13 Nov 2019

There Is No Such Thing As A Free Press

'All from the lowest reporter to the highest editor to the owners of the news organization are caught up in enabling the elites to control the explanations. Ulfkotte names names and lists the organizations'
By Dr. Paul Craig Roberts: Udo Ulfkotte’s amazing book, Gekaufte Journalisten (Bought Journalism) was published by Kopp Verlag in 2014. The book was a sensation and sold 1,500,000 copies in Germany, but no major US publisher would bring out an English translation. Finally, last month a small publisher, Progressive Press, published an English language edition titled Presstitutes Embedded in the Pay of the CIA.
Ulfkotte’s book destroys the illusion/delusion that there is anywhere in the Western world an independent press.

A Dream Of Fecunda - Part 2

Editor’s Note: Below is an extract from the book, The Vast and the Spurious: 25 Problems for Feminism.

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Part Two – Rape Culture and Guilt
Part one of this article was about a fictional all-women country called Fecunda. Part two looks at a more serious question – are men as a class responsible for individual crimes against women, and are women entitled to hate them?  It is after such crimes in my country, Australia, that feminist anger against men reaches a peak.
In June, 2018, a young woman named Eurydice Dixon was raped and murdered in a Melbourne park. This awful event stirred up a lot of anger. TV host, Lisa Wilkinson, mentioned The Handmaid’s Tale in a tearful speech. Clementine Ford wrote a newspaper column scolding men for their collective sins.
This may seem odd, given that men as a class did not murder Eurydice Dixon. In fact, she was killed by a 19 year old autistic man named Jaymes Todd. But by some interpretations of feminist theory, men as a class did murder Eurydice, at least indirectly. She was a victim of ‘rape culture’ and systemic misogyny. So, if men as a whole are part of creating rape culture, some feminists hold them accountable.

How To Argue Nicely About Sex With Your Boyfriend: A Medieval Lesson

Couples commonly argue about sex. Continually imbibing the poisons of rape-culture culture, women today readily feel hatred toward men. That makes girlfriend-boyfriend arguments about sex particularly nasty. Medieval Latin literature, which isn’t just for men, shows a more excellent way. It supports imagining what’s scarcely imaginable today. A woman can treat a man’s sexual feelings with compassion and respect, yet insist on what she understands to be proper conduct.
In twelfth-century France, a boyfriend and a girlfriend argued nicely about sex. They argued in Latin, the language regarded as appropriate for serious arguments. In accordance with the medieval church’s insistence on mutuality in marriage, this couple took turns saying to each other four-line stanzas of Latin poetry. They argued humanely, learnedly, and eloquently. The man started first, because his feelings were compelling him to rise.

Anti SJW Cring

DoctorRandomercam: I am not getting paid for this appearance or for this video; No monetisation, no superchats, and no links on any donation sites. I’d like to thank US Customs for vigilance in their most rigidly consistent standards above and beyond the call of duty. This messaging system will self destruct in five years.