among the references cited in the two letters by Calisher and colleagues,
, all but one simply show that SARS-CoV-2 is phylogenetically related to other betacoronaviruses. The fact that the causative agent of COVID-19 descends from a natural virus is widely accepted, but this does not explain how it came to infect humans. The question of the proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2—ie, the final virus and host before passage to humans—was expressly addressed in only one highly cited opinion piece, which supports the natural origin hypothesis, but suffers from a logical fallacy: it opposes two hypotheses—laboratory engineering versus zoonosis—wrongly implying that there are no other possible scenarios. The article then provides arguments against the laboratory engineering hypothesis, which are not conclusive for the following reasons. First, it assumes that the optimisation of the receptor binding domain for human ACE2 requires prior knowledge of the adaptive mutations, whereas selection in cell culture or animal models would lead to the same effect. Second, the absence of traces of reverse-engineering systems does not preclude genome editing, which is performed with so-called seamless techniques., Finally, the absence of a previously known backbone is not a proof, since researchers can work for several years on viruses before publishing their full genome (this was the case for RaTG13, the closest known virus, which was collected in 2013 and published in 2020). Based on these indirect and questionable arguments, the authors conclude in favour of a natural proximal origin. In the last part of the article, they briefly evoke selection during passage (i.e, experiments aiming to test the capacity of a virus to infect cell cultures or model animals) and acknowledge the documented cases of laboratory escapes of SARS-CoV, but they dismiss this scenario, based on the argument that the strong similarity between receptor binding domains of SARS-CoV-2 and pangolins provides a more parsimonious explanation of the specific mutations. However, the pangolin hypothesis has since been abandoned,, so the whole reasoning should be re-evaluated.

Although considerable evidence supports the natural origins of other outbreaks (e.g, Nipah, MERS, and the 2002–04 SARS outbreak) direct evidence for a natural origin for SARS-CoV-2 is missing. After 19 months of investigations, the proximal progenitor of SARS-CoV-2 is still lacking. Neither the host pathway from bats to humans, nor the geographical route from Yunnan (where the viruses most closely related to SARS-CoV-2 have been sampled) to Wuhan (where the pandemic emerged [publicly]) have been identified. More than 80 000 samples collected from Chinese wildlife sites and animal farms all proved negative.
In addition, the international research community has no access to the sites, samples, or raw data. Although the Joint WHO-China Study concluded that the laboratory origin was “extremely unlikely”, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus declared that all hypotheses remained on the table including that of a laboratory leak.

A research-related origin is plausible. Two questions need to be addressed: virus evolution and introduction into the human population. Since July, 2020, several peer-reviewed scientific papers have discussed the likelihood of a research-related origin of the virus. Some unusual features of the SARS-CoV-2 genome sequence suggest that they may have resulted from genetic engineering,
an approach widely used in some virology labs. Alternatively, adaptation to humans might result from undirected laboratory selection during serial passage in cell cultures or laboratory animals,, including humanised mice. Mice genetically modified to display the human receptor for entry of SARS-CoV-2 (ACE2) were used in research projects funded before the pandemic, to test the infectivity of different virus strains. Laboratory research also includes more targeted approaches such as gain-of-function experiments relying on chimeric viruses to test their potential to cross species barriers.,

A research-related contamination could result from contact with a natural virus during field collection, transportation from the field to a laboratory,
characterisation of bats and bat viruses in a laboratory, or from a non-natural virus modified in a laboratory. There are well-documented cases of pathogen escapes from laboratories.,, , Field collection, field survey, and in-laboratory research on potential pandemic pathogens require high-safety protections and a strong and transparent safety culture. However, experiments on SARS-related coronaviruses are routinely performed at biosafety level 2,, which complies with the recommendations for viruses infecting non-human animals, but is inappropriate for experiments that might produce human-adapted viruses by effects of selection or oriented mutations.

Overwhelming evidence for either a zoonotic or research-related origin is lacking: the jury is still out. On the basis of the current scientific literature, complemented by our own analyses of coronavirus genomes and proteins,,, , , , we hold that there is currently no compelling evidence to choose between a natural origin (i.e, a virus that has evolved and been transmitted to humans solely via contact with wild or farmed animals) and a research-related origin (which might have occurred at sampling sites, during transportation or within the laboratory, and might have involved natural, selected, or engineered viruses).

An evidence-based, independent, and prejudice-free evaluation will require an international consultation of high-level experts with no conflicts of interest, from various disciplines and countries; the mandate will be to establish the different scenarios, and the associated hypotheses, and then to propose protocols, methods, and required data in order to elucidate the question of SARS-CoV-2's origin. Beyond this issue, it is important to continue debating about the risk–benefit balance of current practices of field and laboratory research, including gain-of-function experiments, as well as the human activities contributing to zoonotic events.

Scientific journals should open their columns to in-depth analyses of all hypotheses. As scientists, we need to evaluate all hypotheses on a rational basis, and to weigh their likelihood based on facts and evidence, devoid of speculation concerning possible political impacts. Contrary to the first letter published in The Lancet by Calisher and colleagues, we do not think that scientists should promote “unity” (“We support the call from the Director-General of WHO to promote scientific evidence and unity over misinformation and conjecture”). As shown above, research-related hypotheses are not misinformation and conjecture. More importantly, science embraces alternative hypotheses, contradictory arguments, verification, refutability, and controversy. Departing from this principle risks establishing dogmas, abandoning the essence of science, and, even worse, paving the way for conspiracy theories. Instead, the scientific community should bring this debate to a place where it belongs: the columns of scientific journals.,

JvH, CDB, ED, and JH contributed equally. They wrote the first version of the manuscript, integrated the other authors' modifications, and managed the interactions with the editors. All the other authors contributed to the writing of the manuscript and acknowledged the latest version. We declare no competing interests.(read more)

See also: Statement in support of the scientists, public health professionals, and medical professionals of China combatting COVID-19
This 19 Feb. 2020 letter by Daszak, Farrar, et al. in The Lancet, was a signal for scientists worldwide that only a natural origin hypothesis for the coronavirus was permissible. The conspirators wrote, “We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin.”

2021-09-21 b
SCIENCE POLITICIZED & CORRUPTED BY FOUCAULT & HIS ACOLYTES

How We Forgot Foucault

L
ate last year, British trade minister Liz Truss caused a stir with a speech that pinned the failures of the British education system on “postmodernist philosophy,” which, she said, “puts societal power structures and labels ahead of individuals and their endeavours.” Due to the influence of such views, she went on, students learn about racism and sexism rather than being taught to read and write, and are instilled with a relativistic denial of objective truth. The progenitor of this baleful worldview, Truss told her audience, was the French philosopher Michel Foucault.

Truss’s rant seemed to embarrass the UK’s Conservative government, which removed the transcript from its website. But it’s unclear why it was seen as so scandalous: it was merely a variant of a story told time and again in recent decades by conservatives and centrist liberals alike across the anglophone world. According to this narra­tive, a cluster of ideas originating in continental Europe, especially France, has invaded educational institutions and undermined the values of Western culture and the pursuit of objective scientific truth. Under the sway of this “postmodern” worldview, we are told, stu­dents learn to fault the West for the sins of racism, sexism, and colonialism, and to embrace both moral and epistemological relativism.

Foucault, who died in 1984, has often played the part of archvillain in such accounts. In the early phase of the culture wars in the 1980s and 1990s, he was well-suited for the role of corrupter of youth. Not only was he openly gay before gay rights gained mainstream acceptance, he seemed to endorse sadomasochism and other “limit experiences” as modes of personal liberation. During the period he spent teaching at UC Berkeley, Foucault frequented the bathhouses of San Francisco and did LSD in Death Valley. His death from AIDS at the height of the crisis offered a ready-made cautionary tale about his philosophical commitment to transgression. To his detractors, all this made him emblematic of the takeover of American universities by corrosive countercultural values and subversive foreign influences. (The recent allegation of pedophilia made by fellow intellectual Guy Sorman has revived this mode of polemic.)

But it is not only Foucault’s enthusiasm for sexual experimentation that has made him a bête noire for defenders of the traditional academy. His radically revisionist account of the nature of knowledge has been arguably more controversial. In his breakthrough 1966 book The Order of Things, Foucault proposed that historical periods oper­ate under distinct “epistemes” that set the conditions of possibility for what can be thought and known; thus, what each period takes to be real or true is an effect of the “regime of truth” it is operating under. This relativism was seen to undermine the possibility of objective truth and any notion of the progress of knowledge.

Perhaps Foucault’s most influential coinage is his related notion of “power-knowledge.” This must be distinguished from the better-known and less controversial dictum that “knowledge is power,” often attributed to Francis Bacon, which asserts that knowledge enables control of the world. For Foucault, in contrast, knowledge does not enable the exercise of power, but proceeds from it. This inversion comes about because power establishes the truth regimes that enable the production of knowledge. The resulting knowledge perpetuates and expands power—which produces more knowledge. In Foucault’s words, “‘Truth’ is linked in a circular relation with systems of power which produce and sustain it, and to effects of power which it induces and which extends it.”

From his 1963 book The Birth of the Clinic up to the final series of lectures he delivered in the early 1980s, Foucault’s work on the inseparability of power and knowledge laid particular emphasis on the political implications of biomedical science. “Biopower,” another influential coinage, was his term for the diffuse array of institutions that monitor, manage, and optimize the health of the population in advanced industrial societies. “Biopolitics” was his related term for the general involvement of the modern state in the biological life of its subjects, evident in its attention to matters like “the problems of birth rate, longevity, public health, housing, and migration” and the “ex­plosion of numerous and diverse techniques for achieving the sub­jugation of bodies and the control of populations.” The evolution of modern medicine, Foucault suggests, cannot be understood sep­arately from the political uses it has been put to.

For Foucault’s critics, the implication that there can exist no disinterested, apolitical pursuit of knowledge is scandalous. Conservatives, liberal defenders of science, and traditional humanists have all claimed that his work contributed to the politicization of universities in recent decades. Many on the right have regarded his arguments as offering a pretext for declining standards and the imposition of ideology in the classroom. Recently, critics of campus leftism includ­ing Jordan Peterson, James Lindsay, and Helen Pluckrose have revived these attacks. The idea that Foucault and other “post­modernists” viewed scientific objectivity as a myth that disguises structures of domination has even led some to trace right-wing science denial to their impact.

Follow the Science?

Foucault’s detractors are not wrong about the extent of his influence—even if they tend to mischaracterize it. Over the past fifty years, he has exercised a broader impact on the academic humanities and social sciences than almost any other thinker. By some measures, he is the most cited author across those fields. In late 2020, however, some began to observe that Foucault’s citations, as reported by Google Scholar, had dropped precipitously over the course of that year, even as the global pandemic and the unprecedented political responses it generated would seem to make his account of biopolitics more relevant than ever.

Given long academic publication timelines and the likely role of random fluctuation, we probably shouldn’t read too much into Fou­cault’s 2020 citation slump. Nevertheless, it is emblematic of a curious absence. Even though the elite university graduates who shape media narratives and policy discussions are highly likely to have encountered his ideas, his critical account of the politics of public health has had essentially no impact on debates around Covid-19 policy. The simplest explanation of this omission is that while he is largely embraced on the political left, his account of biopolitics is at odds with many views now prevalent on that side of the spectrum.

Even a perfunctory reading of Foucault should raise questions about the current veneration of scientific expertise and related de­mands to subordinate politics to science. Indeed, there could hardly be an outlook more opposed to Foucault’s mode of analysis than a politics premised on “believing in science.” From a Foucauldian perspective, such a fetishization of scientific knowledge entails a blindness to its inextricability from power. In his famous 1971 debate with Noam Chomsky, Foucault asserted that “[t]he real political task in a society such as ours is to criticize the working of institutions which appear to be both neutral and independent.” In other words, the same qualities that the average professional-class liberal today views as the virtues of scientific institutions are what Foucault claimed should lead us to be skeptical.

From the standpoint offered by his work, deferring to “science” for political decisions does not merely imply putting the best-informed individuals in charge. On the contrary, it means drastically reconfiguring the exercise of power. During the pandemic, the delega­tion of decisions to public health experts has entailed a dramatic expansion of state authority and abrogation of basic rights, most notably freedom of speech and assembly. A range of needs and values that might contravene the prevention of infection were sidelined at the behest of unelected health officials. None of this is to say there is no reasonable argument for such an approach. The problem is that this mode of politics is an attempt to circumvent reasoned argument altogether.

It was for this reason that Foucault saw a fundamental tension between the principles of democratic deliberation and the modern public health bureaucracy. This conflict becomes visible when the determinations of medical and scientific experts are presented as transcending politics, as has occurred in the past year. For the average citizen, the opaqueness of the relevant calculations, along with the identification of extraordinary risks, essentially forestalls the possibility of debate. Questioning the determinations of health experts is treated not as participation in a democratic decision-making process, but as tan­tamount to “literal murder.” This logic, as we have seen, can also provide a rationale for restrictions in other realms. Thus, vesting authority in ostensibly neutral institutions can enable a massive covert expansion of unaccountable power.

The irony of Foucault’s current status, therefore, is that the implications of his work are at odds with many of the views of the degree-holding professional class among whom his influence is puta­tively the strongest. Conversely, despite the widespread derision of Foucault that has long prevailed on the right, his skeptical perspective on the politics of expertise resonates with the attacks on liberal-dominated expert institutions and the propagandistic weaponization of “science” lately heard in conservative precincts. This unacknowledged realignment is newly evident in the Covid era. But even before last year, the peculiarities of Foucault’s U.S. reception obscured certain valences of his work that might have troubled many of his erstwhile admirers.

The guardians of respectable opinion indirectly revealed their discomfort with applying Foucault’s account of biopower to Covid politics early on in 2020, when the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben became embroiled in controversy for his criticisms of the harsh lockdowns imposed in his country. Agamben, who frames much of his work as an engagement with Foucault’s, described the Italian government’s lockdown and social distancing policies as the leading edge of a “techno-medical despotism” that overrides demo­cracy and rights in the name of security.

Two decades ago, Agamben raised similar concerns about the post‑9/11 security state and the War on Terror. The demand for security at all costs, he argued then, can become the pretext for the imposition of a “state of exception” in which laws and rights are indefinitely suspended. At the time, these arguments made him an intellectual hero for much of the Left. But when he argued last year that prioritizing the risk of the virus above all other concerns has similar effects, his former allies in the global progressive intelligentsia denounced his Covid interventions as dangerous and irresponsible. Instead, it fell to observers on the lockdown-skeptical political right, including R. R. Reno and Christopher Caldwell in the United States, to cite him favorably.

During the same period that conservatives were expressing appre­ciation for Agamben’s Foucault-inspired Covid critiques, the histo­rian Blake Smith made the case for an “unwoke Foucault” in a series of essays. Foucault, Smith suggests, has much to offer to critics of the current regime on both the right and the dissenting left. Smith notes that conservatives “are adding to their long-held distrust of the state a new suspicion about the power of managerial and therapeutic experts over everyday life.” In light of these concerns, he writes, “Foucault’s work [offers] theoretical support to conservative critiques of the ‘new class’ of experts”—ironically, again, the class among which Foucault has been most widely celebrated.

The Hegemony of Biopolitics

Foucault developed his critique of expertise at a moment when power was undergoing a profound shift across the West—a shift noted by commentators on both the left and the right. The mid-twentieth century witnessed the consolidation of what the Trotskyite-turned-conservative James Burnham called the “managerial elite”: an un­elected caste of experts who effectively govern advanced industrial societies from both the public and private sectors. While the grand ideals of democracy live on superficially in the mediatized theater of electoral politics, power becomes concentrated in undemocratic bureaucracies. On the left, the sociologist C. Wright Mills offered similar analyses shortly after Burnham. Foucault, when he charted the transformation of power from sovereign authority and formal hier­archy into diffuse localized operations overseen by credentialed technocrats, was also responding to these developments.

In his earliest books, History of Madness and The Birth of the Clinic, he traced these alternative sites of power back to their uneasy origins alongside the rise of the modern secular state. On one hand, the latter accorded universal rights to its subjects; on the other, new regimes of expertise carved out exceptions to these rights. Coercive intrusions into privacy and prolonged confinement, he showed, were legitimated by expert professionals in burgeoning fields like criminology and psychiatry. In societies that, in formal terms, were supposed to grant basic freedoms to all, madmen and delinquents could be deprived of their autonomy at the behest of these specialists. More­over, this constrictive regime of enclosed spaces revealed a logic that operated subtly across the society as a whole. This was the logic of what Foucault called “discipline.”

Disciplinary societies, which he saw as reaching their initial apogee in the nineteenth century, established formal rights through the legal system, but simultaneously disciplined their subjects by way of the “spaces of enclosure” they occupied at every stage of life: family, school, factory, army, and so on. The systematic surveillance and regulation of behavior imposed within these spaces constituted the “the other, dark side” of modern freedom. In Foucault’s words, “[t]he real, corporeal disciplines constituted the foundation of the formal, juridical liberties.” The expansion of de jure freedom, that is, was accompanied by a variety of new de facto institutional constraints.

Implicit in this analysis is a critique of any Whiggish narrative of historical progress that also eschews conservative nostalgia for the ancien régime. For example, Foucault’s histories of humanitarian reform efforts in criminal justice and psychiatric treatment reveal their consistency with expansive new apparatuses of surveillance and control. In the famous opening chapter of Discipline and Punish, published in 1975, he contrasts the brutal public torture and dismemberment of a regicide in 1757 with a timetable minutely regulating the daily lives of prisoners a century later. Each, he says, reveals a distinct “penal style.” In the first case, the exercise of power is rendered visible at the symbolic center of power; its locus is the body. In the second, it is hidden in marginal spaces, and its locus is the inner self. His point is not to offer a judgment about which system is preferable, but to reveal the evolving operations of power.

Foucault’s analysis of biopolitics, as outlined in The History of Sexuality and his late lectures, extends and modifies this approach. His definition of biopolitics proceeds from a contrast between the early modern and modern relations between the state and what Agamben would later term “bare” biological life. Foucault contrasts “the characteristic privileges of sovereign power” that were predominant in an earlier period—“the right to decide life and death”—with modern power, which reoriented itself around “the right of the social body to ensure, maintain, or develop its life.” The characteristic mani­festation of the older form of power was execution: the sovereign’s power was revealed in its prerogative of taking life. Modern bio­power, in contrast, “exerts a positive influence on life, that endeav­ors to administer, optimize, and multiply it, subjecting to precise controls and comprehensive regulations.”

Biopower, Foucault argues, works simultaneously at the level of the population and the individual. It closely tracks individual devel­opment and well-being through institutions including education and medicine; at the same time, sprawling new bureaucracies increasingly quantify, categorize, and manage populations on a large scale. On one hand, professions like psychiatry classify and treat individuals accord­ing to their conformity with or deviation from the norm. On the other hand, government officials increasingly view the health of the whole population as a set of variables to be observed, measured, and regulated. In the earlier era of “sovereign power,” in Foucault’s periodization, a state’s involvement with the biological life of its subjects was a forceful exception. With the rise of biopolitics, it becomes the rule.

This modern form of power, whose modus operandi is to “qualify, measure, appraise, and hierarchize, rather than display itself in its murderous splendor,” is essentially the domain of experts rather than brutal executioners. Not that executions or other murderous modes of state power vanish; the point, rather, is that these too are remade in the image of the new penal style. Here one might think of how the death penalty itself, where it persists, becomes another procedure technically administered by experts with the introduction of the electric chair and lethal injection; execution becomes one component in a series of intricate judicial processes, psychiatric evaluations, and periods of imprisonment. In Foucault’s words, under the sign of bio­politics, “the judicial institution is increasingly incorporated into a continuum of apparatuses (medical, administrative, and so on) whose functions are for the most part regulatory.”

The justification of the state’s power to put to death also shifts. Once the latter “gave itself the function of administering life,” the death penalty became “a limit, a scandal, and a contradiction.” This does not, again, mean that it vanished, but that it “could not be maintained except by invoking less the enormity of the crime itself than the monstrosity of the criminal, his incorrigibility, and the safe­guard of society. One had the right to kill those who represented a kind of biological danger to others.” Increasingly, the deliberate imposition of death was justified not as “eye for an eye” recompense, but in terms of power’s broader mandate to protect life.

This logic has surfaced in strange ways during the Covid pandemic, such as when a prominent reporter, previously employed by the New York Times, announced on Twitter that he “wanted to find an antimasker and beat them to death.” A more measured version of this sentiment appeared in op-eds declaring to those who refused to cover their faces that “you don’t have a right to kill me.” If, throughout 2020, the unmasked were construed as threats to biological existence, the same discourse is now emerging around vaccination. The notion of “vaccine passports” explicitly defines the unvaccinated as a danger to society, who can be excluded from a variety of spaces on this basis—a prospect many liberal observers appear to relish.

Such biopolitical imperatives were intuitive to many on both the left and right ends of the spectrum well before Covid appeared on the scene. Consider, in the former instance, the frequency with which the term “lives” appears in political slogans. In the past year, we have seen the simultaneous prominence of “Masks Save Lives” and “Black Lives Matter,” though the latter first gained prominence some years ago. But similar phrasing also emerged several years ago in relation to another issue when the “March for Our Lives” became a site of gun control advocacy.

The persistence of such language reveals that the most intense moral passions of today’s Democratic coalition are animated by the protection of what Agamben calls “bare life”—sheer biological exist­ence. Whatever commitment to some vision of the good life exceeds that, it has been far less central to political messaging. When it does appear, it also heavily involves the agencies charged with biopolitical management. Consider the frequent proposals, over the past year, to replace police with social workers. Such proposals follow the logic Foucault identifies in the emergence of biopower, in which the criminologist and the psychiatrist came to enjoy greater prominence than the executioner. The implication here is neutral as to the advisability of the proposal: it is simply to note that it does not abolish power, but alters its operations.

The Right, for its part, has long embraced biopolitical imperatives. Most obviously, consider the framing of the “pro-life” cause, whose messaging is framed similarly to that of the “lives”-based causes enumerated above. What the pro-life movement shares with the latter is that the emotional impetus of the cause is the protection of sheer biological life per se. The apparent contradictions this has generated, such as “pro-life” activists who have murdered abortion doctors, are resolved when we consider that the logic of protecting life is a pri­mary mode of legitimating violence on the part of the state as well. As Foucault notes, it has become the basis for war as well as the death penalty. “Life”/“lives” movements replicate this broader rationale of power.

It was also, of course, the political Right that propelled a set of developments around the War on Terror which, as Agamben has noted, anticipated much of the Covid era’s expansion of power. As with the pandemic, the concern for a particular risk to life became the basis for an expansion of unaccountable power, an introduction of new restrictions on daily life, and a new sensibility in which the perception of others as a constant sense of danger shapes behavior. In both instances, in Foucault’s words, “it was life more than the law that became the issue of political struggles, even if the latter were formulated through affirmations concerning rights.” Efforts to resist this power, he notes, have generally underlined the pervasiveness of biopolitical logic: “the forces that resisted relied for support on the very thing it invested, that is, on life and man as a living being.” To step outside of this framing, a political resistance must be willing to surrender life—yet amid the currently prevailing values, such a poli­tics would be seen as sheer madness.

The Conservative Foucault

The idea that Foucault’s work is not comfortably aligned with the political Left would not have been quite as surprising to his contemporaries. The anthropologist Paul Rabinow, who produced an Eng­lish-language anthology of Foucault’s work in 1984, noted that “one encounters great difficulty in trying to situate Foucault as an intellectual spokesman with a particular message to propound.” In this way, he stood out against the Parisian left intelligentsia, which remained predominantly Marxist well into the 1970s, and particularly from his older rival (and sometime collaborator) Jean-Paul Sartre, the role model of activist intellectuals worldwide. Indeed, Rabinow notes, “Foucault has been cast as a conservative by some, in the sense that he has consistently opposed much of modern French Marxism, ‘existing socialism,’ and those utopias and nightmares associated with this tradition”—in contrast to Sartre, who praised Stalin and Mao.

In an interview completed not long before Foucault’s death, Rab­inow notes the ambiguity of his politics: “[y]ou have been read as an idealist, as a nihilist, as a ‘new philosopher,’ an anti-Marxist, a new conservative, and so on.” He asks: “Where do you stand?” Foucault responds: “I think I have in fact been situated in most of the squares on the political checkerboard . . . : as anarchist, leftist, ostentatious or disguised Marxist, nihilist, explicit or secret anti-Marxist, technocrat in the service of Gaullism, new liberal, etc.” He goes on to comment that “[n]one of these descriptions is important by itself; taken together, on the other hand, they mean something. And I must admit that I rather like what they mean.” In other words, he was happy to project a political ambiguity that admirers and detractors alike seem to have forgotten.

His controversial support for the Iranian Revolution has often been treated by his critics as an instance of left-wing naïveté about Third World tyrannies, but the nature of his sympathy was less straightforward than this. As Blake Smith puts it, Foucault “hoped that by offering a substantive ethic rooted in a collective experience of the sacred, an Islamic political movement might be able to restrain the systems of domination and manipulation that comprise biopolitics.” Specifically, he admired the Islamic revolutionaries’ willingness to sacrifice themselves: he took their declaration that “we are prepared to die by the thousands” as a call to arms against biopower. What attracted him, then, was a discontinuity with prior modern revolutions, which he believed had merely pursued the trajectory of bio­political domination under a new guise. That is, the specifically reli­gious dimensions of the revolution represented a different sort of possibility than what early generations of intellectuals had hoped for in Marxist liberation struggles.

Foucault participated actively in social movements in France focused on the institutions he wrote about in his work on discipline and biopower: asylums and prisons. What connected his intellectual and practical activities in these areas was his interest in the concrete functioning of power, which he argued Marxists had too often ig­nored. In the essay “What Is Enlightenment?” he highlighted “the very specific transformations that have proved to be possible” in areas such as “the way in which we perceive insanity or illness,” in overt contrast to “the programs for a new man that the worst political systems have repeated throughout the twentieth century.” He also indicted leftist intellectuals for their “refusal to pose the problem of internment,” which he attributed to their loyalty to the Soviet bloc and need to excuse the gulag.

Far from initiating the politicization of scholarship, in many ways Foucault’s work marked a break with the traditions and habits of the engagé left-wing French intellectual establishment, as embodied notably in Sartre. Instead of positioning himself within a universal revolutionary struggle, in both his writing and his activism Foucault emphasized localized institutional realms and an attunement to the “micro-physics of power” implemented at that level. As he puts it in his famous discussion of power resistance in the first volume of the History of Sexuality, “there is no single locus of great Refusal, no soul of revolt, source of all rebellions, or pure law of the revolutionary. Instead there is a plurality of resistances, each of them a special case.”

Foucault was not a practitioner of “identity politics” of the current American variety—indeed, he forcefully rejected any notion of a homosexual identity—but he became a godfather to new identity-focused fields like queer theory that emerged in the 1980s and 1990s. Likewise, although the marginalized groups that most interested Fou­cault were prisoners and asylum inmates rather than more familiar categories, his ideas and approach would be widely adapted by schol­ars focused on race, gender, sexuality, and other modes of identity. On these grounds, erstwhile Marxist allies criticized Foucault for turning away from class politics and universalism and toward identity politics. In contrast to current detractors who accuse him of recasting all knowledge as a political ruse, they faulted him for depoliticizing scholarship.

To be sure, Foucault’s conception of power as a pervasive force distributed across society played a role in reshaping the dominant conception of politics in academia and beyond. In History of Sexuality, he writes that “[p]ower is everywhere; not because it em­braces everything, but because it comes from everywhere.” Moreover, “[r]elations of power are not in a position of exteriority with respect to other types of relationships (economic processes, knowledge rela­tionships, sexual relations), but are immanent in the latter.” Such claims played some role in the rise of a mode of analysis that vastly expands the range of what can be treated as political.

This emphasis has given rise to a style of academic research focused on exposing the hidden machinations of power in unexpected places. A version of this approach also thrives in popular cultural criticism, as when the Marvel Comics Universe is presented as a site for the contestation of power, or experimenting with sexual positions becomes a mode of political resistance. Academics and journalists alike present these seemingly minor interventions in discourse as strategies of radical subversion. After all, if “points of resistance are present everywhere in the power network,” even the most minor gestures can be valorized as politically significant.

Foucault’s approach might also seem to dovetail with the “inter­sectional” worldview, where convergent identity struggles take prece­dence over any universal political movement. Again, this sensibility has weathered as much criticism from Marxists as it now tends to attract from centrist liberals and conservatives. From an older Marxist perspective, the implications of Foucault’s work were conservative, because rather than aiming to constitute a broad revolutionary class, he emphasized marginal groups whose social force they regarded as insufficient to bring about any broader political transformation. This critique is quite distinct from the more common ones heard today, which lament the erosion of Enlightenment faith in objectivity and neutrality.

A Mythology for the Professional Class

Foucault’s critics have long viewed his account of power as a threat to the legitimacy of institutions, not least the universities in which his ideas circulate most widely. If knowledge is viewed as an instrument of political domination, the reasoning goes, the credibility of those who pursue it will become unsustainable. But a more plausible view is that the delegitimation of expertise is a response to factors far broader than the influence of a particular philosopher. Indeed, the reverse is probably true. An epistemology that links knowledge instrumentally to power is likely to be appealing amid the decline of what Foucault’s contemporary Jean-François Lyotard called “grand narratives”: the legitimating stories that ennoble the pursuit of knowledge as a means of civilizational progress towards truth or the preservation of a common culture.

In the same period in which the lofty ideals of liberal education gave way to the nebulous raison d’être of the corporate university, the Foucauldian analysis of power has made many careers. It has also furnished a means of mythologizing professional activity as a mode of radical politics. Academic advancement strategies can be understood as modes of political contestation: peer-reviewed articles and confer­ence papers as nodes of resistance, tenure committees as sites of nascent radical struggle, and so on. In this sense, Foucault’s influence did not undermine institutions so much as offer a new rationale for savvy operators within them. As sociologist Daniel Zamora remarks, Foucault “offers a comfortable position that allows a certain degree of subversion to be introduced without detracting from the codes of the academy.”

Zamora has written extensively about an underexamined aspect of Foucault’s later work: his surprising affinities with Anglo-American neoliberalism, evident in particular in his lectures on the Birth of Biopolitics. According to Zamora, Foucault “saw in neoliberalism a ‘much less bureaucratic’ and ‘much less disciplinarian’ form of politics than that offered by the postwar welfare state.” Scholars other than Zamora have likewise acknowledged an “affinity between aspects of Foucault’s late account of subjectivity and the neoliberal account of subjectivity” derived from Chicago-school economics. This observation offers a new way of understanding Foucault’s emergence as “official philosopher” in humanities and social science departments alongside the general restructuring of the university system around market incentives.

In a sense, Foucault’s discussion of power and resistance in the History of Sexuality anticipated the professionalized and commoditized political radicalism of many of his followers. He wrote there that “resistance is never in a position of exteriority in relation to power.” In other words, resistance can “play the role of adversary, target, support, or handle in power relations.” It can, that is, serve just as much to broaden the range of operations of power as it can to oppose that expansion. An example central to the History of Sexuality is the way that the apparent liberation of sex from Victorian constraints in the twentieth century was closely linked to an ever-greater monitoring and medicalization of sexuality by medical and psychiatric authorities.

This outlook is consistent with a certain mood of resignation that shades into cynicism. And this cynicism is appropriate to an academic sphere that is at once rhetorically subversive and institutionally con­servative. If all subversive energies ultimately feed into domination, it is unsurprising that the humanities and social sciences have become a space where overt ideological fervor coexists comfortably with covert careerist hypercompetitiveness, bourgeois professionalism, and the reproduction of elites. But for this reason, the Foucauldian account of transgression as a stratagem of power, like his critique of institutions, can only be taken so far. Such radicalism, rather than challenging the university, merely offers a new pretext for its power.

The implication here is that Foucault became the intellectual patron saint of the contemporary academy because his work captured fundamental truths about how the latter institution functions. It of­fered a form of immanent self-critique as well as a kind of modus operandi for functioning within the neoliberal university. But those whose livelihoods depend entirely on the power of such institutions will be unlikely to apply his work in a way that calls that power into question. Acceptance of the localized domain of struggle leaves the totality unquestioned. But critics of this mode of power may find a different sort of value in some aspects of his work.

Remembering Foucault

In 1977, the philosopher Jean Baudrillard exhorted the public to Forget Foucault in a polemic published under that title. Judging by his far larger impact in academia in subsequent decades, Foucault seemed to get the better of his rival. Nevertheless, his almost total absence from public debates around the Covid pandemic, and the political responses to it, suggests that, in spite of his massive influence, we did forget Foucault—or at least the parts of his work most challenging to our guiding political assumptions. The Left, which has spent decades poring over his oeuvre in its academic redoubts, has in the past year largely acquiesced to a dictatorship of expertise that might as well be using the Foucauldian account of biopower as an instruction manual. Its abandonment of the tools of critique offered by his work has been sudden and almost total.

Foucault’s politically orphaned status also proceeds in part from a cluster of misapprehensions regarding so-called postmodernism, an umbrella term for many of the themes under discussion: the disappearance of the historical grand narratives of progress offered by liberalism and Marxism, the fragmentation of politics and knowledge alongside the delegitimation of institutions. Postmodernism’s critics often blame the ideas that fall under that heading for the evolution of values away from universal values and the disinterested pursuit of knowledge. At its most interesting, however, the body of thought classified as “postmodernism” helps characterize transformations that were underway by the time its epigones were writing.

Foucault’s detractors, whether conservative, centrist, or Marxist, converge in their repudiation of what they see as the consequences of his ideas: a rejection of objectivity and neutrality, a valuing of subversion and transgression, and a fetishization of social marginality. But in reality, he was a late arrival to this project of counter-modern transvaluation. The philosophical lineage he is part of extends all the way back to the beginning of the modern era, and passes through figures including the Marquis de Sade in the eighteenth century, Friedrich Nietzsche in the nineteenth, and Martin Heidegger in the twentieth. To attribute any of these tendencies to a single thinker’s influence is to ignore the fact that they are built into the operating system of modernity.

Foucault’s more original contributions lie in his anchoring of a philosophical account of the relationship between truth and power in a historical analysis of specific modern institutions. His wide-ranging impact, I have argued here, owes something to his insights into the ascendancy of the same professional class of credentialed experts amongst whom his theories have achieved the most traction. But the dimensions of his ideas that might offer a means of criticizing the guiding assumptions of that class have generally remained unexplored, lest they prove too potent. Right-wing critique of liberal institutions, suspicious as it is of a figure who appears to be a guiding light for the enemy side, remains unlikely to find value in his cri­tiques. They may, however, have a renewed utility for the politically heterodox across the spectrum, especially insofar as his critiques of institutions expose the limits of our dominant modes of politics. (read more)

2021-09-21 a
WHICH SCIENTIFIC METHOD DO YOU TRUST?

Real Science or Postmodern "Science"

Real Science or Postmodern
                          "Science"

2021-09-20 f
BIG LOSER
(Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona (
owned and controlled by George Soros) has much to lose from the forensic audit.)


The failed leadership and agenda based politics have not promoted transparency, they have only deteriorated the democratic process. Leadership means doing what is right even when it is difficult. This compromise does not represent a healthy outcome (1/2)

— Paul Penzone (@Penzone4sheriff) September 17, 2021


*

It sets a precedent that will cause us to pay dearly due to political agendas and a lack of courage and conviction by a few. (2/2)

— Paul Penzone (@Penzone4sheriff) September 17, 2021

*
Replying to @Penzone4sheriff
Aren’t you glad that the audit finally has access to the data on the routers? I bet you are sooo stoked!

Joe Hardy (@hardie_joseph) September 18, 2021
*

Replying to @Penzone4sheriff
What you afraid of? Grow a set

DeanCompass (@DeanCompass) September 18, 2021
*

Replying to @Penzone4sheriff
Did Soros text you that this morning included on his to-do list for you today?

BigLifter99 (@BLifter99) September 18, 2021
*

Replying to @Penzone4sheriff
When the DNC sent 100+lawyers to fight the audit I knew there was fraud

Jason (@Jason54056278)
September 18, 2021

*

Replying to @Penzone4sheriff
Soros is disappointed in you sellout

Eric Thompson (ET) (@ETTalkShow) September 18, 2021


2021-09-20 e
BIG DROP

Dow heads for worst day in 10 months as debt woes for China’s Evergrande rattles stock market

Dow plunges over 903 points as debt woes for China’s Evergrande rattle stocks

U.S. stocks tumbled Monday afternoon, as investors parsed the potential impact of the collapse of a debt-laden property developer in China and traders positioned ahead of a two-day meeting of Federal Reserve policy makers that begins Tuesday.

On
Friday, the Dow logged its third straight weekly decline, losing 0.1% and booking its longest weekly losing streak since the four weeks ending Sept. 25, 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The S&P 500 fell 0.6% in a second straight week of losses, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.5%, also booking two straight weekly falls, according to FactSet.

What’s driving the market?

Is this the correction that some strategists have anticipated?

A downturn in China’s property market, which suffered heavy losses Monday with shares of China Evergrande 3333, -10.24% falling 13% in Hong Kong, were blamed for dragging down U.S. and global equities.

Markets were closed in mainland China for a holiday, but the Hang Seng HSI, -3.30% dropped over 3%. (read more)

2021-09-20 d
BIG BALLS III

Elon Musk mocks Biden after SpaceX completes first all-civilian flight

Elon Musk took a swipe at President Biden after the commander-in-chief failed to acknowledge SpaceX’s
completion of its first all-civilian mission, in which four amateur astronauts orbited Earth for three days.

One of Musk’s 60 million Twitter followers pointed out that the White House and Biden had yet to comment on the mission, which successfully returned to Earth Saturday evening.

“The President of the United States has refused to even acknowledge the 4 newest American astronauts who helped raise hundreds of millions of dollars for St. Jude,” user @rhensing wrote. “What’s your theory on why that is?”

“He’s still sleeping,” Musk responded Sunday afternoon.

As of Monday morning, the White House had yet to comment on the mission, dubbed “Inspiration4,” which marks the first time an all-civilian crew has ever made it to Earth’s orbit. (read more)

2021-09-20 c
BIG BALLS II

11 of 15 NYC restaurants not enforcing vaccine mandate

Most of the 15 Manhattan restaurants visited by undercover sleuths this week were not enforcing Mayor Bill de Blasio’s city-wide
COVID-19 vaccine mandate for people dining inside, according to a new investigation.

Only four of the 15 restaurants asked reporters for ID along with proof of vaccination before seating them inside, according to a segment from Inside Edition.

At an Upper East Side location of the BurgerFi chain, the restaurant let a producer for the show order and eat inside without showing proof of vaccination — even though the eatery had small signs at each table that read “show me your vax.”

When confronted the following day about the lax enforcement, a manager of the store said, “I’m shocked right now, not gonna lie. I’m shocked because I know that I’ve definitely been asking everyone.”

BurgerFi is now investigating the matter, a representative for the company told The Post.

“After learning about the incident, we immediately began an investigation, and will continue to work with all BurgerFi locations to ensure all proper steps are taken to abide by vaccination dining regulations and policies appropriate to each restaurant location,” the spokesperson said.

Hummus Kitchen, an Upper East Side Mediterranean restaurant, also didn’t ask to see proof of vaccination and matching ID when visited by an Inside Edition producer.

Among the four restaurants that did cooperate with the order was SoHo’s Mercer Kitchen, where a hostess asked to see a vaccine card at the door.

“Unfortunately, if we don’t have proof, we can’t seat you inside. It’s New York law,” the hostess said. [Editor's Note: A dictatorial "mandate" from a mayor is not a "law."]

The city’s vaccine mandate, dubbed the “Key to NYC,” went into effect last month, requiring New Yorkers who want to dine inside restaurants, work out at a gym or attend an indoor concert to show proof they’ve gotten at least one of their shots.

After a roughly one-month grace period, enforcement of the order on businesses went into effect on Sept. 13.

So far, the city has conducted about 5,500 total inspections and issued about 2,200 warnings, according to data from City Hall.

Authorities are continuing to be lax about enforcement, doling out warnings rather than monetary fines, as businesses continue to adjust to the requirement, a city hall official said. (read more)

2021-09-20 b
BIG BALLS I

The Saga of the Swollen Testicles

Whether or not Nicki Minaj said that her cousin (Mr. Daniel, or a friend of his) in Trinidad and Tobago had swollen testicles after getting the spike protein mRNA gene therapy shot, it is true that testicular pain/swelling has been reported 799 times on the federal vaccine injury website so far this year.

big balls
(image source)

VAERS COVID Vaccine
Reproductive Health Related Reports

Through September 10, 2021

big balls

See also:

See also:

Miss Minaj is exposing how the media operates pic.twitter.com/YjPZni2gUf

— Dr. Benjamin Braddock (@GraduatedBen) September 17, 2021


2021-09-20 a

“The state never intentionally confronts a man’s sense, intellectual or moral, but only his body, his senses. It is not armed with superior wit or honesty, but with superior physical strength. I was not born to be forced. I will breathe after my own fashion. Let us see who is the strongest.”

― Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience


2021
-09-19 l
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION XII
(Pregnant Thoughts - VAERS reports 1.862 miscarriages so far this year after spike protein mRNA gene therapy shots a.k.a. Covid "vaccination.")


NEJM published a correction... they now admit that there is no evidence that the vaccines are safe for pregnant women. Whoops. Took them months to respond to our group. Look for the "1" at the VERY top of the page.

nejm.org

Steve Kirsch (@stkirsch) September 16, 2021

*

How can Joe Biden, in good conscience, force pregnant women to take a vaccine that hasn’t even received emergency use authorization for children ages 0-11 ?

Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) September 19, 2021


2021
-09-19 k
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION XI
(AOCs Hideous Met Gala Dress)


*

2021-09-19 j
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION X
(Glenn Gets It)


A huge number of liberals absolutely believe non-liberals are stupid, primitive, ignorant, inferior and amoral troglodytes, and most COVID discourse has far more to do what that bigotry -- and the glee they get in overriding their will -- than it does anything resembling Science.

Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) September 9, 2021

*

Huge majorities of Democrats -- huge -- favor not only having Big Tech monopolies censor the internet more, but also favor *having the government* do the censoring.

The dominant political faction in Washington is completely authoritarian.

pewresearch.org/

Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) September 19, 2021


2021-09-19 i
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION IX
(I'm proud to admit my social credit score would be a negative number.)

The Agenda

2021-09-19 h
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION VIII
The Current State of the Covid-Con in Four Acts

Act 1 - Bedwetting sissies on an American Airlines flight are terrified of an asthmatic two-year-old boy who couldn't wear a mask during an asthma attack.

The Good Nazis in Our MIdst
(The "Good Nazi" passengers on that Amerikan Airlines flight after landing in Colorado.)
*

A mother has alleged that an American Airlines flight attendant kicked her and her son off of a flight because the two-year-old could not wear a mask properly during an asthma attack.

Story upcoming at @NationalFile pic.twitter.com/4OajeHrMAz

— Jack Hadfield 👍(@JackHadders) September 14, 2021

*

I’d like to say that not ONE person stood up for this mom on the plane.
I can’t even comprehend seeing an injustice and just sitting quietly.

This doesn’t end unless we all start standing up against TYRANTS.

STAND UP. SPEAK UP. FIGHT BACK.

— Tiger Lily (@yogarespecter) September 14, 2021

*

That’s not enough for me. I’m sure the Biden administration is pleased with your abuse of power but this family will see justice.

— Tiger Lily (@yogarespecter) September 14, 2021

*

See also: https://nationalfile.com/american-airlines-turns-plane-around-kicks-two-year-old-off-flight-for-not-wearing-mask-during-asthma-attack/

Act 2 - Spin-Psaki asks Nicki Minaj to come to White House for "re-education" on non-vaccine "vaccines." Watch TikTok video at this link:


The official narrative is crumbling more and more on a daily basis.

₵Ø₦₮ⱤØⱠ₳_VłⱤɄ₴ (@Controla_Virus7) September 18, 2021


Act 3 - Two brutal, asshole cops in Australia knock down a 74-year-old woman and each one pepper sprays her face. This image has NOT been approved by the Australian Tourism Agency.

Viral Victory in Victoria
*

If there’s one picture that could depict Australia.. it’s these two police officers double pepper spraying a 74 year old lady after violently throwing her to the ground.

Pelham (@Resist_05) Septemer 18, 2021


Act 4 - Conniving doctors in North Carolina discuss on Zoom how to scare patients with lies.

SHOCK VIDEO: Senior doctors and a marketing director in North Carolina discussed inflating COVID-19 numbers by counting recovered patients as active COVID patients.

"We need to be... more scary to the public... If you don't get vaccinated, you know you're going to die." pic.twitter.com/66CcIsVR4B

— National File (@NationalFile) September 10, 2021

2021
-09-19 g
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION VII

Alleged Federal Agents at the DC Political Prisoner Rally Yesterday

They stand out like crossdressers crashing a Lutheran potluck.

federales playing MAGA

2021-09-19 f
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION VI
(Arizona Audit)

HUGE win for the Az Senate today! Maricopa settlement gives us all the data needed to complete the review of the routers & splunk log to the most comprehensive election audit in history. We got everything we need and more. Maricopa County goes home with its tail between its legs

— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) September 18, 2021

*
Huge win for senate  we get everything and we don’t pay for the machines that never should have been bought

— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) September 17, 2021

*

The senate has access to everything including the routers

— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) September 17, 2021
*

HUGE win for the Az Senate today! Maricopa settlement gives us all the data needed to complete the review of the routers & splunk log to the most comprehensive election audit in history.  We got everything we need including the routers and more

— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) September 17, 2021

*

Summary: We won. They dropped their $2.8 meaningless claim for the machine replacement. We get the routers and spunk logs. Cyber Ninjas has full access. Maricopa caved.

— Wendy Rogers (@WendyRogersAZ) September 18, 2021

*

AUDIT AND CANVASS EVERY ELECTION FOREVER IN ALL 50 STATES

— Wendy Rogers (@WendyRogersAZ) September 18, 2021

*

ALL CRIMINAL ACTIVITY WILL BE REFERRED TO THE AZ ATTORNEY GENERAL

— Wendy Rogers (@WendyRogersAZ) September 18, 2021

*

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Maricopa County agrees to settle with Arizona State Senate#AZSenate @FannKfann pic.twitter.com/QNW1QAaUbw

— AZSenateRepublicans (@AZSenateGOP) September 18, 2021

*

Update: Settlement reached.

The county will work through a special master to answer questions from the Arizona Senate about its routers and Splunk logs.

The county will also drop its complaint asking the Senate for $2.8M to replace its voting machines.

— Jen Fifield (@JenAFifield) September 18, 2021


2021-09-19 e
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION V
(You still have a choice.)

[...] this [covid tyranny] only works because we comply. so stop.

be peaceful but implacable. your right to say “no” and to self determination is fundamental. “because i don’t want to” is always a good enough reason.

we cannot all quit our jobs and take to the streets. but there is quite a lot we CAN all do.

  1. do not patronize businesses that force restrictions on you and that support the mandates

  2. support the business that stand with you. stand with them.

  3. encourage other businesses and other friends to do so.

  4. starve the beast and support those who do.

  5. pressure the schools. support school choice. take back education.

  6. oppose regulations and health codes. this is how they control private businesses.

  7. stand with the doctors who speak out against this at risk to their careers and positions.

  8. disobey. go reclaim normal, not “new normal.” normal. unjust laws are no laws at all

  9. and most of all, LET GO OF THE FEAR. fear is the vilification

erode this from within by denying it support. make your own way. freely.

the creation of parallel structures away from the authoritarians is not just your right, but a moral imperative.

and you do NOT wanna see where the other road leads…(source)

2021-09-19 d
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION IV

When governments condescendingly treat us like provincial inadequates or ill-bred peasants who would struggle to pour piss out of a boot after a night of carousing, are their "paternalistic" actions deliberate or accidental? Could we infer their agenda or intentions from their actions or inactions?

[...] But just because this eccentric little homage to human conditioning is the accidental side-effect of a poorly designed initiative, it doesn’t necessarily follow that we should immediately dismiss it as meaningless or politically insignificant. Too often in life, we demarcate the deliberate from the accidental on the basis of intentionality. Deliberate acts, we say to ourselves, must mean something, must knowingly have been undertaken and must therefore reveal something of a person’s intentions. Accidents, on the other hand, we determine to be meaningless simply because they weren’t performed intentionally: “I’m sorry,” as the exculpatory saying so beloved of all recently exposed philanderers has it. “I didn’t mean to hurt you.” But what if meaningful phenomena sometimes leaked out unknowingly when people caused accidents? What if slip-ups, stumbles, mispronunciations, repeated patterns of odd behaviour (etc.) could reveal someone’s intentions, motivations or desires without that person ever realising that that was the case?

Certainly that well-known white supremacist, Sigmund Freud, believed that these apparently trivial moments – what he referred to as ‘parapraxes’ but that we know simply as ‘Freudian slips’ – had the power to reveal the unconscious; those deepest, darkest, most powerful ideas that prey on a person’s mind, influencing their actions and their lives. Freud’s claim was that a person’s superego, normally so capable of repression, sometimes flickered momentarily, like a current switched off and on; and in those moments our actions would often betray us: grief still too raw to be processed after half a century, caught in the slip of a tongue; libidinal attachments to a particular prohibition, petrified in the repeated and apparently accidental mispronunciation of a word; or sadistic impulses embedded within a predictive computer model that consistently over-exaggerates epidemiological risk.

That’s not to say that all accidents constitute parapraxes. Naturally, there are events that are accidental in the original meaning of that word and are brought about by chance or fate. Where a government rarely if ever ends up salving one crisis by generating another, for instance, we may feel confident in describing those rare instances as “accidents”. But where that same government repeatedly responds to crises with initiatives that cannot help but generate other crises, we are perhaps entitled to consider whether something a little more parapraxis-like than chance might lie at the root of the problem… (read more)

2021-09-19 c
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION III
(How do they lie to us? Let us count the ways.)

why "vaccinated covid deaths/hospitalizations" are being counted incorrectly

and how to do it properly

by el gato malo

[...] now let’s lay out some salients:

vaccines seem to provide efficacy against severe covid and death. but they do not provide efficacy against “cases” or even “symptomatic cases” and look to actually have negative VE in that regard. (analysis HERE) so we can dispense with the “social duty” claims. these never held water medically or ethically.

this is about you and making the choice that best ensures your personal safety.

and to do that, you need to know the real vaccine efficacy INCLUDING the “run across the field.”

this has been deliberately swept under the rug and manipulated.

vaccine companies, countries, and health agencies reporting “vaccine efficacy” are using definitions like “14 days after the second dose” for vaccinated. and they are calling all people who have had at least one dose but not reached the 14 day post d2 mark (sometimes 7 days) as “unvaccinated.” and this turns out to be a truly nasty sleight of hand that seriously affects the data.

the vaccine companies palmed a bad card, took it out of their hand, and put it in yours.

and they absolutely knew this. these definitions were not picked out of a hat or based on some other convention. they were tailor made by big pharma (who know a thing or twelve about manipulating results and trial design/definitions) to make the vaccines look more effective and to hide a glaring fact:

for the 2 weeks after you get your first covid jab, your risk of contracting covid goes up sharply. the VE is strongly negative. this means that there IS a field that you need to run across and that vaccination campaigns can act as pandemic accelerants.

(examples HERE and HERE)

we’ve looked at this VE data before:

in this STUDY the danes found dramatic increases in infection rates post vaccination. “adjusted VE” is the risk adjusted vaccine efficacy. it was -40% for nursing home residents and -104% for health care workers in those homes. it more than doubled their risk. (it’s to be expected that the younger, healthier HCW’s would see more drop vs the NH residents in the event of immuno-suppression as they had more effective immune systems to suppress. we see the same reflected in peak VE of 90% for HCW vs 64% in residents)

note that this is all in the 14 days post dose 1. VE ramped up over time, but those first two weeks were a serious risk accelerant. 40-100% rise in risk is no joke.

[...] does this seems like a fair accounting of risk and efficacy to you?

because to me, it looks like not only hiding the risk needed to get the reward, but actually inflating the reported risk of not pursuing the reward in the first place.

they are not only hiding the heightened risk of covid to the newly vaccinated, but they are taking the bad outcomes from that increased risk and blaming it on lack of vaccination.

you might as well blame drowning on the way to the other end of the pool on “not swimming” because you never got across.

this is not a reasonable definition and if public health agencies wish to be taken seriously, they need to stop trying to pass this off as a valid risk reward analysis. it’s clearly not.

the FDA absolutely should have known better. this trial design and headline reporting should never have been approved.

to really assess VE, you need to look at ALL bad outcomes form the commencement of vaccination and accrued them to the vaccinated. this includes the heightened risk of covid. (read more)

2021-09-19 b
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION II

The Ethical Bankruptcy of Vaccinating 12-15 Year-Olds Against SARS-CoV-2
 
16 September 2021
by George Santayana

The Declaration of Geneva of the World Medical Association binds the physician with the words, “The health of my patient will be my first consideration,” and the International Code of Medical Ethics declares that, “A physician shall act in the patient’s best interest when providing medical care.”
– From the General Principles in the Declaration of Helsinki.

[...] When it comes to the vaccine-induced safety risks, such as myocarditis, we do not have enough data to adequately assess what they mean for this vulnerable group and, as a result, we do not know how to satisfactorily manage them. This was the point the JCVI was making when raising concerns about the long-term risks. I must also emphasise again; children are not small adults and for 12-15 year-olds with hormones racing and puberty in full swing we cannot necessarily transfer any knowledge or assessment of risks from the adult population to this group. It may be that the risks are short-term, manageable, and acceptable and so the balance of benefit/risk is okay… but the fact is we simply do not know, and finding out by immunising 100,000s of children in uncontrolled circumstances is no way to discover the truth. One cannot ignore these risks just because “they are very rare”, especially when the significant benefits may also be “very rare”.

This is a clear case of where the precautionary principle should be applied and where we should assume the worse outcomes and manage the situation accordingly. Here, we’d assume there will be long-term issues associated with vaccine-induced myocarditis, put in place a routine monitoring plan for those who have already suffered this adverse event to ensure they remain healthy and detect any issues as soon as we can, and not vaccinate anyone else in this group until we understand what, if any, long-term issues there may be. It is ironic to me that the precautionary principle has been wielded by the Government and their advisors to justify a whole host of unproven interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic (think masks, think lockdown), but it appears that when it gets in the way of a desired policy implementation it is something that can just be forgotten. As Groucho Marx once said: “Those are my principles, and if you don’t like them… well, I have others.” (read more)

2021-09-19 a
THE STATE OF THE DISUNION I

Governor Abbott Statement On Biden Administration Refusal To Close Ports Of Entry

September 16, 2021 | Austin, Texas | Press Release

Governor Greg Abbott today issued a statement after the Biden Administration reversed their decision to close ports of entry after a massive influx of migrants arrived at the Texas border:
 
"Six hours after U.S. Customs and Border Protection requested help from Texas to close ports of entry and secure the border, the Biden Administration has now flip-flopped to a different strategy that abandons border security and instead makes it easier for people to cross illegally and for cartels to exploit the border. The Biden Administration is in complete disarray and is handling the border crisis as badly as the evacuation from Afghanistan. I have directed the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Texas National Guard to maintain their presence at and around ports of entry to deter crossings." (read more)

2021
-09-18 c
BECAUSE THE ILLEGITIMATE BIDEN REGIME WOULD NOT, TEXAS STATE TROOPERS (DPS) HAVE STOPPED HAITIAN INVADERS

Rio Grande dam, Del Rio, Texas

An unspeakably foul entity has coordinated and financed flights to Mexico from Haiti and elsewhere in the Americas for at least 15,000 Haitians. All have then been bused from the interior of Mexico to the Texas border. This is a multi-million dollar operation.

This is something George Soros would do. He hates America and has been undermining America for decades. Importing thousands from Haiti, a failed state, is something he would do. You can be certain that the CIA and NSA and DIA know exactly who is behind this.

The U.S. already has a huge, multi-generational underclass of welfare parasites; many of them foreign-born.

America cannot afford any more no-skill or low-skill people from Third World failed states.

Taxpayers cannot afford the burden of subsidizing more welfare parasites.
.
And, Americans do not want their country turned into a Third World failed state.

*
Replying to @BillFOXLA  and @FoxNews
Good hopefully the storm wipes them away

— Jonnyknight765 (@jonnyknight765) September 18, 2021
*
Replying to @BillFOXLA  and @FoxNews
They are gonna love just sitting out in the open under a storm. Texas ain't Haiti...

—  kimmitx #MAGA#USA#Americafirst#Resist# (@kimmiintx) September 18, 2021
*
(Look at video of many inter-city motor coaches arriving in Ciudad Acuña. Is George Soros financing this invasion from Haiti?)

#Breaking: Busloads of migrants just arrived to Acuña and more en route.@RealDrGina @BenBergquam @AgueroForTexas @Oscarelblue @charlottecuthbo @BillFOXLA

— Auden B. Cabello (@CabelloAuden) September 17, 2021

*
Replying to @BillFOXLA  and @FoxNews
ask them who paid for their flights...

— Antoine (@forgot2tellu) September 18, 2021


*
Replying to @BillFOXLA and @FoxNews
Look at all that garbage.  I guess in addition to not being required to have
COVID vaccines, they also don't have to obey littering laws.

— mitzi snowden (@mitzisnowden) September 18, 2021

*
Who’s providing the funds for them to travel well fed, arriving fat and with fancy cell phones in hand? New crop of Demonrat voters sneaking in on our dollar!

— Swamp Fox (@pantog) September 18, 2021
*
It undermines the power of the vote (& communities) to purposely import people to dilute the vote. That is not democracy, that is an elite using a mob to gain & maintain power. Yes, it will bring democrats victory but also bring troubles in the future.

— Leftists-Tumors to World (@wang1333) September 18, 2021

*
UPDATE: Situation at Del Río appears to be “under control”. Migrants have been cleared from the dam.  @BillFOXLA @BenBergquam @RealDrGina

— Auden B. Cabello (@CabelloAuden) September 18, 2021
*
UPDATE: It appears Texas DPS has been able to put a stop to the flow of migrants crossing the Rio Grande into Del Rio, at least for now.

— Bill Melugin (@BillFOXLA) September 18, 2021

*
Because they are not walking on that dam doesn’t mean it’s under control. They are still there, over 18,000 now and more on the way!

— Donna Kelley (@Appasi) September 18, 2021


2021-09-18 b
PAGAN FOLLOWERS OF VOODOO AND SANTERIA ARE MASSING UNDER BRIDGE in a floodplain known for summer flash floods - Update: At 3:20 PM Eastern Daylight Time, an arc of strong thunderstorms is moving southwestward toward Del Rio, Texas.
(What unspeakably foul entity has coordinated and financed the travels of so many devil worshipers to the Texas border?)

Pray for rain.
*

Law enforcement sources say there are up to 10,000 more migrants en route to cross illegally into Del Rio. They have been walking across a dam in the Rio Grande all morning long, and they then walk to the international bridge where they are congregating underneath. @FoxNews pic.twitter.com/xzAcyglRLB

— Bill Melugin (@BillFOXLA) September 17, 2021

*

More migrants are arriving here in Del Rio, TX after crossing a dam in the Rio Grande and entering the United States illegally. There are now at least 10,500 migrants underneath the international bridge, with more coming by the hour. Intel is up to 10,000 more coming. @FoxNews pic.twitter.com/0qjvq8Uqa7

— Bill Melugin (@BillFOXLA) September 17, 2021

*

AMAZING — Since the Biden administration has kicked @BillFoxLA and his team out from flying Fox News's drones along the U.S./Mexico border in Del Rio, TX, *local* law enforcement decided to get him a helicopter to hop in and go check things out to continue reporting. pic.twitter.com/pZ54my6E7o

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 17, 2021

*

.@BillFoxLA: It certainly does not look like an international border there…We’re talking more 10,000 people, guys and this has exploded in size in just two days…There are reports that there are more than 10,000 migrants still on the way." pic.twitter.com/zfewXpZfvq

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 17, 2021

*

.@BillFoxLA Melugin and his crew spot illegal immigrants gathering grass, tree branches, and other brush to make HUTS along a highway overpass.

Melugin also said border agents are “severely outnumbered. They need some serious help…They are insanely frustrated.” pic.twitter.com/LoeIGvZ5LW

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 17, 2021

*

.@BillFOXLA Melugin mentions people are going back & forth between Mexico and the U.S. without any resistance, adding: “This is the most remarkably stunning thing we have seen…Something has got to change pretty quick, guys, b/c this is unsustainable.” pic.twitter.com/MmMXbEnY58

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 17, 2021

*

.@BillFOXLA: “They’re just congregating under the bridge…It is safe to say these numbers are pushing at least 11,000…You’re going to have some serious Covid concerns…Haiti has a Covid-19 vaccination rate of less than 1%…Probably looking at some serious…health issues” pic.twitter.com/VWqATWYmKF

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 17, 2021

*

EXCLUSIVE video inside the migrant encampment in Del Rio @CityofDelRio Mayor Lozano said the numbers are rising, conditions are dire, and there’s fear of a stampede or riot

Latest count: over 12,000 @KENS5 pic.twitter.com/iGGBEugJFO

— Vanessa Croix (@VanessaKENS5) September 17, 2021

*

“Dire circumstances require dire responses,” Del Río Mayor Bruno Lozano said. “There’s people having babies down there [under the bridge], there’s people collapsing out of the heat. They’re pretty aggressive, rightly so — they’ve been in the heat day after day after day.” https://t.co/tlazFGcAeT

— Valerie Gonzalez (@ValOnTheBorder) September 17, 2021

*

Mayor of Del Rio is declaring a disaster and is going to move to close the bridge tolls on the international bridge to stop all traffic into Mexico from Texas or the other way. He says he can’t guarantee safety of personnel if the migrants overtake the area. pic.twitter.com/klXBRnPyzO

— Arelis R. Hernández (@arelisrhdz) September 17, 2021

*

It’s taking 7-15 days, per Del Rio mayor Bruno “Ralphy” Lozano, for border Patrol agents to begin processing an individual or family because of the influx and backlog. pic.twitter.com/OSn0Ygwnrl

— Arelis R. Hernández (@arelisrhdz) September 17, 2021

*

President Biden, for reference, 10,503 people is inching close to 1/3 of the population of Del Rio, Texas. @POTUS @VP @DHSgov @FoxNews @GregAbbott_TX @cnnbrk @ABC @NBCNews @CBSNews

— Mayor Bruno “Ralphy” Lozano (@BrunoRalphy) September 17, 2021

*

Univision reports that the Border Patrol is fearful of getting overrun in a "human stampede" at Del Rio. Is this at least part of the rationale behind the FAA's shutdown of drone overflights?  pic.twitter.com/QZbmbYUIyo

— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) September 17, 2021

*

Inbox: @TonyGonzales4TX's office on the situation at Del Rio International Bridge: "As of Friday morning, the location reached over 12,000 migrants, with reports of more people expected to arrive from the interior of Mexico."#BorderCrisis

— Hayden Sparks (@HaydenJSparks) September 17, 2021

*

Border Crisis: After exposing the massive explosion in illegal border crossings in the last 24-hours with their overhead drone, the FAA steps in to ban Fox News from flying. pic.twitter.com/D1lnSfnyET

— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) September 17, 2021
*

. @FoxNews applied this morning and has received clearance to operate from now until the end of September in the restricted airspace linked below.

Any media can also apply at: https://t.co/aKnbUkaTG6https://t.co/FyUL146Lmo

— The FAA ✈️ (@FAANews) September 17, 2021


2021
-09-18 a
Editor's Note:
It would be irresponsible to make a generalization at this stage (dealing with a sample size of 10 to 12) but I have noticed the early Covid "vaccinated" share certain traits. Please look for these when conversing with those who received the spike protein mRNA gene therapy shots when they first came out. Let me know if you detect any of these:

1. Frequent repetition.
2. Difficulty remembering events from past week.
3. Cannot hold a thought or make a reasoned argument.
4. Formerly articulate are at a loss for words.
5. Make poor financial decisions.
6. Reaction times seem slower.
7. Have had a "near accident" while driving.
8. Have lost the "spark" in their eye and often have a "blank" stare.

Please share your observations if you know how to contact me. Thank you.


2021
-09-17 f
PANDEMIC OF LIES VI

Social Justice and the Emergence of Covid Tyranny

Signs of incipient totalitarian impulses have been evident since the rise of political correctness.1 Yet, warnings from those who saw the character of contemporary “social justice” went largely unheeded. Nevertheless, even before degenerating into “wokeness,” social justice bore the seeds of civilizational decline and the simultaneous rise of social and political tyranny. The weaponization of mostly feigned fragility by snowflake totalitarians has been marshaled to abrogate the rights of those deemed offensive, injurious, and even “dangerous.” It also has evinced “paralogistic discourse,” or “[d]iscourse that is out of touch with reality, involving illogical, fallacious, unwarranted premises and conclusions.”2 Such thinking is characteristic of societal hysteria.3 This weaponization escalated, germinating “cancel culture,” the buds from which neo-Stalinist purges have since blossomed.

As I was first to point out, social justice amounts to “practical postmodernism.”4 The relativism, subjectivism, and antiobjectivity of postmodern theory, as well as the priority it places on language, have been harnessed by social justice activists and their followers and put to political ends. Social justice ideology claims that “narratives,” “my truth,” and language trump or produce reality. In terms of transgender ideology, this means that declaring one’s gender, or mere (re)naming, supersedes and cancels biology. In terms of critical race theory and the Black Lives Matter movement, it means that personal stories of oppression overwrite evidence, statistics, and the arc of history. Given that appeals to objective criteria are banished, when backed by the requisite power, such claims are necessarily authoritarian. Without objective criteria, there is no court of appeal other than power, and thus such “truths” are deemed incontrovertible.5 The legal ramifications of practical postmodernism have been nothing less than astonishing.

The policies of so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) accelerated the already prevalent upward movement of unqualified persons, those who have achieved important positions thanks to affirmative action and adherence to political ideology. DEI (or DIE) metastasized throughout the culture at large, with signs of the upward mobility of the unqualified seen in government, academia, and the corporate world. On Twitter, the accounts of unremarkable activists and otherwise unaccomplished leftists are granted the official blue checkmark of authority and significance.

Historically, the upward movement of the unqualified has been a harbinger of increasing authoritarianism; the unqualified favor authoritarianism, which protects their unearned status, and authoritarianism selects the unqualified, who become avid loyalists of the authoritarian regime.6 Thus, the upward movement of the unqualified should be taken as a telltale sign.

The [contrived] covid regime has extended and deepened the epistemic crisis inaugurated by postmodernism and practical postmodernism. Paralogistic discourse has now penetrated “the science,” which has devolved into a series of non sequiturs backed by force. Science has become postmodern, proving the claim of the sociologist of science Bruno Latour—in the postmodern world, scientific facts are merely socially constructed statements that become “too costly” to overthrow.7 Science is now a power gambit that relies on enrolling “allies” in a process of “black boxing” claims. Facts are merely “black boxes” that become resistant to opening. Such resistance comes from the number and strength of other facts and allies—other scientists, business people, the media, etc.—that the scientists can link to their own claims, making for black boxes that become too difficult to open. The strength of a fact is the result of the social network that is created in the process of staking a claim.8

The covid regime is postmodern “science in action,” to quote Latour. It has never been about legitimate science or public health. Otherwise, known remedies for covid-19 and the dangers of the vaccines would never have been suppressed.

Wokeness set the stage for full-blown covid tyranny—the lockdowns, the masking, and now the demonization of the unvaccinated and the institution of the vaccine passport. The weaponization of fragility by the snowflake totalitarians has been extended and amplified by the covid regime, which construes all who oppose it as “domestic violent extremists.” The unvaccinated are the new “dangerous persons,” reprobates who should be locked down, quarantined, and, according to some, shot.

The woke and covid enthusiasts have proven to be the same people, and the two concerns have converged at every turn. For example, the covid regime came to the defense of the Black Lives Matter movement when over twelve hundred health officials signed an open letter defending BLM protests, claiming that since, like covid, white supremacy poses a great danger to public health, BLM protests should continue unmolested. As unwitting foot soldiers of Big Pharma and agents of the state, Antifa “members” have harassed and shot antivaccine protesters. Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union, now fully woke, has been silent about cancel culture and the civil liberties of nonleftists. Recently, the organization argued that “far from compromising civil liberties, vaccine mandates actually further civil liberties” (emphasis in original). So much for the meaning of “civil liberties” and the ACLU’s defense of bodily autonomy. Like many corporations and trade associations, the National Football League is also woke. The organization requires its players to be vaccinated or otherwise isolated and penalized. It recently canceled the national anthem performance of Grammy Award winner Victory Boyd for her refusal, on religious grounds, of covid vaccines, despite the fact that the singer would have been hundreds of yards from anyone on the field. The list of woke-covid connections could go on and on.

Covid totalitarianism involves the postmodern inversion of reality and morality. The vaccinated now need to be protected from the unvaccinated, even though vaccine was supposed to provide that protection. It is now “moral” to demand that others take injections against their will and “immoral” to resist such demands.

The covid regime involves practical postmodern science. “The science” is whatever the authorities claim is true, and all other scientific inquiry is banned in advance. Those engaged in open scientific inquiry and debate are ridiculed and dismissed a priori, and their reputations destroyed.

Like the assembly of postmodern theorists, the covid regime is a convention of charlatans. Lord Fauci makes declarations ex cathedra, despite their contradiction of accepted epidemiological standards and his own earlier statements, while the medical establishment and the media go along for the ride.

The covid regime is a consensus of postmodern hysterics. The compliant observe superstitious rituals and direct their outrage at the unvaccinated rather than at the authorities responsible for their madness.

All of this adds up to the continual elimination of individual rights and the growing power of a delusional bureaucratic state.

Only a post-postmodern turn can bring about the overthrow of covid totalitarianism. The tide must turn against the practical postmodern consensus, leading to a reinstatement of the competent over the promotion of the unqualified, the reestablishment of legitimate science, a renewed regard for the value of truth, and the subsequent elimination of authoritarianism from the public sphere. In short, it will require the complete reconstruction of the social order.

REFERENCES

1. Michael Rectenwald, “Why Political Correctness Is Incorrect,” International Business Times, Nov. 22, 2020, https://www.ibtimes.com/why-political-correctness-incorrect-2645346.

2. Andrew M. Łobaczewski, Political Ponerology: The Science of Evil, Psychopathy, and the Origins of Totalitarianism, rev. ed., ed. Harrison Koehli (Otto, NC: Red Pill Press), forthcoming, p. 87n173. (Page numbers subject to change.)

3. Andrew M. Łobaczewski, Political Ponerology, p. 87.

4. Michael Rectenwald, Springtime for Snowflakes: "Social Justice" and Its Postmodern Parentage: A Memoir (Nashville, TN: New English Review Press, 2018), pp. xii, and 114–15.

5. Michael Rectenwald, “Why Postmodernism Is Incompatible with a Politics of Liberty,” Mises Wire, Apr. 5, 2021. https://mises.org/wire/why-postmodernism-incompatible-politics-liberty.

6. Łobaczewski, Political Ponerology, p. 72.

7. Bruno Latour and Steve Woolgar, Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2006), p. 243.

8. Bruno Latour, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015).

2021-09-17 e
PANDEMIC OF LIES V

Covid Heterodoxy in Three Layers

ABSTRACT:
Lockdowns and related policies of behavioral and economic restriction introduced in response to the Covid-19 pandemic are criticized, drawing on three sets of ideas and arguments that are organized in accordance with the likely degree of controversy associated with their guiding assumptions. The first set of arguments makes use of cost-benefit reasoning within a broadly utilitarian framework, emphasizing uncertainty, the role of worst-case scenarios, and the need to consider at least the medium term as well as immediate effects. The second draws on assumptions about the political value of basic liberties. The third draws on ideas about the roles of different stages within human life.

CONTENTS:
Introduction

First Layer: The Balance of Harms (p. 4)
Second Layer: Liberties (p. 14)
Third Layer: Aspiration, Meaning, and Fear (p. 21)


[...] Still, I agree that part of the message is how we might do better next time. Both in the case of Covid itself and those future challenges, we need to be more responsive to the costs of lockdowns, especially given their limited benefits over the past year, and we need to be more cognizant of the value of liberties in the realm of everyday behavior. We also need to react to crises with a stronger sense of our responsibility to young people, with a recognition of what makes life remain valuable for many older people, and an unwillingness to let fear call all the shots. (read more)

2021-09-17 d
PANDEMIC OF LIES IV
(Study was shoved down the memory hole.)

Group Think USA—Cleveland Clinic Removes an Important Study and Issues a Call for Vaccination

Back in June, TrialSite reported on an important Cleveland Clinic observational study sponsored by the Cleveland Clinic, evidencing powerful natural immunity among the health care workers subjects of the study. The study found that once the healthcare worker study subjects were infected with SARS-CoV-2 virus, they were not reinfected, even if they remained unvaccinated. This study indicated that one's antibodies are working to protect individuals naturally against reinfection, meaning that a vaccine isn't necessarily required. Conducted with 52,238 employees at the Cleveland Clinic, the study established a positive RT-PCR test equating to COVID-19 infection. Two thousand five hundred seventy-nine of the total in the study were previously infected, while 54% of the group never received a vaccine. None of the 2,759 employees were reinfected. The study authors concluded based on the results that once an individual is infected with the coronavirus, they are unlikely to benefit from vaccination. TrialSite reiterates the study's limitations and hence the importance of not drawing any conclusions from this one study. (read more)

2021-09-17 c
PANDEMIC OF LIES III

The Boys Who Cried Wolf

Throughout 2020, the media reported a ‘scientific consensus’ about the pandemic’s origins without providing any information about its investigations

[...] The media throughout 2020 reported a “scientific consensus” that the pandemic was a result of a zoonotic jump that is unrelated to lab activity without providing information on what questions the scientists it surveyed were asked, how many scientists were surveyed, and whether or not these scientists conducted investigations into the origin of COVID-19. It is clear that journalists have a powerful tool through which they are able to declare a scientific consensus before a matter is rigorously investigated.

Amplifying ignorance and absolutism in order to enforce unproven opinions as unquestionable “facts” is the opposite of how the scientific method functions. Irresponsible reporting and nonfactual declarations of scientific consensus on developing matters endanger public health just like a virus does, by undermining public trust in science. We should learn something from the boys who cried wolf. (read more)

2021-09-17 b
PANDEMIC OF LIES II

The [Fake] Pandemic Is Changing the Norms of Science

Imperatives like skepticism and disinterestedness are being junked to fuel political warfare that has nothing in common with scientific methodology

[...] One problem with this new mass engagement with science is that most people, including most people in the West, had never been seriously exposed to the fundamental norms of the scientific method. The Mertonian norms of communalism, universalism, disinterestedness, and organized skepticism have unfortunately never been mainstream in education, media, or even in science museums and TV documentaries on scientific topics.

Before the [fake] pandemic, the sharing of data, protocols, and discoveries for free was limited, compromising the communalism on which the scientific method is based. It was already widely tolerated that science was not universal, but the realm of an ever-more hierarchical elite, a minority of experts. Gargantuan financial and other interests and conflicts thrived in the neighborhood of science—and the norm of disinterestedness was left forlorn.

As for organized skepticism, it did not sell very well within academic sanctuaries. Even the best peer-reviewed journals often presented results with bias and spin. Broader public and media dissemination of scientific discoveries was largely focused on what could be exaggerated about the research, rather than the rigor of its methods and the inherent uncertainty of the results.

Nevertheless, despite the cynical realization that the methodological norms of science had been neglected (or perhaps because of this realization), voices struggling for more communalism, universalism, disinterestedness, and organized skepticism had been multiplying among scientific circles prior to the pandemic. Reformers were often seen as holding some sort of a moral higher ground, despite being outnumbered in occupancy of powerful positions. Reproducibility crises in many scientific fields, ranging from biomedicine to psychology, caused soul-searching and efforts to enhance transparency, including the sharing of raw data, protocols, and code. Inequalities within the academy were increasingly recognized with calls to remedy them. Many were receptive to pleas for reform.

Opinion-based experts (while still dominant in influential committees, professional societies, major conferences, funding bodies, and other power nodes of the system) were often challenged by evidence-based criticism. There were efforts to make conflicts of interest more transparent and to minimize their impact, even if most science leaders remained conflicted, especially in medicine. A thriving community of scientists focused on rigorous methods, understanding biases, and minimizing their impact. The field of meta-research, i.e., research on research, had become widely respected. One might therefore have hoped that the pandemic crisis could have fostered change. Indeed, change did happen—but perhaps mostly for the worst.

Lack of communalism during the pandemic fueled scandals and conspiracy theories, which were then treated as fact in the name of science by much of the popular press and on social media. The retraction of a highly visible hydroxychloroquine paper from the The Lancet was a startling example: A lack of sharing and openness allowed a top medical journal to publish an article in which 671 hospitals allegedly contributed data that did not exist, and no one noticed this outright fabrication before publication. The New England Journal of Medicine, another top medical journal, managed to publish a similar paper; many scientists [and journalists] continue to heavily cite it long after its retraction.

The hottest public scientific debate of the moment—whether the COVID-19 virus was the product of natural evolution or a laboratory accident—could have been settled easily with a minimal demonstration of communalism (“communism,” actually, in the original Merton vocabulary) from China: Opening the lab books of the Wuhan Institute of Virology would have alleviated concerns immediately. Without such openness about which experiments were done, lab leak theories remain tantalizingly credible.

Personally, I don’t want to consider the lab leak theory—a major blow to scientific investigation—as the dominant explanation yet. However, if full public data-sharing cannot happen even for a question relevant to the deaths of millions and the suffering of billions, what hope is there for scientific transparency and a sharing culture? Whatever the origins of the virus, the refusal to abide by formerly accepted norms has done its own enormous damage.

The [fake] pandemic led seemingly overnight to a scary new form of scientific universalism. Everyone did COVID-19 science or commented on it. By August 2021, 330,000 scientific papers were published on COVID-19, involving roughly a million different authors. An analysis showed that scientists from every single one of the 174 disciplines that comprise what we know as science has published on COVID-19. By the end of 2020, only automobile engineering didn’t have scientists publishing on COVID-19. By early 2021, the automobile engineers had their say, too.

At first sight, this was an unprecedented mobilization of interdisciplinary talent. However, most of this work was of low quality, often wrong, and sometimes highly misleading. Many people without subject-matter technical expertise became experts overnight, emphatically saving the world. As these spurious experts multiplied, evidence-based approaches—like randomized trials and collection of more accurate, unbiased data—were frequently dismissed as inappropriate, too slow, and harmful. The disdain for reliable study designs was even celebrated.

Many amazing scientists have worked on COVID-19. I admire their work. Their contributions have taught us so much. My gratitude extends to the many extremely talented and well-trained young investigators who rejuvenate our aging scientific workforce. However, alongside thousands of solid scientists came freshly minted experts with questionable, irrelevant, or nonexistent credentials and questionable, irrelevant, or nonexistent data.

Social and mainstream media have helped to manufacture this new breed of experts. Anyone who was not an epidemiologist or health policy specialist could suddenly be cited as an epidemiologist or health policy specialist by reporters who often knew little about those fields but knew immediately which opinions were true. Conversely, some of the best epidemiologists and health policy specialists in America were smeared as clueless and dangerous by people who believed themselves fit to summarily arbitrate differences of scientific opinion without understanding the methodology or data at issue.

Disinterestedness suffered gravely. In the past, conflicted entities mostly tried to hide their agendas. During the pandemic, these same conflicted entities were raised to the status of heroes. For example, Big Pharma companies clearly produced useful drugs, vaccines, and other interventions that saved lives, though it was also known that profit was and is their main motive. Big Tobacco was known to kill many millions of people every year and to continuously mislead when promoting its old and new, equally harmful, products. Yet during the pandemic, requesting better evidence on effectiveness and adverse events was often considered anathema. This dismissive, authoritarian approach “in defense of science” may sadly have enhanced vaccine hesitancy and the anti-vax movement, wasting a unique opportunity that was created by the fantastic rapid development of COVID-19 vaccines. Even the tobacco industry upgraded its reputation: Philip Morris donated [killer] ventilators to propel a profile of corporate responsibility and saving lives, a tiny fraction of which were put at risk of death from COVID-19 because of background diseases caused by tobacco products.

Other potentially conflicted entities became the new societal regulators, rather than the ones being regulated. Big Tech companies, which gained trillions of dollars in cumulative market value from the virtual transformation of human life during lockdown, developed powerful censorship machineries that skewed the information available to users on their platforms. Consultants who made millions of dollars from corporate and government consultation were given prestigious positions, power, and public praise, while unconflicted scientists who worked pro bono but dared to question dominant narratives were smeared as being conflicted. Organized skepticism was seen as a threat to public health. There was a clash between two schools of thought, authoritarian public health versus science—and science lost.

Honest, continuous questioning and exploration of alternative paths are indispensable for good science. In the authoritarian (as opposed to participatory) version of public health, these activities were seen as treason and desertion. The dominant narrative became that “we are at war.” When at war, everyone has to follow orders. If a platoon is ordered to go right and some soldiers explore maneuvering to the left, they are shot as deserters. Scientific skepticism had to be shot, no questions asked. The orders were clear.

Who gave these orders? Who decided that his or her opinion, expertise, and conflicts should be in charge? It was not a single person, not a crazy general or a despicable politician or a dictator, even if political interference in science did happen—massively so. It was all of us, a conglomerate that has no name and no face: a mesh and mess of half-cooked evidence; frenzied and partisan media promoting parachute journalism and pack coverage; the proliferation of pseudonymous and eponymous social media personas which led even serious scientists to become unrestrained, wild-beast avatars of themselves, spitting massive quantities of inanity and nonsense; poorly regulated industry and technology companies flexing their brain and marketing power; and common people afflicted by the protracted crisis. All swim in a mixture of some good intentions, some excellent thinking, and some splendid scientific successes, but also of conflicts, political polarization, fear, panic, hatred, divisiveness, fake news, censorship, inequalities, racism, and chronic and acute societal dysfunction.

Heated but healthy scientific debates are welcome. Serious critics are our greatest benefactors. John Tukey once said that the collective noun for a group of statisticians is a quarrel. This applies to other scientists, too. But “we are at war” led to a step beyond: This is a dirty war, one without dignity. Opponents were threatened, abused, and bullied by cancel culture campaigns in social media, hit stories in mainstream media, and bestsellers written by zealots. Statements were distorted, turned into straw men, and ridiculed. Wikipedia pages were vandalized. Reputations were systematically devastated and destroyed. Many brilliant scientists were abused and received threats during the pandemic, intended to make them and their families miserable.

Anonymous and pseudonymous abuse has a chilling effect; it is worse when the people doing the abusing are eponymous and respectable. The only viable responses to bigotry and hypocrisy are kindness, civility, empathy, and dignity. However, barring in-person communication, virtual living and social media in social isolation are poor conveyors of these virtues.

Politics had a deleterious influence on pandemic science. Anything any apolitical scientist said or wrote could be weaponized for political agendas. Tying public health interventions like masks and vaccines to a faction, political or otherwise, satisfies those devoted to that faction, but infuriates the opposing faction. This process undermines the wider adoption required for such interventions to be effective. Politics dressed up as public health not only injured science. It also shot down participatory public health where people are empowered, rather than obligated and humiliated.

A scientist cannot and should not try to change his or her data and inferences based on the current doctrine of political parties or the reading du jour of the social media thermometer. In an environment where traditional political divisions between left and right no longer seem to make much sense, data, sentences, and interpretations are taken out of context and weaponized. The same apolitical scientist could be attacked by left-wing commentators in one place and by alt-right commentators in another. Many excellent scientists have had to silence themselves in this chaos. Their self-censorship has been a major loss for scientific investigation and the public health effort. My heroes are the many well-intentioned scientists who were abused, smeared, and threatened during the pandemic. I respect all of them and suffer for what they went through, regardless of whether their scientific positions agreed or disagreed with mine. I suffer for and cherish even more those whose positions disagreed with mine.

{I would like to believe t]here was absolutely no conspiracy or preplanning behind this hypercharged evolution. Simply, in times of crisis, the powerful thrive and the weak become more disadvantaged. Amid [the fake] pandemic confusion, the powerful and the conflicted became more powerful and more conflicted, while millions of disadvantaged people have died and billions suffered.

I worry that science and its norms have shared the fate of the disadvantaged. It is a pity, because science can still help everyone. Science remains the best thing that can happen to humans, provided it can be both tolerant and tolerated. (read more)

2021-09-17 a
PANDEMIC OF LIES I
(To me, it looks like doctors, hospitals and politicians must be receiving commissions from the makers of the spike protein mRNA shots. What other explanation accounts for their blatant lies and fear-mongering? It isn't because they care about our health. They know about the deaths and adverse effects. They know the so-called vaccines neither prevent infection nor transmission.)

Doctor Wants To Be ‘Scary To The Public’ And Inflate COVID Numbers, ‘If You Don’t Get Vaccinated, You Know You’re Going To Die’

North Carolina doctor wants to be "scary" to the public by inflating COVID-19 numbers and claiming people will die without vaccines

National File has obtained a recording of a Zoom video conference call between physicians and a marketing director at Novant Heath New Hanover Regional Medical Center, a group of 20 hospitals, clinics, and offices that treat patients in North Carolina and South Carolina.

In the recording, Mary Rudyk, MD tells Director of Marketing Carolyn Fisher and another hospital employee that she wants the hospitals to become more “scary to the public” by inflating the number of COVID-19 patients, and by using messaging that falsely tells individuals “If you don’t get vaccinated, you know you’re going to die.”

In the clip, Fisher seems confused by questions raised by Rudyk regarding how COVID-19 patients are counted. After Fisher explains this process, Rudyk asserts that the hospitals should become “scary” in their messaging about COVID-19, inflate their total number of COVID-19 patients by counting those who have recovered, and suggest that people will die without taking one of the controversial COVID-19 vaccines.

The video was obtained from an internal source at Novant Health, and was recorded earlier this week. The clip features three speakers: Rudyk, Fisher, and Shelbourn Stevens, president of who promises to speak with MacDonald about inflating the count of COVID-19 patients “offline.”

"We need to be… more scary to the public… If you don't get vaccinated, you know you're going to die." pic.twitter.com/66CcIsVR4B

— National File (@NationalFile) September 10, 2021


After the first speaker seems to answer a question about how COVID-19 patient counts are determined and shared with the public, MacDonald responds, “I guess my feeling at this point in time is, maybe we need to be completely a little bit more scary to the public.” She then introduces her idea to inflate the total number of COVID-19 patients by counting patients who recovered. “There are many people still hospitalized that we’re considering post-COVID, but they’re not counted in those numbers,” Rudyk explains, “So how do we include those post-COVID people in the numbers of the patients we have in the hospital?”

At this point Fisher, apparently confused, asks Rudyk to clarify if she is suggesting the hospital release the total number of patients treated at the hospital “since the beginning of COVID,” which Rudyk says is an even better idea.

“That’s better still, and that’s something that I can take to someone else, but I think those are important numbers. The patients that are still in the hospital, that are off the COVID floor, but still are occupying the hospital for a variety of reasons,” said Rudyk, before a male doctor interrupted to inform her that those patients are considered “recovered.”

Still she persists: “I think that that needs to be highlighted as well, because once you’re off isolation you drop from the COVID numbers, that’s exactly right.” The male doctor agreed, “Carolyn, we can talk offline about how we run that up to marketing,” before being cut off by Rudyk.

“So I just want to say we have to be more blunt, we have to be more forceful, we have to see something coming out: ‘If you don’t get vaccinated, you know you’re going to die,'” Rudyk said, laughing. “I mean let’s just be really blunt with these people.”

Since the video surfaced on social media, the hospital has released a statement claiming that the “team members involved” in the meeting are stressed and frustrated that more people are not taking one of the controversial vaccines. However, the hospital clarified that Rudyk’s suggestion was not taken: “The data we have been sharing does not include patients who remain hospitalized for COVID-19 complications even though they are no longer COVID positive.” However, the hospital then suggests it may start inflating its count, as Rudyk suggested, “it does not provide a complete picture,” the hospital noted.
(read more)

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