• Dave Rich – The right side of history:

    What does it take for a demonstrator, marching through central London, to hold a placard declaring that a regime that maims and blinds young women for the ‘crime’ of wanting to choose how they dress is on the right side of history?

    Why is it that so many women on that same march happily chanted “We Stand With Iran” while dressed in a way that would see them beaten and imprisoned by that same Iranian regime, and despite all the horrors it perpetrates on its own people, most of whom would be glad to see the back of it (even if they don’t welcome Israeli and American bombs)?

    It was entirely predictable that the pro-Palestinian movement that has solidified on our streets and online since October 7 would swing firmly behind Iran once Israel – and now the United States – bombed Iran’s nuclear and other military facilities. That the Iranian regime hangs gay men from cranes was never going to stop Owen Jones from choosing the Iranian side in this war. Any discussions about the true intentions of Iran’s nuclear programme, the state of international negotiations, and the possible ways this conflict now plays out are a distraction from the only thing that matters: the belief that Israel is always in the wrong, that its actions are never justified, and that everything it does is a crime of inhumane cruelty that exceeds rational explanation. All else flows from that; all is justified in opposition to it….

    Shorter version:

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  • Kyle Orton at UnHerd on the Trump bombings:

    Trump was reluctant to carry out this action, and reportedly tried to minimise the fallout by communicating to the Iranian leadership in advance that the strikes were a one-off, strictly limited to the nuclear weapons programme and with no intention to threaten the regime itself. This did not stop the Iranians vowing “everlasting consequences”, but perhaps what moved the US President to commit to strikes was the realisation that there is nothing the Islamic Republic can actually do.

    Israel has thoroughly infiltrated Iran, causing the suppression of air defences in the first hours of this campaign. It has killed swathes of Tehran’s senior leadership and struck nuclear facilities, the missile programme, and even energy infrastructure. Israel crippled Iran’s ability to carry out foreign terrorism years ago, reducing the country’s response to sporadic and increasingly ineffective missile barrages.

    The Islamic regime governing Iran has prospered because of its enemies’ timidity, which has been justified by Tehran being on the threshold of nuclear weapons. Israel’s actions over the past two years — in devastating Iranian outposts around the region and then taking the war to the central node in Tehran — have shaken this paradigm. Whether the American strikes have completely disarmed Iran or not, Trump has provided the opportunity to discard it altogether. The weakness of the Islamic Republic has been exposed and a precedent set. If there are future negotiations with Iran, all sides now know the West has cards to play which it has denied itself for too long.

    What Iran can do – what they've threatened to do – is close the Strait of Hormuz, shutting off the oil tankers from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States. The Saudis would not be pleased, and, facing a weakened Iran and with the support of America, might feel tempted to respond with some force of their own…

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  • In Cumbria? Sounds more like Portland Oregon, or some Californian university campus.

    BBC Children in Need has helped fund a group that claims gender-critical beliefs are rooted in “white supremacy”.

    Anti-Racist Cumbria has claimed that opposition to gender ideology – the idea that people can choose to become a man or woman – is rooted in “patriarchy” and “oppression”.

    The charity that works with local schools claimed that the views of JK Rowling and other gender-critical feminists are the result of “white supremacy”.

    In a lengthy statement, the charity added that “defining womanhood as ‘biological’ is dangerous” and can lead down a “slippery slope of white supremacy thinking”….

    Anti-Racist Cumbria claimed following the Supreme Court decision: “The activism of so-called ‘gender-critical feminists’, supported by the likes of JK Rowling and the Trump movement, will not stop here.

    “The fight against trans rights does not exist in isolation, and although it is dressed up as ‘women’s rights’, it’s a direct result of patriarchy and white supremacy as systems of oppression.”

    The post also included an image of JK Rowling smoking a cigar “on her superyacht”, the charity claimed in a picture caption, while many “transgender people have experienced homelessness”.

    The lengthy article about the gender ruling, on the “resources” section of the charity’s website, also touched on issues of women’s safety, which it claimed were preludes to “fascism”.

    Gosh.

  • Julie Burchill in the Spectator has fun with Stephen Fry:

    I’d wager that all of J.K.R.’s famous critics envy her money – no one is as greedy as the rich – but even more than that, as they crouch atop their relatively modest fortunes like resentful dung beetles, they envy her the ease, the generosity and yes, the nobility which has seen her go from billionaire to a mere multi-millionaire, like them. One gets the impression that whereas J.K.R. has the psychological bandwidth – which probably comes from real confidence in her own creativity – to dispense with vast amounts of cash, there is a bottomless pit of neediness inside her critics which leads them to grab at, say, advertising campaigns the way they do.

    They certainly don’t need the money. But when, like [Daniel] Radcliffe (thought to have around £100 million) and co., you know that you really are nothing special and were just tremendously lucky, it’s bound to make you feel insecure, no matter how much you’ve got in the bank. Look at the vast amount of voiceover work (like his female equivalent, Dawn French) Fry has done – that can only be greed. Surely there’s only so many video games his lovely young husband can play with?

    Cross-dressing men in general want to be Rowling, as they tend to look like navvies done up as prossies, whereas J.K.R. is wonderfully elegant with her wand-like body and Modigliani face and clever way with a big hat and a lovely bit of scarlet lippy – the brazen hussy! But we inevitably come back to Fry as the bellwether (not to mention the bell-end) of J.K.R.-envy. I once, some time ago, labelled him ‘a stupid person’s idea of a clever person’ – but the degradation of his intellectual ability in the years which have passed since then has been a remarkable, Biden-level catastrophe for his thought processes. So more than anything else, he envies Rowling because she is that rare thing in a po-faced world; she is a wit. And it’s been a damn long time since Fry – his once-glittering brain eaten alive by becoming the genital equivalent of a Flat Earther – was one of those. The poor poppet!

    Ouch.

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Full text:

    That same test applies to recognizing biological reality, acknowledging that men and women are different, that there are only two genders, and that biological males have no place competing in women’s sports.

    These aren’t partisan issues. They’re foundational truths.

    And the radical left has failed every one of them.

  • Kemi Badenoch in the Times:

    Too many politicians treat the world like a student union. Abstract, simplistic and completely disconnected from reality. The world is not a debating club. It is a dangerous place where power matters, where democracy is fragile and where enemies don’t play by the rules.

    That’s why we need to be clear: supporting Israel is not just right — it is necessary for our own national security. Israelis are at the front line in the fight for the West and for our shared values.

    First, Iran is a direct threat to the UK and has been for years. Our security services have stopped multiple Iranian terrorist plots and assassination attempts on UK soil. Its ballistic missiles can reach Europe. We should support any ally that seeks to damage Iran’s nuclear programme and eliminate the threat posed by the terror-exporting Revolutionary Guards.

    Anti-British sentiment is almost as central to the ayatollahs’ deranged ideology as their obsessive hatred of Israel and the United States. They use the term “Little Satan” interchangeably to refer to both the UK and Israel.

    Iran uses influence through mosques, schools and fake charities to radicalise and corrupt our own population: taking advantage of our democracy to advance its theocracy.

    Second, Iran and Israel are not moral equivalents. Israel is a vibrant democracy that protects women and minorities and encourages them to vote, speak and dissent. In Iran women are brutalised by a theocratic dictatorship. Their ability to travel and work is restricted. They are beaten for showing their hair. Tortured for asking questions. Executed for demanding freedom.

    Anyone who can’t see the difference between a liberal democracy and a terrorist regime needs to spend less time on social media and more time understanding reality….

    Support for Israel is not about sentiment. It’s about security, sovereignty and survival. We stand with Israel because it shares our values. Because it defends itself against terrorists who have their sights on us, too. Because if we don’t stand with democracies under attack, we embolden those who hate everything we stand for. And what we see now is a weak UK emboldening its enemies.

    The attack on Israel is part of a broader assault on Western values. An assault on free, democratic countries from an axis of authoritarian states. Their fight is our fight.

  • Coming soon, on a placard near you:

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

  • I mentioned cousin marriages the other day, as a factor in the self-imposed isolation of Muslim communities in some of the grooming-gangs northern towns.

    Matthew Syed in today's Sunday Times – The missing link in the grooming gangs report: cousin marriage:

    [T]o understand many of the most urgent failures of integration, you need to understand the clan. These groups are held together not just by ideology or religion; they are cemented by cousin marriage, a common practice in Arabic cultures and, in the UK, many Pakistani immigrant communities, particularly those hailing from Kashmir. By marrying within small, tightknit groups, they ensure everything is kept within the baradari, or brotherhood — property, secrets, loyalty — binding clan members closer together while sequestering them from wider society.

    In her 2016 report [Baroness] Casey rightly talked about the failure to speak English, honour beatings and the like, but she missed the point that many of these problems are a function of marriage practices that isolate communities and permit extremism to fester. The academic Patrick Nash of the Pharos Foundation has written of baradari life “concentrated in small geographical areas spread across a few streets or nearby neighbourhoods where there is little need or opportunity to have much to do with wider society or practise the English language”. To write a report on failures of integration without seeing the link with cousin marriage is, I suggest, like writing on the power grid without noting the significance of electricity.

    Casey’s report on the rape gang scandal was flawed for the same reason. It was a strange experience to read her words as she edged ever closer to grasping the point without quite getting there. She noted that the problem is disproportionately concentrated among British Pakistanis. She even noted that “two thirds of suspects offended within groups” that were “based on pre-existing relationships — mainly brothers and cousins”. But then, stunningly, she suggested that these links were “unsophisticated” and “informal”. Anyone who studies these things — one thinks of Michael Muthukrishna at LSE — could have told her that this is the unmistakable pattern of clan-based crime: groups whose links are anything but informal and unsophisticated.

    Charlie Peters, who has investigated this problem for GB News, told me: “The deeper you probe, the more you see the presence of clans. We know that such communities are more likely to see others as outsiders, of less moral value and, when it comes to young white girls, fair game. The perpetrators also knew that they could commit crimes without getting dobbed in since loyalty is owed to the clan but not victims. In some cases, abusers were aided by relatives in authority.”

    Nash put it this way: “Cousin marriage sustains close-kin networks which incentivise clan members both to dehumanise out-group victims and to suppress knowledge of criminal activity to preserve family honour.”…

    I have long advocated a ban on cousin marriage but should perhaps say that I’ve never regarded it as a panacea. Improving integration requires so much more: ending mass uncontrolled immigration, amending legal frameworks to stop the boats, deporting foreign criminals, not to mention other policies supported by large majorities but serially ducked by politicians. A ban on consanguinity would, though, be of huge value. American states with bans tend to be more prosperous and faster-growing. Nations with bans are richer and more integrated, with less corruption and lower rates of crime. A ban would also reduce the prevalence of the congenital diseases causing untold suffering in Kashmiri immigrant communities from Bradford to Luton.

    The good news is that Kemi Badenoch has adopted this as Tory policy after campaigning by her colleague Richard Holden, and a poll for YouGov last month showed that 77 per cent of the British people are in favour of a ban (only 9 per cent oppose it). But here’s what astounds me: Labour remains against prohibition, despite (I am told) having read the evidence. Why? How? Permit me to suggest that I glimpse through the façade of prevarication a party still terrified of criticising any cultural practice out of fear of appearing racist. Isn’t that why it was mute for so long on female genital mutilation and honour beatings and still can’t bring itself to describe the burqa as a pernicious symbol of institutional misogyny?

    Yep. Exactly. And, as the proposed Islamophobia law suggests, nothing is about to change. No lessons have been learnt.

    In other words, the reason the grooming scandal was not confronted for so long by both main parties (not to mention the police and social services) — namely, the fear of seeming bigoted for investigating ethnic minorities, even while they were gang-raping young girls — is still alive and well in the British government. As the son of a Pakistani immigrant who integrated into this nation (not least by marrying my mum) and came to love it, I find this sickening. One can perhaps forgive Casey for missing the significance of cousin marriage, given that it is a custom with which she is unfamiliar (although, frankly, she should have done her homework), but there can be no excuse for politicians who put cultural sensitivities before basic decency.

    So I say to Starmer, Hermer, Cooper et al: examine your consciences. Did you really go into politics to be apologists for the worst kind of moral relativism, to acquiesce in the nihilistic pretence that all cultural practices are of equal value, when they emphatically are not?

    If not, find your backbone, confront the Muslim bloc vote and ban cousin marriage. The alternative is betrayal of the most heinous kind. For here’s a thought to focus minds: girls today, even as you read these words, are being abused by ethnic clans operating in this country. Fail to act now, and this is on you.

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Here:

    [T]he police do not do anything so prosaic as patrol the streets and deter crime. No: what they do is ensure that “everyone is able to thrive and flourish knowing they are valued for their true and authentic selves”. The police, you see, are there to combat “isolation” and the feeling that people might get that they are “unwelcome” or “rejected”. They “continually listen”, “help people identify and report hate crime” and “record and manage information to build deeper knowledge and understanding”. And they carry out “proactive information campaigns” to “challenge people to reflect on their own behaviours and attitudes” so as to nip hatred in the bud “before it happens”.

    They in other words take on the role of benign busybodies, carefully monitoring what people are saying and thinking, and working to ensure that nobody is ever permitted to speak or behave in such a way as to interfere with anyone else’s “right to live safely and happily” as their (again) “true and authentic selves”.

    This is laughable drivel, of course, although the smile on one’s face begins to fade when one considers that was written by the second most senior police officer in Scotland. Barely a moment’s thought has gone into it: Ritchie cannot possibly mean what he thinks he means, because anybody who reflected for even a moment would soon realise that being one’s “true and authentic self” is the last thing that should be encouraged in psychopaths, sexual predators, kleptomaniacs, exhibitionists, delinquents, misogynists, racists, paedophiles, arsonists, people who watch TikTok videos on public transport without headphones, or indeed even people who just aren’t very nice….