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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
11 w

The Spectator P.M. Ep. 145: Southern Baptists Seek to End Same-Sex Marriage
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The Spectator P.M. Ep. 145: Southern Baptists Seek to End Same-Sex Marriage

Southern Baptists voted at the annual Southern Baptist Convention on a measure to support the overturning of Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court decision that said there is a right to same-sex marriage. (READ MORE: To Its Eternal Shame, the GOP Hands Victory to the Dems on Gay Marriage)  The Spectator P.M. Podcast hosts Ellie Gardey Holmes and Lyrah Margo discuss the significance of the Southern Baptists’ new measure and the importance of Christian political engagement. Ellie and Lyrah also discuss topics debated within the church, such as women’s leadership in pastoral roles. (READ MORE: Our Two Main Parties Are Non-Christian but Only One Is Demonic)  Tune in to hear their discussion! Read Ellie and Lyrah’s writing here and here. Listen to the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Spotify. Watch the Spectator P.M. Podcast on Rumble. The post <i>The Spectator P.M.</i> Ep. 145: Southern Baptists Seek to End Same-Sex Marriage appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
11 w

Imagine if Biden Did What Spanish Prime Minister Has Done
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Imagine if Biden Did What Spanish Prime Minister Has Done

Imagine, for a moment, that a police investigation uncovers hours of recordings involving members of Joe Biden’s administration. In those conversations, the president’s two most trusted allies are heard discussing how they rigged the primaries by stuffing ballots to ensure Biden became the Democratic nominee. This is exactly what has happened and is happening in Spain under Pedro Sánchez’s government and the PSOE (Socialist Party). Yet he refuses to step down or call elections. Now picture another recording where Biden’s right-hand man — executive director of the Democratic Party and Secretary of State — uses his chief advisor to arrange his schedule of prostitutes, requesting specific girls because he knows them and they do “great work.” Imagine this official is also under investigation for taking bribes and illegal kickbacks on public works projects, despite overseeing the government’s largest public works budget. Now imagine that when the scandal about his Secretary of State breaks in the press, Biden fires him and appoints another close confidant, also the Democratic Party’s executive director, to replace him. Soon after, this new appointee is caught in fresh recordings orchestrating illegal kickbacks — some apparently to fatten the party’s coffers — rigging public contracts, and placing trusted prostitutes in public company roles. Now imagine Biden’s wife is also under judicial investigation for using her position as the president’s spouse to favor companies linked to the university department she heads. She’s also being investigated for corruption in business dealings, misappropriation of funds, professional misconduct, and possible embezzlement. Now picture Biden’s father-in-law running a network of gay saunas and brothels, built with his brothers, frequented by political, business, and media figures. According to intercepted police audio, recordings from these venues were allegedly used to blackmail those involved. Now imagine recordings of a Democratic Party advisor meeting with businessmen and a lawyer, asking for sensitive information to discredit (“we have to kill him,” she’s heard saying) the police officers investigating the various cases tied to Biden’s inner circle and the Democratic Party. Now imagine the Justice Department opens an investigation into Biden’s brother for benefiting from a tailor-made public institution position, as well as possible tax crimes and chronic absenteeism. Now picture Biden, for years, dismissing press reports on these cases as far-right hoaxes aimed at destabilizing his government. Motivated by these “hoaxes,” he pushes a gag law that effectively lets him financially choke dissenting journalists. Now imagine that when these recordings and police reports surface, Biden merely asks the implicated advisor to leave the party, forces the Democratic Party’s executive director to resign, and offers a public apology (complete with extra bags under his eyes and a sad face for the cameras). He claims he had no idea his closest collaborators for fifteen years, from the start of his political career, were raking in public money through kickbacks and cavorting with prostitutes. This is exactly what has happened and is happening in Spain under Pedro Sánchez’s government and the PSOE (Socialist Party). Yet he refuses to step down or call elections. The separatist parties, communists, nationalists, and heirs of terrorists — whose parliamentary support he secured to stay in power despite losing elections — continue to back him in Parliament. Corruption piled on corruption. The tragedy of my Spain. And a vivid picture of what postmodern socialism looks like across the West: a machine of power and corruption, willing to do absolutely anything to cling to that power. In the end, it always lands in the same place: illegal kickbacks, prostitutes, and mediocre leaders. READ MORE from Itxu Diaz: We Need to Return to Trump’s Law and Order Musk v. Trump Isn’t Funny The post Imagine if Biden Did What Spanish Prime Minister Has Done appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
11 w

When Old Becomes New: Blue Books Are Back
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When Old Becomes New: Blue Books Are Back

Students across the educational spectrum are outsourcing their work to Artificial Intelligence (AI), according to the Wall Street Journal. In other words, cheating is more widespread than ever. To counter this underhanded academic revolution, the professoriate is taking a page, or more appropriately, pages, from their analog days to solve an ongoing digital problem. Enter blue books — the academy’s counter to the AI revolution. Blue books first made their appearance at Butler University in Indiana a century ago and represent the school’s colors of blue and white, leading to their time-honored name. In my salad days, the illustrious blue book was as much a part of the collegiate landscape as payphones, textbooks, and typewriters. (RELATED: Yes, AI Is Taking Jobs From the Class of 2025. No, We Shouldn’t Be Concerned.) In a world shaped by algorithms, bureaucracies, and nonstop social media, the blue book is a welcome and needed blast from the past. They are a constructive, yet inexpensive tool that consists of blank, ruled pages waiting to be filled with knowledge obtained. In an era where computers and virtual schooling relegated the blue book to academia’s endangered list, its comeback solves a problem that didn’t exist until now. Blue books were a longtime staple of the academic exam world, particularly for subjects requiring written analysis. While their use declined with the rise of digital technology, they have seen a resurgence in recent times due to concerns about academic integrity. Blue Book vs. AI Blue books will help combat AI-assisted cheating, making it easier for students to generate essays and answers. ChatGPT is perhaps the most formidable cheat apparatus to date. Over the past two summers with school out, ChatGPT’s traffic has markedly declined. Moreover, ChatGPT references Wikipedia, proving that all things digital are anything but a scholarly, peer-reviewed provenance, underscoring why it is called “artificial” intelligence. (RELATED: The Big Beautiful Bill’s Moratorium on AI Regulation Is Dangerous) AI is anything but agnostic. AI is beholden to the bias of their programmers and their milquetoast drivel. Programming’s oldest adage applies — garbage in, garbage out. AI doesn’t think for you; it does other people’s thinking for you. Critical thinking skills are desperately needed in our era, which is overwhelmed with an army of mendacious charlatans who ply lies for a living. This return to what was once considered a relic of the past helps prevent AI misappropriation in every sense. The triumphant return of blue books is part of a broader symposium about how to balance educational technology with genuine learning and critical thinking. They allow a student to demonstrate their knowledge in context and without digital assistance, providing them with the opportunity to test their writing chops, accompanied by the once-common cursive penmanship that in recent times is greatly lacking. To call most penmanship today chicken scratch would be an insult to chickens. Such expression in their own words and in their own handwriting ensures academic integrity while expressing the personality of the writer with a distinct human touch. Blue books are an antidote for that compounded equation infecting campuses known as dumbed down plus group think equals grade inflation. Moreover, it is difficult to cheat on a handwritten, proctored exam. Best of all, it’s working as some universities have seen a surge in demand, with blue book sales increasing by 30 percent at Texas A&M, 50 percent at the University of Florida, and 80 percent at UC Berkeley. Adding an oral assessment component to the blue book exam is something that has been suggested to ensure the student can verbally communicate cohesively and effectively what they have learned. Teachers want their students to learn and succeed, not cheat their way to a diploma. Education is not just about gathering and regurgitating facts and figures. It is about critical thinking, analysis, and creation. Technology is a tool that makes life better, not a means to do your thinking for you. The brain must be exercised. The lack of critical thinking is our other national deficit, growing at unprecedented levels. Too often, collegiate critical thinking means undermining objective reality when it conflicts with students’ emotions that are suffused nonstop with leftist ideology. Like it or not, life is one big blue book. Blue books are the first hopeful sign of common sense emerging from the academic quad in decades. Proving what’s old is still useful. Perhaps fountain pens, textbooks, and slide rules are next. READ MORE from Greg Maresca: Corporation for Propaganda Broadcasting America’s Sport Export Autopen on Autopilot The post When Old Becomes New: Blue Books Are Back appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
11 w

A Dog’s Grave
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A Dog’s Grave

The eighteenth-century Hellenist Johann Joachim Winckelmann maintained that the “finest and most beautiful drawing in the world” could be found on the surface of the Meidias Hydria, a red-figured water jar attributed to the fifth-century Athenian potter Meidias, and today found in the veritable Wunderkammer that is Room 19 of the British Museum. Often have I looked upon the Meidias Hydria, with its marvelously detailed depiction of the abduction of the Leukippides, but whether it truly is the “most beautiful drawing in the world,” or even the most beautiful specimen of Greek vase-painting,  remains open to debate. And now we have adopted another shelter dog, Mina, part dachshund and part Jack Russell terrier, a huntress who now patrols our yard. Another work by the same painter, a red-figured lekythos (oil vessel) showing the birth of Erichthonios, now in the Cleveland Museum of Art, is no less remarkable, and other red-figure painters, like Euphronios, Euthymides, the Berlin Painter, and the Marsyas Painter, could all match Meidias brushstroke for brushstroke. And the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston has a red-figure calyx krater by the Dokimasia Painter depicting the murder of Agamemnon, a vessel which seems to me superior to the Meidias Hydria in most every way — with all due respect to Herr Winckelmann. Yet one of the most affecting examples of that particular art form can be found not in the Louvre,  the Pergamonmuseum, the Getty, the Fitzwilliam, or any of the other world-class collections of classical art you might care to mention, but in the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, located on the University of Michigan’s central campus in Ann Arbor. It is an Apulian volute krater, two-handed with red-figured decoration, produced by the anonymous Gioia del Colle Painter around 340 B.C., and featuring the image of a young man reunited in the afterlife with his faithful canine companion. Most of us have never witnessed a violent mythical abduction, or the miraculous birth of a king from the unwanted seed of a god, or the murder of a proud monarch by his wife and her lover, but many of us are quite familiar with the relationship between a master and a hound, and with the nature of bereavement, and it is for this reason I find the krater at the Kelsey Museum, with its human scale and subject matter, so profoundly moving. At the center of the Gioia del Colle Painter’s composition is a youth seated in a naiskos, a small tomb building or temple, surrounded by grieving gift-bearers and libation-pourers. The deceased still has a spear in his hands, a sheathed sword at his side, and a military chlamys (cloak) pinned with a fibula at his left shoulder, but his fighting days are evidently over, since his bronze greaves and helmet have been hung up with care, never to be worn again, never again to produce the “earth-clash of bronze armor,” as it says in the Iliad. At his feet sits his dog, likely a member of the Lakonikoí Kýnes breed, the sort of swift Laconian hound made famous by Homer (the “swift-footed” Argos, loyal to Odysseus unto death) and Shakespeare (the hounds of Theseus “are bred out of the Spartan kind,” we are told). With his right hand the dead youth reaches out to his dog, who is seated obediently on its haunches, calmly gazing back at its owner with utter devotion. What better companion, for a soldier and a hunter at least, could there be in the underworld? How the ancient Greeks and Romans adored their dogs, a fondness we find ample evidence for in the touching epitaphs they had engraved on the headstones of their dead pets: This is the tomb of the dog, Stephanos, who perished, whom Rhodope shed tears for and buried like a human. I am the dog Stephanos, and Rhodope set up a tomb for me. Here the stone says it holds the white dog from Melita, the most faithful guardian of Eumelus; Bull they called him while he was yet alive; but now his voice is prisoned in the silent pathways of night. Surely even as thou liest dead in this tomb I deem the wild beasts yet fear thy white bones, huntress Lycas; and thy valor great Pelion knows, and splendid Ossa and the lonely peaks of Cithaeron. Thou who passest on this path If haply thou dost mark this monument, Laugh not, I pray thee, though it is a dog’s grave. Tears fell for me, and the dust was heaped above me By a master’s hand. I am in tears, while carrying you to your last resting place, as much as I rejoiced when bringing you home in my own hands fifteen years ago. In the very origins of our civilization, we find the relationship between master and hound already perfected. And here I am reminded of one of G.K. Chesterton’s finest essays, “On Keeping a Dog,” from February of 1911. Inspired by the “innovation which I of late introduced into my domestic life; he is a four-legged innovation in the shape of an Aberdeen terrier,” Chesterton described how “if the dog is loved he is loved as a dog; not as a fellow-citizen, or an idol, or a pet, or a product of evolution.” Somehow this creature has completed my manhood; somehow, I cannot explain why, a man ought to have a dog. A man ought to have six legs; those other four legs are part of him. Our alliance is older than any of the passing and priggish explanations that are offered of either of us; before evolution was, we were. You can find it written in a book that I am a mere survival of a squabble of anthropoid apes; and perhaps I am. I am sure I have no objection. But my dog knows I am a man, and you will not find the meaning of that word written in any book as clearly as it is written in his soul. For Chesterton, it is in this symbiotic relationship between master and hound that we are at our most civilized: It may be written in a book that my dog is canine; and from this it may be deduced that he must hunt with a pack, since all canines hunt with a pack. Hence it may be argued (in the book) that if I have one Aberdeen terrier I ought to have twenty-five Aberdeen terriers. But my dog knows that I do not ask him to hunt with a pack; he knows that I do not care a curse whether he is canine or not so long as he is my dog. That is the real secret of the matter which the superficial evolutionists cannot be got to see. If traceable history be the test, civilization is much older than the savagery of evolution. The civilized dog is older than the wild dog of science. The civilized man is older than the primitive man of science. We feel it in our bones that we are the antiquities, and that the visions of biology are the fancies and the fads. The books do not matter; the night is closing in, and it is too dark to read books. Faintly against the fading firelight can be traced the prehistoric outlines of the man and the dog. Anyone who has lost a beloved pet understands the profound nature of this bond, one which stretches back to time immemorial, long before biologists sought to explain the human-canine relationship with recourse to oxytocinergic systems and socio-positive interactions and what have you. We recently lost our cherished dog, a long-haired dachshund named Magnus, adopted from a local shelter, who spent his many years with us defending our garden, red in tooth and claw if need be, from possums, rabbits, squirrels, chipmunks, rats, and short-tailed shrews, but otherwise curled up either in our leather writer’s chair, or in front of the fireplace, just like Chesterton’s prized Scottish terrier. His death was devastating. Lord Byron’s memorialized his Landseer dog, Boatswain, as one who who possessed Beauty without Vanity, Strength without Insolence, Courage without Ferosity, and all the virtues of Man without his Vices. This praise, which would be unmeaning Flattery if inscribed over human Ashes, is but a just tribute to the Memory of Boatswain, a Dog And the very same could be said of our own dearly-missed hound. When Argentina’s President Javier Milei lost his English mastiff Conan — his “true and greatest love,” his “friend and confidant,” “literally a son to me” — he insisted that his pet’s demise was merely “a physical disappearance,” and that he could still communicate with Conan, even using him as a intercessor between himself and the Almighty. Some might scoff at these unorthodox beliefs, but true cynophiles are more likely to understand. My Dog, Forever Magnus now rests beneath a mound of earth, in the shade of a gently swaying Korean fir, surrounded by the daylilies and ground elder and fallen leaves through which he snuffled and hunted. I would like to think his white bones still strike fear into the hearts of the vermin that threaten our vegetable patch, even if his voice has been imprisoned in the silent pathways of the night. And now we have adopted another shelter dog, Mina, part dachshund and part Jack Russell terrier, a huntress who now patrols our yard, yet enjoys nothing more than sitting and gazing lovingly into our eyes, in a posture identical to that of the Laconian hound so exquisitely rendered by the Gioia del Colle Painter on his volute krater. Chesterton marveled at how “one loves an animal like a man instead of merely accepting an animal like an optimist” — and it is precisely that sort of love that really ought to extend beyond the confines of this life and into the hereafter, where we will, with any luck, find ourselves seated beneath the ample roof of a naiskos, in the company of our faithful guardians, forevermore. READ MORE from Matthew Omolesky: Chopin Intime Confronting the Shadows: Shūsaku Endō’s Rediscovered Masterpieces Sede Vacante: China’s Provocations Against the Vatican The post A Dog’s Grave appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
11 w News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
O’Keefe Undercover in LA: “No Kings” Protesters Recruited by Communist Group, Graffiti Near Feds
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
11 w

The WHO Pandemic Treaty: Medical Tyranny on Steroids. Speakers: Dr. Vliet and Major Gary
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The WHO Pandemic Treaty: Medical Tyranny on Steroids. Speakers: Dr. Vliet and Major Gary

from Vaxxchoice: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
11 w

Report: U.S. Quietly Sent Israel Hundreds of Hellfire Missiles While Touting ‘Diplomacy’
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Report: U.S. Quietly Sent Israel Hundreds of Hellfire Missiles While Touting ‘Diplomacy’

by Chris Menahan, Information Liberation: The US was shipping hundreds of Hellfire missiles to Israel while President Trump was out touting his push for “diplomacy” with Iran, according to a new report. From The Middle East Eye, “Exclusive: US quietly sent hundreds of Hellfire missiles to Israel before Iran attack”: The US quietly delivered hundreds of […]
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Bikers Den
Bikers Den
11 w

Rolling Deep with My Dog – Harley Style!
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Rolling Deep with My Dog – Harley Style!

Rolling Deep with My Dog – Harley Style!
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Bikers Den
Bikers Den
11 w ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Outlaw Motorcycle Club Clashes With No Kings Protesters in Detroit ??️
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The First - News Feed
The First - News Feed
11 w ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
Here’s Who’s Financing the California Riots
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