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Yesterday — June 25th 2024U.S.
Before yesterdayU.S.

Public school enrollment declining in America's most populous cities: Report

Despite declining enrollment, school spending and hiring in the nation's largest cities has increased on a per-student basis in many urban school districts

HBO comic warns 'The View' of looming threat to comedy

Comedian J.B. Smoove joined the co-hosts of "The View" on Thursday and said wokeness was discouraging for comedians, warning against a possible "comedy prohibition."

Faith-based company is one step closer in legal fight to distribute dog tags with Bible verses

Shields of Strength is one step closer to securing the right to continue making faith-based dog tags for the military after a U.S. District Court ruled that the case could continue.

DEI and one of the biggest problems facing Black Americans

Since the 1960s, many of us have embraced our freedoms to prove that skin color does not limit our abilities. Yet, thanks to leftist policies, a nasty inferiority still shadows us.

UNC rager dubbed 'Flagstock 2024,' funded by GoFundMe slated for Labor Day

A group of fraternity members at UNC captured the attention of the nation in May when they held up the American flag as anti-Israel protesters tried to replace it with a Palestinian flag.

Physically healthy Dutch woman dies by assisted suicide at age 29

Zoraya ter Beek was physically healthy, but struggled with her autism diagnosis as well as depression, anxiety and an unspecified personality disorder.

JK Rowling says friends 'begged' her not to speak out on trans issue: 'I was a heretic'

"Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling opened up about what prompted her to speak out on transgender ideology, despite facing pressure to not defend women's rights.

Lizzo responds to South Park name-drop: 'I'm really that b---h'

Singer Lizzo reacted on her Instagram and TikTok account to her name being used and mocked during a recent special episode of “South Park" on Saturday.

MAGA

  A funny thing happened in 2015.    A real estate estate mogul from NYC with a huge ego matched by a huge mouth decided to run for President of the United States.  By itself that’s just a blurb in the news, the kind usually followed a few weeks later with an update that the celebrity has ‘suspended’ his campaign and quit the race.  Certainly that’s what the field of candidates expected in the race to follow Obama with a Republican POTUS. Instead, Donald Trump built on modest support and his name, and soon became a contender for the GOP

Ex-NYTer Bowles: A Full Correction for Left-Wing Excesses in 2020 Includes People Getting Their Jobs Back

On Friday’s broadcast of HBO’s “Real Time,” former New York Times reporter and current reporter and Head of Strategy at the Free Press Nellie Bowles argued that a full reversal of the left-wing excesses of 2020 should include “apologies to the people

The post Ex-NYTer Bowles: A Full Correction for Left-Wing Excesses in 2020 Includes People Getting Their Jobs Back appeared first on Breitbart.

Caitlin Clark Did Not Break Pete Marvich’s Scoring Record (Woke Conservatives Run Amok)

By: Scalia
Celebrated rookie Indiana Fever guard, Caitlin Clark, has lately been the focus of a lot of attention, primarily due to her superlative basketball skills and her being the top scoring basketball player in NCAA history. Most certainly, she deserves all the attention and sponsorships that have come her way. She’s a top-notch player with a bright future as a professional. Nevertheless, there always appear to be segments of society that push a good thing too far. Her fawning fans won’t hesitate to boast that she even outscored the legendary Pete Maravich (3,685 to 3,667). Admittedly, I’ve never been impressed with

Artists Try to Ban Israelis

(John Hinderaker)

The Venice Biennale is one of the world’s biggest art shows. The show has a national focus:

Held since 1895 and considered the world’s top art event, the Venice Biennale, which starts in April, gives nations the chance to show off their best artists at national pavilions.

That is the hook for pro-mass muder artists to try to boot Israel out:

A petition to kick Israel out of the Venice Biennale art show because of the war in Gaza signed by more than 16,000 artists, curators and academics has been angrily dismissed as “shameful” by Italy’s arts minister.

More to come from the culture minister, a Giorgia Meloni appointee.

Signed by art world luminaries including Jesse Darling, the British Turner prize winner, the petition claims: “The Biennale is platforming a genocidal apartheid state. No death in Venice. No business as usual.”

“Platforming” is a sinister term that generally means failing to discriminate against. Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano pushed back:

The petition drew a furious response from Gennaro Sangiuliano, the Italian culture minister, who lambasted what he described as “a diktat from those who think they are the custodians of the truth, and who with anger and hatred try to threaten the freedom of thought and creative expression in a democratic nation like Italy”. He added: “The Biennale will always be a space of freedom, meeting and dialogue rather than censorship and intolerance. Culture is a bridge between people and nations, not a wall of division.”

Israel is to be represented at the Biennale by Ruth Patir, who is plenty far left by any normal standard. But that doesn’t cut any ice with anti-Semites.

This flap is a reminder that art isn’t what it used to be. As noted above, Britain’s Jesse Darling is apparently the most notable of the artists trying to ban Israel. Here he is with some of his art works:

Which prompts the question: is there a connection between bad art and bad politics? Mr. Darling is, on this question, a data point.

How Wimpy Are Our Kids?

(John Hinderaker)

This picture of kids on a playground in 1912 popped up on my Instagram feed:

It got me thinking: if you encouraged that sort of activity today, someone would call the police. No one would consider it safe for kids to play that way, and when it comes to children, safety–or “safety”–is the supreme value.

I have been working, on and off, on a memoir about what it was like to grow up in a small town in South Dakota in the 1950s and early 60s. Looking back, kids in that time and place enjoyed an astonishing degree of freedom. Kids played, almost always without parents having anything to do with it. In some ways, you could say our parents were strict. On the other hand, they rarely had any idea what we were doing. As long as we were home for dinner at six, we were good.

Those days are gone. And yet, despite the hothouse environments in which children are raised nowadays, they aren’t safe at all. On the contrary: a great many of them can’t cope. I ran across this podcast by Bari Weiss: “Why the Kids Aren’t Alright.”

American kids are the freest, most privileged kids in all of history. They are also the saddest, most anxious, depressed, and medicated generation on record. Nearly a third of teen girls say they have seriously considered suicide. For boys, that number is an alarming 14 percent.

What’s even stranger is that all of these worsening mental health outcomes for kids have coincided with a generation of parents hyper-fixated on the mental health and well-being of their children.

Take, for example, the biggest parenting trend today: “gentle parenting.” Parents today are told to understand their kids’ feelings instead of punishing them when they act out. This emphasis on the importance of feelings is not just a parenting trend—it’s become an educational tool as well. “Social-emotional learning” has become a pillar in public schools across America, from kindergarten to high school. And maybe most significantly, therapy for children has been normalized. In fact, there are more kids in therapy today than ever before.

On the surface, all of these parenting and educational developments seem positive. We are told that parents and educators today are more understanding, more accepting, more empathetic, and more compassionate than ever before—which, in turn, makes wonderful children.

But is that really the case? Are all of these changes—the cultural rethink, the advent of therapy culture, of gentle parenting, of teaching kids about social-emotional learning—actually making our kids better?

Best-selling author Abigail Shrier says no.

In her new book, Bad Therapy: Why the Kids Aren’t Growing Up, Shrier argues that these changes are directly contributing to kids’ mental health decline. In other words: all of this shiny new stuff is actually making our kids worse.

Today: What’s gone wrong with American youth? What really happens to kids who get therapy but don’t actually need it? In our attempt to keep kids safe, are we failing the next generation of adults? And, if yes, how do we reverse it before it’s too late?

That conversation is a little different from the kids playing on 20 foot high jungle gyms, but clearly related. It is a big topic, and that is enough for the moment.

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