We are almost a quarter of a century into the third millennium Anno Domini. In that period the alphabet soup – LGBTTQAEIOUandsometimesY - gang has grown accustomed to getting whatever it demands, no matter how ludicrous, absurd, or even downright insane, the demand happens to be. This is true in general across the civilization formerly known as Christendom but nowhere more so than here in the Dominion of Canada. It has been especially true here for the last nine years since Captain Airhead became the creepiest little low-life sleazebag ever to disgrace the office of the first minister of His Majesty’s government in Ottawa. Captain Airhead has aggressively promoted the craziest, most fringe, and least defensible elements of the alphabet soup agenda as if they were commonsensical, had the weight of universally recognized moral truth behind them, and could be opposed only by knuckle-dragging moral reprobates. If knuckle-dragging moral reprobation is what is required to oppose such things then Captain Airhead ought to be leading the opposition. He was never able to add two and two together and come up with four, however. Just look at his budgets.
One
consequence of Captain Airhead’s alphabet soup policies has been a sharp
decline in average intelligence in the country. We might call this the Trudeau Effect. It is the opposite of the Flynn Effect, the
psychometric phenomenon named after James Flynn by Charles Murray and Richard
Herrnstein in The Bell Curve (1994)
that was the reason standardized IQ tests needed to be revised, updated, and
recalibrated periodically to prevent the average from running significantly
over 100. The Trudeau Effect is when,
due to constant government-backed gas-lighting and bullying, intelligence so
declines that people no longer understand the difference between what is true
in reality and what someone mistakenly thinks or imagines to be true. Before Captain Airhead we could say in
response to those pushing the trans part of the alphabet soup agenda that we
don’t accept that the person who thinks he is a chicken actually is a chicken,
we don’t accept that the person who thinks he is Napoleon Bonaparte actually is
who he thinks he is, and neither should we accept that the boy who thinks he is
a girl is a girl or that the girl who thinks she is a boy is a boy. Today, not only do fewer and fewer people
understand this, the aggressive promotion of the trans agenda has brought us to
the point where there is now a demand that we regard people who think they are
something other than people as being what they think or say they are.
This is why
it has been rather encouraging over the last year or so to see a growing push
back against this insanity. Most
recently, Danielle Smith, the premier of Alberta, announced a new set of
policies and upcoming legislation for her province that would restrict the
genital and breast mutilation sickeningly called by such deranged euphemisms
as gender-reassignment
surgery or gender-affirming care to those who have reached the age of majority, ban puberty-blockers for
those under the age of 16, require that parents be notified and give their
consent when pervert teachers try to brainwash their kids into thinking they
are the opposite sex/gender, require parental consent for sex education and that all sex ed curricula be approved by the minister of education, and prevent the sort of situation that Ray Stevens
has hilariously lampooned in his new song “Since
Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene”. In other words, policies and legislation that
anyone who isn’t a total idiot, insane, under the influence of an evil spirit
or a substance that turns one’s mind to goo or both, evil on a megalomaniacal
scale, or some combination of these, could and would support. Needless to say, both Captain Airhead and
Jimmy Dhaliwal, the supervillain who somehow broke out of the cartoon universe
and into our own and having been denied entry to India due to his connections
to the extremists who want to break that country up opted to become the leader
of the socialist party here, have been having conniptions over this.
Most news
media commentators have joined the whacko politicians like Airhead and Dhaliwal
in howling in outrage over what could be best described as the very, bare
bones, minimum of a sensible provincial policy towards alphabet soup gender
politics. This will not come as a shock
to many, I suspect. Canadian
newspapers have acted as if their role was to propagate the ideas of and
bolster support for the Liberal Party since at least the time when John Wesley
Defoe edited the Winnipeg Free Press. Arguably it goes back even further to when
George Brown edited the Toronto Globe,
the predecessor of today’s Globe and
Mail. That the new technological
means of mass communication seemed designed to project a distorted view of
reality that served the interests of some ideological vision of progress rather
than of truth was a critique made by such varied observers as the American
Richard M. Weaver, the French Jacques Ellul, and the Canadian Marshall
McLuhan. It was radio, television, and
the motion picture industry that these men had in mind. The second revolution in mass communications
technology that gave us the internet, smartphones, social media, and streaming
services has since eclipsed the first.
It has not rectified the problem those astute social critics and
technosceptics saw in the earlier mass communications media any more than Captain
Airhead’s bailout of the struggling Canadian newspapers solved the problem of
their heavy bias towards the Liberal Party but rather, in both instances, the
problem was exponentially magnified.
John Ibbitson wrote a piece that argued that Smith’s policies were endangering all teenagers in Alberta. Naturally, the Globe and Mail had the poor taste to publish it. The obvious reality is that no teenagers – or anybody else for that matter – are endangered by Smith’s policies. Max Fawcett, the lead columnist for Canada’s National Observer, attempted to argue that Smith, who has long been identified with the libertarian wing of Canadian conservatism, has betrayed her ideology. As Pierre Poilievre, the current leader of His Majesty’s Loyal Opposition, the Conservative Party, pointed out, however, when he – finally – took a stand in favour what Smith was doing, prohibiting people from making irreversible, life-altering, decisions while they are children means protecting their right to make adult choices as adults. That is hardly something that could be described as irreconcilably out of sync with libertarian ideals As an indicator of just how cuckoo most of the media reporting on this has been, Ibbitson’s and Fawcett’s are among the saner of the anti-Smith pieces that have appeared.
Poilievre
also predicted that Captain Airhead will eventually have to back down on this
issue. I certainly hope that he is
right about that and that soon we will have the pleasure of watching Captain
Airhead eat his own words. In the
meantime, it is good to see that a rational, sane, pushback against the
alphabet soup madness has finally begun.
Let us hope and pray that it continues and spreads.
Yes, it is encouraging.
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