THE BROKEN BOYS OF KENOSHA: JACOB BLAKE, KYLE RITTENHOUSE, AND THE LIES WE STILL LIVE BY
HARVARD CANCELED ITS BEST BLACK PROFESSOR. WHY?
LOS ANGELES IS LIVING A "SOCIAL JUSTICE" NIGHTMARE.
Four years ago, in the heat of our “social justice” summer, the people of Los Angeles decided to make a man named George Gascon their District Attorney. Gascon’s politics had met their moment; he was a pure vessel of Black Lives Matter orthodoxy, denouncing the legal system as inherently racist and promising to slash criminal penalties and empty jails.
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Once he assumed office, Gascon held to his word. He stopped enforcing many misdemeanor crimes. He gave thousands of prisoners early release. He slashed felony sentences. He hamstrung prosecutors with new rules on bail and parole.
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Gascon is up for re-election in November. We went to Los Angeles to investigate how his experiment has been going, to watch Gascon's grand visions collide with reality.
CHARLES MURRAY'S IQ REVOLUTION
Charles Murray, a long-time scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is one of the most important social scientists of the last 50 years. His work reveals profound, unseen truths about the shifts in American society.
And yet, to the average person, the word they think of when they hear his name is "Racist." Or "White Supremacist." Or "Pseudo-scientist." Murray has been subjected to 30 years of misrepresentation and name-calling, primarily based on a single chapter in his book "The Bell Curve," which, when it was released in the early 90s, caused a national firestorm and propelled Murray into intellectual superstardom.
And all that controversy has obscured what Murray's life's work is really about: it's about "the invisible revolution." This is an epic, sustained restructuring of America into a new class system, not based on race, gender, or nationality, but on IQ, on the power in people's brains.