Here we go again with one of these utterly despicable stories.No doubt, the Muslim team will suffer no consequence for refusing to play against the creep, or refusing to share a locker/dressing room with him. It's decidedly atrocious that the Jewish team by contrast refused to refrain from playing against a team with such a despicable person taking part. As a result, they made the Muslim team look like the better. And that's very sad.
The girls’ basketball team of San Francisco Waldorf High School is currently on a five-game win streak, largely owed to their captain and superstar player, Henry Hanlon.
San Francisco Waldorf squared off Thursday against Jewish Community, with the former forcing a dominating 54-22 victory. Hanlon led the team in scoring — and the entire game at that — with 24 points. Hanlon also scored a third of Waldorf’s points, and this is the fourth-straight game this feat has been accomplished by the transgender athlete.
Hanlon, a male, has competed in girls’ sports for the last three years, according to ICONS and Reduxx, per OutKick. In addition to basketball, the junior also competes in soccer and volleyball and, with the latter, Hanlon led the school to a CIF North Coast Championship last season.
In basketball, Hanlon is ranked No. 4 in scoring in the North Coast Section of California with an average of 20.8 points-per-game and, as you’re about to see, the transgender athlete completely towers over his female teammates.
Earlier in January, Averroes — an Islamic college preparatory high school — refused to play against Hanlon because of his transgender status, as well as declining to share any locker room facilities, according to Breitbart and Reduxx.
"ALL CAPS IN DEFENSE OF LIBERTY IS NO VICE."
Showing posts with label san francisco chronicle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san francisco chronicle. Show all posts
Monday, January 22, 2024
Jewish community girls' basketball team in San Francisco gave Muslim team advantage in case involving transsexual player
A most decidedly galling case occurred where a Jewish girls' basketball team in Frisco let a Muslim girls' team get the advantage by not playing against a team with a male transsexual player included:
Labels:
anti-Semitism,
dhimmitude,
islam,
islamo-misogyny,
san francisco chronicle,
sexism,
sports
Friday, January 12, 2024
Antisemites taunt Jewish man describing murders of family members by Hamas at San Francisco meeting
San Francisco continues to prove it's one of the most repulsive places you could ever be in California:
Footage of a Jewish man sharing his experiences of antisemitism at a committee hearing Tuesday has gone viral.The city's already been circling the drain in the past few years very fast. And recently, pro-Islamist hoodlums vandalized a Christmas tree in SF's Union Square. So as horrible as it is to see what the poor man went through, it's no longer a shock. And I will not set foot in such a cesspool as SF's become, even if I were paid to visit there.
You may have seen the videos of a group of masked up San Francisco residents dancing and celebrating the passage of a resolution calling for a sustained ceasefire in Gaza. No, this vote did nothing in terms of actually contributing toward a ceasefire. But it did bring out some of the most racist people the Bay Area has to offer.
One Jewish man, seen in a clip shared by the Jewish Community Relations Council, described to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors committee how five members of his immediate family were murdered at Kibbutz Be’eri by Hamas terrorists Oct. 7, 2023.
“Two of those family, this is my first cousins, were taken hostage, Noga and Shiri Weiss, and they were released as part of that second day of the releases of hostages,” the man told the crowd.
“And I can tell you that this resolution does one thing. It fuels antisemitism and hatred, as exemplified in this room right now,” he continued, as a group of ugly monsters taunted and jeered the man behind him.
The crowd grew louder as the man described the blatant racism around him.
“I have never, since I moved to San Francisco, seen this kind of hatred against a minority group. Ever,” he noted. “A public demonstration of hate against a minority group.”
[...] “My kids and I do not feel safe in San Francisco,” concluding with a statement on how the resolution is going to make America and the world a far more dangerous place for the Jewish people.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Innovative Plan Offered to Save Newspapers
Raised an avid consumer of newspaper journalism, I went on to earn a journalism degree from Oklahoma State University and hold a variety of professional positions, most of which afforded me opportunities to work with and among professional journalists on a daily basis. So it goes without saying -- and with my tongue planted firmly in my cheek -- that I want to do my part to assist influential elected officials in their effort to keep the nation's newspaper industry from going under. Among them, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).
Earlier this year, Speaker Pelosi recently urged the Justice Department to consider giving Bay Area papers more leeway to merge or consolidate business operations to stay afloat, according to a report at SFGate.com, the online home of the struggling Hearst Corporation-owned San Francisco Chronicle.
More recently, however, President Barack Obama joined Pelosi in her desire to help struggling newspapers. In fact, he told The Hill, saying he is "happy to look at" bills before Congress that would give struggling news organizations tax breaks if they were to restructure as nonprofit businesses. Newspapers deserve help, right? Of course, they do.
While I think the hearts of both the speaker and the president are in the right place on this issue, I'm doubtful that a legal rearrangement of the newspaper industry's "deck chairs" will produce the desired results. That's why I'm proposing a different solution:
Under my plan, they would be offered jobs as beat reporters, distribution specialists and collection agents for the new Chronicle, and people would subscribe -- I guarantee it!
If the San Quentin News-San Francisco Chronicle project works, it can be duplicated in cities across the state and across the nation. Imagine the possibilities!
[Editor's Note: The post below was originally published here March 31, 2009. With news about a newspaper bailout back in the public spotlight, I decided to breathe new life into it and republish an updated version of the post today.]
Read more like this at Bob McCarty Writes.
Earlier this year, Speaker Pelosi recently urged the Justice Department to consider giving Bay Area papers more leeway to merge or consolidate business operations to stay afloat, according to a report at SFGate.com, the online home of the struggling Hearst Corporation-owned San Francisco Chronicle.
More recently, however, President Barack Obama joined Pelosi in her desire to help struggling newspapers. In fact, he told The Hill, saying he is "happy to look at" bills before Congress that would give struggling news organizations tax breaks if they were to restructure as nonprofit businesses. Newspapers deserve help, right? Of course, they do.
While I think the hearts of both the speaker and the president are in the right place on this issue, I'm doubtful that a legal rearrangement of the newspaper industry's "deck chairs" will produce the desired results. That's why I'm proposing a different solution:
The job of running the nation's major newspapers -- including those in the Bay Area -- should be turned over to the inmates in state prisons. As a launching pad for this project, inmates at San Quentin State Prison can take over operations at the nearby Chronicle.
- After a 16-year hiatus, the San Quentin News newspaper was revived on June 1, 2008 (Vol. 1), and has printed six editions since then (See Vol. 2, Vol. 3, Vol. 4, Vol. 5, Vol. 6 and Vol. 7).
- It already circulates inside and outside the prison walls;
- It boasts a circulation of 7,500; and
- It costs very little to produce.
Under my plan, they would be offered jobs as beat reporters, distribution specialists and collection agents for the new Chronicle, and people would subscribe -- I guarantee it!
If the San Quentin News-San Francisco Chronicle project works, it can be duplicated in cities across the state and across the nation. Imagine the possibilities!
[Editor's Note: The post below was originally published here March 31, 2009. With news about a newspaper bailout back in the public spotlight, I decided to breathe new life into it and republish an updated version of the post today.]
Read more like this at Bob McCarty Writes.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)