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1 y

The UN Won’t Protect Gaza, But Can Adopt A ‘Pact for the Future?’
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The UN Won’t Protect Gaza, But Can Adopt A ‘Pact for the Future?’

The United Nations has become a parody of itself. As world leaders gathered in New York this week, Gaza, Lebanon, and Palestine were nowhere on the agenda, but a rammed-through US Pact designed to protect…
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Why Is the Government Still Paying for Covid Tests?
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Why Is the Government Still Paying for Covid Tests?

Politics Why Is the Government Still Paying for Covid Tests? There is something sinister about state-sponsored hypochondria. Credit: image via Shutterstock Four years ago, during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, the U.S. public-health establishment set the conditions for a panic unlike anything witnessed in our lifetimes. Through an unholy combination of social-distancing edicts, stay-at-home orders, and vaccine mandates, the establishment induced a state of over-the-top alarm among millions of Americans. These days, the most the bureaucrats can hope to provoke in the population is not compulsory panic but something like officially-sanctioned hypochondria. Last week, I read that the U.S. government had resuscitated its pandemic-era initiative of flooding the country with free Covid tests. According to the Associated Press, the government will again provide families with as many as four tests “on the house,” so to speak—an act of would-be charity that loses some of its punch after the AP notes that the average cost of an over-the-counter test amounts to a whopping $11.  Among other things, here we have a particularly pitiful example of a nanny state that condescendingly assumes that its subjects cannot even pull together the equivalent of the cost of a Big Mac, a medium French fries, and some pop. “Insurers are no longer required to cover the cost of the tests,” the AP glumly notes. (Two cheers for insurers!) My objection to the reconstitution of the Covid test giveaway program, however, has relatively little to do with the tests being made available for free. Instead, I reserve my greatest disapproval for the assumption implicit in the proposition: That the public should be encouraged to monitor the nature and severity of their upper-respiratory symptoms to such an extent that it is worth distinguishing Covid from influenza, the common cold, hay fever, or a bad case of “I’ve been cleaning the attic and kicked up a lot of dust.” This amounts to a normalization of the unnatural obsessing over germs. If the government ever makes public the number of people who have signed up to receive the new free Covid tests, the figure might give us a clue about just how many of our fellow citizens can be led by the government to become as neurotic as Woody Allen in Hannah and Her Sisters. (Allen, in that movie, mistook a stain on his shirt for skin cancer.)  To the best of my recollection, I have made use of a Covid test exactly once in my life—something I admit with a fair degree of sheepishness if not genuine repentance. Although I instantly viewed with intense skepticism the pandemic-excused shutdown of civilization as we knew it, I was not exempt from worrying about catching the virus. In my defense, my single use of a Covid test came early in the pandemic, and its negative result—the fact that I had bought a silly test when there was nothing wrong with me at all!—taught me a lesson: Catching a case of hypochondria is far worse than catching a case of the sniffles. I also concluded that to test oneself for Covid encouraged the spurious thinking that catching Covid was itself a rare, notable, or, indeed, avoidable occurrence. The logic went something like this: Covid was singularly strange and scary, and so testing for it—something we do not do for more innocuous infections like the common cold—was called for. But the opposite was plainly true: Covid would eventually become so ubiquitous as to render testing for it decidedly anticlimactic. Therefore, to cease testing for Covid was to accept the inevitability of Covid—a healthy affirmation of reality. And Covid did come for your faithful correspondent: Over the last few years, I have caught an upper-respiratory virus on at least three occasions, and the odds are likely that each time I had Covid. Yet I did not test myself once, so who knows? As I was sidelined with a fever, headache, and sore throat, I was more concerned with attempting to write and file my deeply engaging opinion journalism than I was with confirming that I had this virus rather than that virus. Actually, the fact that I can readily recall the number of times I have had Covid or some Covid-like condition must in and of itself be counted as a personal failing: We all get colds—stop keeping count! The return of the free Covid tests might appear to be just another example of pandemic-era detritus. Perhaps it is no more significant than encountering the occasional discarded mask in a parking lot. Indeed, it is hard not to chuckle when standing in line at a store and looking down to find the scuffed-up stickers that once attempted to demarcate 6-foot social distancing; these are artifacts as surely as a book of S&H Green Stamps.  Yet I maintain that the resuscitation of the Covid test handout scheme amounts to something more ominous: an attempt to convert panic into hypochondria, and thus free-thinking, otherwise sensible-minded citizens into permanent worrywarts.  The post Why Is the Government Still Paying for Covid Tests? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

It’s Time for the GOP to Play Hardball With Public Universities
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It’s Time for the GOP to Play Hardball With Public Universities

Education It’s Time for the GOP to Play Hardball With Public Universities Red-state tax dollars should not fund hostile institutions. Credit: Martin Pope/Getty Images It’s old news that universities are not particularly friendly grounds for conservatives. Every so often, a new study looks at the partisan affiliation of professors in various academic disciplines, and it’s never pretty. Business, economics, and the hard sciences are always home court for Republicans, but at the average college, no academic department comes close to parity. On the other hand, conservatism in some academic departments is utterly extinct or even unimaginable: In sociology and communications, the odds of finding a conservative prof are literally 100:1, or, in some places, worse. Conservatives have been complaining about universities since before conservatism was even a coherent movement, but nothing much has been accomplished. Bill Buckley rose to prominence after publishing God and Man at Yale in 1951, but despite his needling of the professorial class, the dregs of ’60s radicalism ended up filling the ranks of the academy (bombing American military bases is apparently an excellent qualification for teaching college students). The results have been disastrous. The left has consolidated its position into complete dominance of higher education, which serves as the principal apparatus of elite production in postindustrial society. This provides it with enormous cultural and political influence, while slowly choking conservative political possibilities by depriving the Republican Party of the expertise and trained personnel necessary to effectively exert political power in the modern state. The result is Republican administrations that are barely able to staff their own bureaucracies: They appoint twice as many Democrats to executive branch positions as Democratic presidents appoint Republicans. Republicans at all levels had decades to deal with what has been an obvious issue since the genesis of modern conservatism; why the inertia? Some of it, it seems, was because Republicans naively didn’t take universities seriously. Campus problems, surely, would remain confined to campuses—students would come out, wise up to the world, and leave radicalism on the quad. But much seems to have been a reverence for the founding mythology of academia: the sacred rights of faculty self-governance and academic freedom. It’s time to put old illusions aside and recognize what universities have become: a patronage system for the left and a political machine for Democrats. Colleges and universities systematically discriminate against conservative professors and students. Hundreds of billions of dollars of state and federal funds go to establish professors of critical gender studies and fund research projects whose sole purpose is to decry America as an evil and oppressive state. Republicans are hardly helpless in the face of this onslaught. Red states control vast swathes of the American public university system, and billions of dollars of state funds flow into their coffers. Republicans at the national level can levy strikes against the excesses of federal grant and loan funding. With some imagination, and more importantly, political will, universities can be brought to heel and made to represent the priorities of the citizens that fund them, rather than the left-wing professors who have stacked their own ranks.  The first step is for state governors to take seriously their power to appoint university governing boards. Currently, it is common to appoint donors and local business leaders to governing boards, but these appointees are usually unengaged and ineffective; many are happy to get their free football tickets and leave the university administrators to their own devices. Their lack of experience with academic governance and university administration means they usually do not have a solid grasp of the problems facing universities or the actions that need to be taken to effectively exercise power in higher education. Replacing apathetic boards with experienced activists will allow them to properly exercise their oversight functions, appoint effective conservative university presidents, rein in university spending on frivolous projects, shutter useless and hostile degree programs, veto tenure applications for unqualified ideologues, and mandate changes in university policy. The DeSantis administration in Florida is an excellent example of conservative leadership taking higher education seriously. New boards have begun a complete transformation of both the flagship University of Florida and smaller colleges like New College of Florida and Florida International University, while the legislature has put significant money into the state scholarship program to ensure that education is affordable and the state university system retains as much talent as possible. State legislatures can also play a major role by being aggressive with their oversight of university budgets. Universities must be hit where it hurts, in their pocketbooks. Any university that does not shut down hostile patronage programs like various grievance studies departments and adjust its hiring practices to bring its professoriate in line with state public opinion should have its funding pared dramatically. University administrators who fear for their budgets will quickly move to curtail left-wing excesses on campus; if they don’t, their mandates can be reduced to provide only the most basic degree programs, without amenities. Legislatures can also reward universities for playing nice, and appropriate funds for colleges to build out independent conservative centers that will provide jobs and training for future conservative academics, like the Hamilton Center at the University of Florida and the School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership at Arizona State University. At the federal level, reform is more difficult, due to the constraints on congressional legislation and the partisan lean of the administrative state. But Republican presidents can certainly staff up organs like the Department of Education, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the National Science Foundation with appointees that will dispense with absurdities like awarding the University of Texas at Arlington $5 million to better integrate equity into mathematics education. Congress, on the other hand, can take direct aim at the overstuffed budgets of grant-giving agencies and, ideally, cut them down to a much more reasonable, even to a rather minuscule, size: “Give grants appropriately or don’t give them at all” should be the message. Of course, there will be outcry from leftists, academics, Democratic party hacks in general, and squeamish Republicans about “politicizing education.” But no one should be fooled: education has already been politicized—anyone can watch the Claudine Gay depositions if they dare to dispute the fact. Conservatives must respond in kind. The post It’s Time for the GOP to Play Hardball With Public Universities appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

90% of US Population Would Die From EMP Attack: Unclassified Report. Facts Matter
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90% of US Population Would Die From EMP Attack: Unclassified Report. Facts Matter

90% of US Population Would Die From EMP Attack: Unclassified Report. Facts Matter - 61,777 views Sep 27, 2024 Facts Matter with Roman Balmakov - Episode Resources: ? 2004 EMP Report: https://ept.ms/3wUwVMh ? EMP Committee Hearing https://ept.ms/3wV3Znm ------------------ ?"Green policies" are devastating our farmers. We know because we talked to them personally - from the Netherlands to California. Now you can help us share their stories! ?https://www.epochoriginal.com/nofarme... ⭕️ Sign up for our NEWSLETTER and stay in touch ? https://ept.ms/FactsMatterNewsletter ------------------ ⭕️ Follow us on GAN JING WORLD: https://www.ganjingworld.com/channel/... ⭕️ Subscribe for updates: https://ept.ms/2Tu9clR ⭕️ Support us: https://donorbox.org/facts_matter ⭕️ Merchandise: https://www.epochtv.shop ⭕️ Listen to Podcasts: - ? iTunes Podcast: https://ept.ms/FactsMatterApplePodcast ? Spotify Podcast: https://ept.ms/FactsMatterSpotifyPodcast ? Google Podcast: https://ept.ms/FactsMatterGooglePodcast - ? Epoch Original Documentary DVDs: 1, No Farmers No Food | Documentary https://www.epochtv.shop/product-page... 2, The Final War | Documentary https://www.epochtv.shop/product-page... - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES Mirrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@FactsMatterRoman
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Hack the Vote! Digital Election Rigging 2024. Compromised By Design ClimateViewer 9-27-2024
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api.bitchute.com

Hack the Vote! Digital Election Rigging 2024. Compromised By Design ClimateViewer 9-27-2024

Hack the Vote! Digital Election Rigging 2024. Compromised By Design ClimateViewer 9-27-2024 - 1,036 views • Sept. 27, 2024 ClimateViewer - https://climateviewer.substack.com/p/... - ? ClimateViewer Social Links https://connect.climateviewer.com/ ? - SUBSTACK NEWSLETTER https://climateviewer.substack.com/ ? - CHAT https://t.me/climateviewerchat ❤ - DONATE   / climateviewer   https://www.paypal.me/climateviewer https://www.givesendgo.com/climateviewer https://www.buymeacoffee.com/climatev... - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES Mirrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@climateviewer
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

RESIST THEM: Samuel Adams' Forgotten Call for Liberty and Defiance Against Tyranny 9-28-2024
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RESIST THEM: Samuel Adams' Forgotten Call for Liberty and Defiance Against Tyranny 9-28-2024

RESIST THEM: Samuel Adams' Forgotten Call for Liberty and Defiance Against Tyranny 9-28-2024 - SILENCE IS COMPLIANCE - THE TYRANNY WE FACE IN OUR MODERN DAY IS 10,000 TIMES WORSE THAN WHAT WAS THE CAUSE OF THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE - September 28th, 2024 Tenth Amendment Center - Nearly five years before the Declaration of Independence, Samuel Adams wrote an essay urging the people to RESIST TYRANNY - not tamely submit and hope for the best. For Adams, it was a moral imperative to stand up for what’s right, even against the most powerful government in history. Unfortunately, his bold call for liberty has been almost entirely forgotten. Today, in commemoration of his birthday, we’re uncovering what Adams warned us about - his message is more urgent than ever. - Path to Liberty: September 27, 2024 - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES Mirrored From: https://old.bitchute.com/channel/tenthamendmentcenter/
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

‘Dizzy Miss Lizzy’: The iconic Beatles cover that derails ‘Help!’
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

‘Dizzy Miss Lizzy’: The iconic Beatles cover that derails ‘Help!’

Just a-rocking and a-rolling. The post ‘Dizzy Miss Lizzy’: The iconic Beatles cover that derails ‘Help!’ first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
Why You Keep Eating Bad Foods: The Hidden Triggers Behind Your Choices w/Adam Braud - EP#22 | Alpha Dad Show w/ Colton Whited + Andrew Blumer
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Ronald Reagan: An Example of Pro-Life Presidential Leadership
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townhall.com

Ronald Reagan: An Example of Pro-Life Presidential Leadership

Ronald Reagan: An Example of Pro-Life Presidential Leadership
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Assassination Fixation
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Assassination Fixation

Assassination Fixation
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