Настроение: sick Музыка: Адаптация - Концерт в Алматы 04.2004 Entry tags: islam, sjw, usa

"Ayaan Hirsi Ali, ты следующая"

Поучительное

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/rex-mu rphy-on-ayaan-hirsi-ali-universities-hav e-become-factories-for-reinforcing-opini on

про то, как в Брандайзе выдали почетную степень

Ayaan Hirsi Ali за борьбу за права женщин при исламе,

но после кампании протеста со стороны SJW отменили.







Если кто не помнит, Ayaan Hirsi Ali это писательница, которая совместно

с Тео ван Гогом сделала фильм Submission, за который

ван Гога убили исламские террористы, и приделали

к трупу бумажку с надписью "Ayaan Hirsi Ali, ты

следующая".



Интересно, что Брандейз был изначально создан

на еврейские пожертвования как конкурент Гарварду,

куда не брали евреев по причине антисемитизма.

Там и сейчас евреи, но они ниибацца прогрессивные,

значит, готовы делать что угодно на саудовские

деньги, потому что у SJW так принято. Данная

конкретная акция была осуществлена при спонсорстве

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR),

который официально объявил, что Ayaan Hirsi Ali есть

"notorious islamophobe". Если кто не в курсе,

CAIR есть американское отделение Хамаса, занятое

раздачей саудовских денег полезным идиотам.



По соседству, очерк студенческих протестов

в университете Оттавы.



Professor Janice Fiamengo's speech at the University of

Ottawa was shut down by protesters who claimed her "ideas

have no place on our campus."



The entire display is chronicled in a 50-minute YouTube

video that shows protesters booing, yelling and blowing a

vuvuzela throughout Fiamengo's attempted address. The

lecture organizer tried to reason with protesters, but it

didn't work. Campus security tried to intervene, with

little success. Finally, the event moved to another room,

but shortly after, the fire alarm went off.



According to the student newspaper the Fulcrum, a group

that calls itself the Revolutionary Student Movement (RSM)

was behind the protest.



"We feel that these ideas have no place on our campus

and refuse to legitimize them by allowing them space

to organize," a representative for the RSM wrote in an

email to the paper. "As was demonstrated, campus

security will not protect our community from events

that are harmful to men, women, and trans people in

the community, so we decided to stand up for what we

feel is right."



Hold on - ideas have no place on campus? Surely, they

can't be serious.



Alas, the irony of unilaterally deciding "what is right"

is apparently lost on this vocal group of freedom

fighters. Indeed, they haul out the notion of "safe

space," which is commonly used as a defence for quieting

speakers that the loudest few on campus don't want to

hear. And they take it upon themselves to "protect" the

apparently feeble campus community from the perils of

intellectually challenging ideas.



The same shoddy rationale was employed by protesters at

Massachusetts' Brandeis University, which was recently

pressured into forgoing plans to award an honourary degree

to women's rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Ali's personal

history is a remarkable testament to resilience - she was

genitally mutilated at age five and became a refugee to

flee an arranged marriage, yet still rose to become a

distinguished member of Parliament, public speaker and

author. But her ongoing criticism of Islam, which she has

called "imbued with violence," was deemed "hateful" by a

self-appointed group of safe-space-keepers at Brandeis

University, and the administration shamefully caved to

their demands and revoked their invitation.



Привет