Category: Notes and Comment Blog

  • They do not tolerate discrimination, they inflict it

    More on that.

  • Welcoming for everyone – no not you

    Ah isn’t that sweet, incloosivittee at its best.

    You’ll NEVER guess what kind of “community concerns” the brewery means. You’ll never guess what kind of people are being made to feel respected and safe at the expense of which other kind of people, who are being made to feel disrespected and silenced.

    Working backward in time, here are the answers to those questions.

    Incloosivittee for me not for thee.

  • Physician heal thyself

    Hmmm.

    McBride is a man.

  • Man sad to be unable to cheat

    Yet another sloppy title.

    Transgender players to be banned from women’s darts events

    Male players. The problem is not that they’re transgender but that they’re men. If they’re women who don’t dope then they’re not banned, whatever they claim to be or idennify as.

    Noa-Lynn van Leuven, a transgender competitor, has described the decision as ‘huge hit for the trans community’, with the ruling coming into force immediately

    A male transgender competitor.

    Transgender players have been banned from women’s darts tournaments after the sport’s regulatory authority ruled that only biological females will be allowed to compete.

    The new policy, which comes into force immediately, means Noa-Lynn van Leuven, a Dutch transgender player who has won several women’s tournaments, will no longer be able to compete in them. She said the decision by the Darts Regulation Authority (DRA) was “a huge hit for the trans community”.

    He said. And it’s not a hit, it’s a reversal of what should never have happened in the first place. If he weren’t a greedy ruthless cheat he would know that.

    In a Facebook video reacting to the decision, a tearful Van Leuven, 29, said: “Apparently I am going to have to retire as I’m no longer allowed to compete.”

    Wah. Now think about how the women feel.

    “I have worked so damn hard for years just to get here. I respected the sport, and now I’m being told I just don’t belong. Every day it is getting harder and harder for trans people to exist.”

    Nonsense. Competing in a women’s sport despite being a man is not necessary to anyone’s existence.

  • Yes but compassion and care for which people?

    Greg Lukianoff on victim groups and morality on the left.

    But once people on the left had defended other perceived victim groups, there seemed to be only one place left to go. The result was that the issue was pursued as a quasi-religious social movement rather than as a scientific or public policy question that needed to be carefully thought through and rigorously examined. Once people’s identities revolved around the idea that compassion and care were the highest moral ends, and therefore essentially sacred, hysteria was bound to follow. The Founders tried to guard against this kind of dynamic through things like the pairing of the Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses, but those protections do not work as well when the ideology in question does not call itself a religion.

    I don’t think that’s quite it though. It’s not just the idea that compassion and care are the highest moral ends, it’s also that women don’t count as “victim groups” aka a set of people who have been systematically treated as inferior and subordinate since forever. It’s the sudden and ruthless displacement of women’s long campaign for equality and respect by men who dress up as women. That can’t be due to the idea that compassion and care are the highest moral ends, because in that case where is the compassion and care for women? Where did it go all of a sudden? How was it decided that women are the oppressor as opposed to the oppressed?

  • What have trees ever done for Trump?

    Now Trump is taking a chainsaw to the National Forest Service.

    The Trump administration says moving the Forest Service headquarters to Utah and shutting down 31 research stations will streamline operations and bring leaders west, where the forests are.

    Well yeah, it will “streamline” operations in the sense of getting rid of them. That kind of streamlining is not always a good thing.

    In announcing one of the largest reorganizations in the 120-year history of the U.S. Forest Service, the Trump administration declared that there would be “no interruption or change” to the agency’s firefighting force.

    But critics say the upheaval comes at the worst possible time—with the agency’s ranks already depleted and demoralized, and a new federal wildfire forecast showing exceptionally high fire risk in both the Southeast and across much of the West over the next three months.

    Yes but how can anyone possibly expect Trump to care about that?

    By the end of March, 1.62 million acres had already burned across the country this year —231 percent of the previous 10-year average, the National Interagency Fire Center said in its seasonal forecast released Wednesday. That included the largest wildfire in Nebraska’s history, which last month scorched 640,000 acres and killed an 86-year-old woman who was trying to escape. 

    Yes but focus: Trump does not care.

    “President Trump has made it a priority to return common sense to the way our government works,” said U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, whose agency oversees the Forest Service, in making the announcement on Tuesday.

    Yes but what Trump means by common sense is “more cheaply no matter what the outcome is.”

  • Pope shan’t visit party

    Now Trump is quarreling with the Vatican. Great – let’s hope they tear each other to shreds.

    The Vatican has shelved plans for Pope Leo XIV to visit the United States after what officials describe as a deeply alarming confrontation with the Pentagon.

    A stunning new report — now independently confirmed the publication Letters from Leo — reveals that a top U.S. official summoned the Pope’s then-ambassador, Cardinal Christophe Pierre, and delivered a stark warning: America has the military power to do whatever it wants — and the Church “had better take its side.”

    Even more shocking, officials reportedly invoked the Avignon Papacy — a dark chapter when secular powers used force to control the Catholic Church — a reference some in the Vatican interpreted as a veiled military threat against the Holy See.

    The confrontation came after Pope Leo publicly condemned a world driven by “a diplomacy based on force” and a growing “zeal for war” — remarks that reportedly enraged Pete Hegseth Pentagon officials, who viewed them as a direct challenge to the U.S.

    The fallout has been immediate and significant. The Vatican has indefinitely postponed a planned U.S. visit. And instead of coming to America, Leo will spend July 4, 2026 in Lampedusa, standing with migrants, a powerful and deliberate rebuke. For the first time in modern history, the Pentagon offered no Good Friday services for Catholics this year.

    Journalist Christopher Hale notes: “Earlier this year, Pete Hegseth invited his pastor to speak at the Pentagon. That pastor has called for banning public expressions of Catholicism in the United States.”

    While tensions escalated behind closed doors, Pope Leo didn’t back down. He doubled down.

    Doing the Vatican Rag.

  • Ours

    The records belong to us, not to him.

    The world’s largest association of historians is suing the Trump administration over a recent effort to justify the president keeping his official records rather than turning them over to the National Archives.

    The American Historical Association and a second organization, American Oversight, filed the suit in Washington, D.C., District Court Monday, describing the case as an attempt to “preserve the historical record that belongs to the American people, before it is forever lost.”

    “This case is about the preservation of records that document our nation’s history, and whether the American people are able to access and learn from that history,” the complaint said.

    They’re ours. His current job isn’t a business job, it’s a government job, and he doesn’t get to make his own rules.

    Last week, the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel issued an advisory opinion that stated Trump “need not further comply” with the decades-old law governing the handover of presidential records for public preservation after a president leaves office.

    What else is there that he “need not” do? Everything?

    Passed by Congress in the wake of the Watergate scandal, the Presidential Records Act established that official presidential records — such as emails, phone records, and other materials created by White House staff over the course of their official duties — become public property and are maintained by the National Archives and Records Administration.  

    After his first term in office, Trump was accused of violating the Presidential Records Act by storing boxes of sensitive presidential records at his Mar-a-Lago estate and taking steps to thwart the government’s efforts to retrieve them.

    He was indicted for allegedly retaining classified information and obstructing justice, though the case was dismissed over U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon’s concerns about the appointment of special counsel Jack Smith. 

    Judge Aileen Cannon being, funnily enough, a woefully underqualified hack appointed by none other than Trump.

  • Hands across the water

    Vance helping the fascist dude. No not that one; a different one.

    JD Vance has railed against the EU, accusing it of blatantly interfering in Hungary’s upcoming elections, even as the US vice-president said he had travelled to Budapest to “help” Viktor Orbán win Sunday’s vote.

    Yes but that’s completely different, because Vance is from Rust Belt Ohio. Rust Belt protects all forms of double standards.

    Speaking to reporters shortly after landing in Budapest on Tuesday, Vance’s tone was combative as he alleged that the EU was responsible for “one of the worst examples of foreign election interference” he had ever seen.

    Vance, however, made no effort to conceal the reason he had arrived in the country five days before a heated election in which Orbán is facing the possibility of being ousted after 16 years in power. “Of course, I want to help, as much as I possibly can, the prime minister as he faces this election season,” said Vance.

    Wull, he said; he’s helping; that’s not interfering.

    At the evening rally – called a “Day of Friendship” event – Vance delivered further attacks on the EU. “I’m not telling you exactly who to vote for, but what I am telling you is that the bureaucrats in Brussels, those people, should not be listened to,” he said. “Listen to your hearts, listen to your souls, and listen to the sovereignty of the Hungarian people.”

    He added: “I see that those who hate Europe the most, who hate its borders, its energy independence, the people who hate its Christian heritage, they hate one man above all others and his name is Viktor Orbán. And if they hate him, it means he’s on your side.”

    Hearts, souls, Christian heritage. It’s all so familiar.

  • In her capacity

    Bondi wants to be excused.

    House Republicans indicated Wednesday they will continue to seek sworn testimony from Pam Bondi on the Justice Department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case, even after her ousting as attorney general.

    The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Bondi for an April 14 deposition, but that date was never confirmed by Bondi, and the panel said in a statement that it will continue to seek a date for her testimony.

    “The Department of Justice has stated Pam Bondi will not appear on April 14 for a deposition since she is no longer Attorney General and was subpoenaed in her capacity as Attorney General,” a spokeswoman for Oversight Republicans said in a statement. “The Committee will contact Pam Bondi’s personal counsel to discuss next steps regarding scheduling her deposition.”

    That would make sense if her firing had somehow erased everything she had done before said firing, but it didn’t, so it doesn’t. Firing someone isn’t magic: it doesn’t automatically delete the past.

  • The view

    Gosh, ya think?

    Whether such a jaw-dropping threat from an American president pressured Iran to agree to the kind of ceasefire they had previously rejected is uncertain. What is clear is that Trump’s astounding, inflammatory declaration – just two days after a similar obscenity-laced Truth Social demand – is unlike anything a modern US president has ever levelled or hinted at.

    And even if the two-week ceasefire does result in a permanent peace, the Iran war – and Trump’s recent words – may have fundamentally altered the way the rest of the world views the US.

    Of course it has. Trump all along has fundamentally altered the way the world views us. It’s fundamentally altered our view right here in the US. It’s injected us with and soaked us in a corrosive horror-filled shame. The corrosion has only gotten worse over time. It’s deeply shaming that such a ridiculous fraudulent childish spoiled brat could get elected before trying to seize power by force, let alone after doing that.

    The emptiness, the sadism, the rudeness, the ignorance, the trashiness, the stupidity, the laziness, the corruption, the greed, the conceit, the lust for violence, the hunger for flattery and ass-kissing – all of it has set fire to the way everyone on the planet views us.

  • Hey kids it’s silencing time again

    Here we go again. Oh no, women are talking?! That must not be allowed! We must go where they are talking and talk over them!! Women damn well will wheesht if we have anything to say about it!

  • VP

    One small bit from a report on the Bar Standards Board’s rejection of Jolyon Maugham’s attempt to punish and silence Sarah Phillimore:

    The Good Law Project criticised the decision, saying it had brought the complaint after taking advice from counsel, including a King’s Counsel, and maintained that the conduct amounted to harassment. It said it would ask the regulator to refer its decision to an independent reviewer and, if necessary, pursue judicial review proceedings.

    The organisation said the complaint formed part of a wider campaign addressing the treatment of trans individuals online and argued that regulators should take stronger action where lawyers’ public conduct risks harm to vulnerable people.

    But who are the vulnerable people here?

    Obviously “the organisation” aka Jolyon Maugham is framing trans people as vulnerable and Sarah Phillimore as invulnerable, but that is utterly grotesque. The loudest angriest shoutiest trans people are men, and Sarah Phillimore is a woman. Is it really the case that angry shouty men are vulnerable in relation to women? Is it really true that a woman has more power and clout and establishment backup than loud angry shouty men? Just by virtue of the fact that the men are trans and the woman says they are nevertheless men?

    I don’t think that’s how “vulnerable” works.

  • Summon the legal boffins

    What exactly are we talking about here?

    What is the question here?

    The question is whether there is such a thing as a right to manifest gender critical beliefs. What beliefs are those? The belief that women are women, and the corresponding belief that men are men.

    It seems very odd to ask if there is such a thing as a right to assert obvious basic impersonal facts. Why would there not be such a right?

    What are called “gender critical beliefs” aren’t really beliefs as generally understood. They’re just facts, and very fundamental facts at that. Every single human who lives or has ever lived has been the product of a woman. Humans exist because women are women.

    Trans ideology’s role in life is to pretend that those facts are contested and that there are valid and/or reasonable explanations of why they are contested. Hungry narcissists who get a lot of attention via pretending that some men are women and vice versa want us to believe that their game of let’s pretend is sacred and precious and vulnerable to the slightest dissent.

    What kind of world would it be if we were not allowed to say that men are not women? If saying that were a crime, and we could be imprisoned for that crime? That’s what Euan Weddell is pushing for here.

  • Being and pretending

    No see that’s the whole thing right there.

    Mushy is saying that being and “living as” are the same thing, and they’re not. In the literal sense, being entails “living as” but Mushy is not using the literal sense, he means that other one. He means he’s pretending to be a woman and therefore is one.

    It doesn’t work like that.

  • The right to manifest

    Guido Fawkes tells us Jolyon Loses Again.

    The Bar Standards Board late last week slapped down a complaint made by Maugham’s Good Law Project against a barrister over her social media posts. Sarah Phillimore is also launching crowdfunded defamation proceedings against Jolyon himself…

    The GLP made a complaint on behalf of a trans person after Phillimore referred to them in posts. The Bar Standards Board has said Phillimore “has the right to manifest her gender critical beliefs,” and that her posts were not “either seriously offensive or otherwise a potential breach of CD5 [core duty 5 – upholding public trust] by being harassing, bullying, victimising or discriminating.” Dismissed on all counts…

    Meanwhile Jolyon does quite a lot of harassing and bullying himself.

  • Tactless

    The Jerusalem Post reports:

    Pro-Palestinian rally at Buchenwald memorial shut down by German authorities

    Team Pro-Palestinian being a little too obvious maybe?

    The rally was slated for April 12, marking the 81st anniversary of Buchenwald’s liberation by US troops. But the city of Weimar said on Monday it would ban the event on the memorial grounds.

    Marking the 81st anniversary of Buchenwald’s liberation with a rally of people who hate Jews. How inspiring!

    German authorities have shut down a planned pro-Palestinian vigil at the Buchenwald Nazi concentration camp memorial after a fierce outcry.

    The rally was slated for April 12, marking the 81st anniversary of Buchenwald’s liberation by US troops. But the city of Weimar said on Monday it would ban the event on the memorial grounds and offered a square downtown as an alternate location.

    Kufiyas in Buchenwald, the group behind the campaign, announced it was challenging the ban in court. The group said it aimed to “commemorate victims of genocide and fascism” and “uplift the fundamental duty to fight against all genocides, particularly the genocide currently taking place in Palestine.”

    Or to put it more crisply, the group said it aimed to make the Jews shut up about their damn death camps and their damn six million murdered Jews.

    The planned event had been heavily criticized by German leaders, such as federal antisemitism czar Felix Klein. In an interview with the Jüdische Allgemeine, Klein said he viewed the rally as “disrespectful self-promotion and a perfidious attempt to relativize the murder of over 11,000 Jews in the Buchenwald concentration camp by comparing it to Israel’s actions in the recent Gaza war.”

    And that was a mere blip compared to the death camps. A million were murdered at Auschwitz.

  • Lagomorph day

    How it started:

    How it went on:

  • Guest post: Like a see-saw

    Originally a comment by Artymorty on There are none.

    By gluing the LGB to the T, especially in the context of conversion therapy, PBS has done serious damage to gay rights.

    Conversion therapy practices against same-sex attracted people don’t work: sexual orientation is fixed and inborn. Not only do such practices not work, we know that they’re also extremely harmful to patients’ mental health. Obviously, the old-school electroshock-treatment kind was barbaric. But the supposedly “milder” talk-therapy kind is also harmful — extremely so. It’s effectively psychological torture to be told by a supposed professional authority figure that there’s something wrong with you that you need to keep trying to fix, when the cards are stacked against you because in reality, it’s not in your control to change it, and that thing (sexual orientation) is not actually wrong in the first place.

    In the field of secular professional therapy, this is all well-established, and the practice of trying to change someone’s sexual orientation is long gone.

    But of course, with respect to “gender identity”, the exact opposite is true: in reality, it’s not in your control to change your biological sex or to radically change how others observe and detect your sex, and that thing — your sex — is not actually “wrong” in the first place.

    So it very much should be the standard in secular professional therapy to steer kids away from pseudoscientific beliefs about having “wrong” bodies and mismatched “gender identities”. And we know from years of data that such therapy does, in fact, work a lot of the time, and as the therapeutic approaches improve, the rates of effectiveness do, too.

    Unlike gay, you can, in fact, therapeutically “cure” trans.

    People are right to both push to preserve clinicians’ rights to talk kids out of toxic “gender identities” and simultaneously push to restrict clinicians’ rights to try and talk kids out of their natural sexual orientations or gender-nonconforming expressions of personality.

    Like a see-saw, when one side goes up, the other must go down. Problem is, when they get merged together, most people only see one side of the see-saw — the one they’re most preoccupied with — and the effects on the other side are out of view.

    When the editors at PBS merge “gender identity” therapy with sexual orientation therapy, the readers who are (rightly) appalled at the thought of gay conversion therapy fail to see the other side of the see-saw, that rightful treatment for “gender”-confused kids is also in play.

    But readers who are (also rightly) appalled by the extremism of gender ideology are so eager to see a stop to that, they fail to see the damage done to LGB people when the courts roll back prohibitions on attempted conversion against us.

    I ran into this problem early on in my gay rights campaigning on this issue, and I have to confess: I, too, didn’t fully grasp the other side of the see-saw.

    A few years ago when Canada’s Parliament was debating a conversion-therapy bill, I was actively involved, and I came close to testifying before the House about it. (I didn’t testify in the end, but I submitted a well-received Brief to the House, and someone who did testify addressed my brief during her testimony and urged the Members to read it.)

    At that time, I was in many discussions and meetings with people about the Bill. What I had failed to grasp was that many of my supposed allies in opposing the ban on “trans conversion therapy” were also advocates for gay conversion therapy on religious freedom grounds. They and I were allies on one side of the see-saw — the one about gender identity — but I failed to immediately detect how hostile many of them were to the other side of the equation, how callous they were about the harms conversion therapy does to LGB people.

    Over time, I began to see how people’s growing preoccupations with the ban on trans conversion therapy were blinding them to the dangers of re-introducing gay conversion therapy. I’d see people argue, for example, that maybe the “talk therapy” kind of gay conversion therapy isn’t really such a big concession, because it’s not like the bad old days of electroshock treatment and physical torture. That kind of Overton-window shifting, of rationalizing away the erosion of important protections that are vital to young gays and lesbians.

    It’s not a coincidence that Colorado’s court case was brought forward by a Christian counselor backed by the Alliance Defending Freedom. Their end-goal is not merely to preserve therapists’ rights to treat “trans” ideation, but to criminalize homosexuality. The ADF are, as far as I’m concerned, the closest analog to the Klan or the Nazis with respect to gays and lesbians. They truly do hate us and they genuinely want homosexuality eradicated.

    But it won’t surprise me if I come across a bunch of “gender critical” types celebrating the ADF’s victory, and leaving the LGB side of the see-saw largely out of sight. This may be a victory for the fight against gender ideology, but for gays and lesbians, our rights and protections in Colorado have just swung way, way down.

    The blame for this predicament, as I see it, falls on PBS and other media outlets who did the dirty deed of lumping us in with the T in the first place. It was they who muddied the message. They’re the ones who tied our fates together like this.

    I hate it so much.

  • There are none

    It seems we can never have clarity or precision or accuracy in this discussion now. PBS shows us why right in the headline.

    Supreme Court rules against Colorado’s ban on ‘conversion therapy’ for LGBTQ kids | PBS News

    But what is conversion therapy for LGBTQ kids? Nothing. It can’t be anything, because those 5 items are not identical. T is not the same as L or G, or L and G. They are, in fact, opposites. L and G are real categories, easily specified. T is a destructive invasive fiction.

    I suppose the perceived connection is that some gay men lean girly while others don’t, and some lesbians lean butch while others don’t. Rachel Maddow assures us that her wife wears skirts, never trousers. But…you know…the gap between that and actually being F or M because skirts or trousers is enormous. If Trump rocks up to the camera, takes his ugly blue trousers off, and puts on an ugly blue skirt, he doesn’t then become a woman.

    An 8-1 high court majority sided with a Christian counselor who argues the law banning talk therapy violates the First Amendment. The justices agreed that the law raises free speech concerns and sent it back to a lower court to decide if it meets a legal standard that few laws pass.

    It’s the latest in a line of recent cases in which the justices have backed claims of religious discrimination while taking a skeptical view of LGBTQ rights.

    But, again, they shouldn’t be bundled together. LGB rights are different from purported T rights. (What Q rights are is anyone’s guess.) The right to love, marry, have sex with, raise children with same sex people is not the same as the purported right to be treated as the sex one is not in all circumstances.

    Being able to talk sensibly about this subject would be a lot easier if the news media would stop framing it so dishonestly.