The problem of cowering to and enabling SJW's

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Darmok
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02 May 2019, 10:49 am

Every Pronoun Must Go

Two types of people desire to impose politically correct locutions on the rest of us: those who possess unlimited power and fear to lose it and those who aspire to unlimited power and need a means to attain it. And there is, after all, no greater power than that of prescribing what others must say and what others must not think.

The Scottish Maritime Museum, dedicated to the history of the country’s shipbuilding industry, has decided that it will no longer use the words she and her to refer to ships, but rather it and its. This is in response to feminists, who have defaced plaques referring to ships as she or her. This change would negate centuries of tradition, during which the words traditionally used on launching a ship, “May God bless all who sail in her,” carried no connotation of insult or deprecation—rather the reverse.

The Maritime Museum’s surrender is yet another instance of the craven surrender of British officialdom to the demands of a small but vociferous group of monomaniacs who make the imposition of their views the purpose of their lives. Museum authorities have argued that they must move with the times, and the prevention of vandalism is important, for economic reasons among others. Yet this rationale is something like awarding burglars a pension in an effort to prevent burglary.


https://www.city-journal.org/scottish-m ... neutrality


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Darmok
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25 May 2019, 5:50 pm

It's getting really hard to tell truth from satire these days.... :D

'This Is Exactly Like The Handmaid's Tale,' Declares Local Woman After Man Opens Door For Her

FAIRFAX, VA—Local woman Jenny Parsons was leaving a meeting, minding her own business, at the office building where she works Thursday. She thought she was just filing out like all the other employees.

Little did she know, she was actually about to encounter evidence that her workplace is no better than the oppressive, totalitarian regime depicted in Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.

Her coworker, Jake, smiled and held the door for her, prompting Parsons to explode almost immediately into a rant about how this was just more evidence that America is literally like something out of a dystopian novel she's read about on the internet.

"Where are we, Gilead?" she said loudly as the confused man held the door for her. "Why does no one else but me see how oppressive this is toward women? This is exactly like The Handmaid's Tale. This is the future Hulu warned us about."


https://babylonbee.com/news/this-is-exa ... maids-tale


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SaveFerris
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25 May 2019, 6:33 pm

^ why did you leave the last paragraph off that article dude :lol:


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25 May 2019, 6:35 pm

Atwood -- kill me now 8O :eew:


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Darmok
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25 May 2019, 8:56 pm

Satire or not satire? Who can tell. 8)

Image


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CockneyRebel
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25 May 2019, 9:08 pm

Those ads give off a double meaning. The one about dreaming of a white Dorchester really says it all. Are all the other races supposed to leave Dorchester for the Christmas season?


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CockneyRebel
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25 May 2019, 9:25 pm

Darmok wrote:
Satire or not satire? Who can tell. 8)

Image


I started laughing right away when I saw that. :lol:


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13 Jun 2019, 3:17 am

Not this time

Protests at Oberlin labeled a bakery racist. Now the college will pay $11 million for libel.

Quote:
On Nov. 9, 2016, the day after Donald Trump clinched the presidency, a student at Oberlin College entered a local bakery and convenience store, hoping to leave with a few bottles of wine.

Instead, Jonathan Aladin, 19, ran from the store brawling with an employee, Allyn D. Gibson. The scuffle between the two men – the young black student, a sophomore at the time, and the white businessman – turned into a standoff between the liberal arts college and the downtown establishment, a proxy war in a much larger struggle over free speech, racial sensitivity and town-gown relations.

The skirmish came with a price tag for the college of $11 million, the sum awarded on Friday to the business by a jury in Lorain County, Ohio. The judgment, which found the college responsible for libel and infliction of emotional distress, provided a bookend to the bitter conflict, which has divided the Oberlin community, nestled 35 miles from Cleveland.

Gibson’s Bakery is a century-old, family-owned business whose fortunes are tightly bound to the college. The shop long supplied bagels and pastries to Oberlin, the town’s largest employer. Alumni return for the apple fritters and whole-wheat doughnuts.

The storied business sits adjacent to the campus, a bastion of liberal activism. Founded in 1833, Oberlin was the first interracial and coeducational college in the United States. The town was a stop on the Underground Railroad. Today, it is nearly 15 percent black, compared to 5 percent of Oberlin’s undergraduate population that identifies that way.

In recent years, the college has been an epicenter of the campus culture wars – a site of vehement debate over trigger warnings, safe spaces and the limitations of the Western canon. At Oberlin, no issue is too trivial for critique, not even the authenticity of Chinese cuisine served in the cafeteria.

In the fall of 2016, students were on high alert following the dismissal of an assistant professor of rhetoric and composition, Joy Karega, over incendiary statements on social media, including her suggestion that Israel was behind the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Karega, who is black, said she was a victim of discrimination. The college’s Black Student Union, assailing Oberlin as an “unethical institution,” had previously called for her tenure.

The confrontation between Gibson and Aladin led to the student’s arrest and arraignment on a robbery charge, which in turned spurred allegations of racial profiling, igniting protests that unfolded in the overwrought days following the 2016 election. Residents of Oberlin favored Hillary Clinton to Trump 11 to 1, while the surrounding county, where the case was later heard, came down on the side of the Democrat by scarcely more than 100 votes.

When Aladin arrived at the front of the store, Gibson, 32 at the time, told the student that he was contacting the police, saying he had seen him slip two bottles of wine under his clothes. When he pulled out his phone to take a picture, according to a police report, Aladin slapped it away, causing it to strike the Gibson’s face.

Gibson followed the student from the store, where they began exchanging blows across the street, which is campus property. Police said they arrived to find Gibson on his back, with Aladin, joined by two friends, punching and kicking him. All three were charged, Aladin with robbery and his friends with assault.

Students encouraged a boycott of the establishment, which is owned by Gibson’s father, David R. Gibson, and his grandfather, also named Allyn.

“A member of our community was assaulted by the owner of this establishment yesterday,” read a flier distributed outside the bakery, calling Gibson’s a “RACIST establishment with a LONG ACCOUNT of RACIAL PROFILING and DISCRIMINATION.” The leaflet recommended 10 rival businesses where patrons could go instead.

Police later conducted an investigation and found that 40 adults had been arrested for shoplifting at Gibson’s in a five-year period, among them six African Americans.

The college suspended its Gibson’s order in the days following the incident but restored it in early 2017. In August, the three students at the center of the tumult pleaded guilty to amended misdemeanor charges. Before their sentencing, which involved restitution but no jail time, each student read a statement acknowledging that Gibson was justified in trying to restrain Aladin, and that the owner’s actions had not been racially motivated, according to court documents.

Three months later, Gibson’s filed a civil complaint against Oberlin in the Lorain County Court of Common Pleas. Accusing the college of lending support to the protests, the Gibson family sued the institution, as well as its vice president and dean of students, Meredith Raimondo, for libel, slander, interference with business relationships, interference with contracts, deceptive trade practices, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligent hiring and trespass.

The owners argued that college leaders facilitated the “illegal defamation and economic boycott” by helping students copy and distribute the fliers, as well as joining them at protest actions and allowing them to skip class and gain credit to continue their campaign. According to the complaint, a Facebook post by an Oberlin academic department stated, “Gibson’s has been bad for decades, their dislike of Black people is palpable. Their food is rotten and they profile Black students. NO MORE!”

“Gibson’s Bakery has suffered a severe and sustained loss of student, professor, administrative, and college department business,” the complaint argued. It also pointed to a “severe emotional and physical toll” on the family. Their home had been damaged, they claimed, and their car tires punctured.

The college responded by arguing that none of the statements cited by the bakery’s owners had been defamatory. Instead, they represented protected speech. Specifically, the filing maintained that the allegation of racism could not be grounds for a defamation claim because it was a statement of opinion that could not be proven false.

Lawyers further argued that Oberlin was not responsible for the views expressed by its students. Raimondo, in her response, said she was present at the protests to ensure they did not descend into violence.

Oberlin did acknowledge that some of its students viewed the bakery’s owners as racist. Lawyers for the college accused the Gibson family of adopting an “us versus them” mentality toward the campus community, citing posts on social media by the younger Gibson that took aim at “entitled” students. In a further response, the college denied allowing students to skip class in favor of their protest activity.

Jurors in Lorain County heard the case this spring. Communication unveiled in court filings and at trial revealed how different members of the college community reacted to the controversy. Some were apparently embarrassed by protest activity they felt reflected poorly on the campus, while others said the boycott had been effective in targeting Gibson’s with a “smear on their brand” since the business was unresponsive to other forms of pressure.

Raimondo took the stand and denied accounts that she had instructed college staff to engage in unruly behavior at the demonstrations. She said she lacked “control of the students.” Court documents revealed how she and another administrator shared a sense of outrage after a professor spoke against the boycott.

“[Expletive] him,” Raimondo wrote in a message, the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram reported. She added, “I’d say unleash the students if I wasn’t convinced this needs to be put behind us.”

The lawsuit ensured it wasn’t.

On Friday, jurors awarded Gibson’s and its owners $11 million. According to the Chronicle-Telegram, the court found that the college had libeled the bakery and its owners, in addition to inflicting emotional distress on the owners. It found that Raimondo was also responsible for libel, as well as for interfering with the bakery’s business.

The court assigned $5.8 million to Gibson’s father and $3 million to his grandfather, as well as $2.2 million to the bakery. The plaintiffs could gain more in punitive damages, which are the subject of the second phase of the trial, set to begin Tuesday.

In the episode’s aftermath, however, the college has aimed to mold the behavior of its students. Last year, Oberlin’s president, Carmen Twillie Ambar, wrote to the local business community about a set of new initiatives designed to teach incoming students how to be a “good neighbor” to local establishments.

The effort includes encouraging students to buy local goods and a new orientation program whose title makes its aim unambiguous: “Community 101.“


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Darmok
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13 Jun 2019, 1:55 pm

^ This was a very good verdict. Oberlin College officials were basically running a Ku Klux Klan-type operation of threats and intimidation, trying to destroy a local business.

The jury is today deliberating in the punitive damages phase. We shall see if there is any further award.


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Darmok
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13 Jun 2019, 2:54 pm

Darmok wrote:
^ This was a very good verdict. Oberlin College officials were basically running a Ku Klux Klan-type operation of threats and intimidation, trying to destroy a local business.

The jury is today deliberating in the punitive damages phase. We shall see if there is any further award.

Very good news for justice:

The jury just rendered its verdict on punitive damages in the Gibson’s Bakery v. Oberlin College case.

Daniel McGraw, our reporter in the courtroom, reports that in addition to the $11.2 million compensatory damages awarded last Friday, the jury awarded a total of $33 million in punitive damages, which will probably be reduced by the court to $22 million because of the state law cap at twice compensatory (it’s not an absolute cap, but probably will apply here). That brings the total damages to $33 million. We will have the breakdown soon. The jury also awarded attorney’s fees, to be determined by the judge.


https://legalinsurrection.com/2019/06/o ... kery-case/


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funeralxempire
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13 Jun 2019, 4:54 pm

Darmok wrote:
^ This was a very good verdict. Oberlin College officials were basically running a Ku Klux Klan-type operation of threats and intimidation, trying to destroy a local business.

The jury is today deliberating in the punitive damages phase. We shall see if there is any further award.


The courts can demand a settlement, but they can't insist that students ever give their patronage to the business again. In the long run justice likely will prevail. :wink:


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13 Jun 2019, 8:03 pm

AspE wrote:
Maybe err on the side of not flirting with racism? I don't see what's lost here.


What's lost is freedom of expression.



Darmok
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13 Jun 2019, 8:10 pm

funeralxempire wrote:
The courts can demand a settlement, but they can't insist that students ever give their patronage to the business again. In the long run justice likely will prevail. :wink:

That's true. There will always be a few racist students and college administrators who won't patronize this shop because of the color of the owner's skin. But they will probably be overwhelmed by the non-racist general public, as well as those who now want to show extra support for an honorable local business that has been hounded and threatened by racist mobs. So yes, justice will likely prevail. :wink:


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Lintar
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13 Jun 2019, 8:12 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
Why are we even asking this question on a autism forum where most of the members have faced negative consequences from being misinterpreted and often discuss crippling anxiety, a constant feeling of walking on eggshells out of fear being misinterprated.


Egggggggg-zactly! Oops, I shouldn't mention 'eggs', or even hint at them, because that leads to the expression 'walking on eggshells' (which you also mentioned), but that in turn leads inevitably to snowf... I mean, "sensitive people" being offended, because you are subtly implying they don't have a thick skin (which can be referred to as anything but white - all other colours are okay though), and that is an implied criticism of their level of tolerance for reality, and is also a subtle criticism of their need for safe spaces.

Holy crap, we've raised an entire generation of entitled, hyper-sensitive, out-of-touch idiots. ASPartOfMe, you are absolutely right about this even being an issue on an AUTISM website! The number of times I've "offended" someone are too many to recall, and I'll be DAMNED if I ever cave in to the cretinous demands of these precious snowflakes! Hell no! :evil: :evil: :evil: :evil: Over my dead, effing body! You will NEVER shut me up!

On a lighter note, I too am dreaming of a white, pure, Klan-inspired Christmas. :mrgreen:



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13 Jun 2019, 8:18 pm

shlaifu wrote:
Well... I guess German needs to be banned. It's an awful language anyway.


It's better than French, Greek, Hungarian, Chinese and Russian! Now those languages need to be banned!



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13 Jun 2019, 8:20 pm

Misslizard wrote:
Then to be PC it should no longer be called the White House but the Orange House.


No, we can't have that, because "Orange Man bad". It has to be the Black House, because Barack Obama used to be there, and that's an officially-approved colour, so it's safe to use.



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