• From the Toronto Star:

    Dr. Daniel Drucker may one day win the Nobel Prize for his research paving the way for diabetes wonder drugs such as Ozempic.

    Unsurprisingly the University of Ottawa invited him to deliver a lecture on his scientific work last February.

    Imagine Drucker’s surprise when the university suddenly disinvited him a week before his scheduled talk.

    I think we can guess why. Hint: he's Jewish.

    “I was invited to give a ‘named’ (formal) lecture at the University of Ottawa and abruptly, one week before I was supposed to go, that invitation was cancelled,” Drucker told me this week.

    “Some pro-Palestinian students had protested that inviting ‘Drucker, a Zionist professor,’ would make them feel unsafe … would be threatening.”

    After the fact, the best brains at U of O had second thoughts about their first impulses. Upon reflection, “they admitted that they made a hasty decision” and tried to make it up to him, according to Drucker.

    Four months after students dissed him and organizers disinvited him, he was invited back to give the prestigious Morris Kates Lecture at U of O. Drucker was not exactly made to feel welcome.

    “My lecture, for the very first time in my life, was interrupted by two pro-Palestinian students holding signs talking about how the U of O invites ‘genocide supporters’ to their campus,” Drucker recalled.

    “This is the world that we live in. I was profoundly disappointed.”

  • From the Mid-Devon Advertiser:

    A transgender woman from Chudleigh Knighton has been jailed for setting light to her sister’s two cars at the end of a five month campaign of harassment.

    Davina Moore accused her sister Sarah Smith and her husband Gary of spreading rumours that she was a paedophile around the village where they both lived and took revenge. 

    Moore had already thrown a brick through the window of one of their cars and thrown lit firelighters into their garden as well as pestering them. 

    Her campaign of hate reached a peak on April 18 when her sister heard a noise outside and they saw Moore pouring petrol onto their Mazda and Hyundai cars before torching them.

    He. He's a man. He.

    Amy Hamm at Reduxx has the full story – with the correct pronouns.

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  • John Vachon, February 1943. "New York, New York. Associated Transport Company trucking terminal on Washington Street. Loading goods on a southbound transport."

    image from www.shorpy.com
    [Photo: Shorpy/John Vachon for the Office of War Information]

  • Stop press! A female runner is competing in the US Olympic trials for a place in the women's 1500 metres. From the NYT Athletic:

    The biggest race of Nikki Hiltz’s career is coming soon, but the middle-distance runner who identifies as transgender and nonbinary said that racing to a spot on the U.S. Olympic team held a special significance because it came at the end of Pride Month.

    Hiltz, 29, whose sex was assigned as female at birth, earned a ticket to the Paris Games with a meet-record time of 3:55.33 in the women’s 1500-meter final of the U.S. Olympic trials on June 30. The performance easily beat the previous Olympic trials record, which was 3:58.03 set by Elle St. Pierre at the 2021 U.S. track and field trials. St. Pierre finished third on Sunday to also earn a spot on Team USA along with the second-place finisher, Emily Mackay.

    “This is bigger than just me,” Hiltz told NBC. “It’s the last day of Pride Month, and I wanted to run this one for my community. All the LGBTQ folks, you guys brought me home that last 100. I could just feel the love and support.”

    She's transgender and nonbinary. How does that work? And if she's transgender and "was assigned as female at birth" then she's presumably now a trans man – but she's denying her gender identity to compete in the women's race – which according to trans dogma is very wrong. 

    It's all very confusing. Though of course there'd be little point in her competing in the men's race, where she wouldn't stand a chance. Still – wow! It's all just so wonderful, her being trans and nonbinary and a good runner and the last day of Pride Month, and feeling the love of LGBTQ folks and all. She's clearly a special magical person.

    Runners like Hiltz who were assigned female at birth do not face the same restrictions for women’s divisions as transgender athletes who were assigned male at birth.

    A line for future generations to look back at and wonder. Women don't face the same restrictions for women's events as men do – obviously, because men aren't women – but all garbled up in gender-speak.

  • In case you're excited by the BBC headline, Reformist Masoud Pezeshkian elected Iran's president:

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  • Café Royal Books, this time with photographer Phil Portus:

    In the mid to late 70s, I was part of a small group of photographers called the REFLEX GROUP which was led by Diane "Hank" Olson (aka Diane Bush), an American documentary photographer, who had previously worked in London with the EXIT Collective and exhibited at the Half Moon Gallery along with work published in Camerawork. The REFLEX GROUP had met up occasionally in between our individual Salford photo excursions. I concentrated mainly in Langworthy, Ordsall and some work in the Adelphi area. In 1978 we had a group exhibition held in the Salford Players Theatre on Liverpool Road.

    Portus1

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    [Photos © Cafe Royal Books/Phil Portus]

    Previously.

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    For the BBC, Hussain's victory was fueled by "Gaza concerns".

    See also, Leicester South:

    There were jobs to get back to but many chose to linger at the end of Friday prayers at Masjid Umar mosque in Leicester. All were hoping to shake the hand of one man, a fellow worshipper, Shockat Adam, who hours earlier had pulled off the biggest election upset in an otherwise triumphant night for Labour.

    Running as an independent and campaigning on a pro-Palestinian ticket, Adam ousted Jonathan Ashworth, who was Labour’s shadow paymaster-general, from his seat in Leicester South, which he had held since 2011.

    The excitement among the crowd of Muslim worshippers, and their anger over Labour’s stance on the conflict in Gaza, was palpable. “I have one thing to say to Jonathan Ashworth,” said one man as he waited outside the mosque in a queue to congratulate Adam. “As [the civil rights activists] Malcolm X said: ‘Chickens coming home to roost never did make me sad, they always made me glad.’”

    In total, Labour lost five seats to pro-Palestinian independent candidates on Thursday night, all in areas with significant Muslim populations.

    Historically a demographic that has supported the party, Muslim voters deserted Labour in this election in response to Sir Keir Starmer’s initial refusal to back an immediate ceasefire in Gaza…

    In a city that two years ago was rocked by days of violence between Hindu and Muslim groups, Adam says one of his priorities in parliament will be to challenge the “weaponisation of ethnicity, religion and race that has grown since Brexit”.

    Challenging the weaponisation of ethnicity, religion and race by weaponising Muslim grievances about Gaza in a UK election…

  • Yes, of late the Tories have been the ones putting a brake on the gender steam-roller – but they're the ones who got us into this mess. Joan Smith at UnHerd:

    As we watch with trepidation to see how far the new Labour government will pursue its manifesto commitments to gender ideology, it’s easy to forget how fully the Conservative Party succumbed to trans activism. Looking back, the high point of absurdity was reached in 2016 when the former Tory culture secretary, Maria Miller, had the nerve to turn on feminists.

    At the time, Miller was chair of the Women and Equalities Committee, which had just published a report packed with proposals that now seem barking mad. They included introducing self-ID, allowing people to record their gender as “X” on passports, and permitting trans-identified males to access single-sex spaces. When Miller was challenged, she announced that she was a feminist and anyone who disagreed with her must be an impostor. “The only negative reaction that I’ve seen has been by individuals purporting to be feminists,” she shot back.

    It took just over a quarter of a century, in other words, for the party of Margaret Thatcher to embrace a thoroughly misogynistic ideology and call it feminism. By then, of course, any number of institutions had been captured. Police forces, NHS trusts and government departments competed — and paid — for gold stars from Stonewall. Gender-neutral toilets, male sex offenders in women’s prisons, trans women on female hospital wards — all of these things happened under Conservative administrations, including one led by the Tories’ second female PM, Theresa May.

    May was as keen to suck up to trans activists as Keir Starmer would prove to be a few years later. In 2017, she appeared at the Pink News awards, promising to “streamline and de-medicalise” the process of getting a gender recognition certificate, something that sounds very much like self-ID.

    The Tories got us into this mess, and it’s ironic that it was the Tories’ third and spectacularly unsuccessful female prime minister who put the brakes on. In 2020, when Liz Truss was Women and Equalities Minister, she abandoned plans to reform the Gender Recognition Act, putting her party back on the road to sanity on this subject alone if little else.

    This sequence of events is easily overlooked, now that Labour has picked up the mantle from the Conservatives. But the Tories were in power for 14 years and it’s only in the last few months that they’ve proposed amending the Equality Act and banning the teaching of gender identity in schools. Starmer would have less room for manoeuvre if he had inherited a legislative landscape where issues such as women-only spaces were already firmly protected by law….

    Identity politics is clearly not easily reducible to a Left-versus-Right analysis, given that Angela Rayner and Anneliese Dodds are now spouting the kind of nonsense we used to hear from Tory women. But it’s hard not to feel this morning as though we’re back where we were seven or eight years ago — and that’s as much the Tories’ fault as Labour’s.