Meet the Transsexual Hijabis Welcoming the Muslim New World Order Nov 9
muslim immigration in the west has become a hot button issue. for some, it's just hot.
River PageGrab your popcorn, kids, itâs a good old fashioned Plagiarism War. In the end, it was the morally inverted rape parades that drove Americaâs more moderate billionaires to interrogate those age old questions âwhat the hell is going on at Harvard,â and âwhy the hell am I paying for this?â But today, as an entire class of former-fence sitters introspect, not only on the problems of the world but on the donor classâs role in causing these problems, no personal evolution has been more stark, or more public, than that of hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, who is presently waging war against the American institutions most hopelessly rotted by radical activist politics; no disrupted vector of radical power more starkly embodies the changing times than Claudine Gay, the former Harvard president who, it would seem from the press, Ackman just fired; and no piece of this saga, from inception to the vindictive institutional backlash now bearing down on Ackmanâs wife, would be possible without the discourse vacuum inherent of Elon Muskâs free Twitter â a total collapse of the Overton window. With the shape of culture up for grabs, idealists and ideologues from every pole, and from every corner, have finally come to agreement on one point: the game is no longer rigged in favor of the craziest people alive. This is why, for the first time in decades, everyone is playing to win. Anon, have you ever seen a scared authoritarian before?
Things are about to get ugly.
The story went something like this: following Hamasâ October 7th terror attack in Israel, TikTok-brained âyay terrorismâ demonstrations seized the world, and chaos erupted on college campuses across America. There, the concept of two aggrieved racial minorities â Jews and Arabs â demanding âsafetyâ from each other (silence from their opponents) shattered far left orthodoxy, and the internal inconsistency of activist zealotry concluded in the disastrous congressional hearing of three prominent university presidents. In a noble, if totally unexpected defense of free speech, each of these powerful women declined to condemn the masturbatory genocidal fantasies levied against Israelis on their campuses, an argument that would have found more sympathy had these same campuses not spent the last decade endorsing the concept of âwords constitute literal violence.â Public outrage was immense. Ackman threatened the boards of Harvard and MIT, accusing the latter of tax fraud. College donors across the country revoked millions in funding, and UPENNâs Elizabeth Magill was forced to resign.
All of this, from the threats to the attacks to the shaping of each story, was coordinated in public, on Twitter, before an audience of millions. None of it was censored.
While Gay initially survived the charge of antisemitism, she was quickly overtaken by charges of academic fraud. Again, this story played out almost entirely on Twitter. Here, at least 40 violations of Harvardâs ethical standards were uncovered by the conservative Free Beacon, and the activist Christopher Rufo dramatically amplified the news. âItâs a political attack!â shouted Gayâs allies, which was obviously true. But the charges against Harvardâs now former president nonetheless constituted legitimate violations of Harvardâs ethical standards. They had also been covered up by Harvardâs board. The scandal trended globally, and in the end not even President Obama could save Gay (which, according to the sort of media that hates them both, he did attempt to do). She finally resigned, blamed the backlash against her presidency on racism, and the machine struck back. But it did not strike back against Ackman, or at least not directly. It went after his family.
Following the trail of an anonymous tipster, Business Insider accused Ackmanâs wife, Neri Oxman, a celebrated designer and manic pixie âmaterial ecologist,â of plagiarism. While charges consisted mainly of a few missing quotation marks, good intentions couldnât possibly matter following the partisan targeting of Gay. Business Insiderâs purpose was obviously to destroy someone important to Ackman, both a punishment and signal to any other turncoat shitposting billionaire, and in these efforts the press has tirelessly worked for days. In response, Ackman publicly accused a prominently-placed figure at MIT of coordinating the hit, and implied the charges against his wife were both unserious, and fundamentally malicious. Nonetheless, he agreed the subject of plagiarism was important, and promised, therefore, to fund investigations into MITâs entire leadership in search of similar malfeasance. Finally, Business Insider followed up with more accusations against Neri, including definitions of random words on Wikipedia (???). With headlines around the globe now pillorying the woman for fraud, Ackman evolved his approach. He would no longer be satisfied in mere investigation of MIT. He would now, for love, burn down the entire academic world. And also Business Insider.
Man, people really care about academic integrity!
On the other hand, duh, Claudine Gay was a powerful DEI bureaucrat long before she was the president of Harvard, and every piece of this, from her targeting to the backlash over her targeting, is obviously a referendum on DEI. This is not about antisemitism, and it is certainly not about plagiarism. The country is embroiled in a heated, national conversation on a dramatic centralization of bureaucratic power in the hands of the very far left, for which âDiversity, Equity, and Inclusionâ has only ever been, from its inception, a tool for maintaining.
Happily, the talking heads have done us all a favor, and momentarily dispensed with the bullshit. Over the weekend, the real fight clownishly unfolded on the Chris Wallace Show, where Grandma Yells at Cloud (Kara Swisher) and the NYTâs buffoonish Lulu Garcia-Navarro joined Never Trump GOP blowhole Jonah Goldberg and Reihan Salam for a debate over the only question anyone actually cares about: why are we still hiring people based on race and sex in 2024, and should we keep doing this? Here, proponents typically argue racist hiring isnât happening, and also racist hiring has to happen or weâre racist. But this conversation went a little differently.
Out of the gate, Kara invoked the âmirrortocracyâ (white men), invoking the mythological âwhite patriarchyâ central to her faith. As Reihan attempted to rebut this staggering cleverness with a monologue on fairness, Lulu cut him off. âRidiculoâ she shouted in an accent reminiscent of Hilaria Baldwin, making certain everyone on the panel understood she was not a regular white woman, but a white woman of Hispanic heritage, which therefore made her slightly more correct. The real problem, she insisted, was people of color could never win within this racist system called America. âIf sheâs there,â Lulu said of Claudine Gay, âitâs because of DEI,â and âif she loses itâs because she was actually never good enough to be there.â It was a bizarre, uncomfortable, accidental admission of reality, which, for just a second, shocked everyone to silence. But then it was back to raw emotion from all four guests. The reason, it seemed, was nobody knew what was coming next, and uncertainty breeds fear.
Towards the end of the conversation, Kara mentioned there were never any consequences for âwhite menâ (a pejorative), not only betraying the deeply racist, sexist thinking sheâs picked up these past five years or so, but her total ignorance of the subject at hand.
Marc Tessier-Lavigne, Stanfordâs former President. Chopped. Robert Caslen, the University of Southern Carolinaâs former president. Chopped. And what was it that happened merely weeks before Claudine Gayâs resignation? Ah yes right, Liz Magill, a white woman embroiled in controversy following the very same hearing that catalyzed Gayâs downfall. Chopped. Claudine Gay was not fired because she was a black woman. The truth, of course, is obviously the opposite: she was protected, in a manner no other college president in her position would have been protected, because she was a black woman. Was she targeted by people who didnât like her politics? Of course, but now youâre just describing journalism, which brings us to the meatiest subject at hand: how the story broke, how the story grew, and what it means for stories moving forward.
As conversation rocketed back to Claudine Gay, the âsympatheticâ figure somehow meant to justify the systemic sexism and racism inherent of DEI, Lulu couldnât help from mentioning Christopher Rufo, her real obsession, bringing to the fore â for me, at least (Lulu continued shouting nonsense) â the question of Twitterâs power. After all, here were five professional talking heads on television discussing the fallout of, yet again, a story shaped entirely on social media. The impact of the internet in this regard is nothing new, but that a story so overwhelmingly disadvantageous to the far left hasnât been censored or shaped by the mediaâs most popular platform for speech is a matter of enormous consequence.
I found a viral clip this week that blew my mind:
Here, liked by over 6 million people, a young woman accurately describes our entire human reality: a search for consensus. The concept of âAmerica,â for example, is just the product of a conversation about who and what we are, and most people donât really think that hard about these questions. Largely, the average person only tunes into the discourse to learn what theyâre supposed to think, not to disagree. Humans are fundamentally social creatures, and human society is basically gossip. We are deeply, impossibly interested in the concept of âwhat people are saying,â which means he who shapes the discourse shapes the world.
For over twenty years itâs been obvious the internet doomed the 20th Century media oligopoly. But it took decades for a majority of Americans to move online, and in 2016, at precisely the moment it seemed social media would replace the former order, an unofficial alliance of powers refortified an elitist hold on discourse. A year ago, Elon shattered that alliance. The thought criminals were freed, and the window of acceptable discourse broadened until it broke â a total Overton collapse. Now, for better and for worse, there is no more curation, there are no more fake trends, there are no more Washington Post-employed state sock puppets propped up artificially, and there is no more political censorship. Yes, whatever Elon finds personally annoying tends to vanish (R.I.P. Substack links), and heâs still not been tested by a major election. But, for now at least, news trends are dominated by stories people actually care about (even when they suck). This has never happened before, and so the phenomenon necessarily poses opportunity that has never before existed.
For decades â more, probably â American politics and culture âevolvedâ in one direction. This evolution concluded in Harvard removing portraits that were too white. In IBM punishing executives for hiring too many asians. And in the abolition of âacademic meritâ at the conceptual level. Proponents of such abhorrent practices assumed the future would carry on apace, as did most detractors, and so mostly no one really fought for control of the âright side of history.â Sure, there was a spicy blog post here and there. But real war? With reputations and fortunes on the line? Why bother if the conclusion was inevitable?
Well, if the future is just talk, and talk is finally free, the conclusion is no longer inevitable. Thereâs potential upside, now, and so is it really any surprise the first man swinging runs a hedge fund?
I doubt Harvard will change overnight, but its reputation, which is and can only be the sum of people talking, has been tremendously sullied. To attract donors, to keep its federal funding, and to guarantee graduates of the university will continue to be associated with a brand of excellence, the machine will have to evolve. Not just at Harvard, but everywhere, from the Ivy League to Silicon Valley. If it doesnât, people will talk. This talk will be permitted. The machine will break.
And so the fight â the real fight â begins.
-SOLANA
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