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In India, Raids Targeting a Prominent News Agency Spark Censorship Fears – The Diplomat
Posted: June 21, 2017 at 3:44 am
Was a raid on NDTVs offices earlier this month politically motivated?
In the two weeks since Indias Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) launched a raid on the offices and the homes of NDTV staffin India, an important conversation regarding government interference in the media has resurfaced. The atmosphere surrounding the issue remainsmurky and longstanding suspicions of the strong nexus between the investigation agency and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party have once more been brought to the fore.
On June 5, the CBI conducted its raid, prompting a statement from NDTV declaring that it was based on unproven complaints from a disgruntled former employee. The complaint, on the basis of a loan default, was further dismissed as baseless by the organization, which furnished the proof of repayment along with its statement.
Furthermore, the implication that this raid was based on a year-old complaint that was private in nature sparked concerns that it was politically motivated. Days prior to the raid, as several members of the Indian media have been quick to point out, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Partys spokesperson Sambhit Patra was asked to leave an NDTV debate for his accusations against the channel in the face of criticism.
Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting Rajyavardhan Rathore responded to this by saying that while the government was committed to protecting freedom of expression, it was also responsible for preserving the law of the land. While voices within the media have indicated that there may well be a case for this raid and that it was premature to cast this as retaliation for government criticism, several prominent members have a different opinion.
The Editors Guild of India has since issued a statement implicatingthis move as a violation ofthe principle of the freedom of the press within a democracy, pegging it as a possible attempt to silence the media. The Press Club of India subsequently organized a meeting to protest the raid. The CBI, in turn, responded with the argument that NDTV was not singled out in this raid process. Explaining that this raid was not about loan default as much as a larger list of violations of banking sector guidelines, the organization placed this investigation along the spectrum of a long list of others on the issue of banking fraud.
However, the absence of a preliminary inquiry ahead of this raid has not silenced the criticism. The Press Club meeting for instance was the site of incensed conversation. Prominent media figures like Kuldip Nayyar and Arun Shourie even discussed parallels between the current governments attitude towards the media and the time of Emergency under former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The ensuing discussion expressed worry at the majoritarian tendencies of the government, a need to move beyond institutional affiliations in the interest of preserving shrinking spaces for dissent, and the absence of protocol in the investigation.
The space for dialogue regarding the actions of the army in Kashmir, the anti-beef agenda, moral policing to name just a few issues has been fast shrinking amid perceptions that the government will seek to retaliate. Comparisons to the Emergency, while perhaps hyperbolic, are nevertheless worrisome as they are indicative of the beginnings of a trend towards heightened censorship in India. The defensiveness of the ruling party in the face of criticism has been on the rise in the past few years, and the NDTV has faced unexpected consequences for the second time in a year, following its24-hour blackout in November 2016.
The recent raids, in keeping with this trend, inspire a feeling of unease and worry regarding what they might foretell.
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LETTER: Wrong lesson learned by yearbook censorship – Asbury Park Press
Posted: at 3:44 am
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1:48 p.m. ET June 20, 2017
High school yearbooks that featured digitally altered photographs of students supporting President Donald Trump will be reissued.
So, Wall taxpayers will be footing the bill for new yearbooks because some kid decided to wear a Trump T-shirt for his yearbook photo and it was edited because someone on the yearbook staff thought it was inappropriate? (Trump censorship: Wall H.S. to get new yearbooks, June 15).
First of all, what student would wear a T-shirt for his yearbook photo?
But he does learn a lesson. If he stomps his feet and holds his breath he can get daddy to rally round the poor choices. Maybe the lesson should have been, Sorry Charlie. You made a poor choice in your attire. Live with it.
What teacher in Wall will want to do anything more than teach their classes? Why take a chance that some misguided youth and his righteous dad will raise a stink and tag some inflammatory description on the decision. There is censorship in schools every day. Its part of the learning process.
Chuck Person
Barnegat
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Alarmed by torrent of censorship imposed by administrators? Support student journalists – The College Fix
Posted: at 3:44 am
Alarmed by torrent of censorship imposed by administrators? Support student journalists
This week I saw a preview screening of a documentary about Syrian citizen journalists who chronicled the rise of ISIS before anyone in the West gave a damn about the propaganda-fueled jihadist group.
The heroes of City of Ghosts, which releases commercially next month,are ordinary internal people whose lives are threatened not words are violence threatened, but mortally threatened every time they secretly record the daily atrocities in Raqqa, the ISIS capital.
They feed it out to their still-endangered external compatriots who manage the news operation, known as Raqqa is Being SlaughteredSilently, from abroad.
The first leader of the group, Naji Jerf,who put these young journalists through a crash course in war reporting, was tracked down by ISIS in Turkey and executed during the documentarys filming. Thats how dangerous unfiltered information is to propagandists.
He looks like a college journalism adviser, I thought as I watched the screening, organized by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. (Two of the citizen journalists made a surprise visit. Our questions for them kind of sucked because we were stunned they made it here.)
Naji Jerf was basically working with people many of whom appear to be college age who had non-journalism livelihoods, but felt compelled to shine a light on their besieged city when no one else would.
For those of us safely reporting on absurd things in America, where the main victim is sanity and common sense, our work feels puny compared to the daily life-and-death struggle of Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently.
But there are faint shadows of the Syrian citizen journalists struggle in many towns in America, where youngsters operate under the constant threat of punishment and censorship for reporting on their communities.
The Washington Post profiles the important work of the Student Press Law Center, which we occasionally feature and consult for College Fix stories, and its outgoing executive director, Frank LoMonte, who is headed to the University of Florida to do journalism law.
I feel a certain kinship to SPLC because were both tiny shoestring-budget nonprofits working with journalism newbies who are vulnerable to pressure and intimidation from administrators, especially when students are covering their own schools.
As Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan notes, the problems cut across ideology and political lines when SPLC swoops in to defend student journalists:
LoMonte helped a reporter at the student newspaper at New Jerseys Kean University as she tried to pry loose a surveillance video that the universitys police department was wrongly withholding.
At an Omaha high school, the student newspaper wanted to publish a column suggesting that teachers keep their politics out of the classroom. (It observed that some of them were trash-talking Trump, using words such as Nazi and Hitler.)
The school administration found the column unacceptable. Then, when students tried to write about the censorship, that article was killed, too. With SPLCs intervention, both pieces were published and won a state high school journalism award.
Ive gotten people out of jail, Ive gotten cameras back from police this is an urgent-level service, said LoMonte
SPLC is also leading the charge at the state level for statutory protections for student journalists, and it sends out 200-odd lawyer-volunteers who run journalism workshops for students.
LoMonte makes a great argument when he faces off against administrators who want to suppress reporting:
That schools would be acting in their own self-interest to let students publish because, in the social-media era, theyll find a way to get their message out in some other (perhaps less accurate) form, anyway.
Its a little easier for High Schoolers Being Censored Silently to circumvent the powers-that-be than for the brave journalists of Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, thankfully.
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LETTER: Defense of censorship was nauseating – Richmond County Daily Journal
Posted: at 3:44 am
To the editor:
As we are in the season of graduation, I hope you will allow this retired educator to reflect on the Early College yearbook fiasco.
First, let me address the nauseating defense of censorship offered up by John Robich (Richmond County Daily Journal, June 3-4). His attempts to ingratiate the reader by extolling the virtues of the Early College at the expense of censorship is an abysmal failure. He delights that school officials put down the yearbook as if free speech were a rabid dog.
Mr. Robich reinforces his moralistic rant stating the potential threat of information that neither he or any of the public had access to, yet he claims that information potentially inflammatory, controversial and offensive.
Sir, you need a refresher course in Constitutional Law 101.
His most laughable observation goads the reader to be concerned over how posterity might perceive the yearbook in question. Yes, Mr. Robich, the students will remember the yearbook, but not for the reasons you so smugly suggest.
They will recall how obsessed school officials used collusion to steal the work of a year of collaboration. Where are they confiscated books? Have they been destroyed? At least the Nazis burned their books in public. Oh, that one copy still copy still exists to be downloaded to the freedom of the internet.
In his arrogantly condescending tone, Mr. Robich admonishes those who disagree with him to consider the big picture.
Yes, we see the big picture. The educational caste system is alive and well in Richmond County. Do you really think our citizens will acquiesce to such thinking?
At every turn, he insults the intelligence of the readers ability to make their own moral choices. That Principal Waddell made the right and morally good decision would make it astounding that students and parents can make these choices at all! Its a sure bet that next years publication will be closely scrutinizedoopssanitized.
Our superintendents failure to publicly weigh in on the crisis has been noted. Her silence speaks volumes. With the national spotlight on our school system, Dr. Goodman missed an opportunity for transparency in her administration.
Some would want to maintain the status quo. Sorry folks. Pandoras Box has been opened and things will never be the same again.
In recent months, we have witnessed massive student walkouts in our state over social issues. It is to their credit our students chose not to disrupt their education.
Are you listening administrators? Who are the adults in this scenario?
Congratulations to the graduates of Early College. Despite the despicable act of betrayal perpetrated on you, you still hold the promise of a democratic society. Never let anyone or group of people put braces on your brains. My prayer of you, in the words of one spiritual revolutionary, is to continue to ask, seek and knock all the days of your life.
I applaud the Daily Journal for keeping the issue in the forefront. Although our school officials are on report, you can be sure you have not heard the last of their draconian antics.
Vigilance is the price we pay for freedom. I hope Richmond Countys motto Fiat Justicia, (Let Justice Be Done) will prevail in the end.
Eddie Russell
Rockingham
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Ron Paul: Why is US ‘taking military actions that benefit ISIS?’ – WND.com
Posted: at 3:43 am
Published: 1 day ago.
Ron Paul
President Donald Trump is veering from his campaign promises to destroy ISIS at all cost, says former presidential candidate Ron Paul.
On Saturday, a U.S. Navy fighter jet shot down a Syrian war plane after it attacked rebel forces being supported by Washington.
The F-18 launched from the USS George H.W. Bush in the Mediterranean Sea near Israel and shot down a Syrian SU-22 fighter over Syrian territory. This is the first time the U.S. has engaged in an air-to-air shoot-down since the U.S. attack on Yugoslavia in 1999.
In response to the U.S. attack, the Russians have suspended the use of the military hotline and announced that they will view all unidentified aircraft operating in the vicinity of Russian military aircraft as potential targets.
Paul is mystified by the Trump administrations actions.
The U.S. claims the attack was in self-defense, that the Syrian jet was threatening U.S.-backed rebel forces in the area, he said in an emailed statement. That claim has been debunked by even the pro-rebel Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The shoot-down of the Syrian plane is the latest in a pattern of military actions against the regime of President Bashar Assad.
This marks the fourth recent U.S. attack on Syrian government forces as they engage ISIS in attempt to eject the terrorists from eastern Syria, Paul continued. Each time, U.S. intervention has benefited ISIS.
Paul put forth similar criticisms in a June 16 columntitled Why are we attacking the Syrians who are fighting ISIS.
He said the Trump foreign policy visa vie the Middle East is barely recognizable from the non-interventionist platform upon which he campaigned.
Just when you thought our Syria policy could not get any worse, last week it did, Paul writes. The Syrian forces were pursuing ISIS in the area, but the U.S. attacked anyway.
Why are we violating the sovereignty of Syria and attacking its military as they are fighting ISIS? Why does Washington claim that its primary mission in Syria is to defeat ISIS while taking military actions that benefit ISIS?
Clare Lopez, senior vice president of research and analysis for the Washington-based Center for Security Policy, says Paul is justified in his concerns.
Lopez said the broader question is: What is the core compelling U.S. national security objective that would plunge us into the middle of a 1,400-year-old intra-Islamic sectarian struggle between Shiites and Sunnis?
Paul pointed out that President Trump appears dead set upon making sure Iran doesnt see its hand strengthened in the Middle East, even if that means putting a governor on the campaign to destroy ISIS.
What is this really all about? Why does the U.S. military occupy this base inside Syria? Its partly about preventing the Syrians and Iraqis from working together to fight ISIS, but I think its mostly about Iran, Paul wrote. If the Syrians and Iraqis join up to fight ISIS with the help of Iranian-allied Shia militia, the U.S. believes it will strengthen Irans hand in the region. President Trump has recently returned from a trip to Saudi Arabia where he swore he would not allow that to happen.
But the intervention of the U.S. military in Syria comes with risks, the biggest one being direct engagement with the Russian military, Lopez said.
The administration appears to be poking the bear without a clear statement of objectives, she said.
Lopezwonders if the National Security Council and Pentagon have formulated a set of strategic objectives for this region of the Middle East along with the best course of action that would achieve those objectives.
Or, are we sliding inexorably into a maelstrom that will chew up more American lives and treasure without having set out that overarching strategy first? Lopez asks.
Even if the U.S. were to defeat ISIS, Lopez doubts it is prepared to defeat the idea that inspires ISIS, meaning the ideology.
From the strategic level down to the tactical one, have the NSC/Pentagon actually conducted a thorough investigation of just who these rebel militia groups on the ground really are? she asked.
Michael K. Nagata, former commander of American Special Operations forces in the Middle East, commented back in 2014:We have not defeated the idea. We do not even understand the idea.
Have we ever moved beyond that astonishing admission of dereliction of professional duty to know the enemy? Lopez asked.
Has the Trump administration conducted its own study of Islam, jihad and Shariah to a depth of being able to understand why either Shiite or Sunni groups are fighting each other, us, Western civilization?
How does hurling the U.S. military into defense of what is very likely a jumble of Middle Eastern jihadist militias advance the strategic defense of the U.S. homeland, Constitution or core, compelling national security interests?
In his email to WND, Paul said the situation with the Russians could easily escalate.
We do know from the time of the Mujahideen in Afghanistan that elements in the U.S. national security establishment have utilized extremists in pursuit of their interventionist foreign policy goals. The fact that this strategy has failed with tragic consequences does not seem to faze proponents of this policy.
Paul said Russia is furious over the U.S. attack on the Syrian jet.
They also had jets operating in the area, and the U.S. did not use the hotline designed to avoid any unintended disasters, Paul said. Indeed, the use of the F-18 instead of a surface-to-air missile suggests that the U.S. understood the delicacy of the operation.
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Ron Paul: Trump flip flops for the neo-cons – Tulsa World
Posted: at 3:43 am
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‘Democracy In Chains’ Traces The Rise Of American Libertarianism – NPR
Posted: at 3:42 am
Obscuring census data to give "conservative districts more than their fair share of representation." Preventing access to the vote. Decrying "socialized medicine." Trying to end Social Security using dishonest vocabulary like "strengthened." Lionizing Lenin. Attempting to institute voucher programs to "get out of the business of public education." Increasing corporatization of higher education. Harboring a desire, at heart, to change the Constitution itself.
This unsettling list could be 2017 Bingo. In fact, it's from half a century earlier, when economist James Buchanan an early herald of libertarianism began to cultivate a group of like-minded thinkers with the goal of changing government. This ideology eventually reached the billionaire Charles Koch; the rest is, well, 2017 Bingo.
This sixty-year campaign to make libertarianism mainstream and eventually take the government itself is at the heart of Democracy in Chains. It's grim going; this isn't the first time Nancy MacLean has investigated the dark side of the American conservative movement (she also wrote Behind the Mask of Chivalry: The Making of the Second Ku Klux Klan), but it's the one that feels like it was written with a clock ticking down.
Still, it takes the time to meticulously trace how we got here from there. Charles and his brother David Koch have been pushing the libertarian agenda for more than 20 years. A generation before them, Buchanan founded a series of enclaves to study ways to make government bend. Before that, critic and historian Donald Davidson coined the term "Leviathan" in the 1930s for the federal government, and blamed northeasterners for "pushing workers' rights and federal regulations. Such ideas could never arise from American soil, Davidson insisted. They were 'alien' European imports brought by baleful characters." And going back another century, the book locates the movement's center in the fundamentalism of Vice President John C. Calhoun, for whom the ideas of capital and self-worth were inextricably intertwined. (Spoilers: It was about slavery.)
It's grim going; this isn't the first time Nancy MacLean has investigated the dark side of the American conservative movement ... but it's the one that feels like it was written with a clock ticking down.
Buchanan headed a group of radical thinkers (he told his allies "conspiratorial secrecy is at all times essential"), who worked to centralize power in states like Virginia. They eschewed empirical research. They termed taxes "slavery." They tried repeatedly to strike down progressive action school integration, Social Security claiming it wasn't economically sound. And they had the patience and the money to weather failures in their quest to win.
As MacLean lays out in their own words, these men developed a strategy of misinformation and lying about outcomes until they had enough power that the public couldn't retaliate against policies libertarians knew were destructive. (Look no further than Flint, MacLean says, where the Koch-funded Mackinac Center was behind policies that led to the water crisis.) And it's painstakingly laid out. This is a book written for the skeptic; MacLean's dedicated to connecting the dots.
She gives full due to the men's intellectual rigor; Buchanan won the Nobel for economics, and it's hard to deny that he and the Koch brothers have had some success. (Alongside players like Dick Armey and Tyler Cowen, there are cameos from Newt Gingrich, John Kasich, Mitt Romney, and Antonin Scalia.) But this isn't a biography. Besides occasional asides, MacLean's much more concerned with ideology and policy. By the time we reach Buchanan's role in the rise of Chilean strongman Augusto Pinochet (which backfired so badly on the people of Chile that Buchanan remained silent about it for the rest of his life), that's all you need to know about who Buchanan was.
We are, 'Democracy in Chains' is clear, at a precipice.
If you're worried about what all this means for America's future, you should be. The clear and present danger is hard to ignore. When nearly every radical belief the Buchanan school ever floated is held by a member of the current administration, it's bad news.
But it's worth noting that the primary practice outlined in this book is the leveraging of money to protect money and the counter-practice is the vocal and sustained will of the people. We are, Democracy in Chains is clear, at a precipice. At the moment, the first practice is winning. If you don't like it, now's the time to try the second. And if someone you know isn't convinced, you have just the book to hand them.
Genevieve Valentine's latest novel is Icon.
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New Study Shows What Really Happened in the 2016 Election – New York Magazine
Posted: at 3:42 am
Photo: Sandy Huffaker/AFP/Getty Images
The Democracy Fund Voter Study Group has a new survey of the electorate that explodes many of the myths that we believe about American politics. Lee Drutman has a fascinating report delving into the data. I want to highlight a few of the most interesting conclusions in the survey.
1. The Democratic Party is not really divided on economics. You think the Bernie Sanders movement was about socialism? Not really. Sanders voters have the same beliefs about economic equality and government intervention as Hillary Clinton supporters. On the importance of Social Security and Medicare, Sanders voters actually have more conservative views:
Where they mainly differ is on international trade and the question of whether politics is a rigged game. The ideological content of Sanderss platform is not what drew voters. It was, instead, his counter-positioning to Clinton as a clean, uncorrupted outsider.
2. Fiscal conservativesocial liberals are overrepresented. The study breaks down the beliefs of voters in both parties by income. The parties tend to cohere pretty tightly rich Republicans are much closer to poor Republicans than either is to the Democrats; and rich Democrats and poor Democrats share more in common than either does with Republicans.
Still, there are important differences. The richest members of both parties have more economically conservative and socially liberal views than the poorest members. That gives them disproportionate influence over their agendas and priorities.
3. Libertarians dont exist. Well, obviously, they exist just not in any remotely large enough numbers to form a constituency. Its not just hardcore libertarians who are absent. Even vaguely libertarian-ish voters are functionally nonexistent.
The study breaks down voters into four quadrants, defined by both social and economic liberalism. But virtually everybody falls into three quadrants: socially liberal/economically liberal; socially conservative/economically conservative; and socially conservative/economically liberal. The fourth quadrant, socially liberal/economically conservative, is empty:
The libertarian movement has a lot of money and hardcore activist and intellectual support, which allows it to punch way above its weight. Libertarian organs like Reason regularly churn out polemics and studies designed to show that libertarianism is a huge new trend and the wave of the future. Sometimes, mainstream news organizations buy what theyre selling. But the truth is that the underrepresented cohort in American politics is the opposite of libertarians: people with right-wing social views who support big government on the economy.
4. Trump won by dominating with populists. Republicans always need to do reasonably well with populists, which is why theres always a tension between the pro-government leanings of a large number of their voters and the anti-government tilt of the party agenda. The key to Trumps success was to win more populists than Mitt Romney had managed. The issues where 2012 Obama voters who defected to Trump diverge from the ones who stayed and voted for Clinton are overwhelmingly related to race and identity.
As Drutman notes, Among populists who voted for Obama, Clinton did terribly. She held onto only 6 in 10 of these voters (59 percent). Trump picked up 27 percent of these voters, and the remaining 14 percent didnt vote for either major party candidate. What makes this result fascinating is that, in 2008, Clinton had positioned herself as the candidate of the white working class and she dominated the white socially conservative wing of her party. But she lost that identity so thoroughly that she couldnt even replicate the performance of a president who had become synonymous with elite social liberalism.
Every election is different. But to the extent that 2016 has an ideological lesson for Democrats, it is that the subject the party is currently debating within itself whether or how far left to move on economics is irrelevant to its electoral predicament. The issue space where Clinton lost voters who had supported Obama was in the array of social-identity questions, revolving around patriotism and identity.
They may not need to solve this problem Trumps failures may well solve it for them. And to some extent, moral commitments to social justice may preclude the party from moving to the center on some or all of their social policies. But to the extent Democrats want to optimize their party profile to make Trump a one-term president, the social issues are where they need to focus.
Republicans will likely be emboldened by the results, though they only held the traditionally red districts by single digits.
By dominating early voting and convincing GOP voters that her opponent was out of mainstream, Karen Handel posted a comeback victory.
While Trump had an 18 point lead in the district, Republican Ralph Norman won by only a few points.
On the day of Georgias special election, rain is flooding Democratic sections of the district while leaving GOP areas relatively unscathed.
Hell be releasing a new EP every month for the next four years.
He opined that the zealot Pence might be worse on domestic policy than Trump. Its a sign the idea of impeachment is becoming real.
It has been made public after the trial of the officer, who was found not guilty last week.
While I greatly appreciate the efforts of President Xi & China to help with North Korea, it has not worked out. At least I know China tried!
Brusselss Central Station has been evacuated, and police say the situation is under control.
It would be an extremely 2017 miscalculation for liberals to fall in love with sanctions just because Trump opposes them.
Ryan has routinely won landslides in his purple district. Randy Bryces incredible new campaign ad suggests that could change that.
The upper chamber is reportedly eyeing an approach to cutting the program that could be more draconian than what passed the House.
A plurality of Republicans think the special counsels investigation is impartial and 75 percent dont want Trump to fire Robert Mueller.
Conservatives spent years developing a plan for remaking the health-care system. The Republican Party has buried it forever.
The First Daughter will meet with Senators Marco Rubio and Deb Fischer to talk over the plan.
Government technology is bad, and the White House wants you to think they can fix it.
Is government transparency under attack or is Sean Spicer just being body-shamed?
Lower education levels, a larger minority population, and affection for Trump make this SC race a better bet for the GOP win than GA-06 next door.
They want to know why Flynn omitted information from his security clearance forms, which may be illegal.
The Americans death could lead to new travel restrictions and prompt the U.S. to put more pressure on China to rein in its neighbor.
Link:
New Study Shows What Really Happened in the 2016 Election - New York Magazine
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Thief steals pickled human toe garnish from legendary cocktail – New York Post
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HuffPost | Thief steals pickled human toe garnish from legendary cocktail New York Post A pickled human toe the selling point to the Downtown Hotel's Sourtoe Cocktail was stolen on Saturday, staffers told CBC. We are furious, said Terry Lee, the hotel's Toe Captain. Toes are very hard to come by. The $5 cocktail is simple: a ... Canadian Hotel Wants To Get Its Hands On Whoever Stole Human Toe NEW: Hotel bar 'furious' after man steals its severed human toe Mummified Toe Stolen From Dawson City Bar |
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Thief steals pickled human toe garnish from legendary cocktail - New York Post
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Bruce Pardy: Meet the new ‘human rights’ where you are forced by law to use ‘reasonable’ pronouns – National Post
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National Post | Bruce Pardy: Meet the new 'human rights' where you are forced by law to use 'reasonable' pronouns National Post When University of Toronto professor Jordan Peterson posted his now notorious YouTube video spelling out his refusal to use non-gendered pronouns, activists expressed their outrage. Non-gendered people have the right to be accommodated and ... |
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Bruce Pardy: Meet the new 'human rights' where you are forced by law to use 'reasonable' pronouns - National Post
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