Archive for the ‘Jordan Peterson’ Category

Confessions of a jaded NZ bookseller – The Spinoff

We cant tell you who wrote this piece, or where they work. What we can tell you is its not Unity.

A little while ago, I said to a friend that working at a bookshop kind of sucks. He was clearly bamboozled. I thought working at a bookshop would be lovely and magical. Being surrounded by books, reading all day

I used to think so, too.

When I got my first job as a bookseller, at 16 years old, I was thrilled. I had wanted to work at my local bookshop since I was a child I hero-worshipped and crushed on the staff, was entranced by the shelves and the papery smell, and spent hours reading in the kids room while my Mum and Dad had coffee next door (note to parents: if your children are gremlins, this is not good practice).

I loved cutting up the Christmas wrapping paper and recommending childrens books to parents. I happily gave up half my weekend to be there, making friends Ive kept ever since. Through the bookshop Ive become more confident, met countless lovely customers, been introduced to excellent and thought-provoking books, and experienced the way that communities continue to support an industry that would otherwise disappear.

But after 10 years as a part-time bookseller, Im jaded. Ive become someone who frequently loathes other people. And this isnt just me being an asshole.

Lately, grumpy booksellers have been going public. Last year Anne Barnetson, a bookseller in Perth, started posting her comic series Customer Service Wolf to Tumblr and Instagram. She told the BBC Its unenacted fantasies that I think people have after a very long day when they think: It would just be great to stop all this right now.'

There have been books, of course: London bookseller Jen Campbell released Weird Things Customers Say in Bookstores in 2012; five years later Scottish secondhand bookstore owner Shaun Bhythell put out what Russell Baillie described in the Listener as a funny, pithy, grumpy poignant memoir of a year in the shops life and its occasionally annoying clientele.

And, at the serious end of the spectrum, Sadie Stein, contributing editor for The Paris Review, opened a 2016 column with I love bookstores, but theres something that needs to be said: theyre often filled with lurking creeps.

All retailers know that just one unpleasant interaction someone who doesnt treat you as a real human, basically can ruin your day. These customers come in various forms: the creepy men, the entitled, the children-with-icecreams, the bigots, the (many) people who are outraged that we dont have a particular title, despite Covid-19 playing havoc with supply chains (NB: please call ahead!). Crucially, unlike most retail jobs, customers of bookshops want to discuss ideas, and that can lead to uncomfortable, sticky situations.

Plus, I now know that part of the bookshop smell is a carpet that has absorbed urine both canine and toddler so a bit of the olfactory charm has gone, too.

Probably weeing. (Photo: Martin Barraud/Getty)

The reality: working in a bookshop is sometimes a bit shit, more Black Books than Notting Hill. Let me list the ways.

When the customer is wrong

A woman once said to my manager, Do you have 20 Rules for Life?

Do you mean Jordan Petersons 12 Rules for Life? she asked.

Haughty look. No. Its 20 Rules.

My manager picked up a copy of the book, 12 Rules for Life. This one?

Well, thats the right author. But no. Im certain its 20 Rules. Ill call my son and get this sorted out.

When the customer is wrong and also racist

The number of times Ive had someone tell me I dont like Asian writers would be ridiculous and absurd if it wasnt so offensive. Generally, I assume such customers have read one Murakami novel and believe that hes It.

An incident that really sticks with me is when an older woman asked for a book recommendation, and I suggested A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara a Man Booker finalist, incredible, brutal, and one of my favourites. Recommending a book like this, which left me devastated and still has the power to choke me up, feels like extending an (emotionally laden) olive branch. Youre trying to share an experience that moved you, so its hard not to feel a bit miffed when you gush over something amazing and then the customer buys Jojo Moyes. But this time, the customer stopped me before I finished saying Its about four men

Oh no, she said. I dont read Asian authors.

A pause.

Hanya Yanagihara is American, I said. The book is set in New York.

Then whats with her name?

Long exhale through the nose. Her parents are from Hawaii.

She scrunched up her face and said no thank you and at that point I just had to walk away, leaving her to browse all the novels by men called John or Robert and women called Ann. How, I thought, did people still think these things, let alone say them aloud in public? Is it because people like me just walk away, rather than telling them it isnt right?

Its hard, though, to say what you think when youre in customer service. Even in a regular social situation my conflict-averse nature would make it difficult, but when a large part of your job is to ensure that your shop keeps getting five-star Google reviews and receiving happy paying customers, biting your tongue can feel like the only option, even when on the inside youre spitting nails.

When the customer is a creep

Sometimes, behaving like its all OK and putting on a pleasant face can really cause trouble. On and off for five years, from when I was 19, a middle-aged man stalked me in the shop. He would come in when I was on my own at night, tell me hed broken up with his girlfriend because he liked me better, call the shop repeatedly to ask me to coffee, say hed recently watched Fifty Shades of Grey and that Anastasia reminded him of me because, of course, shes so clever.

Anastasia Steele (as played by Dakota Johnson): really not renowned for her smarts. (Photo: Supplied)

At the start, I partly blamed myself for getting into this situation. Hadnt I chatted cheerfully with him? Hadnt I smiled? Hadnt I wryly told him that Fifty Shades of Grey is not great literature?

But of course this wasnt my fault. I was in customer service mode. I was being nice and accommodating because thats what youre expected to do, both as a customer service worker and as a woman. You get used to saying Yes, of course, and Oh, how interesting. Plus, I literally couldnt leave when he talked to me. The furthest away I could get was behind the till.

What most customers understand is that customer service workers are fakers. Sure, sometimes were happy, sometimes we even enjoy the chatting but its also our job, so generally it shouldnt be taken to heart. But some men oh, they take it to heart, and they keep it buried deep in their aorta, even when two years have passed and you duck upstairs whenever they walk through the door.

Our health and safety plan in a situation like that is to send a Facebook message saying CALL THE SHOP! to the work groupchat, wait for a colleague to ring, then pretend the friend on the phone is an annoying customer who might take hours to deal with, hoping that the actual annoying/unstable/stalker customer will get disheartened and decide to leave.

This is not totally reassuring, however, when youre alone with a man who is wearing a mesh singlet and covered in swastika tattoos.

When whats selling is extremely weird

Cultural trends are reflected in what people buy. In 2016, for example, we sold what felt like billions of adult colouring books. Obviously, that year everyone was stressed as hell and very susceptible to suggestion. After Christmas, the colouring books left and never came back, a weird blip in the book universe.

Over the past few months, since the police killing of George Floyd and the political protests and riots that followed, the trend has been to buy books that confront and oppose racism. How to be an Anti-Racist, Me and White Supremacy, So You Want to Talk About Race, White Fragility, and books by James Baldwin, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Michelle Alexander and others have been hugely in demand we keep ordering them in, there are stacks put away as special customer orders, and yet there are never enough copies on the shelves.

Black Lives Matter March For Solidarity in Auckland on June 1, 2020 (Photo: Jihee Junn)

The buying habits at our bookshop are just a microcosm of whats going on in the world. In early June, both the New York Times list of bestselling non-fiction and Amazons bestsellers list were suddenly dominated by books addressing racism.

In the UK, Reni Eddo-Lodge (Why Im No Longer Talking to White People About Race) and Bernardine Evaristo (Girl, Woman, Other) became the first black British women to top the countrys non-fiction and fiction charts, respectively.

Its refreshing to see these changes, despite how late theyve come, despite the incredible discomfort, articulated by Reni Eddo-Lodge, that it took the killing of an innocent black man to drive such widespread interest and care. Still, when I see people lining up to buy these titles, it feels considerably better than when the queue was for Lost Ocean: An Inky Adventure & Colouring Book.

When it all gets too much

Books are vehicles for ideas, ideology, and politics, even when that wasnt the authors intent (think of when Ted Dawes Into the River was banned, or the recent controversy surrounding American Dirt).

While bookshops are generally politically neutral spaces, in which Richard Dawkins is equally as welcome as Eckhart Tolle, there are times when both booksellers and customers dont see it that way.

A customer I remember well came into the shop one night and turned John Keys biography face-down on the table before leaving in a hurry. She then emailed the shop to say that she found it both distasteful and mystifying that a small business like ours would propagate such a book. We replied that we didnt push a political agenda, that our staff hold a variety of viewpoints (although, really, were mainly a bunch of lefties). End of discussion.

Possibly not an accidental juxtaposition. Kim Dotcom tweeted this in 2014, commenting in fine company (Photo: Twitter)

Really, though, were not always neutral and agenda-less. Nearly half of my colleagues studied politics, were in the book world because we enjoy discussing ideas, and were low-wage earners of course we have views, not only about the world, but about the books we sell. On occasion, thats led to some perhaps less-than-ethical behaviour.

Jordan Petersons self-help book 12 (not 20) Rules for Life is a good example. After becoming well-known for his views on free speech and gender-neutral pronouns, Peterson was adopted as a mascot of the alt-right. Boxes upon boxes of his books arrived in our shop, and most staff werent thrilled.

So after selling dozens of copies to both Peterson fans and people simply intrigued by the title, a few of my colleagues had had enough and ended up hiding Petersons books in a cupboard behind the till. Well sell them if someone asks, they said, but were not going to advertise them on the shop floor.

Surely it isnt the place of booksellers to censor or interfere in consumer trends, is it? But, equally, were human, were political beings rather than customer service robots. And sometimes, we snap.

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Confessions of a jaded NZ bookseller - The Spinoff

Will the real fascist please stand up? – Fallbrook / Bonsall Villlage News

This week I listened to an interview on Public Broadcasting Service with Jason Stanley, a professor of philosophy at Yale and author of the book How Fascism Works. He defined fascism as an ideology based on power, loyalty and fear of the other where the other is defined ethnically, or by nationality or religion, and the leader represents us.

His position was that we are in danger of fascism by President Donald Trump. It was his assertion that the entire reason Department of Homeland Security went into Portland was not to protect their federal properties from being destroyed (as is their job) but rather it was President Trumps political plan to provoke the rioters and create a scene of chaos and violence for the TV screens so that he could appear as the strong man to protect you against opponents who threaten the values you hold dear. Stanley is voicing a leftist position.

Stanley did not address the other cities where rioters and looters have been terrorizing those cities in the absence of federal officers but did point out that there can be a fascist social and political movement in a democracy, which is what we are seeing across the world, in the U.S. and Brazil.

Stanley states the press is undermining democracy from within. He said the goal is to undermine the institutions and create new fascist institutions. That was interesting to me because while he is thinking President Trump is doing that by DHS going into Portland, I am thinking the left is doing that because they want to change or tear down some of our basic institutions.

So, the left and the right are in fear of the other as fascist. Merriam Webster defines fascism as A political philosophy, movement, or regime that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition.

The right believes the left is also practicing identity politics and exalting race and other identities above everything else above individualism and suppressing opposition and ideas. A good example of this is what is happening with censoring of conservatives on social media and by attacks from ANTIFA.

An early Antifa example is the uprising and protesting at Berkeley when conservative radio talk host and author Ben Shapiro was scheduled to speak in 2017.

Antifa wanted to cancel Shapiro because his ideas did not align with theirs. It is classic identity politics. The right was in danger of being attacked by the left.

A recent example is Bernell Trammell, age 60, a dreadlocked activist known for carrying handmade signs through the streets reading Vote Donald Trump 2020, and posting them on his storefront. He was gunned down by an unknown assailant on his sidewalk last Thursday afternoon, police said, according to the NY Post. I doubt we will see protests or riots over Mr. Trammells death.

This week I heard another well-known lesbian woman podcaster that was talking about how she was being canceled by the left because she wasnt acknowledging a persons proper group or identity. She said shes just tired of people being so demanding and sensitive. She was saying that people on the right have been far nicer and accepting of her.

The next thing to consider is intersectionality. This is a theoretical framework for understanding how aspects of a person's social and political identities (e.g., gender, sex, race, class, sexuality, religion, ability, physical appearance, height, etc.) might combine to create unique modes of discrimination and privilege.

What strikes me about identity politics and intersectionality is what clinical psychologist Jordan Peterson points to, that the natural conclusion of intersectionality is individualism. Furthermore, to attribute to an individual the attributes of that community on the basis of their racial identity is called racism. As if theyre homogeneous. Its the same with any group.

When you start identifying someone by all the groups they identify with, the possibilities are endless and at the end of it all is a unique individual.

We are all individuals and its antithetical to the idea of American individualism, where we believe that no matter who we are or where we came from that we can accomplish and go wherever our hard work will take us.

But somehow now, instead of being judged by our character as Martin Luther King Jr. spoke of, some in our culture are trying to reverse it and go backward. They are actually angry if you dont recognize and identify someone based on their skin color, or their gender. Why cant we just respect and honor everyone, no matter what their race, gender, class, religion, etc.?

It just seems like we are going backward.

Excerpt from:
Will the real fascist please stand up? - Fallbrook / Bonsall Villlage News

Dont bank on Britains foppish, lazy elites to save us from deep fakery – The Guardian

Technological advance is updating the motto of the 12th-century Assassins. Whereas the Ismaili sect said: Nothing is true, everything is permitted, the malicious, embittered, mentally disturbed and pornographically minded will soon make every truth a lie and every lie true.

We did not reach fake news saturation with the Brexit referendum and the Trump presidential campaign. We have barely tipped our toe in the dark waters. Artificial intelligence will allow smartphone users to generate synthetic voices and images that reach a Hollywood level of special effects at next to no cost and with minimum effort. If your enemies have video of you, they can make you appear in a porn scene so authentic only you will know its false. If they have a recording of your voice, they can have you mouthing racist slogans that could get you fired. Some are already doing it. Deep fake tools, such as FakeApp, are the beginning of an explosion in online lying that makes fake news indistinguishable from real.

Because we trust video as the most reliable part of our shared reality, we are likely to believe fakes initially or if it suits us and will go on believing until trust in a shared reality finally shatters. Jordan Peterson may not be a thinker all readers reach for, but when he launched a legal action in 2019 against a website that allowed users to generate believable audio of me saying absolutely anything they want me to say, he gave a warning thats worth remembering. How are we going to trust anything electronically mediated in the very near future? What do we do when anyone can imitate anyone else, for any reason that suits them?

To give you a bearing on where we are heading, watch the wriggles of the US right as it manoeuvres to downplay the death of George Floyd. At the end of June, one Winnie Heartstrong, a Republican candidate in Missouri, produced a dossier alleging that the video of his killing was a deep fake made up of composites and face swaps. Although Twitter and Facebook, the truths willing executioners, have found an audience for fantasies that George Floyd is not dead or that George Soros is behind the Black Lives Matter protests , its fair to say that even they could not make Heartstrongs heartless conspiracism take off.

Nina Schick invites you to imagine the world in five years time. By then, we will be so used to synthetically generated propaganda that millions will find any claim plausible and it will seem no more than sensible scepticism to refuse to acknowledge the real.

Schicks Deep Fakes and the Infocalypse is a short, sharp book that hits you like a punch in the stomach. She witnessed first hand the ability of Vladimir Putins Russia to manufacture reality during its invasion of Ukraine in 2014 and understands the consequences of the triumph of the Putin worldview. Unlike their 20th-century predecessors, dictatorial forces do not try to fool their peoples that they are creating a paradise on Earth the workers state, the 1,000-year Reich. Putinism in its broadest sense convinces the people that it doesnt matter if strongmen lie because everything is a lie, the system is rigged, democracy is a sham and all the news you hear that makes you doubt is a fraud. We may be liars, they concede, but so is everyone else and at least we lie for you. They offer hell on Earth instead of heaven on Earth and insist that only fools believe that the Earth can be made better.

Deep fake technology gives not only Russia but China, which is moving into information warfare as it tries to cover up its culpability for Covid-19, their most powerful tools yet. Advertisers will turn to it. So will criminals as they impersonate CEOs and persuade companies to hand over fortunes.

Many women can explain the future because they have already confronted deep fakery in their private lives. Even Hollywood stars have found they lack the resources to stop the distribution of synthetically generated pornographic films depicting them. Its a useless pursuit sighed Scarlett Johansson after her lawyers had tried and failed to protect her image. She went on to warn that any woman could become a target of amateur pornographers as the web became a vast wormhole of darkness.

Traditional defences of freedom of speech that I have long subscribed to are inadequate. You can say that war, colonialism, fascism and communism happened without the help of the web and we should calm down. Unfortunately, the speed of technological change is an argument against complacency. There were almost four centuries between the invention of the printing press in Europe and the development of photography in the 1830s and societies could adjust. There are 29 years between the oldest web page going up in 1991 and 4.57 billion people being online in 2020.

The need for government to adopt radical policies is obvious. But there is the urgent question of whether we can trust government and not only in dictatorships, where the state is the major source of fake news. Schick, like so many writers, concentrates on Trumps America and I cant find it in myself to blame them for being drawn to that moronic extravaganza. Yet I think we should be more frightened of the British elite. Its foppish laziness and abject cowardice exceeds anything on offer in Washington. A country whose security services were too frightened to investigate Russian interference in the Brexit referendum, whose civil service is stuffed with political appointees and whose TV regulators tear up their own impartiality rules to allow Putins propaganda station a licence, cannot protect the individual or society from the coming age of deep fakery.

As phoneys themselves, they will pretend to, of course. But theyll be faking it.

Nick Cohen is an Observer columnist

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Dont bank on Britains foppish, lazy elites to save us from deep fakery - The Guardian

Top 200 players in fantasy football for the 2020 NFL season – USA TODAY

USA TODAY Sports' Jarrett Bell breaks down the NFL's plan to prevent a potential COVID-19 outbreak. USA TODAY

As NFL teams are opening their training camps in preparation for the upcoming season,fantasy football leagues are beginning to make plans for their seasons as well.

To help you dominate your draft, USA TODAY Sports has just published its annual fantasy football preview issue.Inside, you'll find more than 275 capsule previews of players at every position -- along with their three-year stats and projections for 2020.

Also, check out our strategy articles, sleepers, breakout picks and anevaluation of the potential fantasy values in this year's exciting rookie class. And of course, there's the all-important draft cheat sheet -- with player rankings, both overall and by position.

Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey is the consensus No. 1 player in fantasy football for 2020 and one of six regional cover subjects for USA TODAY's fantasy football preview.(Photo: USA TODAY Sports)

Here are the top 200 overall players in fantasy football, according to the folks atFantasySharks.com. ($AV - auction value based on 12-team leagues with $200 cap)

(Recent up or down movement in the rankings indicated by or .)

Rank Pos Player Team Bye $AV

1 RB Christian McCaffrey CAR 13 $54

2 RB Saquon Barkley NYG 11 $44

3 RB Ezekiel Elliott DAL 10 $38

4 WR Michael Thomas NO 6 $34

5 RB Alvin Kamara NO 6 $38

6 WR Davante Adams GB 5 $33

7 RB Derrick Henry TEN 7 $35

8 RB Dalvin Cook MIN 7 $35

9 RB Aaron Jones GB 5 $35

10 QB Lamar Jackson BAL 8 $43

11 TE Travis Kelce KC 10 $28

12 WR Julio Jones ATL 10 $31

13 RB Austin Ekeler LAC 10 $31

14 QB Patrick Mahomes KC 10 $40

15 RB Kenyan Drake ARI 8 $30

16 RB Joe Mixon CIN 9 $31

17 WR DeAndre Hopkins ARI 8 $30

18 WR Tyreek Hill KC 10 $29

19 TE George Kittle SF 11 $26

20 RB Miles Sanders PHI 9 $27

21 RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire KC 10 $29

22 RB Nick Chubb CLE 9 $28

23 RB Josh Jacobs LV 6 $25

24 QB Deshaun Watson HOU 8 $27

25 RB Leonard Fournette JAC 7 $25

26 RB Todd Gurley ATL 10 $26

27 RB Raheem Mostert SF 11 $25

28 QB Dak Prescott DAL 10 $26

29 RB Le'Veon Bell NYJ 11 $24

30 RB Mark Ingram BAL 8 $19

31 WR Cooper Kupp LAR 9 $24

32 WR Allen Robinson CHI 11 $23

33 RB Devin Singletary BUF 11 $19

34 RB Jonathan Taylor IND 7 $24

35 WR Odell Beckham CLE 9 $23

36 WR Kenny Golladay DET 5 $24

37 RB David Johnson HOU 8 $20

38 WR Amari Cooper DAL 10 $20

39 RB Melvin Gordon DEN 8 $19

40 QB Russell Wilson SEA 6 $24

41 WR JuJu Smith-Schuster PIT 8 $20

42 WR Mike Evans TB 13 $23

43 RB James White NE 6 $18

44 RB James Conner PIT 8 $17

45 WR Chris Godwin TB 13 $21

46 RB Cam Akers LAR 9 $17

47 WR Adam Thielen MIN 7 $23

48 WR Robert Woods LAR 9 $20

49 WR DeVante Parker MIA 11 $21

50 WR Keenan Allen LAC 10 $22

Rank Pos Player Team Bye $AV

51 WR Tyler Lockett SEA 6 $21

52 WR D.J. Moore CAR 13 $17

53 WR A.J. Green CIN 9 $19

54 RB Kareem Hunt CLE 9 $18

55 TE Zach Ertz PHI 9 $18

56 WR A.J. Brown TEN 7 $20

57 WR T.Y. Hilton IND 7 $18

58 WR Calvin Ridley ATL 10 $17

59 WR Stefon Diggs BUF 11 $18

60 WR D.J. Chark JAC 7 $18

61 RB Kerryon Johnson DET 5 $13

62 WR Courtland Sutton DEN 8 $18

63 WR Tyler Boyd CIN 9 $17

64 WR Golden Tate NYG 11 $16

65 RB David Montgomery CHI 11 $12

66 TE Mark Andrews BAL 8 $18

67 RB Chris Carson SEA 6 $13

68 RB Tarik Cohen CHI 11 $13

69 WR Julian Edelman NE 6 $15

70 WR DK Metcalf SEA 6 $17

71 WR Michael Gallup DAL 10 $14

72 TE Jared Cook NO 6 $16

73 RB Jordan Howard MIA 11 $11

74 QB Aaron Rodgers GB 5 $20

75 QB Josh Allen BUF 11 $20

76 RB Ronald Jones TB 13 $11

77 QB Drew Brees NO 6 $20

78 WR Brandin Cooks HOU 8 $14

79 QB Carson Wentz PHI 9 $19

80 RB Derrius Guice WAS 8 $10

81 WR John Brown BUF 11 $14

82 QB Matt Ryan ATL 10 $19

83 WR Breshad Perriman NYJ 11 $12

84 WR Sterling Shepard NYG 11 $13

85 TE Austin Hooper CLE 9 $14

86 WR Terry McLaurin WAS 8 $12

87 QB Kyler Murray ARI 8 $17

88 TE Evan Engram NYG 11 $14

89 RB Adrian Peterson WAS 8 $10

90 WR Christian Kirk ARI 8 $11

91 WR Deebo Samuel SF 11 $11

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Top 200 players in fantasy football for the 2020 NFL season - USA TODAY

5-year-old boy severely injured after being run over during camping trip – East Idaho News

Jack Moser | Courtesy Jordan Peterson

ISLAND PARK A Pocatello child was severely injured Monday when a family camping trip turned into a parents worst nightmare.

Five-year-old Jack Moser was riding his bike at a campsite in Island Park when a truck hauling a trailer pulled through the campground, according to his uncle Jordan Peterson. He said Jack pulled off to the side, but when the trailer was next to him, Jack lost his balance, fell and was ran over by two tires.

There happened to be an ambulance coming from Hebgen Lake (Montana) going to Madison Memorial in Rexburg that saw the call come in, Peterson said. They had a patient in the back of the ambulance and the EMTs realized this is pretty serious. They were about two miles away and they ended up going (to the campground).

The paramedics took the other patient, Jack, and his mother, Amber, in the ambulance to Madison Memorial Hospital. Once there, he was airlifted to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center.

A firefighter was giving Amber a ride to EIRMC in a department vehicle that had lights and sirens on but on their way, Peterson said somebody failed to yield and hit the emergency vehicle.

It just so happened that another vehicle that was passing by was a nursing student who was graduating the next day, Peterson said. He and his kids were in the car and offered to give my sister a ride the rest of the way to Idaho Falls.

Courtesy Jordan Peterson

Jack lost over half of his blood volume by the time he arrived at EIRMC. He was intubated, sedated and flown to Primary Childrens Hospital in Salt Lake City where emergency surgery was performed to try and stop the bleeding.

Between Idaho Falls and Salt Lake, Jack received 11 units of blood products and platelets, so he has more donor blood in his body than he has his own, Peterson explained.

Doctors determined Jack has a broken pelvis, broken femur, damage to his colon and bladder and a laceration to his perineum, which is the underside between his legs. Hes already undergone several surgeries since the accident.

On top of everything, Jacks father, Jordan, isnt allowed to visit the hospital because the patient Amber and Jack rode with in the ambulance to Rexburg tested positive for COVID-19. Amber and Jack are being quarantined for 14 days.

Theres a lot of factors about this thing, Peterson said. Its not just one thing. Its everything. Theres so much going on its hard to comprehend.

Peterson said Jack, who is typically the happiest, most charming child, has a long road ahead of him.

Its not just this week or next week, this is going to be six months to a year at least of recovery time, Peterson said.

To help the Moser family, a GoFundMe acount has been set up and people can donate via Venmo.

Theres also a Jog for Jack! fundraiser Saturday from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. at Jriven Fitness, located at 669 W. Quinn No. 13. in Pocatello.

Courtesy Jordan Peterson

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5-year-old boy severely injured after being run over during camping trip - East Idaho News