One year ago, Hamas launched a horrific attack against Israel, killing over 1,400 Israeli citizens – including defenseless women, children, and the elderly – and kidnapping hundreds more. Today, the prospects of peace seem more distant than ever. But we continue to hope for a…
— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) October 7, 2024
BO's tweet continues:
… return of all the hostages, an end to the violence, a rejection of hate, and a future in which both Israelis and Palestinians can enjoy the security and stability that most of them yearn for.
"… and a pony."
Ah well, I guess his heart is in the right place. Which I also guess was the point of his tweet: to show that his heart was in the right place.
Alas, not everyone is getting the message of peace and love. Jim Geraghty views recent anti-Israel protests and concludes: The Antisemitism Is the Point.
This planet is full of people who just want to kill Jews, and this country has no shortage of people who just want to cheer on the murderers.
[…]
When’s the last time you saw a college campus with a protest against the Chinese government’s ongoing genocide of the Uyghurs? (Perhaps the students are just following the guidance of billionaire investor Chamath Palihapitiya: “Nobody cares about what’s happening to the Uyghurs, okay?”)
Russia has kidnapped an estimated 20,000 to 25,000 Ukrainian children over the course of the war, sending them deeper into Russian-occupied territory or to Russia, and a couple hundred have been shipped off to a boot camp, where the Russians are training them to become child soldiers against their own homeland. This is separate from the 11,743 Ukrainian civilians killed during the war through August, the 24,614 injured, and the 168 summary executions of civilians, including five children, committed by the invading forces.
Anybody on campus want to march in the quad about that?
The local TV station, WMUR, notes the local festivities:
The University of New Hampshire's Palestine Solidarity Coalition held a gathering in Durham on Monday to honor Palestinian lives.
The event was part of the group's "Week of Rage," which commemorates the 41,000 people killed on Oct. 7, 2023.
Ah, nothing "honors" Palestinan lives more than a "week of rage".
Quibble: the "41,000" number is wrong, of course. It is similar to the number of Gaza fatalities reported by the Gazan "health ministry" since 10/7, according to Forbes. And that doesn't count Israeli dead on 10/7.
As Geraghty notes, there's no indication that Uyghur, Ukrainian, or (of course) Israeli lives were mentioned, let alone honored. And what the "Solidarity Coalition" actually says is…
Join us next week to protest one year of the Palestinian genocide and mourn the loss of life and liberty that has been deemed acceptable by the United States, Israel, and Western medias. We will not stand idly while more massacres unfold!
— Palestine Solidarity Coalition UNH (@psc_unh) October 4, 2024
UNH Divest!
Free Palestine! pic.twitter.com/Nw7WSqV8kv
They're real river-to-the-sea folks. They up the toll to 180,000+. And they don't mention honoring anyone, WMUR. Just raging.
Also of note:
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Noah Smith seems to have a limited notion of "everyone". He asks in his headline: What if everyone is wrong about what AI does?
There are two basic debates about AI. One is the “AI safety” or “X-risk” debate, which is about whether AI will turn into Skynet and kill us. But the most prominent and common debate is about AI taking jobs away from humans. What’s interesting about this debate is that practically everyone involved, from AI’s biggest boosters to its biggest critics, seems to agree on the basic premise — that the primary function of AI is as a direct replacement for human beings. In general, people only disagree about what our reaction to this basic fact should be. Should we slow down AI’s development intentionally? Should we implement a universal basic income? Should AI engineers and their shackled gods retreat behind towering fortress walls guarded by legions of autonomous drones, letting the rest of humanity suffer and die as GPT-278 sucks up all of the world’s energy for data centers?
Not a big deal, but it's only been a few months since (for example) Reason put out a whole issue dedicated to AI. And the lead article's headline is In the AI Economy, There Will Be Zero Percent Unemployment. Provocative. And in case you missed it, there's The Case of the AI-Generated Giant Rat Penis.
Noah, I think all the issue's articles are out from behind the paywall. Just sayin'.
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Also out from behind the Reason paywall. … is a review from Jay Bhattacharya of a book by a guy who should have lost his job: Anthony Fauci, the Man Who Thought He Was Science. Just a snippet:
Coercive policy regarding COVID vaccination, recommended by Fauci on the false premise that vaccinated people could not get or spread the virus, collapsed public trust in other vaccines and led the media and public health officials to gaslight individuals who had suffered legitimate vaccine injuries. To pay for the lockdowns recommended by Fauci, the U.S. government spent trillions of dollars, causing high unemployment in the most locked-down states and a hangover of higher prices for consumer goods that continues to this day. Who is to blame?
Fauci served as a key adviser to both President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden, and was a central figure on Trump's COVID task force that determined federal policy. If Fauci has no responsibility for the outcomes of the pandemic, nobody does. Yet in his memoir's chapters on COVID, he simultaneously takes credit for advising leaders while disclaiming any responsibility for policy failures.
Fauci implausibly writes that he "was not locking down the country" and "had no power to control anything." These statements are belied by Fauci's own bragging about his influence on a host of policy responses, including convincing Trump to lock the country down in March 2020 and extend the lockdown in April.
Bhattacharya co-wrote the "Great Barrington Declaration", which Fauci loudly opposed, and still does. I think Bhattacharya has the better argument here.
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As Obama said, "Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to… Well, you probably know the rest of that quote. (But if not, here you go.) Another example from Andrew McCarthy: Botched Plea Deals with 9/11 Plotters Get Worse for Biden Administration.
The botched plea deal with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other 9/11 terrorists is a signature Biden-Harris administration moment: a scheme, apparently double-wrapped in incompetence, to spare the Democrats’ presidential candidate — first the senescent one, then the vacuous one — from an unpopular political decision.
I say double-wrapped because it appears the deal that the administration made, and since then has desperately tried to renege on, contains an anti-renege clause — one that officials calculated would frustrate Donald Trump but on which, instead, the administration has tripped itself up.
Back in August, I outlined how the Biden-Harris administration traded a political problem for a legal problem. The political problem is that the 9/11 case, which has lingered for over two decades, probably cannot be ended unless the administration permits the Defense Department to take the death penalty off the table in order to induce a guilty plea from the terrorists; yet, because the terrorists killed nearly 3,000 Americans, removing capital punishment would be extremely unpopular — and thus the administration does not wish to do it, or at least be seen doing it, much less try to explain it.
As we have seen, the progressive Democrats who run the administration love to make the base swoon by brandishing their anti-death-penalty credentials in the abstract. When it gets down to real cases, though, they hide under their desks: Not only is capital punishment patently constitutional; the majority of Americans approve of it in heinous cases, particularly jihadist mass-murder cases. So, Biden and Harris play a game. They airily proclaim philosophical opposition to capital punishment. In concrete cases — such as that of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev — they tell the country they are defending the death-penalty sentence ordered by a jury; but in so doing, they quietly assure Democrats not to worry because they have imposed a moratorium on executions, ensuring that no death sentences will actually be carried out.
Might be amusing to hear Queen Kamala of Word Salad explain that one. But then someone would have to ask her about it, right? Dream on . . .
"Queen Kamala of Word Salad." Heh.
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