What part of “the right of the people peaceably to assemble” don’t they understand? Hamas are not peaceful, so I suppose we shouldn't be surprised that their collegiate supporters have not been either

Gaza Rally, May 1, 2024, photo by Abbey Cutrer, Kentucky Kernel. How many were there supporting the rally, and how many were just spectators?

No one has been more supportive of the right of the pro-Hamas demonstrators to exercise their freedom of speech and right to peaceably assemble to proclaim their positions than The First Street Journal has been. We have pointed out how the keffiyeh-wearing activists — and I regard wearing the black-and-white Palestinian keffiyeh as qualitatively indistinguishable from wearing a Nazi swastika armband — had their demonstration at the University of Kentucky, made their points in a rally in front of the school’s main library, waved their Palestinian flags, and, when it was over, picked up their stuff and went home. I have supported the right of the Princeton University hunger strikers to starve themselves to make their point, even as I mocked them, because I unequivocally support Israel in their war against Hamas and I support freedom of speech. I have even said that it’s a bit pointless to use force to break up the protest encampments, because, with the semester ending, these encampments will just wither away.

As it happened, the powers that be at the University of Pennsylvania decided against just leaving the encampments alone, and the Philadelphia Police broke it up and arrested some of the campers. They were definitely the Usual Suspects, as Fox 29 News reported that only 7 of the 33 people arrested for ‘defiant trespassing’ were actually Penn students.

Now, there’s this:

Protesters march through University City after Penn encampment disbanded: ‘When they destroy, we build’

Protesters stopped interim university President J. Larry Jameson’s residence near 38th and Walnut Streets, where they held a rally.

by Nick Vadala and Zoe Greenberg | Friday, April 10, 2024 | 11:04 PM EDT

Hours after the dismantling of the pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Pennsylvania, protesters gathered at the Woodlands cemetery on Friday evening before marching through University City.

Protesters stopped interim university President J. Larry Jameson’s residence near 38th and Walnut Streets, where they held a rally. Penn issued an alert that a large demonstration was in the area, and police were on the scene. Video of the rally posted to social media showed protesters banging on the door of Jameson’s home before police pulled them back.

I prefer not to use photos from The Philadelphia Inquirer, but this one documents that Friday night’s march was not peaceable; the marchers were banging on President Jameson’s door, something which might well have cause him to fear for his safety. That is a form of terrorism.

As demonstrators rallied outside, smoke tinted the colors of the Palestinian flag could be seen being released as speakers made remarks.

It was not clear late Friday if anyone had been arrested in connection with the protest. The Philadelphia Police Department did not immediately respond to request for comment.

After stopping at Jameson’s home, the group again began marching again, with a crowd of about 100 people — some waving Palestinian flags and wearing keffiyahs — walking down Chestnut Street before turning left on 33rd.

Around 10:30 p.m., they stood in a large circle in the intersection, clapping and chanting “the students united will never be defeated.” The crowd was peaceful and largely young.

Peaceful? Well, perhaps they were before and after they were at the President’s residence, but they sure weren’t while they were there. The right of peaceable assembly does not include the ‘right’ to trespass on other people’s property, nor the ‘right’ to threaten, intimidate, or terrorize people who disagree with you, or, in these particular cases, are seen as your enemies.

And that has been much of the issue: the pro-Palestinian, pro-Hamas — and, as far as I am concerned, if you are pro-Palestinian, you are pro-Hamas — demonstrations and encampments have been noisy and threatening, to one degree or another, to Jewish students and staff. Chants and signs stating “From the River to the Sea, Palestine must be free” is effectively calling for the complete destruction of Israel and the extermination of the Jews. As Melinda Roth, a professor at George Washington University Law School, noted, signs like “By Any Means Necessary” are, in light of Hamas’ October 7th attack, endorsements of rape, murder, and terrorism. People have, and should have, their freedom of speech, but once your actions start to trample upon other people’s rights, their right to freely move about, their right to their own property — interestingly, the pro-Hamas ‘encampments’ tended to occur on the grounds of private colleges, not public ones — and people’s safety, the consequences of people’s speech begin to accrue.

We have previously noted that some on the left are aghast that some federal judges have said they will not consider graduates of Columbia University for law clerk positions, that some deep-pockets donors have said that they will close their checkbooks until the universities clean up anti-Semitism on campus, and some have stated that they will not hire graduates who have signed anti-Semitic screeds. Couple that with potential criminal records from aggressive trespassing and threatening other people, and yes, there is a price to pay for not protesting peaceably.

 

The muddled Methodists

There are times when things get published that are just unintentionally humorous whiloe being nevertheless very sad. The always homosexual and transgender supporting Philadelphia Inquirer had this one Friday morning:

My husband had to quit his Methodist ministry for being gay. The new rules on LGBTQ clergy are long overdue.

I only wish Michael Collins were alive today to see his dream for an inclusive Methodist church finally come true.

by Huntly Collins | Friday, April 10, 2024 | 5:00 AM EDT

We had just gotten settled into the second-floor apartment of a house in the Rockhill neighborhood of Kansas City, Mo., when my husband burst through the door with disturbing news. A psychological test given to the entering class at St. Paul’s School of Theology, a Methodist seminary, indicated he was gay. If that were true, he might not be able to pursue his lifelong dream of becoming a Methodist minister. Tears filled his eyes as he explained the test results to me. “But you’re not gay!” I insisted. “We know that!”

The incident, in the fall of 1969, was unsettling, but we soon moved past it. We loved each other very much.

Three years later, after he graduated from seminary and was ordained, the Rev. Michael L. Collins took his first church assignment as pastor of a congregation in a white, working-class neighborhood of Portland, Ore., our hometown. We lived across the street in a three-story, four-bedroom parsonage, which came with the job. I had never lived in such a large and beautiful place.

As Mike preached the social justice message of the Gospel, I became the dutiful minister’s wife, inviting church lay leaders over to the parsonage for Sunday pot-roast dinner. I began teaching Sunday school.

Then comes the kicker:

Late one summer afternoon in 1974, Mike summoned me from the parsonage to his office in the church. He paced the floor in front of me. When he spoke, there was a sense of urgency in his voice. “I’ve just tested positive for an STD, and you will have to be tested,” he told me. Pause. “I got it from a man.”

https://i0.wp.com/www.thepiratescove.us/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_wacko.gif?w=612&ssl=1 In other words, the psychological test given to the entering class at the seminary which “indicated” that he was homosexual got it right! https://i0.wp.com/www.thepiratescove.us/wp-content/plugins/wp-monalisa/icons/wpml_yahoo.gif?w=612&ssl=1

When Mike came out, he faced an impossible choice: Because the United Methodist Church forbade LGBTQ Methodists from being ordained and serving as parish ministers, he could either keep his ministry and continue to live a lie, or he could acknowledge his sexual orientation to church officials and lose his ministry. Night after night, we stayed up late to talk about the options. We also probed our relationship. We loved each other; I wanted that to be enough. But, of course, it wasn’t. I eventually moved out. He told church officials and was forced to give up his parish ministry. Soon, he moved to New York City and launched the first national resistance movement aimed at changing discriminatory Methodist doctrine.

The United Methodist Church in the United States is in a major schism, as a quarter of the affiliated individual churches have left, over precisely that issue.

A quarter of U.S. congregations in the United Methodist Church have received permission to leave the denomination during a five-year window, closing this month, that authorized departures for congregations over disputes involving the church’s LGBTQ-related policies.

This year alone, 5,641 congregations received permission from their regional conferences to leave the denomination as of Thursday, according to an unofficial tally by United Methodist News. In total, 7,658 have received permission since 2019. Thursday marked the last scheduled regional vote, according to the news service, when the Texas Annual Conference authorized four congregations’ departures.

The vast major(ity) are conservative-leaning churches responding to what they see as the United Methodists’ failure to enforce bans on same-sex marriage and the ordaining of openly LGBTQ persons.

The new year[1]The cited article was published on December 15, 2023. is expected to bring more changes.

The first denomination-wide legislative gathering in eight years, slated for spring 2024, will consider calls to liberalize policies on marriage and ordination. It will also debate rival proposals, either to decentralize the international church — which has at least as many members outside the United States as in — or provide overseas congregations with the same exit option their U.S. counterparts had.

Yup! At the beginning of this month, the United Methodist Church General Conference repealed bans on LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriage. Apparently, for the General Conference, God had simply been wrong when he prohibited homosexual activity (Leviticus 18:22), or changed his mind, despite Malachi 3:6, “For I am the Lord; I change not.” The General Conference must have missed the words of Jesus, who said, in Matthew, Chapter 5:

17 Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.
18 For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.
19 Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

Perhaps the General Conference believe that they are now smarter or wiser than God?

‘Cafeteria Catholic’ is a term of long derision, describing professed Catholics who just pick and choose whet parts of Catholic doctrine they’ll accept, and which ones they ignore or outright reject. Our nation’s most famous Catholic, Joe Biden, certainly fits into that, openly and strongly rejecting the Church’s teachings on abortion, homosexuality, and transgenderism. Perhaps ‘Muddled Methodists’ would be the proper term here?

There have been uncounted articles noting the fall off of religious affiliation in the United States, of people who have simply ceased going to church, or were never brought up to attend. But, just as serious is the number of people who do still go to Christian churches, but reject the teachings of the God in whom they profess to believe. Being good and kind and nice has overtaken actual belief in God in so many people.

Back to the originally cited OpEd:

Despite our separation and eventual divorce, Mike and I remained soulmates. In the fall of 1983, I moved from Oregon to Philadelphia to take a reporting job at The Inquirer. I was excited to be joining the staff at one of the country’s leading metropolitan dailies, but just as excited to be moving within easy commuting distance of Mike in New York.

Our rekindled connection was short-lived. Michael Leroy Collins died of complications due to AIDS on Oct. 15, 1984, a week and a day after his 37th birthday. He was among the first wave of gay men in New York to succumb to a virus that would go on to kill more than 40 million people worldwide.

I do feel sorry for Mrs Collins, who has continued to use her late ex-husband’s last name, forty years after he went to his eternal reward. But, in the remainder of her column, she goes on to tell us that she has continued his work of attempting to steer the Methodist Church away from the words of the Lord recorded in the Bible in which she professes to believe.

References

References
1 The cited article was published on December 15, 2023.

A hunger strike is only effective if someone actually cares if you starve yourself to death

Do you know who Aaron Bushnell was? Perhaps the name is familiar, but most people would be forgiven if they didn’t remember who he was or why they had heard his name. Senior Airman Bushnell, an enlisted man in the United States Air Force, poured an inflammable liquid on himself and committed suicide via self-immolation outside of the gates of the Israeli embassy in Washington to protest American support for Israel in their war against Hamas. SrA Bushnell was famous for a couple of days, but, let’s be honest here, while people do remember the event, the late Mr Bushnell personally wasn’t famous for long.

As we previously reported, Khader Adnan was a long-time Palestinian Arab activist, and at one point a spokesman for the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Arrested many times, Mr Adnan’s weapon of choice in detention was the hunger strike. His first hunger strike, ten days long, occurred in 2000, when he was locked up not by the Israelis, but the Palestinian National Authority. In 2011, he began another hunger strike, one which lasted 66 days. In 2015, he undertook a 56-day hunger strike, which resulted in Israel releasing him. He kept getting himself arrested, and finally, after another, much longer 87-day hunger strike, died in prison on May 2, 2023.

We also reported, in February, how several Brown University students went on an eight-day-long hunger strike, and then mocked the quaint story that 30 Harvard students went on a 12 hour hunger strike in solidarity with their fellow Ivy Leaguers.

And now? Roughly 15 pro-Hamas students have gone on a hunger strike at Princeton, and hunger strikes are serious things, but they’ve opened themselves up to justifiable mockery.

Princeton anti-Israel protestors are mercilessly mocked after claiming they are STARVING amid self-imposed hunger strike: ‘I’m literally shaking’

By Sophie Mann | Thursday, May 9, 2024 | 12:20 PM EDT | Updated: 12:48 PM EDT

Anti-Israel protestors at Princeton University are being teased online after screaming about the pains of the hunger strike they’ve embarked upon as part of their ongoing solidarity movement with the people of Gaza.

One young woman, in a clip circulating online, yells into a megaphone that she and her peers are ‘starving.’

‘I am quite literally shaking right now, as you can see,’ the masked protestor on the Ivy League campus says, adding that based on her assessment of recent meetings with the university, administrators are not in any rush to give the protestors what they’re after.

The clip was mocked online by countless social media users who pointed out the absurdity of the students complaining about their condition on a self-imposed hunger strike.

‘Are we SURE that this isn’t a fantastic SNL skit?’ one user wrote.

The strike, which is nearing its seven-day mark, began last Friday as part of an effort to coerce the school into meeting with them to discuss Princeton’s divestment from Israel, as well as dropping the criminal and disciplinary charges against two students who were arrested last month.

There is a lot more, including many photos, at the Daily Mail original, and if the Daily Mail is famous for its mockery, as is the New York Post, what my Google search for Princeton hunger strike turned up was a whole lot of nothing from the (purportedly) more serious credentialed media. The only story listed as being in The Philadelphia Inquirer was four days earlier, and there was nothing showing on the first page of my search from The New York Times or The Washington Post. It seems that serious people are mostly ignoring unserious ones.

Would it be wrong to suggest that most people just don’t care about fifteen or so privileges students at an elite and effete Ivy League college. Princeton’s estimated costs of attendance for the 2024-25 academic year are $86,700. The college does tell us that they have a “rigorous academic environment,” and that they bring in “a varied mix of high-achieving, intellectually gifted students,” but somehow, some way, these intellectually gifted students never figured out that a hunger strike would leave them actually, you know, hungry.

You can see the video of the Princeton whiner here. The masked little girl, in her expensive-looking clothes and the obligatory Palestinian keffiyeh — something I regard as qualitatively identical to a Nazi swastika armband — didn’t really generate much sympathy for her cause.

The Princeton princess lamented that the school’s administration wanted to see them weakened, not something she can prove, but, in the end, the authorities don’t have to do anything, and the hunger strike will eventually end. Either they’ll give up, one by one or as a group, or they’ll starve to death. And the mockery that I am seeing, coupled with the more serious credentialed media turning a blind eye to it, tells me that a whole lot of people won’t really care if any of them deliberately starve themselves to death. If the princess hunger strikes her way to her eternal reward, we might remember the action, but, like Aaron Bushnell, few will remember her name.
_____________________________

Update: I had written that the major media had been ignoring the hunger strike, but New York Times columnist Ginia Bellafante wrote about it this morning.

You in a heap o’ trouble, boy! As Leroy Jethro Gibbs once said on NCIS, “Believe me, son, you will not do well in prison.”

Wilmer Romero, photo by Fayette County Detention Center, and is a public record.

Only 18 years old, already a hardened criminal, and now he’s facing life in prison without the possibility of parole. It seems that young Wilmer Geovvany Romero isn’t the brightest bulb on the Christmas tree.

The mugshot? That’s the most recent of four mugshots for young Mr Romero, who has a listed birthday of September 6, 2005, and is listed as being 5’4″ tall (64″) and weighing 130 lb. His stay in jail might wind up on the unpleasant side.

Teenager arrested in connection to Lexington shooting that left an 18-year-old dead

by Christopher Leach | Thursday, May 9, 2024 | 10:31 AM EDT

The Lexington Police Department has arrested an 18-year-old man in connection to a deadly shooting that left another 18-year-old man dead. Continue reading

We all have #FreedomOfSpeech, but that does not come with freedom from consequences The anti-Semitic, pro-Hamas protesters are finding out that some people have listened to them, and don't like what they've said

I spotted this on my feed this morning, and the different reactions are humorous.

Conservative judges say they will boycott Columbia University students

The judges accused Columbia of becoming “ground zero for the explosion of student disruptions, anti-semitism, and hatred for diverse viewpoints on campuses.”

By Tobi Raji | Tuesday, May 7, 2024 | 6:42 PM EDT

More than a dozen conservative federal judges are threatening to not hire law clerks who attend Columbia University or its law school starting this fall — an attempt to show the judges’ displeasure over the institution’s handling of pro-Palestinian protests.

Continue reading

Another five bite the dust! More layoffs at The Philadelphia Inquirer

Last Tuesday, I attended a meet-and-greet presentation held by the Lexington Herald-Leader, listening to Executive Editor Richard Green and Managing Editor Lauren Gorla. It was a decent meeting, and Miss Gorla said one thing which stuck with me. While newspapers used to depend primarily on advertising, she stated that currently what my best friend used to call the Herald-Liberal is primarily funded via subscriptions, and occasional donations from philanthropic organizations.

Available was a complete list of newspaper staffers, 32 to them, of which only 17 were listed as reporters, and only 13 of which were not listed as sports reporters.

I was thinking about that when I read a series of tweets from the News Guild of Greater Philadelphia.

We are disgusted and enraged to report that The Inquirer has laid off 5 of our members today.

This is the bulletin we sent to our members a short time ago:

Less than a week after The Inquirer announced a desire to have employees increase their days working in the office in the spirit of “collaboration, inclusion, and sense of urgency about our work” today the company informed five Guild members who have been extraordinary contributors to our mission that they are being laid off. So much for collaboration and inclusion. Continue reading

The pro #Hamas protesters do everything except actually go to Gaza to help

I have said, on Twitter, more times than I could ever have counted, that if the pro-Hamas protesters really wanted to help the poor, poor people in Gaza, they should pick up a rifle and head to Gaza to fight the hated Joooos along with the people they champion. Thus far, I haven’t heard of an American actually doing that, though it’s possible that a few have done so and I missed the media stories about it. National Public Radio reported that “hundreds” of Americans, primarily veterans, have gone to Ukraine to fight the Russians, and a Google search for American volunteers fighting in Gaza turned up several credentialed media sources reporting how Americans have been heading to the Middle East to support and fight for Israel, but if there are any stories about Americans fighting for the Arabs, I’ve missed them.

Then again, just how stupid would you have to be to voluntarily choose to fight the Israel Defence Force? The IDF don’t play.

GWU law professor calls on anti-Israel students to leave ‘mommy and daddy’ paid dorm rooms, go to Gaza

Prof. Roth told students that they should consider volunteering instead of protesting on campus

by Jeffrey Clark | Monday, May 6, 2024 | 1:34 PM EDT Continue reading

The left are pro-choice on exactly one thing

There was a subscriber comment on an article in The Washington Post on the political polarization of plug in electric vehicles that made me chuckle. The commenter styling himself oneofmanyopinions wrote:

I’m not a tree hugger, but every time I hear a Republican, such as Bill Barr, say things like “they want to take our gas stoves” as justification to vote for Trump, I know I’m witnessing ignorance at a high level.

I responded, noting that immediately to the right of the article was a blurb for one entitled “Gas stoves spread harmful pollution beyond the kitchen, study finds.Continue reading

“I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” The pro-Hamas demonstrators have completely ignored the truth.

We have previously noted the idiocy of those holding a “Queers for Palestine” banner, something that even the homosexual activist publication The Advocate said was stupid.

But the image of te guy on the right? You can tell that he’s an American or Brit, because the signs are in English for English readers, and he’s enjoying his Western civilization world of freedom of speech, because if he wore that shirt in Tehran or Cairo or just about anyplace in the Muslim Middle East, he’d be taken straight to jail, doubtlessly beaten, and could well be prosecuted for blasphemy.

Well, maybe not. Try wearing a shirt which proclaims “Allah is Gay” in Riyadh, and you might not even make it to jail, you might well be beaten to death even before the police got there.

Then there’s this: Continue reading