() It’s London, 1871. Arthur Gordon is a successful West End tea merchant whose life is turned upside down when he receives a proposal for his youngest daughter, Jane, from one of the most eligible bachelors in London – a handsome man with a vast fortune
@tldrjack
'Electrical outlet' is far too many syllables. 'Plug socket', despite not sounding as elegant, is much punchier; better for the spoken language.
@GadSaad
You don't find it rather disingenuous to blame the recent spate of antisemitism on working class whites in Arkansas, (which considering the evangelical love of Jews, is statistically absurd)? After all, the footage of the people chanting 'from the river to the sea' are not Roscoe
Men at the extremes of human height, both the very tall and the very short, are more likely to be homosexuals. This is perhaps indicative of the mutational load theory.
@jeremykauffman
More likely is that Shakespeare did not receive much remuneration and had to write copiously to maintain his income. There were no intellectual property laws then allowing an artist to live off one hit for the rest of his life.
@FilthyArmenian
He would have been telling you to stop being selfish and get the vaccine so that he can resume his listless, self-indulgent tour of urban restaurants.
@PeterStefanovi2
Immigration can be both good and bad in much the same way that water can be. A little water and you slake your thirst; too much water, and you drown. It's an issue of proportion - and immigration is out of proportion at the moment.
@eyeslasho
I'm not a fan of Trump, but I have no idea what you're seeing; he's not performing nearly as badly as you claim. He has already destroyed the competition and, in televised debates, one can never expect perfect delivery and precision answers.
@Tim_Burgess
By this logic we would exhaust all the riches of the earth, forego every luxury, forsake every advantage, and only then would we discover that poverty, crime, and pestilence still exist. Man was not created equal in his abilities.
@davidminpdx
Now do a demographic breakdown of who's committing the murders, and then you might have a better understanding of why people in these states vote red.
@AuronMacintyre
I'm in favour of denser, European style cities in America, but that's not what America would get. America would get Section 8 on a grander scale.
@AndyHearn09
Remember, ladies and gentlemen, it’s a conspiracy theory when it happens to white Britons but an atrocity when it happens to Arabs in the Middle East.
@lporiginalg
It has always been plain to see that the welfare state is a wealth transfer mechanism designed to transfer money from the responsible to the irresponsible.
@FischerKing64
When society is populated with people like this, things work like a dream. People get on with their business and don't make too much fuss, and remain agreeable and cooperative because they aren't all striving to get ahead of each other, even as some do pull ahead. This paradigm
@GadSaad
Those middle American individuals are sending billions of dollars to Israel every year. And they don't have tattoos on his forehead. Just admit you engaged in the dirty, squalid stereotyping that you so loudly rail against when it's leveled at your people.
@eyeslasho
If it was all a divine play, acted out on stage for timeless generations of man to ponder, that still does not make the villain of the play the hero.
@khartoum_of
Dan Snow is the reason why Hitchens is brimming with prophesies of doom and destruction: if Snow is indicative of the British elite, then Britain has no future.
@gtredoux
This is why I maintain some respect for Bertrand Russell despite him being an unrepentant leftist all his life. He refused to be dishonest about what he saw. He made the very unfashionable observation that the Soviet Union had neither freedom nor food; the emperor had no clothes.
@Jacob_Rees_Mogg
The Conservative Party is not a conservative party so as with all things that have exceeded their usefulness, it is time for the Conservative Party to be replaced.
@0xAlaric
The difference between civilization and barbarism is the difference between controlled violence and reckless violence. Civilization can never forget that its comforts come from laws enforced with violence; if the law is divorced from violence, you no longer have a civilization.
@memeticsisyphus
'I don't get it, what's sexual about a tiny strip of cloth that reveals nearly every inch of my body save for my genitals and my nipples?'
@gov_fails
Society has a vested interest in making sure its survival is intact; it should not be eager to let its people be guinea pigs in a vast genetic engineering experiment.
@VDAREJamesK
We should call it the 'Anglo-Saxon Conundrum'. The legalistic, moralistic bent of the Anglo-Saxon helps him to produce the finest institutions in the world which are then subverted by people who replace his legalistic, moralistic worldview with petty ethnocentrism.
@FLAYERS_27XXX
I thought the same thing when I read his post. Let's just continue to accelerate the dysgenic slide downward and continue ceding all institutional power to our enemies.
@jeremykauffman
This is fairly clear cut. You cannot accelerate with a police officer standing directly in front of your car with his gun pointed at you. At that point, the issue of it being a property crime becomes irrelevant because it presents a clear and present danger to the officer.
@jeremykauffman
It's curious how those people criticizing white males for being different, especially those of Western European origin, have no idea how much they owe to those they loathe.
@jmrphy
The standards and norms that made for successful civilizations were ones where low class thieves and beggars were treated with absolute contempt and if they ever stepped outside of the bounds of the law, they would be ruthlessly executed. This contempt for vulgar behavior is what
@restoreorderusa
"We're just as British as you, but we want to stop the world on behalf of the country from which we came and not on behalf of the country in which we hold citizenship."
@zackbeauchamp
White supremacy is when you have laws and enforce them. This sort of myopic, disconnected philosophy is why the right is laughing at Carson's death right now.
@memeticsisyphus
The moral here is that if they had not wasted time with the taser and had simply shot him, the security guard would have never taken a bullet.
@Babygravy9
He's a John Bull for the modern era: one who eats kimchi with Tabasco. Curiously, he also never blinks, which tells me he would not flinch from the splinters thrown off by a French broadside.
@ClarkeMicah
What about his speech was 'cheap and wicked'? I think to most people, especially to his constituents in Wolverhampton, it was an issue about which they were genuinely concerned. And looking at the state of it today, they were right to be concerned.
@0x49fa98
It has always been the case that the lowest form of evil merely wants to please its masters by offering up a living being for sacrifice. Will Stancil is the Incan man offering his daughter to the chief priest so that he can win praise back in the village.
@PepeFisher
@VDAREJamesK
It is precisely this individualism that makes Anglo Institutions so strong. They have a tendency to promote the best and not just their cousins or the men who pay them the most money.
@AndyHearn09
Britons have already suffered plenty of violence (Manchester bombing, multiple attacks in London, Rotherham, and as on) and the acts of violence will only get worse as the proportion of native Britons decreases.
@AncestralVril
Japan's 'religion' is an amalgam of Shinto, Buddhist, and Daoist thought, overlaid now with generous amounts of secular apathy. It's not even remotely Christian and the average person doesn't live at all by the code of Bushido. Most would mock it as outdated.
@TheAdrena
@punk6529
A much better choice would have been to repeal the mandate that he had issued in violation of the most fundamental rights of Canadians.
@NapoleonBonabot
The American Revolution was fought over actions that were decided 'over there'. I am not sure how someone can claim that what happens in Europe doesn't affect America.
@nathancofnas
It's astounding how the West has a class of scribblers like Noah Smith who will eagerly defend in print the theory of evolution but then vigorously deny any of the conclusions derived from that theory.
@zoeliberman
@chicagotribune
@TheOpEdProject
You will be glad to know that I have many open conversations about race with my children, punctuated here and there with some very powerful statistics about the inequality of the races among the perpetrators.
@nathancofnas
'Identity politics is bad, but fawning adoration for my people is permissible,' is not, I will grant you, an inconsistent position, but it is also not a very subtle one.
@jonatanpallesen
@sebjenseb
Violence, if taken far enough, solves a lot of problems. You have a PhD in genetics. You ought to know that evolution is built on mounds of bones not on ideals.
Like most people, I wish it wasn't this way. But it is.
@ExpatAftermath
Whenever the right tries to protest there are always these naysayers who condemn it, saying 'just play it safe', 'don't give the man what he wants', and it all amounts to defending the status quo. But we don't like the status quo. That's why we're protesting.
The 'stop cancelling people' crowd don't realize it has always been this way: people have always discriminated against one another and self-segregated as a result. The net effect is to have a more stable society. It's private discrimination that helps prevent public persecution.
@SwampPug
"One of the most hopeful thinkers of our age."
His philosophy is to steal wealth from a nation's citizens, distribute it to third-worlders and his elite nomenklatura, and then sneer at the people who resent this violent redistribution of their wealth.
@tomhfh
Tom Harwood shall not rest until every inch of England is smothered in tarmac and smokestacks. 'Look', he'll say when the job's done, 'wasn't it worth it for that 2% bump in GDP?'
@stephen_wigmore
I think the Church of England ought to start caring more about England and her people than people 'despite their nationality or immigration status'.
@eyeslasho
The same people who run the FBI also run the most crime-ridden cities, so I don't why you assume that their motivations would not be the same as the FBI's.
@kai_dogecoin
@iamyesyouareno
Before you post something this stupid, you should do some research on how many of these crimes are committed with illegal guns.
@jeremykauffman
Knowing what we know about how politics is influenced by genetics, someday perhaps we'll be able to figure out with a precise mathematical function how much of left-wing politics is siding with 'the other' because of a physical fear of what could happen if they resisted.
@nathancofnas
It's astounding how the West has a class of scribblers like Noah Smith who will eagerly defend in print the theory of evolution but then vigorously deny any of the conclusions derived from that theory.
@captgouda24
You are selling the lab leak theory short by assuming, incorrectly, that the whole case rests on simple proximity of the lab to the market. Not only did the Wuhan lab specialize in the very same virus that leaked from Wuhan, there were photos of researchers handling bats with
@ElijahSchaffer
Not taking into account, of course, the amount of land required to provide food, shelter, factories, sewage, trash, pollution, recreation, and so on.
@FamedCelebrity
The theory of mutational load is more sophisticated than what you (or Bronski) are making it out to be. It rests on several points:
a) The decline in IQ started around the time of the industrial revolution because before then child mortality was much higher among the lower
@metathomist
Mendel, Copernicus, and if you want to add Protestants, you can add Priestly, Newton, Dalton, and many more who were dedicated believers until their dying day.