[FrontPageMagazine] “I use psychedelic drugs to deepen my DEI practice,” writes Steven Huang, a diversity consultant who urges CEOs to get high.
Micro-dosing is soooo trendy in certain circles.
DEI stands for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. Every corporation has gone DEI. Some call it racism, others call it a cult, and some have taken the racist cult to an exciting new place.
At his DEI firm, Huang “seeks to leverage the power of psychedelics to inspire a generation of leaders to interrogate systems of oppression.”
This is DEI. This is DEI on drugs.
“So what does Black History Month look like in the psychedelics ecosystem?” he asked. “From the lens of a social justice warrior operating within a ‘corporate’ psychedelic system… it’s a lot to process,”
Huang then pitched “black-Centered MDMA-Assisted Psychotherapy, Addressing Racial Trauma” through the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies.
MAPS advocates the use of psychedelic drugs to treat trauma. One of its favorites is MDMA, methylenedioxymethamphetamine, better known as ‘ecstasy’ or ‘molly’, and previous efforts by MAPS to use it to help people suffering from PTSD, ended in therapists being caught on video groping a sexual assault victim who was getting therapy with the hallucinogenic rape drug.
One of the therapists was apparently a disciple of Salvador Roquet, a Mexican shrink known as “the master of bad trips”, who was accused of torturing dissidents by dosing them with psychedelics, blasting Wagner symphonies, displaying pictures painted by the inmates of an insane asylum, and reciting, “I am a cat and you are a mouse” to the patient.
[FxNews] What if federal workers never showed up for work and no one missed them?
This is one of the greatest federal government scandals of all time. Many hundreds of thousands of federal employees have been getting a full-time paycheck from Uncle Sam (meaning from all of us) without showing up for work for three years now. They don't call it Club Fed for nothing.
To be fair, just because an employee is working remotely doesn't mean they aren't working. Only a little more than half of private sector workers are actually in the office these days -- although, with each passing day, private workers are returning to work sites. But in the public sector, the percentage of remote workers remains much higher than that. The Federal Times news outlet reports that at the end of 2022, only about 1 in 3 federal bureaucrats were on the job in the office.
Wait. The COVID scare ended two and a half years ago, and most private businesses have demanded their employees show up for work at least some of the time -- or find a new employer. What's so special and privileged about government workers?
Now, new House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer is pushing a bill that would require all federal agencies to reinstitute their telework policies as they existed on Dec. 31, 2019, with expanded remote work only for authorized projects. That bill passed the House on a 221-206 vote. Guess what? All but six House Democrats voted no. Is there any wonder why? Well, more than 90 percent of PAC donations from federal employee unions go to ... you got it, Democrats.
Who are the Democrats accountable to? Federal employees, or their own taxpayer voters and constituents who pay these workers' salaries? This vote makes the answer to that question crystal clear. So, the rest of America in private sector jobs is back to work, but not the 1.9 million federal employees, who often make $100,000 a year in salaries and benefits. All of this is an outrageous abuse of taxpayer money, but there is a silver lining here. Raise your hand if you've even noticed that federal workers are not showing up at the Department of Energy or Education or Transportation or the State Department or the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Has this disrupted your life in any material way? Not mine.
Maybe we've all learned a valuable lesson here. Maybe these agencies aren't as indispensable as President Joe Biden says they are. We could potentially save billions of dollars and reduce our debt by getting rid of some of these obsolete or irrelevant agencies, departments and bureaus.
A budget impasse between Biden and congressional Republicans may lead to a temporary shutdown of some of these agencies. How could that be Armageddon if we don't even know when the workers are on the job?
Posted by: Skidmark ||
02/16/2023 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11129 views]
Top|| File under: Tin Hat Dictators, Presidents for Life, & Kleptocrats
#1
"Many hundreds of thousands of federal employees have been getting a full-time paycheck from Uncle Sam (meaning from all of us) without showing up for work for three years now."
[AmericanGreatness] We should be suspicious of weird coincidences.
The person responsible for preparing the document is a man named Samuel Armes, a young cryptocurrency expert living in Florida. ...[who] told the January 6 select committee last year that he has worked for the State Department and Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa.
It’s week five of the Justice Department’s most high-profile—and high-stakes—criminal trial related to the events of January 6, 2021. Five members of the Proud Boys face the rare "seditious conspiracy" charge. Guilty verdicts—almost certain given the government’s near-perfect conviction rate for January 6 defendants—would build legal momentum for a similar indictment against Donald Trump ...Perhaps no man has ever had as much fun being president of the US... . (The trial is so crucial that Matthew Graves, the Biden-appointed U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia responsible for prosecuting every January 6 case, has shown up in the courtroom on at least three occasions.)
Continued on Page 49
[ForcesCast] The Future of Warfare: Navigating the Changes with Expert
Analysis the future of warfare
The face of warfare is undergoing a rapid transformation, driven by advancements in technology and other factors. The role that technology is playing in shaping the future of warfare cannot be overstated. Experts talk about the future of war and how it will affect society in this article.
From unmanned systems and autonomous weapons to new methods of communication and data sharing, the implications of emerging technologies are profound.
The Impact of Technology on Warfare
The way wars are fought is being transformed by technology, with unmanned systems, artificial intelligence, and cyber capabilities leading the way. The effects of these technologies on society and how they might change the future of war are carefully looked at.
Unmanned systems and autonomous weapons have the potential to reduce human life risks while increasing conflict efficiency and effectiveness.
The Future of Military Operations
The nature of future conflicts will be shaped by technology, which will impact decision-making, intelligence gathering, and logistics. Military organizations will need to adapt to these changes to remain effective in the future. In this section, an expert gives a detailed look at how military operations will change in the future.
The Future of National Security and Defense Strategy
National security and defense strategies will need to evolve in response to the changing nature of warfare. Key considerations such as cyber security, information warfare, and unconventional threats will shape future national security and defense policies.
The expert analysis in this section looks at how countries will need to work together to deal with these problems and keep the world safe. To deal with these new and complex threats, countries need to strengthen their global alliances and build a strong system of collective defense.
Conclusion
This article provides a comprehensive overview of the changes that are underway in the world of warfare and the impact they will have on society. The expert insights provided offer a valuable perspective on the future of warfare and the steps that must be taken to stay informed and prepared for what lies ahead.
The significance of these expert insights for the future of warfare and its impact on society cannot be overstated. Going forward, countries must work together to make sure their citizens are safe and stable by dealing with the unique problems that come with new technologies, cyber threats, and weapons that aren't used very often.
#3
Defense secretary Auston was formerly Raytheon board of directors member. He has since awarded 2.36 Billion in contacts to Ratheon for rocket engines.War is where the money is.
#4
Just re-read Hackett’s books on World War III, fictional accounts of such a war written in the early ‘80s as a ‘lookback’ from just a few years later. Of course it didn’t come to pass, but… And Ukraine war could easily generate an analogous situation.
Of course. Why would the imperials care about disposable peasants in the hinterlands?
[NPASyria] INTRODUCTION The Sick Man of Europe Turkey ...the decaying remnant of the Ottoman Empire... and its affiliated Syrian National Army (SNA) factions have occupied the Afrin region, in the northern countryside of Aleppo, since March 2018. The "Olive Branch" operation of 2018 aimed push out the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) under the pretext of protecting Ottoman Turkish "national security".
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.