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Category Archives: Transhuman News

‘Transphobia’ is Good, and Should be Official Government Policy – The Stream

Posted: July 29, 2022 at 5:13 pm

Fans of the grotesque dont need to read the stories of Flannery OConnor, or flip through art books savoring the paintings of the great Hieronymus Bosch. Everyday reality will scratch any sane persons itch for the lurid, the twisted, the ludicrous. Sometimes the spectacle is funny, sometimes baffling, but often its genuinely sinister. Especially if you remember the stakes for which were playing, both in this life and the next.

Perhaps the most outrageous recent exchange in our public life took place in Senate hearings, when the pro-family patriot Sen. Josh Hawley was questioning U.C. Berkeley Professor Khiara Bridges. As The Guardian reported:

During the judiciary committee hearing, Hawley, who has previously co-sponsored a bill which would prevent transgender children from competing in sports, questioned Khiara Bridges, a professor at UC Berkeley School of Law who was invited to testify on reproductive rights.

Youve referred to people with a capacity for pregnancy, he said. Would that be women?

Bridges replied: Many women, cis women, have the capacity for pregnancy. Many cis women do not have the capacity for pregnancy. There are also trans men who are capable of pregnancy, as well as non-binary people who are capable of pregnancy.

Hawley said: So this isnt really a womens rights issue. Its its what?

Bridges said: We can recognise that this impacts women while also recognising that it impacts other groups, those things are not mutually exclusive, Senator Hawley.

She added: I want to recognise that your line of questioning is transphobic and it opens up trans people to violence by not recognizing them.

We cant just lazily wave at Bridges position and point to it as madness. Of course it is, to you and me. We know with all the certainty of biological science and thousands of years of human civilization, plus the testimony of Scripture, that the divide between the sexes is real, crucially important, and tied to reproduction.

But thats not enough. We face a new ideology that bears all the force of an evangelizing religion, backed by activist billionaires, which has captured all the high ground in our culture.

So we must think through clearly, even ruthlessly, the full implications of the dogmas taught by the Transgenderist cult, which public school teachers are preaching to our children and Democrats are enshrining into law. (Dont worry, Establishment Republicans will be obediently repeating the same superstition, just a few years later. They always do.)

We must follow the truth relentlessly, without flinching for fear of triggering thin-skinned activists. And we absolutely must parry the heavy rhetorical cudgel which Bridges wielded at Hawley. Namely, that some opinions may not be expressed, and must be simply censored, because airing them opens up people to violence.

Let the truth be told, though the heavens fall. We must not live by lies, and cannot let the government uses its bayonets and bullets to cram lies down our throats. Thats how countries end up with gulags, as Solzhenitsyn warned us.

All that by way of background to my central argument, which Ill lay out here in clear, inexorable steps.

Obviously, a whole book could be written, to unpack all these claims. And good ones have been written, such as Ryan Andersons When Harry Became Sally, and Abigail Shreirs Irreversible Damage. I encourage people to read them. And also to listen to testimonies from people who carried the heavy cross of gender dysphoria, unwittingly subjected themselves to medical malpractice at the hands of todays lobotomy doctors, and now regret it. Walt Heyer is perhaps the most eloquent among the ex-trans community.

But for today, I think its sufficient to explore just my first claim, since all the others logically follow from it. If this premise is true, so are the conclusions.

I already wrote a column on this topic to mark the sad transitioning of the gifted actress Ellen Page. Rather than re-invent the wheel, let me quote the key sections here, then add some new reflections.

Let me violate good Gnostic manners and ask a few vulgar questions. Is Page going to have her perfectly healthy breasts removed? Will Page use some crude simulacrum of male genitalia to render her lesbian marriage now suddenly heterosexual? Will Page dose herself with male steroids, and undergo all the health risks? I hope none of the three, for her sake.

But we know that none of these things are necessary for greedy, shameless biological males who wish to scoop up all the prizes in womens sports. Or lurk in their locker rooms. Or leave a male prison where theyre locked up for raping women, and move to a prison full of women whom they can rape.

No, precisely because biology is irrelevant, you need do none of these things to be a trans. You just need to declare it, and everyone else must honor that choice. But what are you choosing, exactly? If youre not making dangerous, destructive efforts to mutilate your body, what are you doing? What are you identifying with, or as, and how?

If the capacity for real motherhood or fatherhood is not part of gender then what is? Lipstick, high heels, and a high-pitched voice on the one hand and lumberjack shirts, work boots, and unashamed farts on the other? By identifying as some gender at odds with your genitals, are you simply indulging a stereotype? If so, must strangers honor that? Must we blow up womens sports, strip women of privacy, and subject some to physical danger (like the fellow prisoners of a suddenly female rapist, or girls on a rugby field mowed down by a 6 3 girl)?

All so that a few mentally ill people can LARP? And we as a society have to nod along with them and agree to pretend to believe them? At this point I insist on saying two things: No, and H***, no! A society that can force us to say that Bruce Jenner is a woman and Ellen Page is a man can force us to say anything at all. Including that 2+2=5.

Nobody asks whether a chicken, or a gorilla, identifies as the opposite sex. Only fallen human beings, with our big, complicated brains, come up with sophisticated delusions like gender dysphoria. Or paranoid conspiracy theories about the Jews. Or bizarre means of mental self-torture like Scientology.

When Transgenderists and their dupes demand that we respect the gender identity of a pregnant man, or a bearded transwoman rapist in prison, what are they telling us to do? Theyre insisting that we must cater to false cognitions, to psychological distortions. That we must remake all of society, and change how we speak and we act, to placate people trapped in illusions who wish to conform to external stereotypes of the opposite sex. And ruin their health, mutilate their bodies, and trample on the rights of others to accomplish that.

Imagine things were different. Visualize a world where Trans ideology applied not to something trivial like the only means of reproducing the human species, but to something really important, such as money.

So people who claim to be billionaires with perfect credit scores and vast assets in real estate and stocks can walk into banks and demand lines of credit worth $500 million. And bankers would have to comply, or else be accused of encouraging violence against the Transfinancial.

People who believe that they know as much as Harvard MBAs can claim that degree on their resumes and employers have to hire them. And so on. Any hobo who puts on an ascot is now a Rockefeller heir, and you must treat him as such or face cancellation. Someones Transfinancial identity must be respected.

Now such things would never happen, because certain subjects are sacred.

John Zmirak is a senior editor at The Stream and author or co-author of ten books, including The Politically Incorrect Guide to Immigration and The Politically Incorrect Guide to Catholicism. He is co-author with Jason Jones of God, Guns, & the Government.

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Will Wokeness Kill the Party? | Opinion – northernexpress.com

Posted: at 5:12 pm

Guest Opinion By Mary Keyes Rogers | July 23, 2022

Regardless of your political persuasion, youve gotta hand it to the Democrats for how well theyve presented the Jan. 6 hearings. Every i has been dotted and each t has been crossed, emotions kept in check, timetables explained, and unbiased witnesses called upon to testify. Even if they did get a hand from Hollywood, thats fine by me. Great job, kudos to all involved!

Considering whats come to light in those hearings, it is a shock theyre likely going to lose the House, and maybe the Senate, too, in the midterms.

Let me predict how Republicans will snatch the votes of many moderate Democrats and Independents.

It shouldnt be easy, considering the average voters opinions on key issues compared to the Republican candidates. Most Americans identify as pro-choice. They support a ban on assault weapons and think the government should be doing more to limit the impact of climate change, all causes represented in Democratic-sponsored legislation in the House and subsequently killed by Republicans in the Senate. To be clear, the Republicans are unanimous in their positions on these issues: No, no, and no.

I believe we can all agree that abortion, guns, and climate are not fringe issues.

Democrats should be at a significant advantage in the midterm elections when Republicans are heavily favored to take back the U.S. House and perhaps even the Senate. Only in the most recent weeks, with the overturning of Roe v. Wade and the Uvalde school shooting, have poll numbers begun to slip a bit for Republicans.

In statewide elections, Democrats, and even moderate Republicans, are poised to be trounced by Trump-whipped, NRA-directed, pro-life, polluting-for-profit Republicans. (By the way, I used to like Republicans when they were a party of free-thinking individuals.)

Considering all that the Republicans are doing in direct opposition to the desires of the American voter, you would naturally believe the Democrats must be doing some genuinely crazy bad stuff.

It may sound minor, but they allowed the tail to wag the dog. Yes, the Democratic party has cowered to its own far, far left, uber-progressive, woke slice of the party pie at the expense of most voters.

So, while closer to the target on these hot-button issues of abortion, guns, and climate, Team Blue went so far to the left on cultural issues that voters are uncomfortable calling themselves Democrats. Moderates and Independents are willing to overlook their differences with the Republican platform as long as their finances are more likely to improve with Team Red.

The message makers at Donkey HQ need a reminder that not everything is sexist, racist, elitist, or coming from a place of white privilege or hate. We are a country of evolving, imperfect humans with varying histories and sensitivities, but our right to free speech includes the right to be insensitive and in bad taste. Sometimes, we really are just making a joke. And some jokes are just plain offensive.

The Democratic Party must recognize that they dont have enough woke soldiers to win the culture war. Politically Incorrects liberal Bill Maher has been held up as the darling of Fox News and the Republican Party because hes openly pissed off and poking fun at the woke crowd. Even former President Obama has sternly warned young activists that shaming isnt activism.

Unfortunately, our funniest comedians will no longer tour or perform on college campuses for fear of either being canceled or facing a woke and humorless audience for 90 minutes. Much to my dismay, Hollywood doesnt seem to be making many comedies anymore because they are too politically expensive to produce in this woke era.

Personally, Im not okay with being shamed by a passing 20-year-old for using a plastic straw. And, honestly, I dont want to be called a birthing person or a person with a vagina.

The most progressive members, the trigger police within the Democratic party, have become its de facto standard bearers. In contrast, the average Democratic voter cannot relate to their gripes or their rage.

I hear young liberal progressives within the Democratic party ashamed of their country and citizenship. I understand that our countrys history has been sanitized, but warts and all, average Democrats still love their country.

Mainstream voters think about paychecks, not pronouns. Average Americans wring their hands over funding their retirement accounts, not defunding the police. The woke culture that threatens, You know you cant say that anymore? has exhausted us. Their 15-minutes can end now, please.

Ironically, woke culture may cancel Democratic candidates and, in the process, help to elect Republicans who will block any legislation offering support for reproductive rights, gun control, or reversing climate change.

Wake up to that.

Mary Keyes Rogers, a Traverse City resident of more than 20 years, hosted the daily talk radio show Mary in the Morning, launched Marigold Women in Business, and has held executive positions in many civic and business leaders local, regional, and national organizations.

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Why tech giants Meta, Google and Adobe are likely to collapse within 10 to 20 years – Vulcan Post

Posted: at 5:12 pm

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed below belong solely to the author.

As I was working on a Google Ads project for a long-time client, sifting through its automated recommendations for his ad account, something dawned on me:

The way things are today, Google (Alphabet) may not survive another 10 or 20 years.

And its not the only major company that may unexpectedly go down the drain, even if most people think it is too big to fall.

There are many cautionary tales from the past of businesses which seemed so huge and so successful that nothing would be able to dent them and then something, someone, came along and kicked them into the dustbin of history.

22 years ago, Nokia was the worlds largest mobile phone maker and hit a peak valuation of over US$300 billion. AOL peaked at over US$200 billion, Yahoo at over US$100 billion around the time Google was a garage project of two students.

In fact, those two students who are now multibillionaires Larry Page and Sergey Brin, offered to sell Google to Yahoo for a mere million bucks in 1998. They were turned down.

Today, Nokia while still in existence is worth less than 10 per cent of what it used to, has left the consumer phone space, and is getting by on its intellectual property and research in the field of enterprise telecommunications.

Its no longer a household name, even though at one time, most mobile users on the planet carried one of its phones in their pockets.

AOL, the giant that once opened the doors to the internet to millions of Americans, was swept up by Verizon for mere US$4.5 billion a few years ago, along with Yahoo once the front-page of the internet and its most popular search engine for about the same.

Last year, both were dumped again, at another 40 per cent discount.

All of them fell from grace because they have grown complacent and slow to respond to innovation brought out by others. They relied on sluggish, increasingly outdated, inflexible business models which once made them rich and seemingly untouchable.

Until it turned out they werent a realisation that happened very suddenly, unexpectedly wiping them out in just a few years.

And I feel the same is happening with at least three of the modern giants: Alphabet (Google), Meta (Facebook) and Adobe, collectively worth over US$2 trillion dollars.

Google is regularly ranked among the worlds most innovative companies but, for the love of me, I have no idea why.

Google Ads are no longer really genuinely helping businesses reach more customers the system is designed in a way that is, by my observation, designed to squeeze out the most money out of advertisers by often suggesting them actions that are not in their best interest.

Its either an example of poor engineering and appalling machine learning or worse, a deliberate policy.

I know this firsthand after observing results from which the supposedly smart algorithms refuse to learn, defaulting to spending more money than is otherwise necessary.

But if thats too niche-specific and not really relatable to you, lets focus on Googles (Alphabets) key, customer-facing product that drives most of its ads: its search engine.

After a quarter of a century, Googles delivery of search results hasnt fundamentally evolved. Its still the same page with links leading to supposedly most relevant results only they still contain a ton of spam or even outright misleading and deceptive sites that continue to outsmart Googles engineers and rank higher than reputable websites or businesses.

It seems that Google has stopped caring about improving its search engine because theres seemingly nobody who could challenge its de facto global monopoly. So, why bother?

At the same time, its advertising that still brings in the vast majority of money 80 per cent of Alphabets revenue, in fact.

In other words, the company is still dependent on 20-year old ideas that it is obviously not intent on meaningfully improving.

Even its venture into the mobile world, where Android is dominating in terms of market share, is ultimately supporting the very same ecosystem of free apps that Google uses to drive people to advertising that it cashes in on.

Advertising, lets remember, that is still largely based on displaying either clickable entries on a search results page, intrusive banners on third-party sites and apps, or interrupts your videos on YouTube and elsewhere (while youre just waiting to skip to what you really came to watch).

How long can a company survive if it depends on a search system that still struggles to provide accurate information and weed out spam or deception, and advertising that is largely an unwanted annoyance for the target audience?

Its quite clear that both are ripe for a shakeup by another innovative startup showing the big, slow elephant that it cant really think forward (in seven years of Alphabets other investments have, so far, failed to provide anything novel, after all).

Facebooks story is largely similar. It wasnt first to the social media market, but it was the first to provide something that glued people to their screens a timeline of activities from accounts and pages within a users network.

Fast forward 18 years and it still depends on just that, fending off challengers who applied a similar concept to other media like images (Instagram, which has since been acquired by Meta) or video (like TikTok).

At the same time, its leadership has obviously grown so self-assured that it believes itself capable of policing thought and speech of Facebooks three billion users, determining not only what they see, but what penalties are imposed on them for sharing politically incorrect opinions or memes, or even having online quarrels with other users.

Not exactly very social after all, is it?

And yet, the next big thing that Big Brother Zuckerberg believes will shape our future is the idea of putting on his VR helmets for hours on end, drifting into the virtual reality of the metaverse that he is so committed to that he has even rebranded his entire company around it.

But have users jumped on the hype? Not so much. While the VR market is growing, it is doing so on the back of improved experiences within existing uses like gaming, not new services that are much more comfortably accessed using legacy technologies which dont induce vertigo or make your eyes and head hurt after an hour or two.

I think its rather telling that these two huge companies have decided to rename themselves and yet failed to produce any innovation under either of the names.

Alphabet has been around for seven years and can anybody name anything that it has churned out outside of Googles brand that would gain global interest?

Meanwhile, Metas VR business is just another acquisition (of Oculups, the original innovators in the VR scene), not an internal development. And by Zuckerbergs creepy launch presentation, it seems that people running the show have, indeed, already lost touch with the real world.

Finally, my personal pet peeve, Adobe. Ive been working as a graphics designer since my early teens 25 years ago. Back then, Adobe was the pinnacle of software engineering in the field and nobody could come close. Even large, complex works were doable on hardware running a tiny fraction of the computing power modern PCs have.

And yet, after a quarter of the century, vast majority of functions (particularly in apps like Photoshop or Illustrator) are exactly the same, yet have a habit of crashing or slowing down even on advanced hardware. I just had Adobe Acrobat protesting removal of a few pages of a PDF file that simply contained a fair bit of outlined text on a Ryzen machine equipped with an RTX3080 and 64GB of RAM.

Adobes customer support forums are filled with mountains of complaints or feature requests dating years into the past that nobody in the company has ever taken care to read, let alone fix or implement.

Even worse, some basic features that are present in one program may be completely absent in another, even though they would be most welcome (and applicable). Heck, even mere copying of content between them is often difficult, buggy or downright impossible.

Why is that? Not because Adobe cant do it, but because it doesnt want to and doesnt have to, as theres nobody to threaten its position.

Its not a company that is any longer driven by engineering milestones, but by financial ones.

Like Boeing, where accountants running the business decided to cut corners so much that two new 737 MAX planes crashed killing a few hundred people on board. All because Boeing wanted to save a bit of money and time on proper licensing procedures that would require retraining existing pilots.

Two years ago, Adobe made a blunder of a similarly catastrophic scale (in proportion, of course) in its own market after a buggy update to Lightroom irreversibly deleted photos and crucial software presets of millions of users of the software on iOS devices.

The dominance it enjoys has culled progress almost entirely, so much so that there are no benefits that it can (or wants to) derive from modern hardware in virtually all of its programs except for video editing perhaps, but it is largely because in the video space it still has some competition to deal with.

Other than that, its simply cheaper to not improve much. Where are the people going to go anyway if Adobe products are not only a global standard, but pretty much a requirement in visual arts and design?

And yet, this is precisely what makes it and other big names so vulnerable. They think they are beyond competition and have strangled innovation in the process, because they just cant be bothered.

Why improve if youre so good that you pretty much own the market? And then, one day, someone comes along and shows the old guard that they are no longer good enough. But that lesson typically comes too late.

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Images of how Coventry tried staying cool in the 1976 heatwave – Coventry Live

Posted: at 5:12 pm

With record-breaking temperatures hitting the country this week, here in Coventry we've seen schools closing, restaurants shutting and even roads melting amid alerts over safety. Yet for some residents, actions to tackle the unprecedented heat are a sign of today's namby pamby snowflake culture.

You just need to wheel back a few years to get a different perspective - even if it is rose-tinted. For many older Coventrians, the tarmac in their day was made of tougher stuff, and schools closed for nothing, not even the safety of youngsters and the current heatwave is a doddle in comparison to the long hot summer of 1976.

Granted, the heatwave of that summer wasn't a couple of days, but almost a solid two months of blistering sunshine. But how did the city stay cool in the face of such heat back then?

READ MORE: Hour by hour forecast on hottest day of the year in Coventry

We've had a look back at the archives to see photos from that summer that show ways residents tried staying cool. This included teens frolicking in well-known fountains, including the popular one outside the Belgrade Theatre.

There was also an attempt to summon some much need rain over in Rugby with what would now be considered a slightly politically incorrect Indian Rain Dance, which included a man dressed in Native American gear. Other images show children splashing in paddling pools.

July of that year saw the Coventry Evening Telegraph reporting on hosepipe bans due to "the demand for water soaring to unprecedented levels". But those naysayers who say schools carried on as normal back in their day are actually wrong.

According to our archives, some city schools switched to 'continental class-hours in an attempt to beat the heatwave'. Sam Bentley, head of Burton Green Primary in the city, said the move "worked marvellously".

Do you remember the summer of 1976? How did you stay cool at the time? Let us know in the comments.

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The woman who married herself: An interview with Kshama Bindus spouse – Times of India

Posted: at 5:12 pm

When Kshama Bindu, a 24-year-old woman from Gujarat, announced early last month that she was getting married to herself, I didnt pay much attention. But when she told the world that she was going for her honeymoon to Goa, I could no longer ignore her. I will spend time at Arambol beach where I can wear a bikini without anyone ogling at me, she said, promising to capture all my special moments on my mobile phone. She added that she was well equipped to handle questions about her spouse.

Well, I have no questions about her spouse, but had a few questions for her spouse. So, I sat down for an imaginary interview with Kshama Bindu, spouse of Kshama Bindu. Uninterrupted by calls from her spouse, she spoke. Excerpts:

Do I call you Kshama or Bindu? And what do I call your spouse?

Call me Kshama. As I am my spouse, you can call her, who is me, also Kshama.

Thats helpful, Kshama. So, how was it being your own bride and how does it feel being newly married?

Ah, the bride part was tough. A local BJP leader made a fuss over my sologamy being against Hindu practices and threatened to stop me from getting married at a temple, so it had to be a private affair. Yet it went off well. Its a wonderful feeling to be married, you know, especially to yourself since you are married to someone you know and someone who understands you.

Are you planning to have children?

Children are cute, and I err we definitely want to have them. With advances in ART its possible, but its too early to think of that. For now, I want to enjoy my married life. The best part of marrying oneself is that I can do everything travel, movies, eating out for half the price of a couple. Isnt that cuter than changing diapers without help from an extra hand?

I may be politically incorrect, but I have to ask this: Have you considered the possibility of a separation or divorce?

Not a problem. Ive thought it through. Though I am married to myself, I can have disagreements with my spouse who is myself. And I am not being philosophical here. But one thing I am certain, I will not fight with my spouse in front of our children. I think the chances of a divorce after sologamy are less, but it can happen. In the unlikely event of incompatibility and divorce, I swear I will not make it ugly. I will just divorce myself. And there would be no custodial battle for children. If my spouse, that is me, has to visit my children, I will make sure I make myself a seven-course dinner to be shared with the kids as the Madras high court has suggested. Anyway, I dont have a better half; the married me just feels full. Now that I am planning my honeymoon, I am all excited, and so is my spouse who is me.

That sounds a bit like Nithyananda

I get your attempted sarcasm, but here it is: I am not the first one to do this; sologamy has been around in the west for many years. The Netflix show Anne with an E might have inspired me to marry myself, but I wasnt being a copycat. I was being myself. What else explains I marrying me and I being happy with me? Well, if that sounds like Nithyananda, he had a point which you guys never understood.

Views expressed above are the author's own.

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Time to step ahead without fear | The Standard – Hong Kong Standard

Posted: at 5:12 pm

Hong Kong reported over 4,100 new Covid infections yesterday amid warnings that daily counts could eventually surpass 10,000 cases.

Contrary to the panic gripping the city at the start of the fifth wave, people seem to have largely got used to living with the numbers without being in a state of fear.

Apparently, the city has reached a new milestone in its pandemic fight.

Yesterday, The Standard's sister paper Sing Tao Daily carried a report saying the government was expected to shorten hotel quarantine for international travelers from seven days to either five days at a quarantine hotel plus two days of restriction outside hotel or four days in a hotel plus three days of restriction.

According to the report, a decision is expected within one or two weeks.

No matter which plan is adopted, people finishing their hotel quarantine will be given a yellow health code to restrict their movements for the rest of the specified period.

It is not yet absolutely clear if people who have completed the shortened hotel quarantine would have to self isolate at home or whether they would be free to go out but not allowed to visit certain premises, including restaurants, where customers are allowed to remove their masks.

But any small step in the direction of enabling the public to resume normal living is to be welcomed.

Of the two options - "five-plus-two" or "four-plus-three" - the second would be preferred since it would at least be one day closer to relatively normal living.

Hopefully, the shortening is only another step down the road, with more easing steps to follow until all quarantine and social distancing restrictions are lifted.

Signs have been promising even though development has been regrettably slow.

Just the day before, four local medical experts, including Yuen Kwok-yung and David Hui-cheong, took the lead to advocate a need to shift our current pandemic policy to one of mixed immunity that is currently the most common strategy practiced in the world. Mixed immunity is not a new concept. Whether it's called mixed immunity, herd immunity or even living with the virus, it means the same thing.

Were all these sensitive phrases in use during the preceding months? Back then, it would still have been impossible and politically incorrect for anyone in or near the establishment to publicly advocate such a policy shift.

That several of the city's best-known experts - as well as former Hospital Authority chief Leung Pak-yin - have spoken up to stress the need to face the reality that Covid won't disappear from the world could be a sign.

It is hoped that Secretary for Health Lo Chung-mau will heed their calls and bring the policy up to date with a view to creating an exit roadmap.

Executive Council convenor Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee mentioned the other day that Hong Kong may have no choice but to open its international borders to normal travel before its borders with the mainland.

Despite her pledge to uphold Exco confidentiality, could Ip be hinting that normal international travel will resume sooner rather than later?

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A Moment of Sporting Immortality – The Heritage Times

Posted: at 5:06 pm

By Olusegun Adeniyi

In a pinned tweet posted six years ago, precisely 7th November 2016, Oluwatobiloba (Tobi) Amusan wrote what has turned out to be prophetic:Unknown now, butI will be unforgettableI will persist until I succeed. On Sunday night in Oregon, United States, Tobi Amusan wrote her name into sporting immortality. I took that phrase from Tim Hutchings, a former English athlete who ran the commentary at the World Athletics Championship Oregon22 alongside American athletic legend, Gail Devers. Amusanhas not only become the first Nigerian to win a Gold medal at the World Championship but also the first athlete to break the global record on the track twice within one night!

This perhaps is one of the most depressing periods in the history of our country. Our public universities have been under lock and key for almost six months with marooned students effectively having lost an academic season as a result of the strike by lecturers. The prevailing climate of general insecurity has reached Abuja where school authorities are asking parents to collect their children/wards and soldiers of the Guards Brigade are being ambushed by terrorists who appear to have infiltrated the Federal Capital Territory. The Naira is dancing Buga in the exchange rate market almost every day as prices of goods and services skyrocket. The energy sector has practically collapsed along with the power grids and oil thieves have hijacked the oil and gas sub-sector. Since we now spend far above what we earn as we continue borrowing to stay afloat, the macro-economic indices are, to put it mildly, frightening. Sadly, there is hardly anything to cheer in our country today.

To worsen matters, those who seek to become our next president are busy fighting dirty in the marketplace over inanities. Many of these politicians over whom Nigerians squabble and take sides as Christians and Muslims, according to a Twitter post, actually meet at secret fraternities. In any case, despite our profession of Christianity or Islam, we should all feel a sense of shame as to what Nigeria has become. That of course does not discount the issue of inclusivity in a plural state that a religiously balanced presidential ticket suggests. Or the provocation of some politicians hiring unknown godmen almost as if Christianity is about wearing ridiculous regalia. But these are issues that can wait. Today, I want to stand up for the champion, our own Tobi Amusan!

For Nigerians who may not fully understand or appreciate what happened at the World Athletics competition in Oregon, let me take them through the commentary that followed the amazing 100 metre hurdles race. Hutchings started it: Tobi Amusan looks at the clock. I cannot believe it; shes done it again. Two world records in one night and she makes history by becoming Nigerias first world champion. What a way to do it and what a stage on which to discover sporting immortality! Records can be broken; titles will stand the test of time and tonight shes done both two world records: 12.06. Tonight will never, never be forgotten by anyone lucky enough to be here. That was utterly extraordinary. We doubted she could do it again. How dare we? How dare we? Nigeria, a proud African nation, are on top of the world tonight. And Amusan has delivered an evening of unprecedented glory and speed. That was utterly, utterly incredible.

After describing the line-up of the eight athletes as the fastest in a World Championship final according to records posted by each of the contestants, Hutchings turned to his colleague in the commentary box: Gail Devers, I know that you have scaled the heights but surely, surely, we never would have expected two world records on one night. Surely, Amusan should have gone tired there, but she was even better.

Devers, an American two-time Olympic champion in the 100 meters and only the second woman in history to have successfully defended that title (with three Olympics Gold medals to her name), responded: I am going to tell you what I wrote. I wrote that let me put myself in her shoes Devers then went on to describe the difficulty that faces any athlete who breaks the record in the qualifying heats and the challenge before Amusan barely an hour later when she had to compete for Gold medal in the final: They are thinking that she cannot repeat (what she just did) but you got to believe in yourself. Its not what other people believe about you. Its what you believe about yourself and what you are willing to do. And on this night, she had to execute. And she did!

Hutchings was back: That was absolutely incredible. When you think, Gail, how long it took Kendra Harrison to break (Bulgarian Yordanka) Donkovas world record and she did it by a hundredth of a second. And suddenly, in the space of one evening, the record tumbled by a further 0.14 of a second which, for this event, is a colossal drop.

Devers took over, again: I mean, it is unbelievable like you said. I was there (in 1988) when Donkova made that world record and to see it come down twice. This is one of those days when people are going to be like where were you when that happened? And I am going to say I was right here watching. Hutchings interjected: And so am I. Toby Amusan is making history, the first Nigerian to win a world title and two world records in one evening. Unprecedented!

My friend, Chris Adetayo who shared one of the screenshots from Amusans twitter page believes that the story of Amusan is going to be a subject of attention by many motivational speakers. I feel inclined to join that crowd today. On 18th September 2016 when the (now former) World record holder, Kendal Harrison turned 24, Amusan tweeted a photograph she had taken with her and this message, Happy birthday @KeniUSATF. 100MHurdles World Record holderWatch out, Im gonna break it soon which she ended with a laughter emoji. And now, she has done it!

The story of Amusan is indeed incredible but there is also an unfortunate Nigerian angle to it. At the Rio Olympics trial in Lagos in June last year, Amusan posted what could have been a new African record of 12.3 seconds, but the timer failed her. About 80 meters into the race, as I approached the home stretch, from the corner of my eye, I couldnt help but notice that the display clock stayed at Zero the whole time. I had never experienced that before, Amusan wrote as she reflected on what might have been. the timer not working, happening during one of the biggest races of my career? Hell no! So, it was quite astonishing seeing all that effort come down to an important moment of just simply timing the final

That disappointment is now no longer important. When Amosun took the podium on Sunday night and the Nigerian national anthem was being played, she could not hold back her tears of joy. As expected, many have given their own interpretation. I am aware that we live in a country where the whole is less than the sum of its parts and we can spend a whole day lamenting about Nigeria. But the lesson from Amusan is that nothing comes easy and that you must work for your success. And as it is for individuals, so it is for nations. That is one take-away from Amusans story. Even with all her past disappointments, she set a goal for herself, put in the shift, and realized her dream. We can say the same for Ese Brume who won bronze at the 2019 championship in Doha but won silver at Oregon. She has already set her sight on an individual Gold medal at the next Olympics and I believe nothing can stop her.

There is a commercial that Globacom used to air of the British World Heavyweight boxing champion, Anthony Joshua speaking about the Nigerian spirit of resilience. Since I have elected to play the role of a motivational speaker, it is most fitting to repeat it here: There has always been a big piece of my heart as a Nigerian and I do believe that it is that piece that sets me apart. It always says to me, never give up, dream big! We have that same tenacity, that Nigerian fighting spirit that makes us game changers! We are relentless. We dont just face our challenges; we step into the ring to win again and again and again. If you believe in yourself, there is no limit to what you can achieve. Yeah, I used to be a bricklayer in England but now I am heavyweight champion of the world! he declared before he added: You need strength? Yeah, that comes from the hard knocks that life throws at us. And we are Nigerians, we know all about that. And finally: Its like when we are up against the rope. You dont stay down; youve got to fight. You have to dig deep to be a world champion.

So much for motivation. Now to the reality. In many different ways, Tobi Amusans breathtaking epic success captures the Nigerian dilemma. Here is a nation imbued with some of the most exceptional citizens with incredible world class talents from aerospace, cutting edge medicine to sports. Yet, despite a lack of preparation for anything, our talented citizens continue winning laurels to the utter astonishment of an embarrassingly incompetent officialdom. Here is a nation defined by a tragic mismatch between Africas most enlightened and refined civil society and one of the worlds worst performing states. Caught between the pride and optimism of our citizens and the tragedy of governmental failures, Nigeria is kept alive by the stubborn hope among the majority of our citizens that one day, bad times and atrocious leaders shall pass.

I join millions of Nigerians in offering my congratulations to both Tobi Amusan and Ese Brume.

Another Organised Waste of Time

I dont understand what point the House of Representatives wants to make with its proposed investigation of the fuel subsidy regime under President Goodluck Jonathan. For me, the so-called Special Ad hoc Committee to Investigate the Petroleum Products Subsidy Regime established on 29th June is no more than another organised waste of time. It is an admission that our lawmakers do not read their own reports. If they do, they will realise the futility of another probe of the oil and gas industry, after what they did a decade ago. Except of course there is something they are not telling Nigerians.

In 2012, following the crisis that followed the unsuccessful attempt by President Jonathan to fully deregulate the petroleum sector, the House of Representatives set up a similar ad-hoc committee to probe the subsidy regime. The current Speaker, Hon Femi Gbajabiamila was a prominent leader in that House. Chaired by Hon Farouk Lawan, who would later be jailed for taking a bribe from Mr. Femi Otedola, the committee conducted its sessions in public (beamed live on television) and received memorandum and testimonies from major stakeholders in the oil industry.

With the authority of the then Speaker, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal (current Governor of Sokoto State), Mr Boniface Emenalo (secretary of the committee who would later be a prosecution witness against Lawan in his court case) availed me all reports, audio tapes and raw transcripts from the committee secretariat and provided clarification whenever needed. It took me two years before I eventually completed the work in June 2014 but given the political environment at the time, I deferred its publication till after the 2015 general election.

Principal testimonies include that of the then Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; then Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke; then Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke, SAN; two Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Deputy Governors at the time, (Dr Kingsley Moghalu and Mr Tunde Lemo); then Chair of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Mrs Ifueko Omougui-Okauru; then Director General, Budget Office of the Federation, Dr Bright Okogu; then Chairman of the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission, Mr Elias Nban; and the then Group Managing Director of the Nigeria National Petroleum Commission (NNPC), Mr Austin Oniwon.

Also captured in the report were testimonies from 93 oil marketers and importers, heads of relevant institutions (NPA, Customs, PPPRA, PPMC, PEF etc.), senior officials from the Nigerian Navy, auditors appointed by the Ministry of Finance to verify subsidy claims, members of the professional bodies in the downstream oil sector, foreign oil traders, as well as the managing directors of the Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna refineries.

Although I began the effort with a mind to put the resultant book up for sale, the end product was too voluminous. I ended up putting the 857-page book, The Verbatim Report: The Inside Story of the Fuel Subsidy Scam on my web portal for free download. So, if our lawmakers are interested in what transpired regarding subsidy payments, especially under President Jonathan, they should access the publication on http://bit.ly/1EY9s80.

Leadership and the Teens

And let me repeat: You are never too young to lead and never too old to learn. So, I call on the young generation to put its remarkable energy, insight and passion in the service of reconciliation and peace. The path is yours to construct and pursue.

The foregoing statement by the former United Nations Secretary-General, the late Kofi Annan, is the anchor for the 2022 edition of the annual Teens Career Conference of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), The Everlasting Arms Parish (TEAP). Speakers include Samson Itodo, Executive Director, YIAGA-Africa and member of the Kofi Annan Foundation Board, Linda Ejiofor-Suleiman, an award-winning actress and model, as well as Seun Onigbinde, a social entrepreneur, open data analyst and co-founder/CEO of BudgIT. The conference holds on 20th August, but participation is by online registration at http://www.rccgteapteens.ng

You can follow me on my Twitter handle, @Olusegunverdict and on http://www.olusegunadeniyi.com

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A Moment of Sporting Immortality - The Heritage Times

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The Download: a breakthrough climate bill, and Twitters terrible trends – MIT Technology Review

Posted: at 5:06 pm

Ive combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 Bitcoin traders dont care about a recessionDebate over the definition of a recession, and whether were in one, feels like a distraction. (CoinDesk)+ Technically the US may now be in recession, but much of the economy remains strong. (The Guardian)+ Heres why the popular definition of a recession isnt official. (The Atlantic $)+ Bitcoins value is heading towards its best month since 2021. (Bloomberg $)

2 Iran is ramping up its drone productionIt wants to sell them to overseas buyers, reportedly including Russia. (NYT $)+ Why business is booming for military AI startups. (MIT Technology Review)

3 The CHIPS Act isnt going to fix the semiconductor shortagePartly because the shortage seems to be easing anyway. (Recode)+ The multi-billion package must be invested wisely. (Wired $)+ Chipmakers say they urgently need the subsidies promised by the bill. (FT $)

4 The Democrats did not release a deepfake video of Joe BidenDespite conspiracy theorists best efforts to convince the internet. (BBC)+ The biggest threat of deepfakes isnt the deepfakes themselves. (MIT Technology Review)

5 Online outrage is performative and fleetingRefusing to stoop to their level can make the whole thing less annoying to deal with. (The Atlantic $)

6 Sticky patches could revolutionize how we take ultrasoundsPatients could wear them at home, instead of attending hospital appointments. (The Guardian)

7 Chinas virtual idols are burnt outTheir adoring fans dont always consider the humans behind the animations. (Rest of World)+ How Chinas biggest online influencers fell from their thrones. (MIT Technology Review)

8 TikTok is driven by strangers, not friendsThe platform rejected the social model championed by Facebook, with great success. (New Yorker $)+ Instagram has sheepishly (and only temporarily) retracted some of its much-hated recent changes. (NYT $)+ Facebook has vowed to double the amount of AI-recommended feed content. (Motherboard)+ Snap and TikTok offer richer, more interesting recommendations than Google. (Slate)

9 This aging research institute wants to help you live better, not longerBut the shadow of the promise of immortality looms large. (Neo.Life)+ Saudi Arabia plans to spend $1 billion a year discovering treatments to slow aging. (MIT Technology Review)

10 Meet the humans keeping the cloud online Often under incredibly punishing conditions. (Aeon)

Quote of the day

"What frustrates me most is when I'm accused of twisting the truth. As meteorologists, we report facts. There is no conspiracy."

Meteorologist and weather presenter Tomasz Schafernaker tells his employer, the BBC, about his frustration at the online abuse he received from climate change deniers during the UKs recent severe heatwave.

The big story

Meet the wounded veteran who got a penis transplant

October 2019

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Austin Duffy: I wanted to immerse the reader in the terror of being on call – The Guardian

Posted: at 5:06 pm

Austin Duffy, 47, was born in Dundalk and lives in Howth, north of Dublin, where he works as an oncologist at the citys Mater hospital. His two previous novels, This Living and Immortal Thing, shortlisted for the Kerry Group Irish novel of the year, and Ten Days, about early dementia, were both set in New York, where Duffy met his wife, the painter Naomi Taitz Duffy, after winning a research fellowship to work at the Memorial Sloan Kettering cancer centre in Manhattan in 2006. His new novel, The Night Interns, follows three trainee medics on a Dublin surgical ward.

What led you to write The Night Interns?Its not a memoir, but I still have vivid memories of my intern year when I was doing medicine [at Trinity College Dublin in the 90s] and always knew I wanted to write about the experience at some point. Youre thrust into this world where you quickly find out the inadequacy of the theoretical knowledge youre relying on from your studies. I wanted to immerse the reader in the terror maybe thats too strong a word, maybe it isnt of being on call and being asked to be the first person to figure things out for people who are sick. The structure, with no chapters, no real breaks, is meant to make you feel like you cant come up for air.

Were you inspired by other hospital novels?No. While I was working on the book I reread Elena Ferrantes The Days of Abandonment, which has that very intense type of claustrophobic first-person narration I wanted. And this is going to sound very odd, but what really inspired me was coming across Hubert Mingarellis A Meal in Winter four or five years ago. Im stunned he doesnt get more attention; hes a bloody genius. Its this short novel humanising the experience of these three SS officers in a death camp in Poland, wandering around the forest at night, trying to keep warm and cook a meal, trying everything they can to get out of their horrific duties. Obviously Im not comparing theyre working in a death camp, and as an intern youre trying to help people, even though it doesnt feel like that some of the time but something just struck me about the group dynamic of these three recognisably human characters able to do nothing, really, but try to get through the night. I remember thinking, I need to set this in a hospital, I need to make these people interns [laughs].

Does knowing youre a novelist make colleagues wary?Not at all, but I can set their minds at ease: my characters are all fictional. People do sometimes sidle up to you saying, oh, I know who your man was [in previous novels]. Im sure Ill get that a lot with this, because there is a sort of villain in the book, but hes a total construct, not anyone I ever worked with. If he reminds me of anyone, its a particular non-medical person, but hes fiction.

How do you write?Ive a short train commute into Dublin from where I live. Thats 25 minutes writing. If I get to the station early, I get another 10 or 15 minutes, the same if I take a slightly earlier train at the other end. Add it all up and its the guts of an hour. If Im bringing my son to soccer practice, Ill be the oddball sat in the car with a laptop, but thats another 45 minutes or an hour of writing. By necessity its very focused: youre not staring out the window, you know?

Which came first for you, medicine or literature?Medicine. It wasnt that I had a passion for it, but back then [growing up in Dundalk] there didnt seem to be a huge amount of opportunities generally and it seemed like something that would be fairly open. I only got properly emotionally invested in being a doctor when I was a few years down the track. Ironically, the intern year was a help: maybe you wouldnt get that impression from the book, but it was good to feel part of the hospital, because as a medical student I hadnt felt like that at all and found it difficult to engage. I didnt really write properly until I found myself in New York in 2006. My hospital accommodation was like a box: no internet, no television, and at that point it was like, if youre serious [about writing], do it. I joined the Writers Studio in Greenwich Village, a weekly craft class that got me into the flow of writing every day. My first book took seven years but it grew out of an exercise from that class.

What novels have you enjoyed lately?Fernanda Melchor just blew my head off. On the jacket of Hurricane Season, Ben Lerner says she makes all other fiction seem anaemic by comparison, and when I read the book, I knew exactly what he meant. It made me feel the same way I felt when I first read Denis Johnsons Jesus Son. I remember picking that up randomly while waiting to meet someone in a bookshop, and they came up to me like: Are you OK? Whats wrong with your face?

Which writers made you want to write fiction?At college I read the same things everyone else was reading Camus, Dostoevsky but I was too young to get them. It was in New York that I really started reading as a writer. I remember being amazed by a Roberto Bolao story in the New Yorker. I read pretty much all his books after that. Hes brilliant, but he loses the run of himself in his bigger novels; I find him one of the funniest writers, and hes more able to sustain that humour in his short stories. Javier Maras was another one I first read in the New Yorker. I think it was a story where someone was sunbathing and it was just their observations around the pool... brilliant. Ive read all his books too but I had to stop because I was beginning to imitate him, and hes not someone you can imitate; youll just sound like an eejit.

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Austin Duffy: I wanted to immerse the reader in the terror of being on call - The Guardian

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Penn Jillette: Did His Libertarianism Survive Trump and COVID? – Reason

Posted: at 4:58 pm

Today's episodemy absolute favorite to date, after almost six years!is a marathon session with Penn Jillette, the larger, louder half of the fantastical and magical duo Penn & Teller.

Since the 1980s, Penn & Teller have been part of a broad movement to freakify and weirdo-ize American culture in a way that is profoundly individualistic and idealistic. They have helped to create a world where conformity has increasingly given way to self-expression. Before them, to me at least, magic was something dull, something mostly old men did, with boring card tricks, hokey gimmicks, capes, and magic wands. It was Doug Henning on Broadway with feather bangs and Harry Blackstone Jr. making Jiffy Pop on the stove.

Penn & Teller were so different, so alive and fresh, deconstructing magic at the very time they were blowing your mind. They were the reincarnation of Harry Houdini, with a punk attitude, and to me as a kid growing up in suburban New Jersey, they helped make me believe all things were possible, that you could create the life you wanted. Their fantastic show Bullshit! ran for eight seasons on Showtime, during which they debunked everything from alien abductions to the drug war to penis pumps to xenophobia (they even had me on that episode, speaking up for loosening the borders).

Penn especially captivated me: For my entire adult life, he's been one of the most vocal and visible self-identified libertarians out there, always insisting that, as a starting point in any discussion of any issue or problem, we should start by asking, "Can this be addressed by giving people more freedom to make their own choices?"

As impressive: In the mid-2010s, he dropped 100 pounds in three months for health reasonspersonifying the personal responsibility and self-improvement near the very center of libertarianism (check out my 2016 interview with him on all that).

But then, in July 2020, he told the excellent website Big Think that the combination of Donald Trump's election four years earlier and the onset of the COVID pandemic was forcing him to rethink his libertarianism. In a video interview titled "The Year That Broke America's Illusions," he went so far as to say that "libertarianism has been so distorted, I don't know if I have to pull my name out of that ring. It's been adopted by people who don't seem to hold the responsibility side of it and don't seem to hold the compassion side of it." He even likened not wearing masks to drunk driving.

As you can imagine, his comments sent shock waves through the libertarian movement. For many of us, trillions in wasted spending, contradictory guidance from public health officials, arbitrary school and business shutdowns, and absurd policies like closing beaches and outdoor dining have made us even more skeptical of government power.

Why did the 2016 election and the pandemic cause one of the best-known libertarians to seemingly go in the other direction?

I recently attended FreedomFest in Las Vegas, where Penn & Teller have a longstanding residency at the Rio Casino, and caught up with Penn on the set of his popular podcast Penn's Sunday School to talk about Donald Trump, COVID restrictions, and whether his view of the world has really changed. Also joining the conversation was Matt Donnelly, a cohost of Penn's Sunday School.

Over nearly two hours, I talked with Penn about Trump, COVID, Bob Dylan, and the $64,000 question: Has libertarianism changedor has he?

Today's sponsors:

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Penn Jillette: Did His Libertarianism Survive Trump and COVID? - Reason

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