Other than the Swedes who cares about the Swedish election?

From Swedish election: deadlock as far right makes gains.

  • Sweden faces a period of political uncertainty after an election that did not leave either main parliamentary bloc with a majority
  • With more than 99% of the vote counted, the centre-left bloc is sitting on 40.6% and the centre-right on 40.2%
  • Analysts predict long negotiations, potentially taking weeks, will be needed to create a majority or a plausible minority government
  • The populist, anti-immigrant party Sweden Democrats won 17.6% of the vote, up on the 12.9% it scored in 2014, but well below the 25% predicted in some polls.
  • The governing Social Democrats, led by prime minister Stefan Löfven, saw their score fall to 28.4%, the lowest for a century but maintained their record of finishing first in every election since 1917
  • Löfven said he would not be resigning, and urged cross-bloc cooperation. He also said the Sweden Democrats “can never, and will never, offer anything that will help society. They will only increase division and hate.”

In fact, part of the biggest story of our times.

“Space, time and matter had to appear out of nowhere”

Does belief in God make sense of the world? Or does reality itself point to God’s absence? Is God real or is he a product of human minds? The video is from Those Who Lack a Belief In God Usually Lack an Argument. In the debate above, both have arguments but only one has an argument in favour of God, and the opposite case seems absolutely empty. You should also go to the link.

Does this man really have a constituency?

Is political judgement so inane that this will actually gather votes for the Democrats: Obama, on campaign swing, urges ‘sanity in our politics’. I, too, urge sanity, but to vote the Dems back in is the last thing that would ever occur to me.

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Former President Barack Obama said Saturday that November midterm elections would give Americans “a chance to restore some sanity in our politics,” taking another swipe at his successor as he raises his profile campaigning for fellow Democrats to regain control of the House.

Obama didn’t mention President Donald Trump by name during a 20-minute speech in the key Southern California battleground of Orange County but the allusions were clear….

His appearance — one day after a strongly worded critique of Trump at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign — touched on themes of retirement security, climate change and education.

“If we don’t step up, things can get worse,” the former president told the audience at the Anaheim Convention Center. “In two months, we have the chance to restore some sanity to our politics. We have the chance to flip the House of Representatives and make sure there are real checks and balances in Washington.”

I’m not sure what it would take to make some people shift away from the fantasists of the left, but it is truly beyond me that any American is not happy to have seen the last of him.

Found at Drudge, who does seem to be drifting away from PDT in how and what he posts.

An eleven year old’s take on women’s rights

Such a clever daughter he has, who can exactly replicate the beliefs and values of her parents. I refer here to Peter von Onselen’s 11-year who has “won a NSW writing competi­tion run by the University of Western Sydney” which is retold in The Oz under the heading Liberal problem with gender even my daughter can see. So I will deal with the problems of gender-based decision-making her father can’t see, which is entirely to be expected. So let me begin with this:

The guiding principle for pupils was to choose a topic that mattered to them; Sasha chose to write an essay on women’s rights.

Beats me what rights are missing that this 11-year-old can identify, but that is what she chose. I know there is much going on about outcomes women are not achieving that many feel are their due, but there is certainly no absence of rights – as in cultural or legislative barriers to prevent any woman from doing whatever she can in whatever area she chooses – missing from her life. But that’s not what she is complaining about. PVO goes on a rant about Liberals bullying so the column is really about the Liberal Party. This then is what is being complained about.

My daughter put it like this: “A quota or target — guaranteeing a minimum number of women take up positions in parliament — would overcome discrimination which prevents them being judged on their abilities.”

I’d have to see more of what she wrote but what exactly is the evidence of this discrimination? But more to the point, she wants quotas for women! Never mind getting there on merit. She wants set asides, even if it discriminates against more qualified men. And why? To repeat:

“[It] would overcome discrimination which prevents them being judged on their abilities.”

Now, of course, they no longer teach grammar so no one would any longer point out that it should be “which prevents their being judged on their abilities”. But really, the entire point is that she does not want to be judged on her abilities in comparison to some male. She wants a female sinecure of some kind where she is judged only against her female peers. Not the kind of standard I’d want for heart surgeons and the garage mechanic fixing my brakes, but for Members of Parliament it may be less damaging. There is no arguing that every political party, and the top members of an elected administration, should have a sizeable number of female members, precisely because the female perspective is different on many of the issues that matter. However, she whines about equal numbers everywhere, and you can see a bright future for her in some socialist agency. As PVO says, which his daughter no doubt has latched onto:

There is no escaping the fact that it is harder for a woman to reach the top of her profession than it is for a man.

And the ridiculous example is that Australia has had only a single female Prime Minister. I might note that my home and native land has only had a single female Prime Minister as well, Kim Campbell, who ended up with the shortest tenure of any Canadian Prime Minister in history and then lost in a landslide, almost wiping out the Conservative Party at the same time. But that is beside the point. The reality is that no parent has anything other than a desire to see their daughters (and granddaughters) succeed. This is pure nonsense:

You can only imagine how young girls feel about such disparity in gender representation, long before the ingrained sexism in so many parts of society knocks them down and stifles their promotion or, worse still, their confidence…. I don’t want my daughter to lose that confidence she still has as a child.

If you really believe your daughter can do anything – she is certainly permitted to try her hand at anything but with no guarantees of success – but if you believe she can be successful at whatever she wishes to attempt to do, it is madness and profoundly self-defeating to build into her psychological mindset the belief that in spite of everything she is likely to fail because of some ingrained sexism which prevents her from succeeding. If you want to chop away her confidence, that is the way to do it, by telling her from the start that she is less likely to succeed than an equally placed male.

So to the finale.

Sasha’s last line in her piece was one I wish I’d thought of myself, it so perfectly cuts through on this issue of poor female representation in the upper echelons of politics, business and many other professions not traditionally decreed as “women’s work”: “Half the population deserves access to half the opportunities on offer.”

Personally, I think that is completely incoherent. The true point is that everyone, both male or female, has a right to compete for every one of the opportunities available. What we have here instead is a poorly worded stated desire that there should be a quota for women to ensure that half of all of the desirable jobs in the world go to them. Not based on merit. Not based on ability. Not based on smarts and proven competence. Just automatically half. What a buffoon PVO is:

Half the population deserves access to half the opportunities on offer. Damn right. It’s not merely a matter of breaking down legal discrimination, as has been occurring for years. It’s necessary also to address cultural discrimination and prejudice.

I find this particularly ridiculous. This is a quote from Sacha’s essay:

“When she finds out she is pregnant it should be a time of great joy in her life, and it is. But she is also worried that her male boss won’t be understanding: about the time she will need off to care for her newborn baby. Every day thousands of women worry they will end up in a lower paid job or even fired, just because they had a baby. This is despite laws saying that can’t happen. It does happen and it is not fair.”

As it happens, I worked on the parental leave test case many years back in which the issue was to set out in law the workplace rights that parents should have to allow mothers to raise their children in the face of business needs to be able to count on their employees showing up to work, and the importance of containing production and training costs. I had young children at the time so it was a personal issue I understood as well as one of public policy. The need to balance the two sides is something PVO is completely oblivious to.

In a previous workplace, my wife, then a law partner, no less, found herself being pressured to return to work from her first pregnancy sooner than she ideally wanted. A compliment as a worker, she was told; it nonetheless flew in the face of legislative rights for women to have 12 months’ unpaid maternity leave.

She was a law partner and they valued her work so much that they wanted her to come back to work sooner than she wanted to. Where’s the discrimination there? She was, of course, only “pressured” to come back. And this was no doubt some large-ish enterprise where it is somewhat easier to share the burdens. It gets worse if you are a four-person enterprise, for example. It is illegal to deny parental leave, and it is even illegal to discriminate against a woman because she is of an age when she might become pregnant, but you would not be amazed to find out that there may well be an employer or two – male and female – who will have such considerations in mind when they are hiring new employees.

“Bullying” is the very essence of the political process

From A Snowflake’s Guide to Politics. See if you can see a pattern.

Here is the first definition of “arm twisting” that comes up on Google. It’s from The Cambridge Dictionary:

arm-twisting noun [ U ]

UK  /ˈɑːmˌtwɪs.tɪŋ/ US  /ˈɑːrmˌtwɪs.tɪŋ/

behaviour in which you try to make someone do something by threats or by persuading them forcefully:

The vote was won only as the result of much arm-twisting by the government.

Here’s the second, from Merriam-Webster:

arm-twisting

noun  arm-twist·ing  \ -ˌtwis-tiŋ \

Definition of arm-twistingthe use of direct personal pressure in order to achieve a desired end

for all the arm-twisting, the … vote on the measure was unexpectedly tight

Newsweek

Here is the third, from The Free Dictionary:

arm-twisting

arm-twist·ing(ärm′twĭs′tĭng)

n. Informal

The use of personal or political pressure in an effort to persuade or to gain support.

You know the line: if you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen. That’s part of what politics is all about, and when it comes right down to it, it is almost everything that politics is all about.

And if you are interested in why this is even worth mentioning, see this from Andrew Bolt.

Spinning up an inquisition

From Steve Hayward at Powerline: Academic Cowardice Reaches a New Low. There are modern compulsory myths about the world and absolutely no one is permitted to even hint that they are untrue, even in a paper on mathematics that no one would ever have read except for all the havoc. The left are fascistic nazis in every way that counts. They would end free speech in a minute if they could and close down all public opposition to their beliefs. A terrible story foreshadowing a terrible future. It is similar in many ways to the story about “bullying” told by Andrew Bolt. Meantime, let us see what happened when it is pointed out that there is evidence that the male of the species have different characteristics than the female of the species, and in this we include the human species.

About ten days ago I reported on the academic study of “sudden onset gender dysphoria” that Brown University repudiated after it came under fire from the transgender community, but today I learn of a new suppression of academic expression that makes Brown’s cowardice look tame.

The good people at Quillette have the whole story (and if you’re not reading Quillette you should be). The story is long and detailed and hard to summarize, but these are the key elements:

• Prof. Ted Hill, Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Georgia Tech, wrote an article, whose background research had been supported by the National Science Foundation, on the ‘Greater Male Variability Hypothesis’ (GMVH), which asserts that there are more idiots and more geniuses among men than among women. This hypothesis is well known in the data on sex differences, and has a long lineage in evolutionary biology. After working with some other scholars to review the data further and enlisting one (Sergei Tabachnikov of Penn State) as a co-author, Hill secured publication in the journal Mathematical Intelligencer, whose editor-in-chief is Marjorie Wikler Senechal, Professor Emerita of Mathematics and the History of Science at Smith College.

She liked our draft, and declared herself to be untroubled by the prospect of controversy. “In principle,” she told Sergei in an email, “I am happy to stir up controversy and few topics generate more than this one. After the Middlebury fracas, in which none of the protestors had read the book they were protesting, we could make a real contribution here by insisting that all views be heard, and providing links to them.”

Well you can guess where this story goes from here. When a pre-print version of the article appeared online, feminists took aim, and succeeded spinning up an inquisition against the authors:

On August 16, a representative of the Women In Mathematics (WIM) chapter in his department at Penn State contacted [Sergei Tabachnikov] to warn that the paper might be damaging to the aspirations of impressionable young women. . . Sergei said he had spent “endless hours” talking to people who explained that the paper was “bad and harmful” and tried to convince him to “withdraw my name to restore peace at the department and to avoid losing whatever political capital I may still have.” Ominously, “analogies with scientific racism were made by some; I am afraid, we are likely to hear more of it in the future.”

The the National Science Foundation ran for the tall grass:

The National Science Foundation wrote to Sergei requesting that acknowledgment of NSF funding be removed from our paper with immediate effect. I was astonished. I had never before heard of the NSF requesting removal of acknowledgement of funding for any reason. On the contrary, they are usually delighted to have public recognition of their support for science.

The ostensible reason for this request was that our paper was unrelated to Sergei’s funded proposal. However, a Freedom of Information request subsequently revealed that Penn State WIM administrator Diane Henderson (“Professor and Chair of the Climate and Diversity Committee”) and Nate Brown (“Professor and Associate Head for Diversity and Equity”) had secretly co-signed a letter to the NSF that same morning. “Our concern,” they explained, “is that [this] paper appears to promote pseudoscientific ideas that are detrimental to the advancement of women in science, and at odds with the values of the NSF.”

Next:

That same day, the Mathematical Intelligencer’s editor-in-chief Marjorie Senechal notified us that, with “deep regret,” she was rescinding her previous acceptance of our paper. “Several colleagues,” she wrote, had warned her that publication would provoke “extremely strong reactions” and there existed a “very real possibility that the right-wing media may pick this up and hype it internationally.” For the second time in a single day I was left flabbergasted. Working mathematicians are usually thrilled if even five people in the world read our latest article. Now some progressive faction was worried that a fairly straightforward logical argument about male variability might encourage the conservative press to actually read and cite a science paper?

It gets still worse from here. The authors placed the article online in a second journal, the New York Journal of Mathematics, only to see the article suddenly disappear after another campaign to suppress it. The entire article is stomach turning. But do read it: I’ve only samples a few highlights in this summary.

PDT v BHO

Sanctimony in action. Unbelievably shallow.

PDT’s reply.

Yet the media, most of the academic world, large slices of the American voting population would go back to the most incompetent presidency in history. Eight years of decline and not a single accomplishment I can think of during all of the years he was in office. Now he even wants to claim the recovery is due to him. And in a sense it is, since DJT could only have become president because Obama had preceded him.

Free speech consists only of what I think is reasonable to say

This is via AP and found in Campus Review: A third of online election news in Sweden ‘junk’: English study. No idea how well those people at Oxford speak Swedish, but this is a very strange story. How would they really know if the information provided was actually “mis-leading” and even more difficult to know, whether these non-factually accurate and biased reports were “deliberate” attempts to mislead? The one certainty, however, is the wish to prevent specific news stories from being read.

One in three news articles shared online about the upcoming Swedish election come from websites publishing deliberately misleading information, most with a right-wing focus on immigration and Islam, Oxford University researchers say.

Their study, published on Thursday, points to widespread online disinformation in the final stages of a tightly contested campaign that could mark a lurch to the right in one of Europe’s most prominent liberal democracies.

The authors, from the Oxford Internet Institute, labelled certain websites junk news, based on a range of detailed criteria. Reuters found the three most popular sites they identified have employed former members of the Sweden Democrats party; one has a former MP listed among its staff.

It was not clear whether the sharing of junk news had affected voting intentions in Sweden, but the study helps show the impact platforms such as Twitter and Facebook have on elections, and how domestic or foreign groups can use them to exacerbate sensitive social and political issues.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven, whose centre-left Social Democrats have dominated politics since 1914 but are now unlikely to secure a ruling majority, told Reuters the spread of false or distorted information online risked shaking “the foundations of democracy” if left unchecked.

The Institute, a department of Oxford University, analysed 275,000 tweets about the Swedish election from a 10-day period in August. It counted articles shared from websites it identified as junk news sources, defined as outlets that “deliberately publish misleading, deceptive or incorrect information purporting to be real news”.

“Roughly speaking, for every two professional content articles shared, one junk news article was shared. Junk news therefore constituted a significant part of the conversation around the Swedish general election,” it said.

A Twitter spokesman declined to comment on the results of the study.

Facebook, where interactions between users are harder to track, said it was working with Swedish officials to help voters spot disinformation. It has also partnered with Viralgranskaren – an arm of Sweden’s Metro newspaper – to identify, demote and counterbalance junk news on its site.

Joakim Wallerstein, head of communications for the Sweden Democrats, said he had no knowledge of or interest in the party sympathies of media outlets. Asked to comment on his party’s relationship with the sites identified by the study, he said he had been interviewed by one of them once.

“I think it is strange that a foreign institute is trying to label various news outlets in Sweden as junk news and release such a report in connection to an election,” he said.

Swedish security officials say there is currently no evidence of a coordinated online attempt by foreign powers to sway the September 9 vote, despite repeated government warnings about the threat.

What could “foreign powers” do that they were not doing themselves. The deep state exists everywhere.