Thursday, October 19, 2017

USA news on Youtube Oct 19 2017

Hi I'm Bimini Bimini Horstmann. I'm 18 years old. I'm a first year student at Davidson, and

I'm a rock climber.

Climbing is different from a lot of other sports because it's always

different. Every time I come into the gym it's different climbs that I can try.

I can experiment with different moves. Climbing it's always changing so it's

very intellectually stimulating, which i think is why you see a big increase in

people at Davidson being really interested in climbing and really

enjoying it because you have to be smart. And you have to be clever about how you

are creative and figuring out how to climb it because everyone is different.

I got started when I was 10 years old at the YMCA near my house. I was taking a

class in rock climbing with my friends just because I thought it would be fun.

And then the instructor told me that I should join a team. And I had no idea

that rock climbing was something that you could be on a team for or compete at

at all. So I was really excited. At first my parents didn't really know what to

think because I tried a lot of other sports before. So they weren't sure how

committed I would be to it. I had been bouncing from sport to sport for a

really long time. Like I did swimming for seven years but I was never really that

into it. And same with other sports. But after a while like they started seeing

that I was really committed to it. And like, I made Nationals my first season of

climbing. And so after that my mom like started buying me my own gear. And then

since then they've been super supportive of me.

Even if you're not super strong, if you have everything planned out, and you have

a good technique, you can be a really really good climber.

For more infomation >> New Heights: Student Climber Gears Up for PanAmerican Games - Duration: 1:57.

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Richard Spencer Speaks at Florida University - Duration: 16:16.

Richard Spencer Speaks at Florida University Richard Spencer Speech at Florida University

and the Battle for Free Speech

Richard Spencer's speech has set off a firestorm of reactions from those who vehemently oppose

his views.

In that firestorm lies the ugly specter of a different tyranny than the one they are

rightly rejecting.

This video is being made before the scheduled speech

today, October 19th, 2017 by Richard Spencer at

the University of Florida, but it is not so much about the speech itself as it is about

what is emerging from the rise of Spencer and his white nationalist goons, the polite,

well-dressed Nazis that are still, at the end of the day, just Nazis, every bit as hateful

and dark as the Nazis of Hitler's Germany.

The State-Run media is painting the event as a challenge to the notion of free speech

and defining when speech goes too far and loses its first amendment protections.

University of Florida President W. Kent Fuchs, speaking to CNN, said that the event is going

to change the complexion of the campus.

"It's not going to feel like a research university for 50,000 students, and the whole purpose

of that is to keep people safe."

Fuchs added that he was advising students to shun Spencer and to also speak against

Spencer's "message of hate and racism."

Here are a couple of the reactions from the students on campus that CNN chose to highlight.

From Fara Moskowitz, "There's a lot of fear, there's a lot of anxiety.

There's a lot of just unknown what's going to happen."

Wes Li, 20-year old, "It's very tense and upsetting.

A lot of people aren't going to be around campus because they're worried."

The narrative is being pushed, the way CNN covered the story, in the way the Florida

President talked about the speech, and in the two examples CNN chose to highlight as

responses to students.

This narrative, in large part, is being aided and abetted by anarchists, Antifa, anarchists

who fundamentally reject the state but whose tactics seem to be emboldening the very state

they purport to hate.

It was the Antifa cry of "punch a Nazi" that gave legitimacy and fuel to the narrative

that existed before the current rise of Antifa, the notion of Hate Speech, the idea that speech

that is deemed offensive, speech that is deemed hateful is not protected speech and should

not be allowed.

Antifa themselves are not really participating in the debate about is it or is it not protected

speech.

That question lies outside of their worldview altogether.

In their worldview, the whole notion of public space is a non-starter.

They are almost treating public space as a sort of march, a land between two kingdoms

that no kingdom claims.

As such, within their parameters, someone is free to say what they want, but they're

not free from the consequence of their actions.

Intellectually, I

understand the points they make.

No one wants to see the rise of White Nationalism, in any form, save for the small minority of

actual white nationalists that exist in this country today.

When you exist within the reality of the coercive enterprise, the state, the First Amendment

as a protection of speech in a public space does indeed create a safe haven for groups

like White Nationalists to organize and gain legitimacy.

If you believe as Antifa does, that White Nationalism has a real chance of actually

seizing power if it is not stopped early, you can understand why they would feel compelled

to

go into those marches and confront the white nationalists with violence, to destroy every

attempt they make to organize.

First of all, I do not agree with Antifa that white nationalism has a real chance of seizing

power now or in the near future.

I do agree with Antifa that white nationalists having the power to gather in public spaces

and spew their hatred and vitriol does empower them, does help them grow their numbers and

this, definitely, is troubling to me.

But now, you have Antifa, and the threat of that violent repercussion to a white nationalist

rally, creating a false legitimacy of the state limiting free speech on the basis of

hate speech.

After all, if you raise

the cost of security, a cost raised not so much by Spencer as by the threat of violence

by Antifa and other counter protesters (but not most), you give the state an emotional

appeal to the masses to convince them to agree to new laws, maybe even a new amendment, that

will give the state the power to determine if your speech is hateful, if your speech

is offensive or not.

Make no mistake, Antifa will find itself on the brute force end of these laws, this new

amendment, and their hope of moving toward statelessness, rather than being advanced

by punching Nazis, will be hindered.

To put it more plainly to Antifa, and I know some of them,

and some of the people who support the punch a Nazi philosophy, your tactic of punching

Nazis will build a stronger state.

Whatever happens today, Richard Spencer will come out still being portrayed as the villain

he is, a man whose ideas are anathema to anyone who values even the remotest notions of liberty.

But, thanks to the threats of violence by Antifa and other counter protest groups, those

who would wish to roll back what little liberties are left in America will be given vast storehouses

of ammunition with which to fire at those of us who still cling bitterly, even hopefully

to liberty.

After the speech, and whatever event emerges from it, is over, we will update the article

this video is

based on, which you can find at the upper right corner of this video, as well

as in the description and comment sections below.

This is

Paul Gordon of iState.Tv and this has been your i(whatever) feature.

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