1/Let us take a journey through the history of Amazon censorship. In 2010 Amazon banned a book called "The Pedophile's Guide to Love and Pleasure: a Child-lover's Code of Conduct" nbcnews.com/id/wbna40112145
2/Amazon was reluctant to ban this book, saying "Amazon believes it is censorship not to sell certain books simply because we or others believe their message is objectionable," but ultimately caved in.
3/ By 2017 they further caved to pressure and banned materials that deny the Holocaust. Not to surprising since this content is illegal in many countries. thejc.com/news/world/und…
4/ In 2019 they started banning books like "White identity" by Jared Taylor and "Culture of Critique" by Kevin Macdonald. Neither of which are that crazy and hateful. theoccidentalobserver.net/2019/03/12/ama…
5/ It seems to me that Amazon crossed a big Rubicon here banning, an academic book from a professor at a well respected university.
6/ In 2021 they banned a book that was critical of trangenderism called "When Harry Became Sally" , because it didn't want to sell any content that portrayed being LGBT as a mental illness wsj.com/articles/amazo…
7/ I have read this book and nothing about it was very objectionable, it was pretty much just a normie conservative's view of transgender issues. Keep in mind that the majority of American's view changing one's gender as morally unacceptable. news.gallup.com/poll/351020/ch…
8/ So in the span of just 11 short years, Amazon has gone from being afraid to ban the most despicable content to banning something that most American probably agree with.
9/ Banned books week is coming up. If they had any principles they would feature books like the "culture of critique", and "when harry became sally" in high school libraries across America, but I won't hold my breath. bannedbooksweek.org
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1/ Thread looking at paper from 2014 from dissecting claims of a labor shortage. This data is all old at this point but we see similar narratives today. On one side people claiming a labor shortage and on the other side, college graduates claiming they can't get jobs.
2/ The idea that America is falling behind in skills goes back a long time.
Some excerpts from WSJ article about the 10 million population cap referendum in Switzerland. The journal admits the historic wave of immigration to the West hasn't solved economic problems:
Economics professor from Canada admits that immigration hasn't solved Canada's problems.
Economic output per worker has stagnated across some of the countries that have accepted the most immigrants.
1/Short thread on race and Greek life. This legal scholar recently filed some FOIA requests for public universities to get some data on mainstream frats and sororities (IFC/Panhellenic) and this is what the data looks like overall:
2/ The IFC fraternities they looked at were slightly less white at around 72%. Everywhere greeks life was at least 15% whiter than the university population as a whole.
3/ Comparison between % of undergrads who are black vs panhellenic sororities. At the schools that turned over chapter level data almost half of chapters had no black members.
1/ Short thread. The WSJ asked business historians to rank the greatest entrepreneurs and business leaders in American history. Here are the racial demographics: