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Thursday, January 29, 2026

The Great Feminization

The Great Feminization

"In 2019, I read an article about Larry Summers and Harvard that changed the way I look at the world. The author, writing under the pseudonym “J. Stone,” argued that the day Larry Summers resigned as president of Harvard University marked a turning point in our culture. The entire “woke” era could be extrapolated from that moment, from the details of how Summers was cancelled and, most of all, who did the cancelling: women...

This cancellation was feminine, the essay argued, because all cancellations are feminine. Cancel culture is simply what women do whenever there are enough of them in a given organization or field. That is the Great Feminization thesis, which the same author later elaborated upon at book length: Everything you think of as “wokeness” is simply an epiphenomenon of demographic feminization.

The explanatory power of this simple thesis was incredible. It really did unlock the secrets of the era we are living in. Wokeness is not a new ideology, an outgrowth of Marxism, or a result of post-Obama disillusionment. It is simply feminine patterns of behavior applied to institutions where women were few in number until recently. How did I not see it before?

Possibly because, like most people, I think of feminization as something that happened in the past before I was born. When we think about women in the legal profession, for example, we think of the first woman to attend law school (1869), the first woman to argue a case before the Supreme Court (1880), or the first female Supreme Court Justice (1981). 

A much more important tipping point is when law schools became majority female, which occurred in 2016, or when law firm associates became majority female, which occurred in 2023. When Sandra Day O’Connor was appointed to the high court, only 5 percent of judges were female. Today women are 33 percent of the judges in America and 63 percent of the judges appointed by President Joe Biden. 

The same trajectory can be seen in many professions: a pioneering generation of women in the 1960s and ’70s; increasing female representation through the 1980s and ’90s; and gender parity finally arriving, at least in the younger cohorts, in the 2010s or 2020s. In 1974, only 10 percent of New York Times reporters were female. The New York Times staff became majority female in 2018 and today the female share is 55 percent. 

Medical schools became majority female in 2019. Women became a majority of the college-educated workforce nationwide in 2019. Women became a majority of college instructors in 2023. Women are not yet a majority of the managers in America but they might be soon, as they are now 46 percent. So the timing fits. Wokeness arose around the same time that many important institutions tipped demographically from majority male to majority female.

The substance fits, too. Everything you think of as wokeness involves prioritizing the feminine over the masculine: empathy over rationality, safety over risk, cohesion over competition. Other writers who have proposed their own versions of the Great Feminization thesis, such as Noah Carl or Bo Winegard and Cory Clark, who looked at feminization’s effects on academia, offer survey data showing sex differences in political values. One survey, for example, found that 71 percent of men said protecting free speech was more important than preserving a cohesive society, and 59 percent of women said the opposite.

The most relevant differences are not about individuals but about groups... 

The larger the group of people, the more likely it is to conform to statistical averages.

Female group dynamics favor consensus and cooperation. Men order each other around, but women can only suggest and persuade. Any criticism or negative sentiment, if it absolutely must be expressed, needs to be buried in layers of compliments. The outcome of a discussion is less important than the fact that a discussion was held and everyone participated in it. The most important sex difference in group dynamics is attitude to conflict. In short, men wage conflict openly while women covertly undermine or ostracize their enemies. 

Bari Weiss, in her letter of resignation from The New York Times, described how colleagues referred to her in internal Slack messages as a racist, a Nazi, and a bigot and—this is the most feminine part—“colleagues perceived to be friendly with me were badgered by coworkers.” Weiss once asked a colleague at the Times opinion desk to get coffee with her. This journalist, a biracial woman who wrote frequently about race, refused to meet. This was a failure to meet the standards of basic professionalism, obviously. It was also very feminine. 

Men tend to be better at compartmentalizing than women, and wokeness was in many ways a society-wide failure to compartmentalize. Traditionally, an individual doctor might have opinions on the political issues of the day but he would regard it as his professional duty to keep those opinions out of the examination room. Now that medicine has become more feminized, doctors wear pins and lanyards expressing views on controversial issues from gay rights to Gaza. They even bring the credibility of their profession to bear on political fads, as when doctors said Black Lives Matter protests could continue in violation of Covid lockdowns because racism was a public health emergency.

One book that helped me put the pieces together was Warriors and Worriers: The Survival of the Sexes by psychology professor Joyce Benenson. She theorizes that men developed group dynamics optimized for war, while women developed group dynamics optimized for protecting their offspring. These habits, formed in the mists of prehistory, explain why experimenters in a modern psychology lab, in a study that Benenson cites, observed that a group of men given a task will “jockey for talking time, disagree loudly,” and then “cheerfully relay a solution to the experimenter.” A group of women given the same task will “politely inquire about one another’s personal backgrounds and relationships … accompanied by much eye contact, smiling, and turn-taking,” and pay “little attention to the task that the experimenter presented.” 

The point of war is to settle disputes between two tribes, but it works only if peace is restored after the dispute is settled. Men therefore developed methods for reconciling with opponents and learning to live in peace with people they were fighting yesterday. Females, even in primate species, are slower to reconcile than males. That is because women’s conflicts were traditionally within the tribe over scarce resources, to be resolved not by open conflict but by covert competition with rivals, with no clear terminus.   

All of these observations matched my observations of wokeness, but soon the happy thrill of discovering a new theory eventually gave way to a sinking feeling. If wokeness really is the result of the Great Feminization, then the eruption of insanity in 2020 was just a small taste of what the future holds. Imagine what will happen as the remaining men age out of these society-shaping professions and the younger, more feminized generations take full control. 

The threat posed by wokeness can be large or small depending on the industry. It’s sad that English departments are all feminized now, but most people’s daily lives are unaffected by it. Other fields matter more. You might not be a journalist, but you live in a country where what gets written in The New York Times determines what is publicly accepted as the truth. If the Times becomes a place where in-group consensus can suppress unpopular facts (more so than it already does), that affects every citizen.

The field that frightens me most is the law. All of us depend on a functioning legal system, and, to be blunt, the rule of law will not survive the legal profession becoming majority female. The rule of law is not just about writing rules down. It means following them even when they yield an outcome that tugs at your heartstrings or runs contrary to your gut sense of which party is more sympathetic. 

A feminized legal system might resemble the Title IX courts for sexual assault on college campuses established in 2011 under President Obama. These proceedings were governed by written rules and so technically could be said to operate under the rule of law. But they lacked many of the safeguards that our legal system holds sacred, such as the right to confront your accuser, the right to know what crime you are accused of, and the fundamental concept that guilt should depend on objective circumstances knowable by both parties, not in how one party feels about an act in retrospect. These protections were abolished because the people who made these rules sympathized with the accusers, who were mostly women, and not with the accused, who were mostly men.

These two approaches to the law clashed vividly in the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings. The masculine position was that, if Christine Blasey Ford can’t provide any concrete evidence that she and Kavanaugh were ever in the same room together, her accusations of rape cannot be allowed to ruin his life. The feminine position was that her self-evident emotional response was itself a kind of credibility that the Senate committee must respect.

If the legal profession becomes majority female, I expect to see the ethos of Title IX tribunals and the Kavanaugh hearings spread. Judges will bend the rules for favored groups and enforce them rigorously on disfavored groups, as already occurs to a worrying extent. It was possible to believe back in 1970 that introducing women into the legal profession in large numbers would have only a minor effect. That belief is no longer sustainable. The changes will be massive.

Oddly enough, both sides of the political spectrum agree on what those changes will be. The only disagreement is over whether they will be a good thing or a bad thing. Dahlia Lithwick opens her book Lady Justice: Women, the Law, and the Battle to Save America with a scene from the Supreme Court in 2016 during oral arguments over a Texas abortion law. The three female justices, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan, “ignored the formal time limits, talking exuberantly over their male colleagues.” Lithwick celebrated this as “an explosion of bottled-up judicial girl power” that “afforded America a glimpse of what genuine gender parity or near parity might have meant for future women in powerful American legal institutions.” 

Lithwick lauds women for their irreverent attitude to the law’s formalities, which, after all, originated in an era of oppression and white supremacy. “The American legal system was fundamentally a machine built to privilege propertied white men,” Lithwick writes. “But it’s the only thing going, and you work with what you have.” Those who view the law as a patriarchal relic can be expected to treat it instrumentally. If that ethos comes to prevail throughout our legal system, then the trappings will look the same, but a revolution will have occurred.

The Great Feminization is truly unprecedented. Other civilizations have given women the vote, granted them property rights, or let them inherit the thrones of empires. No civilization in human history has ever experimented with letting women control so many vital institutions of our society, from political parties to universities to our largest businesses. Even where women do not hold the top spots, women set the tone in these organizations, such that a male CEO must operate within the limits set by his human resources VP. We assume that these institutions will continue to function under these completely novel circumstances. But what are our grounds for that assumption?

The problem is not that women are less talented than men or even that female modes of interaction are inferior in any objective sense. The problem is that female modes of interaction are not well suited to accomplishing the goals of many major institutions. You can have an academia that is majority female, but it will be (as majority-female departments in today’s universities already are) oriented toward other goals than open debate and the unfettered pursuit of truth. And if your academia doesn’t pursue truth, what good is it? If your journalists aren’t prickly individualists who don’t mind alienating people, what good are they? If a business loses its swashbuckling spirit and becomes a feminized, inward-focused bureaucracy, will it not stagnate? 

If the Great Feminization poses a threat to civilization, the question becomes whether there is anything we can do about it. The answer depends on why you think it occurred in the first place. There are many people who think the Great Feminization is a naturally occurring phenomenon. Women were finally given a chance to compete with men, and it turned out they were just better. That is why there are so many women in our newsrooms, running our political parties, and managing our corporations...

That is what feminists think happened, but they are wrong. Feminization is not an organic result of women outcompeting men. It is an artificial result of social engineering, and if we take our thumb off the scale it will collapse within a generation.

The most obvious thumb on the scale is anti-discrimination law. It is illegal to employ too few women at your company. If women are underrepresented, especially in your higher management, that is a lawsuit waiting to happen. As a result, employers give women jobs and promotions they would not otherwise have gotten simply in order to keep their numbers up. 

It is rational for them to do this, because the consequences for failing to do so can be dire. Texaco, Goldman Sachs, Novartis, and Coca-Cola are among the companies that have paid nine-figure settlements in response to lawsuits alleging bias against women in hiring and promotions. No manager wants to be the person who cost his company $200 million in a gender discrimination lawsuit. 

Anti-discrimination law requires that every workplace be feminized. A landmark case in 1991 found that pinup posters on the walls of a shipyard constituted a hostile environment for women, and that principle has grown to encompass many forms of masculine conduct. Dozens of Silicon Valley companies have been hit with lawsuits alleging “frat boy culture” or “toxic bro culture,” and a law firm specializing in these suits brags of settlements ranging from $450,000 to $8 million. 

Women can sue their bosses for running a workplace that feels like a fraternity house, but men can’t sue when their workplace feels like a Montessori kindergarten. Naturally employers err on the side of making the office softer. So if women are thriving more in the modern workplace, is that really because they are outcompeting men? Or is it because the rules have been changed to favor them?

A lot can be inferred from the way that feminization tends to increase over time. Once institutions reach a 50–50 split, they tend to blow past gender parity and become more and more female. Since 2016, law schools have gotten a little bit more female every year; in 2024, they were 56 percent female. Psychology, once a predominantly male field, is now overwhelmingly female, with 75 percent of psychology doctorates going to women. Institutions seem to have a tipping point, after which they become more and more feminized. 

That does not look like women outperforming men. It looks like women driving men away by imposing feminine norms on previously male institutions. What man wants to work in a field where his traits are not welcome? What self-respecting male graduate student would pursue a career in academia when his peers will ostracize him for stating his disagreements too bluntly or espousing a controversial opinion?...

Our window to do something about the Great Feminization is closing. There are leading indicators and lagging indicators of feminization, and we are currently at the in-between stage when law schools are majority female but the federal bench is still majority male. In a few decades, the gender shift will have reached its natural conclusion. Many people think wokeness is over, slain by the vibe shift, but if wokeness is the result of demographic feminization, then it will never be over as long as the demographics remain unchanged. 

As a woman myself, I am grateful for the opportunities I have had to pursue a career in writing and editing. Thankfully, I don’t think solving the feminization problem requires us to shut any doors in women’s faces. We simply have to restore fair rules. Right now we have a nominally meritocratic system in which it is illegal for women to lose. Let’s make hiring meritocratic in substance and not just name, and we will see how it shakes out. Make it legal to have a masculine office culture again. Remove the HR lady’s veto power. I think people will be surprised to discover how much of our current feminization is attributable to institutional changes like the advent of HR, which were brought about by legal changes and which legal changes can reverse. 

Because, after all, I am not just a woman. I am also someone with a lot of disagreeable opinions, who will find it hard to flourish if society becomes more conflict-averse and consensus-driven. I am the mother of sons, who will never reach their full potential if they have to grow up in a feminized world. I am—we all are—dependent on institutions like the legal system, scientific research, and democratic politics that support the American way of life, and we will all suffer if they cease to perform the tasks they were designed to do."

 

Sadly, most people have a pro-female bias, so it looks like Western society is doomed.

Links - 29th January 2026 (1 - USA & Venezuela)

Adam Wren on X - "It’s not about “stealing oil”, the US is energy independent. It IS about restricting the supply of oil to import dependent China. The ‘internal law based order’ did and does exist. The UN has power, international courts have power, but as the hegemon it’s contingent on US hardware. There is no ‘global policeman’ you can call. For decades that policeman was the US, and though it obviously made mistakes with Iraq, Libya and so on, but we have had a remarkably peaceful century. The ‘rules based order’ hit bumps in the road with state sponsored terrorism, with proxy wars conducted by paramilitary organisations and no effective tools to bring those regimes to heel. But where it really eroded was with the emergence of Russia/China as contending powers, with the many failings of the UN. For decades this ‘multipolar’ world was cheered on by western leftists in the hopes it might topple capitalism. We now face constant, barely deniable cyberattacks against western organisations, spying & stealing have become normal. I spent half a decade tracking supply chain attacks against western institutions and every year they got more sophisticated and more audacious. The Russians even unleashed a nerve agent on British soil. Don’t listen to pearl clutching about the ‘illegality’ of limited strikes against Chinese aligned dictators when these people are silent about the threats we’re facing. Toppling the maduro regime (if that’s what happens) it’s a strategic victory. It’s also moral, since he was killing and starving his own people in an attempt to make communism work. Burgon et al will decry the end of the ‘rules based order’ while saying nothing about why it’s ending and opposing the US that upheld it all this time. They’ll call the west imperialist and colonialist while ignoring China and Russia raping africa for its minerals, exterminating its wildlife and killing its rivers. They are hypocrites and their only principle is supporting anything and anyone they deem to be anti-western"

'Zionist Attack:' Venezuela’s Acting Gov't Blames Israel For Maduro Seizure - "'Zionist attack:' Venezuela’s acting gov't blames Israel for Maduro seizure... Venezuela’s government has repeatedly invoked Israel and “Zionism” during past confrontations with foreign powers, a tactic critics say is aimed at deflecting internal blame and consolidating domestic support during moments of political upheaval."
I saw terrorist supporters claim the same thing. Not surprising

Vince Dao on X - "Maduro’s involvement with drug trafficking is NOT made-up propaganda by Trump. It’s known fact. Liberals are just lying about it. The Maduro family has been facing drug cases since the Obama Administration. Even Biden extradited one of Maduro’s top advisors on narco-terrorism charges. The existence of Cartel de Los Soles within the Venezuelan government (Google is free, guys) was NEVER disputed. The only controversy came when Trump labeled them a terrorist organization. There’s a reason liberals have failed to challenge the State Department’s terrorist classification in court: it’s literally true. It’s been a known fact that the Venezuelan government is running a drug cartel for at least a decade. Both Republican and Democrat administrations have acknowledged this. But here comes the revisionist history."

The Left's taste for tyrants is exposed once again - "Faster than Dave Spart could say “Che Guevara”, a chorus of Labour, Lib Dem and Green MPs have called on the Prime Minister to condemn President Trump’s decapitation of the Maduro regime in Venezuela. “If you cannot say this is illegal, all your talk of human rights, the law and democracy is so much hot air,” fulminated Diane Abbott. Jeremy Corbyn’s “Your Party” has launched a petition proclaiming “Stand with Venezuela” – even though very few actual Venezuelans seem inclined to stand with their despised and deposed ex-dictator. The same raddled radicals who half a century ago cut their teeth worshipping at the shrines of Castro and Mao, who spent their youth marching for Chile and Nicaragua, who rallied behind Saddam’s Iraq and still champion Hamas in Gaza, are now recycling their anti-American agitprop on behalf of a tinpot tyrant who even by Latin American standards is entirely unlamented. The love affair between Venezuelan dictators and the British Left goes back at least two decades. As Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone struck up an unrequited dalliance with Hugo Chavez, the former colonel who, after a failed military coup, had been elected Venezuelan president. By then he was touting his ideology of “Chavismo” around the globe. As the strongman of Latin America, his brand of Left-wing populism was all the rage in the salons of Islington. In 2006 Red Ken welcomed this bombastic bolshie to City Hall and was promptly invited for a lavish return visit to Caracas. The following year the Mayor announced that his chum Colonel Chavez had promised to supply cheap oil to Transport for London, which would fund half-price tube and bus fares. Livingstone’s bid to bribe voters with largesse looted from impoverished Venezuelans failed to deter Londoners from replacing him with Boris Johnson. Labour’s tendresse for Chavismo continued until the Colonel’s death in 2013 and beyond. In the run-up to the 2015 general election, Ed Miliband was forced to deny that his proposals for rent controls were inspired by Venezuela. By this time, Nicolas Maduro had succeeded Chavez. In the absence of the Colonel’s charisma, the bankruptcy of Chavismo had become obvious. Venezuela had not only lost its cachet as an anti-capitalist symbol, but was revealed as an economic basket case. Maduro soon emerged as a brutal despot, who has clung to power by repression, corruption and submission to Cuban, Chinese and Russian influence. Yet the British Left is notoriously incorrigible. Once espoused, no cause is ever deemed too unworthy or embarrassing. They condemned US precision strikes against the Iranian nuclear programme, but remain silent in the face of mass protests against the regime – one of the bloodiest on earth. The fact that Donald Trump is responsible for the overthrow of Maduro means that the likes of Richard Burgon and Sir Ed Davey automatically line up against the United States. Those with impeccable credentials in the never-ending war against Anglo-American imperialism are somehow able to turn a blind eye to the role of Xi Jinping and his sinister Belt and Road policy – as blatant an example of neocolonialism as anyone could conceive. China’s strategic acquisitions across Latin America – like those in Africa, Asia and Europe – have been a source of concern in Washington under both Democratic and Republican administrations... There are legitimate liberal and conservative critiques of Trump’s foreign policy, but we have heard little from the British Left that amounts to anything more than a rejection of any US intervention to defend or promote democracy... The Left has never accepted the notion of America as the leader of the free world. Now that Trump seems to be abandoning that idea, the world is likely to become less free, less democratic and more violent. Instead of urging the US to rally the West in defence of embattled democracies such as Ukraine, Israel or Taiwan, the Left continues to regurgitate old anti-American tropes... I hope and pray that the people of Venezuela are given the chance to determine their own destiny, with the US in an enabling role rather than an exploitative one. Britain could play its part too. But I fear that the Left will do all it can to sabotage any constructive efforts we may make, because the current incarnation of Uncle Sam is Donald Trump."

Adam Pankratz: Venezuelan oil could put Canada out of business - "With his removal of Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela, Donald Trump has opened another front in his economic assault on Canada by indirectly targeting our oil industry. Canada must respond decisively with diversification to the world market via the rapid construction of at least another pipeline to the coast, and ideally more. There is now a new urgency to Canadian pipeline construction that didn’t exist prior to the weekend. The reason is simple: Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, and its oil – from the Orinoco Belt — is extra heavy crude, similar to that found in Alberta’s oilsands. With around 303 billion barrels of proven reserves, Venezuela has nearly double the proven reserves of Alberta’s heavy oil. Further, until 1997, Venezuela was the No. 1 exporter of heavy crude to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries. This only changed in 1999 with the election of Hugo Chavez, who raised export prices and royalties... If Canada were to immediately get serious about getting a pipeline to tidewater, it is conceivable that we could complete one in five to seven years. That will require political courage and coastal premiers putting down their activist loudspeakers to facilitate, rather than frustrate, construction. This must happen if anyone in Canada is serious about keeping our country a prosperous one. In 2022, the oil industry directly accounted for $71.4 billion of Canada’s GDP and 20 per cent of Canada’s balance of trade. Despite political hindrance to further development, the industry remains mission-critical to Canada’s economy and investment in our country... Donald Trump did Canada a huge favour when he exposed Canada’s economic and resource export dependence on the United States. So far, we have failed to take measurable steps to diversify away from our southern neighbour. On the weekend, Canada got another dose of realpolitik as the United States launched another bomb at our economy and resources. Refusing to respond with a pipeline would be purely Canadian self-sabotage."

C3 on X - "Once you realize this you’ll never miss it again. When America is in a dispute with another country the Dems and Media will ALWAYS side with the other country. Yesterday was Somalia. Today is Venezuela. It doesn’t matter who it is or what it’s about. They just hate America."

Meme - jashuabonilla: "If anyone from Venezuela is reading this, the majority of Americans do not support the actions of our military. We did not ask for this."
bercowsky: "As a Venezuelan, I did ask for this! You don't care about Venezuela. You're saying this out of hatred for Trump!"
yera_gadea: "Venezuelan here Don't apologize we are crying tears of joy.. thank you Trump."

Sad: This Man Didn't Check The News For One Hour And Missed The Entirety Of World War III | Babylon Bee
As usual, left wingers have very poor comprehension skills and don't understand what a war is. They keep raging about one.

Batya Ungar-Sargon on X - "People are acting like the problem with our forever wars of regime change that cost us billions of dollars and tens of thousands of precious souls was the regime change, not the pointless bloodshed and loss of treasure. Trump's "war" on Venezuela ended before we knew it started."
Batya Ungar-Sargon on X - "Removing a dictator operating in our backyard who flooded our country with lethal drugs and gangs while providing support to China, Russia, and Iran, and getting it done before any of us woke up, is such a clear win—and clearly different than our forever wars in the Middle East."

Richard Miriti on X - "🚨 Hezbollah didn’t hide in the Middle East. It moved to Venezuela. 🚨
🇻🇪 Margarita Island wasn’t just a tourist destination. It became Iran’s proxy hub in the Western Hemisphere. What reports show ⬇️
• Hezbollah training camps protected by the Maduro regime
• IRGC logistics, weapons, and instructors on Venezuelan soil
• Recruits from Latin America trained, then sent to Iran (Qom)
• Fighters relocated from Lebanon after Israeli strikes
• Drug trafficking, money laundering, gold-for-arms deals
And this 👇 matters most: 🛂 Over 10,400 Venezuelan passports and IDs were issued to Lebanese, Iranian, and Syrian nationals between 2010–2019 — many through regime-linked networks. That’s not corruption. That’s operational cover. This infrastructure began under Chávez, expanded under Maduro, and was facilitated by Hezbollah-linked figures like the Nassereddine network.
📍 Location matters: Margarita Island is ~1,200 miles from Florida. That’s not diplomacy. That’s forward positioning. While tourism collapsed, Hezbollah moved in using
• Fake identities
• Duty-free zones
• State protection
This is why U.S. officials didn’t call Venezuela a failed state. They called it a staging ground.
After Jan 2026: Maduro fell. Iran protested. Hezbollah stayed quiet. Because once exposed, outposts get abandoned."

Luke de Pulford on X - "Cool, Beijing cares about international law now. Presume apologies forthcoming for:
- Their planned kinetic attack on @bikhim in Prague?
- Naval provocations in Filipino waters
- Abduction of Gui Minhai?
- Incursions into Taiwans ADIZ?
- Sustenance of Putin’s 🇺🇦 invasion?"

Melissa Chen on X - "Hard to take China’s bluster seriously. Did they ever criticize or condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine? No. In fact, Beijing maintained a position of neutrality, refusing to describe Russia's actions as an "invasion," abstaining from UN votes condemning Russia, and often echoed Russian narratives about NATO expansion and US provocation as “root causes.”"

David Walpiri on X - "China, which is now outraged over “the use of force against president of a sovereign state,” tried to kill Taiwan’s VP, Hsiao Bi-khim, by a planned car crash during her trip to Prague in 2024 Actions against foreign leaders are NOT okay unless China is doing it."

RodeoProfessor on X - "China has been building large scale artificial islands for a decade in the South China Sea. They dredge all the sand around the reefs and pile it directly on top of the same reefs you go diving on when on vacation, just like that. These are aimed at militarization as they install airstrips and radar, territorial expansion, but also the right to the world’s most productive and biodiverse marine regions with vast fisheries stocks. The Spratly Islands have spawning and nursery grounds plus huge tuna, mackerel, croaker, anchovy, shrimp, squid, and other fisheries. Both oceanic and reef fish can be found here which is why the biodiversity is very high. Spratly Island reefs act as nursery grounds for the coastal fisheries for Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines. These larvae and nurseries maintain all regional stocks. China is now the dominant pressure in this region, driven by its government subsidized distant water fleet. These are the last people on earth who should be lecturing us about international law. If it weren’t for the US Navy, this would be happening all over the Indo-Pacific."

Americans for Public Trust on X - "NEW: A CCP-linked group is reportedly behind pro-Maduro protests nationwide. The People’s Forum, a socialist nonprofit organizing the protests, also has ties to Neville Roy Singham — an alleged CCP ally who resides in Shanghai. ➡️ https://t.co/rfCjJujWxc https://t.co/y9TtwizUaF"
Michael Lucci on X - "Communist China funds agitator "boots on the ground" across American cities. Their objective? To sow social division and domestic chaos. It's divide and conquer, CCP-style. CCP agent Neville Roy Singham should be brought to justice for his political war upon America."

Ryan Saavedra on X - "NEW: Within minutes of the U.S. military operation in Venezuela that led to the arrest of Nicolas Maduro, a hardened cell of self-described Marxist, socialist, and communist leaders launched a psychological and propaganda operation in the United States "From a military intelligence perspective, experts say the overnight sequence bears the hallmarks of a pre-positioned influence network executing a rapid-response operation. The synchronization of messaging, the staggered release of content across aligned platforms and the immediate transition from online agitation to physical mobilization point to an ecosystem designed not for spontaneous protest, but for ideological warfare. In this framework, experts say, the nonprofit leaders are foot soldiers in Maduro’s war on the United States, acting as civilian operatives advancing the strategic interests of a foreign ideological project. Their role is not to fight with weapons, but to contest legitimacy, shape public perception, apply internal pressure on U.S. decision-making during moments of external conflict and further the cause of communism, experts say.""

Alex Krüger on X - "Maduro leaves behind a remarkable track record. He oversaw the most efficient destruction of a modern nation-state in history. Under his watch:
• GDP shrank by 80%, a peacetime collapse 3x more severe than the US Great Depression.
• Cumulative inflation hit 150 trillion percent.
• 7.7 million people fled, a displacement of 26% of Venezuela's population.
Beyond economic ruin, Maduro transformed Venezuela into a global logistics hub for cartels. He is accused of repurposing military airbases and radar systems to provide safe corridors for ~275 metric tons of cocaine annually. The UN also links him to over 19,000 extrajudicial killings used to suppress dissent. While the country starved and $300B was siphoned from the treasury, Maduro and his immediate family are believed to have secured a private fortune between $1B and $2.5B. Furthermore, independent audits show that in the 2024 election he fabricated or suppressed 4.7 million votes to flip a landslide 67% defeat into a fraudulent 51% victory. Maduro was an illegitimate president who oversaw a criminal enterprise and directed the economic implosion of one of the wealthiest countries on earth, pushing millions of Venezuelans abroad. The world should be celebrating his removal, rather than defending the "sovereignty" of a tyrant. To the people of Venezuela: congratulations. May this finally be the start of your recovery. I hope to visit Venezuela soon, it's been too long!"

Maurice Cousins on X - "“If you do not possess hard power, you do not get a vote.” Sir Alex Younger, the former Head of MI6, is obviously right. Westminster and the media need to stop talking about the “rules-based order” and start focusing on rebuilding Britain’s hard power. If Britain and Europe are serious about re-armament, there are two urgent preconditions. First, re-densify our energy system. You cannot prepare for war or build credible deterrence on intermittent renewables. Ed Miliband's Clean Power 2030 must not be allowed to proceed. We should immediately scrap the windfall tax on the North Sea, lift the ban on shale gas, and be honest about the continued role of domestic fossil fuels. Coal, however unfashionable, can no longer be ruled out. Second, re-industrialise. Hard power rests on heavy, carbon-intensive industry and the ability to scale production rapidly in a crisis. A country that cannot make things cannot defend itself. Attritional warfare (i.e. the kind last seen in the Second World War and now visible in Ukraine) demands the capacity to fight and sustain conflict over long periods. Alongside fossil fuels that requires domestic production and industrial depth. Re-industrialisation therefore means re-carbonisation, and it means repealing the Climate Change Act and the carbon-budget framework that actively prevent Britain from rebuilding its productive base. Without these foundations, we risk repeating Britain’s mistake of the 1930s: entering a harsher world dangerously unprepared."
Clearly, countries all over the world respect soft power, which is why setting an example of climate change by destroying your economy and having a battalion of human rights lawyers has gotten China to reduce its carbon emissions and stop oppressing the Uighurs

Payton Alexander on X - "This has been one of the most puzzling kinds of reaction to the Venezuela raid. “You seized a country you want, so now China can seize a country they want!” It’s based on the idea that if we take an action, we have made it “okay” for others to take that action. It does not consider whether it is possible for others to take that action, or whether our actions have made it less possible. By taking out Iran and Venezuela, the U.S. and its allies now control 80% of China’s oil supply, making it significantly harder for them to fuel the navy they would need to fight a war against us in the Pacific. Our actions make this scenario less possible, not more, regardless of what “precedent” it sets. It is fundamentally just physically harder for them to do that now."

Glenn Greenwald on X - "Now that the mega-viral videos spread by Trump influencers were exposed as frauds, and we see the real videos of Venezuelans in that country demanding their sovereignty, MAGA will return to: "Venezuelans are dirty third-world pygmies who don't share our values or culture. Who cares what they think?""
Real Political Data on X - ">8 million Venezuelans have fled the country in the last ten years
>Maduro got absolutely destroyed in the recent elections, but stayed in power due to shenanigans
>His approval was in the low 20s
>A crowd of protesters is somehow proof that he was actually secretly popular
>The video is from Russian State TV, and 100% propaganda for Maduro
This whole revision to reality is getting insane, but at this point it’s not even surprising."

Ja'Mal Green on X - "Obama killed Osama Bin Laden, no congressional approval. Obama invaded Libya, the opposition kills Gaddafi. no approval. Biden killed the Al-Qaeda leader in 2022. No congressional approval. Trump swoops in and brings the man alive back to the U.S, Democrats go crazy. lol. As an independent who sits in the middle, Democrats to need to stop being hypocritical."

Meme - Pete Buttigieg: "It's an old and obvious pattern. An unpopular president - failing on the economy and losing his grip on power at home - decides to launch a war for regime change abroad. The American people don't want to "run" a foreign country while our leaders fail to improve life in this one."
Bowling For Ammo: "This you?"
Pete Buttigieg @PeteButtigieg: "The illegitimate takeover of the Venezuelan National Assembly is further evidence that dictator Maduro will stop at nothing to consolidate his grip on power. I stand behind Juan Guaido and the Venezuelan people as they strive to reclaim their democracy and defend their rights."

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Links - 28th January 2026 (3 - Migrants: US - Renee Nicole Good/Alex Pretti)

New Details of ICE Shooting Revealed in 911 Transcripts - "Communication between Minneapolis police and fire units in the minutes following the shooting, also included among transcripts obtained by media outlets, show that an attempt was made to evacuate federal agents to deescalate the situation.  “Contact who is in charge of feds and have them leave scene,” one local officer said at 10:07 a.m. Other messages that followed described the crowd as “getting more agitated” and said that a group of 20 people were attempting to surround ICE officers.  By 11:20 a.m., an officer reported that “all ICE agents have left scene.”"
Weird. Left wingers keep telling us that Ross had to flee the scene because he knew he was guilty

Daractenus on X - "Maybe I’m too much of a European, but I honestly can’t understand how so many Americans find it perfectly natural to be shot in the head on the spot for the slightest act of disobedience toward any sort of law enforcement. You might wanna revisit that "land of the free" thing."
Lauren Chen on X - ""The slightest act of disobedience" Europeans will justify sending people to jail over tweets, but then act like getting hit with a van is not a big deal since it happens to them every time they try to host a Christmas market"

Meme - *Clown meme*
"SHE WAS JUST SITTING IN HER CAR"
"SHE WAS JUST DRIVING AWAY"
"SHE BARELY CLIPPED HIM"
"THE ICE AGENT SAID BAD WORDS"

Meme - Christmas Brick - KOROKS STOLE NOG: "You'll be worthless to them even if you literally die for their cause"
Yves-Angeline: ""Say Her Name" is for Black women. Period."
Bee @byprieta: "I'd like to remind y'all that "Say Her Name" is for Black women. Yes, it matters. Just like Rest in Power is for Black revolutionaries"
An "ally" is a useful idiot who is still ultimately despised for existing

Meme - Tim Walz: "Using the National Guard to stop BLM from burning down Minneapolis *no*"
Tim Walz: "Using the National Guard to stop law enforcement from doing their jobs *yes*"

Meme - John Willow @JohnathonWillow: "From this angle, it is very clear that Anakin Skywalker was not trying to harm the younglings. He was simply trying to provide them with a night light to usher the darkness away and calm their fears."
Meme - A Well_Armed Lamb 🇺🇲 @AWell_ArmedLamb: "From this angle it very clear the balrog was not trying to pass and just panicked as the wizard broke the bridge out under its feet."
Meme - Jack Posobiec @JackPosobiec: "From this angle it is clear the Tanker Bug had just dropped her larva off at school and just panicked when Rico threatened her"
Meme - Tuor Eladar @AgitpropMaster: "From this image it was clear that the Death Star was not pointed directly at Yavin 4, and the rebel scum got away with barely a limp"

Meme - "FOR THE FIRST TIME DEMOCRATS CARE ABOUT A DEAD WHITE BLONDE GIRL"

Meme - "Tinder profile pic vs How she pulls up to the date"

Meme - "0.3x SPEED
Officer 1 standing center hood in front of car. Wheels pointing toward Officer 1
Officer 1 is in standing in front of Vehicle. Officer 2 is attempting to open the door to detain the driver. Moving forward toward Officer 1. Reverse light and Brake light are off
Officer 1 draws sidearm as vehicle comes forward at him. Brake light off, vehicle is now moving forward at Officer 1
Officer 1 aiming side arm as he is struck by the vehicle's front left corner. This shot hit the driver in the head. Tires still pointing forward as Officer 1 is struck by vehicle"

Meme - Soyjak: "Actually, we're allowed to run over people we do not like as long as there are stuffed animals in the car."

The Minneapolis shooting: That settles it - "Although the argument goes on, the video of the Minneapolis shooting taken by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who shot Renee Good effectively answered the question of whether the agent, Jonathan Ross, acted lawfully. The video, and other evidence as well, suggests that he did.    “Regardless of whether you believe Renee Good’s death resulted from either her poor decision-making in gratuitously courting danger, or Trump’s excessive zeal in ramping up immigration enforcement, the legal case comes down to whether the agent reasonably perceived a potentially lethal threat,” wrote former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy. “From what we have seen so far, he did...   Ross is highly unlikely to face any sort of federal prosecution over the incident. But that does not mean that officials in the state of Minnesota will see things the same way. “I’ve just been through enough of these cases where if there’s a political agenda, then the law gets thrown to the side,” Eric Nelson, the lawyer who defended Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis officer now jailed for the death of George Floyd, told the Daily Mail. “It is entirely possible that the federal system could say we’re not going to indict [Ross], but the state could prosecute him for some form of homicide or manslaughter.”   The Ross video is so valuable because, for a couple of days after the shooting, it wasn’t terribly clear what had happened. Was Good part of the local effort to impede ICE’s operations? Did her car hit the agent who fired the shots? Did her wife have some sort of role in events? What had happened in the minutes before the shooting? Nobody knew much.  The video gave the best answer yet to some of those questions. Yes, Good was part of the local effort to impede ICE’s operations. Yes, her car hit Agent Ross. Yes, her wife played a role in events. As far as what happened in the minutes before the shooting, the portion of video that was released doesn’t tell us anything, although another video that has recently come to public attention, made from a house overlooking the scene, showed that Good was obstructing ICE officers.  What was striking was that even as the video emerged, the voices who claimed that the shooting amounted to murder argued that the new pictures supported their position. Shortly before the shooting, Good had told an agent, apparently Ross, “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad.” That, the argument went, showed that she was not in the frame of mind to drive her car in a way that hit Ross. The it-was-murder voices also argued that the video showed Good was trying to avoid Ross, not hit him.   But the videos left no doubt that Good was impeding ICE. There was also no doubt that one or more law enforcement officers ordered her to get out of her car, which she did not do. There was no doubt that she did not stop her car, as ordered. And there was no doubt that Good’s wife, Rebecca Good, a belligerent actor in the street scene, said, “Drive, baby, drive!” immediately before Good hit the accelerator with Ross in front of the car.   Put it all together, and in the view of a number of experts, it added up to a legally sufficient reason for Ross to fire his weapon. “The totality of circumstances relevant to the ICE officer’s decision to use deadly force would have included not simply that Good was a ‘citizen protester’ concerned about the removal policies of the Trump administration,” wrote William Shipley, another former federal prosecutor, “but also that she had created a dangerous condition for others in parking her vehicle blocking a lane of traffic, had failed to comply with lawful commands to exit her vehicle, failed to heed lawful commands to stop as she put the vehicle in gear and began to move, the directions coming from her partner to ‘drive’ while the officer was in front of her vehicle, his observations of her and her conduct through the front windshield, her turning the wheel into his direction and bringing the front end around to face him directly, and beginning to accelerate with the car in ‘Drive.’”  Obviously, none of that will deter Minnesota’s Democratic political officials from denouncing ICE. Perhaps relieved to not be on the defensive about their inaction in the state’s massive Somalia fraud scandal, some Democrats in local positions have routinely called Good’s death “murder.” Others have made a show of their anger. “Get the f*** out of Minneapolis,” said Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey to ICE. Frey also addressed the argument that the ICE agent acted properly by saying, “Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly: That is bulls***.””

Progressivism’s Willing Sacrifices - "Renée Good’s death is being treated by the progressive left as a morality tale with only one permissible conclusion: Trump's ICE is evil, the activist is pure, and any suggestion otherwise is heresy.  That reflexive framing is patently dishonest, and it got a woman killed... The more likely explanation is simpler and more tragic. Good panicked. She feared detention. She believed—wrongly—that she was protected, exempt, insulated by her status, her politics, and the progressive infrastructure that had wrapped her in an illusion of moral invincibility. When that illusion shattered, instinct took over. She fled and that moment of flight, however human and understandable, was catastrophic. In the real world—not the activist one—a moving vehicle confronting law enforcement is not a symbol. It is a weapon. Intent becomes irrelevant.  The mistake many are making is to believe the public sparring between Tim Walz, Keith Ellison, and the insufferable Jacob Frey on one side, and Kristi Noem and the Trump administration on the other, is the real conflict.  It isn’t.  The real culprits are the leaders of a progressive movement that treats human beings as disposable assets. As I thought about this dynamic, a line from Braveheart came to mind, when Edward Longshanks sneers, “Arrows cost money. Use up the Irish. The dead cost nothing.” Substitute “affluent white female liberals” for “the Irish,” and the analogy fits uncomfortably well. This is where Minnesota officials, the DFL, and the broader national progressive movement bear direct responsibility for Renée Good’s death. Good was not a trained professional. She was not a lawyer. She was not a federal monitor. She was labeled a “legal observer”—a title casually bestowed by activist organizations that carries no legal standing but enormous psychological weight. It implies authority without responsibility, protection without power, and safety without consequence.  It is, bluntly, a lie.  That lie is sold aggressively to a specific demographic: affluent, educated white women who have spent their lives buffered from the sharp edges of state power. They are overrepresented in progressive nonprofits, activist training sessions, and street-level demonstrations precisely because they are useful. Their presence sanitizes confrontation. Their voices humanize the cause. Their injuries—and deaths—generate outrage capital and the next Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, or George Floyd “moment” that has fueled nearly every major protest movement since 2012.  This is not an accident. It is a strategy.  And now Renee Gold is dead and the progressive ghouls have their “moment.” Progressive leaders know exactly what they are doing when they deploy these women into volatile law-enforcement situations. They know these participants lack experience with arrest, detention, or physical coercion. They know they are more likely to panic when confronted with real authority. And they know the resulting images will be politically advantageous no matter how the encounter ends. In their heart of hearts, they are looking for that moment.  If this sounds cynical, it should—because it is. The movement’s rhetoric trains its foot soldiers to see law enforcement not as agents of a legal system they may oppose, but as something closer to an occupying army—fascistic, illegitimate, morally void. They hype them up on the dopamine of fear and anger, wind them tight, and send them into the street. That process does not encourage de-escalation. It encourages flight, resistance, and defiance at precisely the moments when compliance is the only safe option.  When Good realized she was about to be detained, her ideology collapsed and all that remained was fear. Her partner reportedly urged her to run. That single word captures the entire failure of progressive activist culture: the belief that moral alignment suspends reality.  It does not. And yet the response from movement leaders has been entirely predictable. They deny responsibility. They double down on rhetoric. They sanctify the victim and absolve themselves. There is no reckoning with the fact that they sent an unprepared civilian into a confrontation with armed federal agents while assuring her—implicitly or explicitly—that she would be safe.  This is not compassion. It is exploitation dressed up as solidarity.  If progressive movements genuinely cared about the people they mobilize, they would stop pretending street activism is consequence-free and a $10 high visibility vest is bulletproof. They would stop inventing titles that suggest immunity. They would stop encouraging civilians to interfere in law-enforcement actions they neither understand nor control.  Most of all, they would stop lying. Renée Good’s death should not be mythologized. It should be interrogated—not to excuse violence, but to expose the moral cowardice of leaders who radicalize rhetoric, outsource risk, and then feign shock when reality intrudes.  Until that happens, more people will be sent forward believing they are protected by virtue alone.  And some of them will not come home."
It's not that affluent white female liberals cost nothing, but that their deaths can be weaponised to turbocharge the left's insurrection

Meme - "Media Framing 101: "Mother and Poet" Renee Nicole Good's Activism
Renee Nicole Good was Minneapolis 'ICE Watch' 'warrior' who trained to resist feds before shooting
When one side of the media tells you she's a "warrior" and the other says she's just a poet caring for neighbors," you're not getting news. You're getting narrative warfare. Swipe to see what they're not telling you.
Same woman. Same story. One side reported facts. The other curated feelings.
NYPost
ICE Watch activist
Trained to "document and resist"
Part of organized coalition
Got involved through son's "social justice first" charter school
Used whistles/horns to warn neighborhoods
Mainstream outlets
Poet
Mother
Christian who sang in chorus
Loving neighbor
Pure sunshine
What Mainstream Media Didn't Tell You:
According to NYPost's reporting (the only outlet that actually did journalism):
She joined "ICE Watch' activists who work to disrupt ICE. operations. Got involved through Southside Family Charter School, 'which *puts social justice first" and involves "kids in political and social activism. Received "thorough training" on how to resist federal agents "what to do, what not to do, to listen to commands, to know your rights, to whistle when you see an ICE agent". Was part of coordinated network using phone apps, whistles, car horns to warn neighborhoods when ICE shows up. Fellow parent at vigil: "She was.a warrior. She died doing, what was right." CNN's version? "She loved to sing"
Why This Matters:
This isn't about whether you support ICE or not. This is about watching mainstream media systematically avoid inconvenient context to manufacture a narrative. They turned an organized anti-ICE activist into a Disney princess because: "Mother shot by feds" gets protests. "Activist trained to resist feds gets shot during confrontation" gets questions. The George Floyd playbook: Strip all agency. Remove all context. Maximize emotional appeal. Fuel outrage. Rinse. Repeat. You're not supposed to know she was trained for this exact scenario, You're just supposed to be angry.
Read Between The Adjectives
When CNN calls someone a "loving mother who sang in chorus" instead of investigating why she was obstructing ICE and that she was an "ICE Watch coordinator trained to disrupt federal operations," they're not lying. They're just telling you which parts matter. Spoiler: The parts that make you feel the way they want you to feel. The facts are all there. The framing does the work. Pay attention to what they include. Pay more attention to what they don't."
This is why left wingers hate the non-left wing media so much. Because they actually dig into the story and report facts
I saw left wingers accuse the New York Post of doxxing her kid. Amusing, given that his name wasn't even given

Meme - Granite Mtn @gran1te_mtn: "What's unfolding in Minnesota is a psychosexual drama where bored moms are begging big strong men to throw them around."
Matt Finn @MattFinnFNC: "MINNEAPOLIS: Border Patrol agents warn two white women in separate SUVs to stop trailing them and not to impede. 'Dont make a bad decision today...""

Meme - "Detained by Desire *white woman in car with masked law enforcement at window*"
Meme - Jack Nelson IV: ""You want to imprison us, fascist!"
>What?
"You want us tied up and restrained!"
>What?
"You want to hold us down with your big, strong muscles as you enforce the law on us!" *bites lip*
>What!?
>Exert your authoritative will over our unrepentant and unlawful bodies" *moans*
>WHAT!?"

John Jackson on X - "An independent autopsy of Renee Good reveals that she had 3 gunshot wounds: to the left arm, right lung, and left temple that exited the right side of her head. That means the third shot, the most unlawful one, from the side, likely killed her."
John Carney on X - "The so-called "independent autopsy" was commissioned by the law firm representing Good's family, which stands to benefit financially if wrongful death is found. The law firm also represented the family of George Floyd. Thank you for your attention to this matter."

Ryan Goodman on X - "As a lawyer, I've been waiting for this. Independent autopsy of Renee Good is in. Strong evidence against Agent Ross, given what it means about second or third shot through left-side window. It's second and third shots that make easiest criminal case of a willful killing."
Shipwreckedcrew on X - "Explain how you get around Alito's 9-0 decision in Plumhoff.     Here's a reminder:  "We now consider respondent’s contention that, even if the use of deadly force was permissible, petitioners acted unreasonably in firing a total of 15 shots. We reject that argument. It stands to reason that, if police officers are justified in firing at a suspect in order to end a severe threat to public safety, the officers need not stop shooting until the threat has ended. As petitioners noted below, “if lethal force is justified, officers are taught to keep shooting until the threat is over.”  9-0.  Including RBG, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan.  Take it up with them."
Time for left wingers to denounce RBG, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan as "fascists" and encourage killing those who are still alive

Mario Zelaya on X - "‼️ BREAKING: CBC busted for Misinformation
My hatred for the CBC, is at a new all-time high. They lied. THEY EDITED OUT KEY ITEMS FROM THE ICE SHOOTING FOOTAGE. Tried to make it seem like:
- there was only 1 ICE agent
- she steered the wheels away from him
- he was at the side of the car when shots were fired
- that the driver’s girlfriend, did not say “drive baby, drive!”
THEY EDITED THE LAST PART OUT! CBC is absolutely disgusting. And deplorable. They need to correct this, apologize and start firing these leftist journalists with an agenda for everything but the unedited truth."
Only Maple Maga believe in CBC media bias!

Meme - *Renee Nicole Good*
"Died protecting dangerous gang members, illegal aliens, and fraudulent Somalis."

ICE shoot dead man, 37, during Minneapolis protest - "Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials claimed the individual had been armed, with a gun and two magazines, when he approached agents who had been “looking for an illegal alien wanted for violent assault”.  The agency claimed in a statement: “An individual approached US Border Patrol officers with a 9mm semi-automatic handgun. The officers attempted to disarm the suspect, but the armed suspect violently resisted.  “Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, an agent fired defensive shots.”"
Now left wingers will call to abolish Border Patrol too. They really want open borders so illegal immigrants can bankrupt the country
Of course some left wingers were blaming ICE. But then they can't tell the difference between legal and illegal immigrants, or men and women either

Andrew Williams on X - "In this video you can see Alex Pretti struggling to point his weapon. When the agent sees Alex trying to free his gun hand he draws his weapon and fires. Anyone who carries a loaded firearm into the middle of a police action is asking to get killed."

captive dreamer on X - "Alex Pretti - shot dead today after pulling a gun on Border Patrol agents while impeding an arrest - had his parents warn him a couple weeks ago to not "do anything stupid" at these protests. They knew he had been radicalized. Must be heartbreaking for them."

Anthony Brian Logan (ABL) 🇺🇸 on X - "This might be the definitive view of the Minneapolis shooting involving Border Patrol. Alex Pretti is clearly seen reaching for his gun holster to try and shoot the officers."
X Exorcist on X - "I see it. The moment after the agent pulls the gun out, the victim instantly reaches back towards his holster. Its hard to see because hes facing the camera at the moment he reaches for the holster. He probably felt the gun being pulled away, and instinctively reached back without thinking."

Landeur 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 on X - "I've slowed this down.  In the huddle, one or more ICE officers shout 'GUN'. This caused another officer to draw his sidearm.  Another officer removed the man's sidearm, and then walked away, but it was discharged negligently (see for yourself).   The Sig P320 is notorious for NDing, but typically only when dropped.   That then triggered the other agents to think that the man on the ground, Alex Pretti, had begun shooting, so they neutralised the perceived threat.  If this is what happened, it's an incredibly unfortunate accident in Minneapolis."

Alex Pretti's Sig P320 may have gone off accidentally, experts suggest - "Rob Doar, a lawyer for the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus, said he believes that Pretti’s gun went off after the agent grabbed it, leading the other agent to open fire.  “I believe it’s highly likely the first shot was a negligent discharge from the agent in the grey jacket after he removed the Sig P320 from Pretti’s holster while exiting the scene,” Doar said on X. The P320 model is widely carried by armed civilians and US law enforcement, including ICE — but has been the subject of more than 100 allegations that it has a defect that allows it to fire “uncommanded.”"

Ian Miles Cheong on X - "Alex Pretti would probably be alive if he didn’t spend over a thousand dollars on a gun with a reputation of just going off while he was larping as a resistance fighter and getting into confrontations with federal agents."

Electoral Islamism in France

Translated by Google:

Islamism in France Is Becoming an Electoral Issue - La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana (L'Islamismo in Francia sta diventando un problema elettorale) 
A lengthy report from the Élysée reconstructs Islam's political strategies in France and the role played by institutional figures. And as the local elections approach, there are fears that the community vote will be exploited to turn the Muslim vote into an electoral lever.  

Khaled Meshaal, the head of Hamas, speaks from afar, but with the air of someone observing a map slowly taking shape. In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera in early December, the leader of the Palestinian terrorist organization indulged in a boast that sounded less like a provocation and more like a diagnosis: "The Palestinian cause," he said, "has entered the minds of young Europeans and Americans," becoming a " new division of the resistance " that fights not in tunnels or along borders, but "in the streets, among young people, on university campuses, in political parties; there, the Palestinian cause has achieved great results." These words find unexpected support in the work of the French Parliament, which has just published its  report  on Islamism in the Republic

For over a decade, Paris has been under constant pressure from a relentless Islamic terrorism and an Islamism that dictates the law in various contexts. This scenario is further corroborated by the publication of two investigative books—   Omar Youssef Souleimane's "Accomplices of Evil" and Nora Bussigny's "The New Anti-Semites: An Investigation by an Infiltrator into the Ranks of the Far Left"  —which have shed light on Islamist entryism into the French political class and have contributed to making an institutional response unavoidable. The Elysée Palace has decided to take a formal step: convening a parliamentary commission of inquiry to determine the existence and nature of the links between political Islamism and left-wing parties. 

Six months of work under pressure , punctuated by closed hearings, personal threats, and a climate of constant tension, have led the French parliamentary commission to an unambiguous conclusion: the terrorist threat has not receded, and political Islamism continues to expand along less visible but highly dangerous lines. Thirty witnesses, including three researchers and two journalists, requested a closed-door hearing, fearing for their safety. La France Insoumise and Les Écologistes (The Greens) are the only two parties cited, and their connections, ambiguities, and similarities raise disturbing questions. 

The  650-page report reconstructs in great detail the political strategies of Islam in France and the role played by institutional figures. "Political Islam is not a fantasy, it is not an abstraction, but a real, documented, and visible threat," declared the investigation's rapporteur,  Matthieu Bloch . "It has a legalistic face and a violent one." And with the municipal elections approaching, the report warns of the potential exploitation of the community vote. "These consultations," it states, "could offer Islamists the opportunity to turn the Muslim vote into an electoral lever." 

On the political level, the report goes beyond diagnosis : it records facts. Several radical imams have openly called for voting for La France Insoumise (Insubordinate France ). This signal reinforces the idea of ​​an electoral unity that is now explicit, at least in some areas. The testimonies of the prefects of the major metropolitan areas, electoral strongholds of LFI, are among the most revealing. From the Rhône comes a clear statement: two party members are using an  anti-colonial discourse  aimed at portraying Islam and Muslim communities as systemic victims, exploiting these issues for political purposes. This stance, the report warns, makes LFI a linchpin of Islamist infiltration.

The cities of Valenciennes, Douchy-les-Mines, and Colombes are cited as case studies of a similar dynamic: the progressive infiltration of Islamist networks into the local political fabric, through formally legal but politically destabilizing mechanisms. According to the commission, three main trends can be observed in these cities. The first concerns the proven presence of militants or sympathizers of political Islamism within electoral lists and municipal consultative bodies, capable of influencing votes, resolutions, and administrative priorities.

The second concerns a targeted mobilization of the community vote , especially in neighborhoods with a high Muslim population, where identity claims—from places of worship to "cultural" associations, even symbolic concessions—are used as a lever for political exchange to transform a religious constituency into a disciplined electorate. The third direction is represented by a network of formally civic associations that act as a link between religious activism and local politics: it is in this gray area, the commission emphasizes, that Islamism takes on its "legalistic" form, exploiting the rules of the state to consolidate influence and legitimacy.

The systematic courting of Islamic associations, the defense of the headscarf in schools as a symbol of identity, the inflated use of the accusation of  Islamophobia  against those who criticize fundamentalism, the sacralization of immigration as a political dogma: everything has become a bargaining chip for a handful of votes.

These elements overlap with what Céline Berthon , head of the General Directorate for Internal Security, highlighted: "Not only the 2025 attacks and the five foiled plots, but also evidence of a strong presence of Islamism in other forms that undermine national cohesion: separatism and one of its manifestations, infiltration." This alarm was confirmed by Bertrand Chamoulaud, director of territorial intelligence , who requested a closed-door hearing, but who had previously stated that "several separatist ecosystems" operate in France, at least  fourteen , structured around mosques or associations of Salafist inspiration or linked to the Muslim Brotherhood. On the ground, the numbers speak for themselves. Alexandre Brugère, prefect of the Hauts-de-Seine, indicated seventy structures under surveillance in his department alone.

Hence the policy line outlined by the Ministry of the Interior : broaden the criteria for dissolving organizations to include threats to social cohesion; strengthen European cooperation to prevent dissolved associations from re-establishing themselves abroad; freeze assets in the event of dissolution; intensify controls on Koranic schools and association financial flows; and give prefects the power to oppose the construction of places of worship if there are signs of separatism or infiltration.

Hence the 32 recommendations with which the commission seeks to translate the alarm into action: stricter controls on subsidies to associations, better information for parliamentarians, operational support for local elected officials through training, intelligence sharing, and structured dialogue with prefects. Particular attention is paid to the most exposed sectors—schools, associations, sports, social networks—where political Islamism finds fertile ground to take root.

The testimony of a former LFI leader in the North , Cédric Brun, further cements the picture. His accusation is the most brutal and the reason he left the party: "It's not a matter of infiltration, but of a deliberate political strategy aimed at welcoming these profiles to gain the missing votes in the second round of the presidential election. It's a cynical choice. The rapprochement between La France Insoumise and these individuals, close to Iran or other countries, and recipients of foreign funding, constitutes a threat to our democracy."

 

Links - 28th January 2026 (2 - Indigenous Peoples: Australia)

Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 on X - "An Australian police officer has been found guilty of dangerous driving causing death after an Indigenous teen, riding a stolen motorbike, collided with the officer’s parked vehicle. Benedict Bryant established a roadblock which the Crown argued made it impossible for the teen to manoeuvre around."

Caldron Pool on X - "A New South Wales police officer has been found guilty of dangerous driving causing death after an Indigenous teen, riding a stolen motorbike, collided with the officer’s parked vehicle."
Mickamious on X - "Aboriginal Kid steals a motorbike... Police block the road to try prevent further risk to the public. Aboriginal Kid hits the parked Police Vehicle. Police Officer is guilty of dangerous driving cause death.. Onus was on the Aboriginal Teen - He broke the law."
Just_Krystle_M on X - "This is EXACTLY what lead to Gargasoulas killing people in Bourke St. (Police had opportunity to take him out earlier & didn't out of fear of criticism). When you tie the hands of police under threat of criminal charges for doing their job (stopping dangerous/reckless drivers)👇"

Venom Rach ☧ on X - ">police office wasn't driving
>still convicted of dangerous driving causing death because a dumb teen of the right skin colour was too dumb to stop on seeing a road block established to stop dumb teens from driving recklessly"
Convicted of dangerous driving when the car is stationary and parked. But it's racist to enforce the law against indigenous people, so

Oksanna Zoschenko on X - "That story is analogous to someone discharging a firearm at a police officer, the gun misfiring, killing the shooter, & the police officer being charged with murder. No wonder police won’t respond to some crimes against the person, all depending on the identity of the offender."

GP on X - "There’s something seriously wrong with this fucked up country. Trying to strip the life of a man who served, instead of a piece of shit who killed themselves while breaking the law. They’d honestly rather an innocent bystander was killed. That’s the better result in their eyes."

Caldron Pool on X - "Criminals injure themselves (and others) avoiding arrest all the time. If the police are now held responsible for the criminal actions of those evading police, we’ll end up with a police force that is only willing to arrest those who voluntarily surrender!"

Andrew A. Hennessy 🍞 on X - "Aboriginal Aussies are 3% of the population but account for 20% of all murder victims.  80% of those Aboriginal murder victims are killed by Aboriginal offenders, mostly family members or partners.  There's much more currency in focusing on White perpetrators than admitting the biggest danger to Aboriginal people are other Aboriginal people. And that why I simply don't care anymore."
Tom Playford on X - "It's hard to care when the blame for the plight of the indigenous is constantly placed on the "colonists" (as Senator Thorpe would call them). When in reality the problems just don't seem to go away no matter how much money is thrown at them."
Andrew A. Hennessy 🍞 on X - "Much as DV, the money being thrown around is the goal. There's next to no interest in solving any other issue than maintaining and expanding the industry."
Tom Playford on X - "I know, right? Marcia Langton got close to the truth about ten years ago when she said the Greens preferred their indigenous drunk and helpless (words to the effect). No interest in solving the actual problem because its all too hard. Sad for the women and children who suffer."

Tom Playford on X - "Why did police command make the decision to not try and stop a speeding teenager on a stolen motorbike - where is the duty of care to the law-abiding public going about their business who were at risk of death from colliding with him?"

RAW EGG NATIONALIST on X - "We all know why decisions like this happen. For the same reason as officers get railroaded out of the armed forces for “misogyny” or “offensive” text messages in a private Whatsapp group. This is a convenient way to purge law-enforcement and the military of their traditional demographics—patriotic white men—so these organisations can be reforged and politicised in line with left-wing rule."

Gray Connolly on X - "Australians following the Minnesota day care fraud and then suddenly remembering the NDIS .... which is closing in on annual Defence spending #Auspol"
Andrew A. Hennessy 🍞 on X - "The NDIS is an obvious fraud centrepiece, but we're forgetting the elephant in the room.  Each year, Australia spends around $10-12 billion on Indigenous-specific programs alone, that's cash targeted just for indigenous people. With a total population of just under 1 million people, that's an insane amount per head.  Yet remote communities still look like third-world camps, violence stats are off the charts (most victims killed by their own mob), and "Closing the Gap" remains a annual TikTok performance.  But keep throwing billions at consultants, NGOs, and feel-good initiatives because acknowledging the real problems would mean admitting decades of this gravy train achieved sweet FA.  The Elephant's not just in the room, it's crushing the furniture and no one's allowed to notice."
Clearly, they didn't spend enough money

katy 🌸 on X - "Monash University now offers Aboriginal staff three days of paid "colonial load leave" annually to cope with the ongoing impacts of colonisation. These people are getting compensation for events that occurred in 1770! Melbourne is the wokest, most idiotic city! No wonder people are fleeing!"

Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 on X - "The left wing government of Australia argues that the foundation of Australia was morally illegitimate and that the country rests on “Stolen Land.”  Senior Labor politicians like the Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan openly argue that Australia is a “nation of foreigners” - that there is no such thing as an Australian people, an Australian culture, or Australian nationhood.  The Labor Premier of South Australia Peter Malinauskas recently argued that Australian culture would be boring and terrible without multiculturalism, because the original people who built the nation are boring and have terrible food, music, culture.  Labor Foreign Minister Penny Wong argued in the Australian Senate that Australia was too white when she was growing up, because her and her brother were the only people with Asian ancestry at her public school.   Labor politicians seem to really dislike the British-European majority of Australia. They constantly attempt to delegitimise their history and ties to Australia and portray their culture as boring, backwards and stagnant.   To this end they have embarked on a massive program of mass migration, the largest in our national history. 10% of the Australian population now reside on temporary visas and the Labor plan appears to be that they want to give out citizenship to as many of them as possible so that they can vote and lock in further support for large scale mass migration.  On current demographic trajectories, European Australians will become a minority group within the next 15-20 years."

TheRoadknight on X - "Another child's life sacrificed.  This is why I am incandescent with rage when people say removing an Aboriginal child from danger is 'stealing' them. It leads to a reluctance to protect the child by removing them.  This poor child was removed at 4 months old, returned around six years later and strangled to death at 8 years old.  Note this fcken language: "...in "cruel irony" had only been returned to his mother 18 months prior to his death."  "Cruel irony"? How bloody dare you. It was sheer incompetence. This child was sacrificed on the altar of political correctness.  Arrest and charge everyone involved.  "The court heard Goltz had used drugs since her teens, smoked cannabis regularly and was a low-grade criminal who was on probation at the time she killed her son."  A person on probation with that history deserves her child back??  This is particularly heartbreaking:  "A victim impact statement from Zion's former foster mother, Beverly Mason, was read to the court by the prosecution.  "She said Zion was born prematurely at 25 weeks gestation because of drug and alcohol abuse during Goltz's pregnancy.  "He was on oxygen fighting for his breath," Ms Mason said.  "I find it very hard to comprehend that for the last part of his life he was made to fight for his breath again."  Name those responsible for returning him. They all have blood on their hands.  Every time, every time someone says 'stolen', say his name: Zion. And look him in the eyes.  #RescuedNotStolen  https://abc.net.au/news/2025-12-0"

Joey Mate™️ 🇦🇺 🇳🇱 on X - "IT WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT AN APOLOGY….IT WAS ALWAYS ABOUT THE MONEY…..YOUR MONEY…..
Per Shannon Deery:  “Two Indigenous groups have recently been awarded about $100m in settlement packages.  The Allan government fought to keep ministerial briefings secret from MPs voting on a Treaty — originally prepared for former premier Dan Andrews — supercharging reparations to Indigenous Victorians.  Secret ministerial briefings hidden from MPs voting on the Treaty reveals that Indigenous Victorians will be able to seek supercharged reparations through the contentious new body.  The briefing prepared for Daniel Andrews — which the Allan government fought to keep hidden until after the Treaty legislation was passed in parliament just weeks ago — also reveals two Indigenous groups have recently been awarded an estimated $100m in settlement packages.  On Tuesday, Jacinta Allan will make another formal apology to Indigenous Victorians for laws, policies and practices that contributed to injustices against them.”  VIC LIEBOR HATES VICTORIA AND VICTORIANS ……  Sack that fucking bitch….."

Australian Greens (Parody) on X - "This is Dr. Lara Daley from the University of Newcastle. Her latest project, funded by taxpayers at over half a million dollars, is to design Aboriginal smoking ceremonies and Welcome to Country rituals for astronauts to perform on Mars. Yes, really.  Australia is slowly becoming a failing state. We can't staff our hospitals or pay our nurses, and our regional roads look like the surface of the moon. Yet, we've somehow found $528,491 to spend on making sure the first human on Mars feels guilty for landing on a barren rock. This is where your money goes.  No joke. 2 days ago the Australian Research Council awarded Dr. Lara Daley this insane figure for "Embedding Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge in Australian space policy." The goal is to insert specific indigenous kinship and "sky country" concepts into protocols for planetary landings and asteroid mining to avoid "colonial harms" in space.  So remember this. While you struggle with soaring energy bills and the elderly skip meals, your taxes are ensuring that the first boot on Mars will kneel in the dust to ask permission from nothing. This is what you voted for. This is your future."

ADVANCE on X - "This is absolutely real. You’re paying for “culturally respectful space exploration” … “to broaden Australia’s understanding of space by recognising long-held Indigenous knowledge systems and their relevance to sustainable human activity beyond Earth”."

DNA analysis suggests first Australians arrived about 60,000 years ago
TheRoadknight on X - "So, those antecedents of Aborigines who remained in the Philippines and Sulawesi, as well as those who remained in Africa are, by pure logic, older. As such, Australian Aborigines are not 'the oldest continuous living culture in the world', since the branch of the tree cannot be older than the tree itself."
Time to censor this for anti-aboriginal racism

Street cleaner breaks his silence after being sacked for objecting to an Acknowledgment of Country - "A street sweeper who won an unfair dismissal claim after he was fired for objecting to an Acknowledgment of Country has broken his silence. Melbourne man Shaun Turner, 60, was sacked from his role as a street sweeper for Darebin City Council in June 2024 after he questioned the ceremony at a toolbox meeting. The council worker, whose father served in World War II, told the meeting: 'If you need to be thanking anyone, it's the people who have worn the uniform and fought for our country to keep us free.' 'It's getting out of hand and people are losing it, it is now being done at the opening of a postage stamp.' Council officers investigated Mr Turner's alleged 'serious misconduct' but the father-of-three doubled down and he was let go. 'As far as I know half of us are born here, I don't need to be welcomed to my own country. If people don't want to be there, they can leave,' Mr Turner told the officers. Mr Turner also told officers that Acknowledgement of Country should be reserved for more formal or international occasions. The Fair Work Commission upheld his unfair dismissal claim, with Mr Turner believing his legal win resonated with the 'silent majority' of people in Australia. Mr Turner, who voted Liberal at the recent election, said 'of course' the country had become too politically correct. 'I just feel like if you were a pale, stale male you can't go to work now and have a laugh,' Mr Turner told The Australian... He added the workplace was being overrun by 'programmed robots', with everyone having to be careful with what they say... 'When it comes to this, the first thing that happens is you are labelled racist. I may not like a lot of people but I have no problem with Aboriginal people,' Mr Turner said. 'I played football, I was brought up with people of all races in Broadmeadows. Some you get on with, some you don't. The easy thing to throw around these days if you can't win an argument is to call someone racist.' Mr Turner believes Acknowledgement of Country is unsuitable for small meetings and should rather be reserved for large events attended by international visitors. Before Mr Turner was dismissed, he attended another meeting with Council Chief of People Officer Yvette Fuller. Ms Fuller informed Mr Turner that there was a firm expectation for an Acknowledgment of Country to precede all formal meetings... Council said the use of the word 'displayed contempt to the council's Indigenous employees and community'. But Mr Clancy disagreed with the council's assessment. 'That Mr Turner holds a different point of view when it comes to Acknowledgements of Country does not, of itself, make him contemptuous of the Respondents.' Mr Clancy noted that both Ms Fuller and Elizabeth Skinner, who was the city works manager at the time, were sufficiently concerned by Mr Turner's conduct that they each contacted his Indigenous support person after the meeting to offer an apology. However, during the Fair Work proceedings, there was no evidence given to show the support person felt offended."
If you don't have Opening Prayers, God will strike you down. Blasphemy against liberal secular religion is heavily punished

Meme - The opinionated Black woman ~ Aunty @Theblackfemini3: "Gosford Hospital NSW.   This is so shameful.   It's very embarrassing, and I'm sure a lot of other black fullas reading this will feel the same way, too.   Some virtue signaling halfwit decided it was a great idea to put up language signs to the resus bays and the ER.   We had no words for resuscitation or emergency, so the virtue signalers decided that it was a good idea to degrade today's  aboriginal people using very basic English, lowering usand our comprehension skills to that of a 5 year old.   That's not even my language, so if the English wasn't there, I wouldn't know what it means.   I speak limited tongue anyway."
"Emergency Department Resuscitation Bays. Mana Galuring Balga. Bring back"
"Emergency Department Acute Pod A & B. Badjal Burung. Sick cave"

NSW will remove 65,000 years of Aboriginal history from its syllabus. It’s a step backwards for education : r/circlejerkaustralia - "It’s around 40-45k years tops.  The 65k years is deeply flawed. Dating is likely incorrect and it contradicts dna evidence which suggests the ancient ancestors of aboriginal Australians were in Africa / Arabia at that time.  I think they want an older is better narrative and to move disassociate the peopling of this continent 40k years ago from the extinction of the megafauna (even though that’s exactly what happened in Nz when the Maori arrived)."
"Also, modern humans have not been evenly spread across all of Australia for the entire 40,000 to 45,000 years. The pattern of migration varies significantly. Evidence suggests that humans arrived in northern Australia first given its proximity from Southeast Asia.  Compared to regions like Victoria, humans likely arrived there much later. The southern parts of Australia, were less hospitable for significant periods due to glacial conditions, which would have made nomadic life impossible. Estimates suggest that continuous human occupation in Victoria could date back to only 15,000 to 30,000 years, significantly shorter than the north.  This uneven distribution of early human presence adds another layer of complexity to the idea of an uninterrupted 65,000 - 100,000 years of occupation across the entire continent. In reality, different regions were populated at different times, there's even large regions of this continent that never has any habitation at all."
"Mate are you suggesting that the current Aboriginals were also colonisers?  That's heresy."
"There’s also strong evidence that Australia was populated by other hominids, potentially Denisovans, prior to the arrival of aboriginals.  Bruce’s book has been shown to be a work of fiction, and many claims in it lack any form of evidence. I’m extremely surprised was still being used in schools."
"I know why they do it, but it’s incredible how much effort people go to in making sure aboriginals seem completely faultless and idyllic. No no, the megafauna just did that. What? No, the tribes never had brutal conflicts . What do you mean? The north half of Australia was always desertified grassland, nothing to do with repeated intense burning of jungle and bushland."
"No, no they never killed their own babies!"
"Tourist on this sub, this is how our North American indigenous population has been largely taught about for at least 30 years, and the funny thing is our textbooks actually did make note of sometimes exceptionally brutal conflicts between tribes, disruption to other species due to overhunting, and also somewhat of their technical achievements. They very much were  working some softer metals like copper in some regions of NA. Yet our history lessons themselves skipped those pages, and instead portrayed them as perennial victims and, oddly, kind of incapable of managing themselves. By simplifying the ugly and turning them into magical people who were some how perfectly in balance with nature, they remove their humanity. Sure a lot of people love the "absolute victim", but it's an insult to their history and accomplishments. And now they are sad alcoholics and society tells us that's just how it is (which again robs them of their agency)."

Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "It’s always baffled me how articles like this and activists talk in a way that implies the people are just being randomly locked up for 0 reason, when Infact it’s because they’ve committed crimes. If they just simply stopped committing crimes, they wouldn’t be locked up?  Am I missing something here?"
Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "You’re kidding right? Most former convicts came to the country as convicts. Struggling with many of the same issues of survival.  Your wokeism and blame gaming won’t work."
Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "Because they refuse to integrate into society as a useful me.ber. instead it's monkey see monkey do gangsta wannabe shit.  They have had the rhetoric of this is our land shit drummed into them and they owe YOU everything. They are the invaders.....you know what heres reality for you  Colonists came, they had the bigger stick and conquered. FUCKING DEAL WITH IT. Don't like it fuck off across the pond to a uninhabited island and live there. Oh wait you can't because you rely on Western medicines, clothes, food, housing pretty much everything that comes with moving forward. See how long you survive without anything we "invaders" provide including money.  Alas youths are not first nation even the generation before isn't. I am first generation Australian but I have to work my ass off to be able to get stuff these people get for free.  I'm not racist I hate everyone equally and I believe nothing gets handed to you in life. Do wrong live with the consequences."
Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "Giving a bunch of people money and housing (which the government pays for when they smash it up) with no expectations and requirements to join society or the workforce. And zero audits on where all the royalties go. No wonder things are getting out of hand, would have happened regardless if they were black or white.  The only way to stop this vicious circle is to start treating them like any other Australian."
Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "Taken into custody and released on the same day only to offend the following day. Rinse and repeat."
Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "Because funding that is intended to help those in remote communities gets taken by those out to help themselves and it’s racist to suggest an audit into the funding to find out where it’s going. Having worked in remote areas, very little funding makes its way through"

Each day, 41 Aboriginal people in the NT are being taken into custody. How did we get here? : r/australian - "We didn't listen to the Police. We didn't listen to the nurses complaining about indigenous sexual assault in alarming numbers.  We didn't listen to the Indigenous Elders that spoke in a non-pc way begging for help with the rampant alcoholism and SA happening in remote communities.  Instead, we just threw insane amounts of money into think tanks and into academics pockets who live in inner city suburbs on the east coast.  To quote Flanders dad, "We've tried nothing and we're all out of ideas""
"Remember when Dutton went to Alice and said crime and abuse was getting out of hand and everyone on the left called him a liar?  Here are a couple of ABC articles condemning Dutton for his comments about crime increasing there.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton says violence and crime still at crisis point in Alice Springs - ABC News
Peter Dutton's comments in Alice Springs show why so many Indigenous communities don't trust politicians - ABC News
The ABC didn't exactly do the people of Alice and NT any favours by downplaying the issue because they want to throw barbs at Dutton. Albo is now too afraid to go to Alice Springs on his recent trip to NT because he knows the reception he would get."

63 Indigenous heritage claims in backlog despite $18m in funding - "Forty-six applications under three key sections of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act filed prior to 2025 have yet to be settled, according to records obtained by this masthead using freedom of information laws. Eight were first lodged with the Environment Department before 2020. Adding in applications made last year, unresolved matters under these sections stood at 63 on December 31, even though the 2024 federal budget gave $18 million “to reduce the backlog”. New applications in 2025 included objections to the Brisbane Olympic stadium and two raising the “threat of drilling exploration” at a remote South Australian tenement once owned by billionaire Clive Palmer... Regis Resources is currently challenging a 2024 decision by then minister Tanya Plibersek to accept evidence of a Blue Banded Bee Dreaming story, which halted the company’s already-approved NSW gold mine project. The Albanese government spokeswoman said it was important to protect culturally significant sites."

Meet Australian Aborigines–They Make African Americans Look Like A Model Minority - "When Cook and his men landed in Australia in 1770 and met the Aborigines they couldn’t believe what they were confronted with. They recorded that they were “savages,” “barbaric” and even “stupid”.” And this wasn’t just casual racism. They knew the people of Hawaii well and, though they regarded them as childlike, perceived them in much more positive terms... Despite the Aborigines sometimes being referred to as “blacks,” only Amerindians (“Native Americans”) are more genetically different from Africans than the Australian Aborigines.” [Which population is most genetically distant from Africans? Amerindians, By Razib Khan, GNXP (Discover Magazine) August 19, 2010. Indeed, whites are actually closer genetically to Aborigines, although still very remote. And, paradoxically, African pygmies and Bushmen are genetically the most different from Aborigines, although occupying a similar hunter-gatherer niche, a phenomenon observed elsewhere in nature.” [On Genetic Interests: Family, Ethnicity and Humanity in an Age of Mass Migration by Frank Salter, 2006, p. 68] Aborigines have do fascinating evolutionary quirks, such as the ability to survive extremes of temperature, sleeping naked out of doors below freezing.” Genetic mutation helps Aboriginal people survive tough climate, research finds By Caitlyn Gribbin, ABC, January 29 2014]. Although their environment is inhospitable, it is invariant—baking in the day and cold at night—and they’re strongly evolved to these extremes, so little planning is necessary. But, consistent with the perception that the Aborigines weren’t very bright, we now know that at some point in their history they’d had sufficient ingenuity to be able to build relatively sturdy boats and make their way to the Torres Strait Islands, but by 1770, they had lost this knowledge. Indeed, the Australian archaeological record is replete with evidence of technological regression: some Aborigine tribes once farmed, some traded with Papua New Guineans, some tribes even “forgot” how to make the boomerang. [The curious case of the people who forgot how to fish, by Adam Benton, Evoanth.Net, April 15, 2014]... British psychologist Richard Lynn, in his seminal study of race differences in IQ, Race and Intelligence: An Evolutionary Analysis, brings together all of the available studies on the intelligence of modern Aborigines. They have an average IQ of 64, compared to about 70 for Sub-Saharan Africans, 85 for African Americans and 100 for whites... Like Native Americans, but unlike many African blacks, they never developed alcohol, leaving them strongly prone to alcoholism... while American Blacks are 12% of the US population and 38% of its prison population.“ Aborigines are 3% of the Australian population and, in 2009, 25% of its prison population.”... In the UK, it has been found that 4% of whites and 10% of blacks have mental health problems—particularly schizophrenia in the case of blacks.” It has been estimated that this is true of over 50% of Aborigines.”... Left in their own “Indigenous Protected Areas,” the living conditions of Australian Aborigines are extraordinarily poor, especially considering that, annually, $43,000 is spent on every Aborigine, compared to $21,000 dollars on everybody else.”... between 1910 and 1970, roughly a third of Aborigine children—those whose backgrounds were the most abusive—were removed from their parents and raised in foster homes, to give them some kind of chance. This worked in the sense that, placed in cities, the Aborigine income and standard of living was higher than that of those who were not removed. They had about the same educational success as the “non-removed”—but the non-removed would have been from more stable backgrounds in the first place. By the 1980s this paternalistic policy was being roundly condemned as removing these children, now known as “the Stolen Generation,” from “their cultural heritage”—ignoring the fact that this heritage seems to include physical abuse, alcoholism, and high infant mortality. By 1998 the virtue-signalling frenzy was such that Australia held a “National Sorry Day” for the victims. The authors of the 1997 Bringing Them Home report on this policy described what had happened as “genocide.”“... The Booker Prize-winning Australian novelist Peter Carey has stated that, as an Australian, ‘You wake up in the morning and you are the beneficiary of genocide.’” [Guardian November 17, 2017 ]. But in reality, it is the Aborigines who should wake up in the morning and realise that they are the beneficiaries of a society and economy that they could never have created on their own."

Speak not of the evil: Aboriginal violence then and now - "It is not polite to say that pre-contact Aboriginal society was abusive to women and generally violent. This would undercut the long-standing official view that current violence in Aboriginal communities reflects colonial dispossession and on-going victimhood. For example, a fact sheet from the federal government’s Closing the Gap Clearing House says that, as is typical for Indigenous populations elsewhere, Aboriginal disadvantage “is a consequence of the historical and continuing impact?of colonialism and dispossession, which has left many (Aboriginals) impoverished, marginalised, discriminated against, in a state of poor physical and mental health, and with inequitable access to necessary public and private services." Aboriginal lawyer Dr Hannah McGlade in “Our Greatest Challenge” similarly blames colonialism: “The linking of Aboriginal culture to family violence and child sexual assault diminishes the grave harm inflicted on Aboriginal people through colonialism…the way in which colonization systematically deprived Aboriginal people of basic human rights.” But feminist author Stephanie Jarrett, in her introduction to “Liberating Aboriginal People from Violence, says, “It is important to acknowledge [the"> link between today’s Aboriginal violence and violent, pre-contact tradition, because until policymakers are honest in their assessment of the causes, Aboriginal people can never be liberated from violence...Deep cultural change is necessary, away from traditional norms and practices of violence.” Bess Nungarrayi Price, in her foreword to Jarrett’s book, says, “My own body is scarred by domestic violence...We Aboriginal people have to acknowledge the truth. We can’t blame all of our problems on the white man...This is our problem that we can fix ourselves…”... Paleopathologist Stephen Webb in 1995 published his analysis of 4500 individuals’ bones from mainland Australia going back 50,000 years. (Priceless bone collections at the time were being officially handed over to Aboriginal communities for re-burial, which stopped follow-up studies).[15"> Webb found highly disproportionate rates of injuries and fractures to women’s skulls, with the injuries suggesting deliberate attack and often attacks from behind, perhaps in domestic squabbles. In the tropics, for example, female head-injury frequency was about 20-33%, versus 6.5-26% for males. The most extreme results were on the south coast, from Swanport and Adelaide, with female cranial trauma rates as high as 40-44% -- two to four times the rate of male cranial trauma. In desert and south coast areas, 5-6% of female skulls had three separate head injuries, and 11-12% had two injuries. Web could not rule out women-on-women attacks but thought them less probable."

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