Monday, May 1, 2017

Steven Glick: Students, Not JustControversial Speakers, Are Silenced Too

Steven Glick: Students, Not JustControversial Speakers, Are Silenced Too

Without free speech, even a college degree does not ensure an education.

     
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Heather Mac Donald made national news when protesters blocked her planned live talk at Claremont McKenna College, forcing her to deliver a shortened version via live stream instead. Charles Murray, Ben Shapiro, Ann Coulter and many others have recently faced similar problems after receiving invitations to speak on college campuses.
While students’ proclivity to prevent controversial speakers from sharing their message is concerning, what’s even more concerning is these students’ inclination to censor their own peers.
It’s not just high-profile speakers who are stifled through threats and intimidation: We students are silenced as well.
When I arrived on campus, I was immediately introduced to a new set of rules for social etiquette.
One of my first days at school, I referred to myself as a “freshman.” An older student overheard my conversation, and told me I should instead call myself a “first year,” as “freshman” is a gendered term and could be offensive to my classmates.
I was taught that white people shouldn’t listen to rap music because it’s cultural appropriation and could be offensive to my classmates. And so, to avoid social ostracism, the other freshmen and I dutifully changed the words we used so as not to offend: Introduce yourself with your name and gender pronouns; don’t call people “African American,” call them “Black”; use “queer” instead of “gay”; “differently abled” rather than “disabled” or “handicapped”; “Latinx,” not “Latino”; “womyn,” not “woman”; “you all,” not “you guys”; and never, ever ask someone, “Where are you from?”
As it turns out, almost anything could be offensive to my classmates: mad scientists,yachts, cupcakes, Speedos, dreamcatchers, hoop earrings, the Food Network, even America. Ultimately, I got fed up with the safe-space culture that dominates all activities on campus.
I began writing for the Claremont Independent — a student-run conservative paper at the Claremont Colleges — and became a vocal opponent of political correctness.
My classmates — as well as my former employer on campus — grew upset with my coverage of the over-the-top PC-policing and began to think up ways to silence me. I was frequently reported to the deans, and a petition even circulated asking the administration to expel me and my staff.
Part of what makes this culture so troubling is the number of double standards it engenders. “Marginalized” students perversely pursue “equality” by pulling groups perceived as privileged down. “Privileged” students are chastised for committing “microaggressions” against their marginalized peers, while marginalized students are free to commit blatant acts of racial or gender bias against those they deem privileged.
This behavior is excused because, in college, the definition of racism or sexism is “power plus prejudice.” Under this definition, only whites are capable of racism and men capable of sexism, because white men are the group in our country who are considered to hold relative power. As a result, any vengeful or discriminatory actions taken against white men are excusable because of their “privilege,” while any malicious acts (or even pointed questioning) directed at members of minority groups or women are labeled racist or sexist.
That’s true both outside and inside the classroom. The faculty at Pomona is incredibly unbalanced ideologically. Unsurprisingly, the curriculums are severely biased with dissenting views unwelcome. The number of class offerings shrinks dramatically for anyone unwilling to fully toe the progressive line. Several of my friends and I decide which classes to take based not on the course content or reading material, but instead based solely on which professors seem least likely to let political or racial biases affect classroom discussion and grading.
Two weeks ago, I tried to produce a video in which my peers would explain their opposition to Heather Mac Donald and describe the reasons they did not believe she should be allowed to speak on campus.
I stayed at the protest for nearly an hour, talking to as many students as I could. But students involved in the protest refused to answer any of my questions. Instead, they blocked my camera, pushed me and formed a wall around me to restrict my movement.
Following the Mac Donald debacle, school leaders once again stressed their commitment to “the exercise of free speech and academic freedom.” But what exactly does that commitment mean in 2017?
While national figures such as Heather Mac Donald have large audiences (online and otherwise) to ensure their opinions are heard, the same is not true for most students on campus.
What measures does a college take to ensure that all of its students have the opportunity to speak, to disagree, and to learn from opposing viewpoints, regardless of their sociodemographic characteristics?
And more importantly, since what schools are doing now clearly isn’t working, what measures are colleges willing to take going forward?
Most would agree that the exchange of competing ideas is the quintessential aspect of a liberal arts education. Unfortunately, it seems that such discussions are a relic of the past.
But it doesn’t have to be this way. Censorious radicals are loud, but they are not the majority, and theirs are not the only opinions that need to be heard.
It’s time for students to insist on free speech on our campuses. Because without free speech, even a college degree does not ensure an education.
Steven Glick is a senior majoring in economics at Pomona College and the editor in chief of the Claremont Independent, a magazine covering the colleges in Claremont, Calif. He is also the nephew of Freedom Center's Caroline Glick. Here he writes his opinion about what he calls a college “educashun.”

Libs Trying to Convince America Tucker Carlson is a Nazi, White Supremacist

Libs Trying to Convince America Tucker Carlson is a Nazi, White Supremacist

Is literally every single conservative a racist to liberals?

     
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Media Matters is trying to get you to believe that Tucker Carlson is suspicious. After Megyn Kelly left Fox News, one article explains, members of the so-called alt-right were chatting about whom they wanted to replace her. After just a little conversation, the alt-right members decided that the best replacement would be the bowtie-wearing pundit who earned his chops by writing for the The Weekly Standardand The New York Times Magazine and who appeared on PBS, CNN, and MSNBC.
“TUCKER FOR ANOTHER HOUR!” reads the thread’s top comment. “Then start spamming fox with emails and comments letting them know,” wrote one Redditor. “You can’t cuck the Tuck,” commented another.
Twenty-four hours later, the trolls seem to have gotten their way, with Fox News announcing that Carlson will take over Kelly’s 9 p.m. timeslot. Carlson -- a preppy son of privilege who has incongruously become cable news’s most favored host among neo-Nazis and white nationalists -- will now have a prime-time venue to continue giving Fox News a bigger foothold with the “alt-right” audience.
The article went on to say that certain alt-right leaders like Mike Cernovich said Carlson would “make FoxNews great again" and that some on the alt-right have made Carlson into memes:
Obviously, Media Matters is trying to make you believe Carlson's views are suspect since his fans are suspicious. In Logic 101, this is called an ad hominem attack: "When the source is viewed negatively because of its association with another person or group who is already viewed negatively."
Person 1 states that Y is true.
Person 2 also states that Y is true, and person 2 is a moron.
Therefore, person 1 must be a moron too.
This is a logical fallacy, and Americans aren't going to buy that Carlson is a racist just because he's supported by the alt-right. Sorry, libs. You'll have to try harder than that.
Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore at Flickr

NYC Public School Principal Banned All Textbooks Because they’re “antiquated.”

NYC Public School Principal Banned All Textbooks

Because they’re “antiquated.”

     
The Life Sciences Secondary School in Manhattan is now textbook-free thanks to Principal Kim Swanson and Assistant Principal Derek Premo, who feel books are too “antiquated” and need to be replaced with “modern technology.”
Students at the combination middle and high school now walk the halls among piles of books stacked on the floor and next to the emergency exits, all of which have been collected as of late last year. Some teachers hid their textbooks so they wouldn’t be confiscated. They are also telling students to grab some and take them home since they’re going to be thrown out anyway.
According to The New York Post, teachers say Swanson and Premo “really frown upon the use of books” and want to teach with new methods. However, the teachers are concerned the school can’t handle doing everything online:
“Most classrooms have only two computers, and not all are hooked up to the Internet. Our hands are tied, and not having books has not helped the cause.”
The Post also notes that the textbooks are in good condition and even includes “stacks of ‘Campbell Biology’” ($150 new) which is a college-level text formerly used in the school’s AP classes. Advanced students now just watch videos on their laptops.
Here's what a few students are saying:
“We used to use them a lot, but now teachers just put out worksheets,” said freshman Shahadat Hossain. “We don’t really get much homework, it’s mostly classwork.”
And a 10th- grader said: “We don’t use any textbooks. They give us packets. I saw the piles of books around and thought it was weird.”
Freshman Meresha Henry, 15, prefers “more modern” learning on the Internet. “The school system is advancing,” she said.
But 14-year-old Anthony Galindo is disappointed that books are considered obsolete.
“It’s really strange. Last year we didn’t have enough textbooks so we had to share. Now we don’t have any at all,” he said, adding: “I liked being able to take them home to study . . . In my government class, my teacher gives hand-written assignments.”
Michael Aciman, a spokesman for the Department of Education, seems to agree with the principal’s decision, stating the books are “outdated and no longer aligned to the school’s current curriculum or New York State Learning Standard.” He also said students have access to “current” books that are more “updated.” One faculty member called that “a blatant lie.”
The touted “New York State Learning Standard” must be pretty low, because this school is underperforming. Though high school students have an over 80% graduation rate, only 26% are college-ready. The middle schoolers also perform well below the city average, with on 5% passing state math tests and only 9% passing English.
But they're apparently super savvy with a Google search.
Photo credit: florian.b via Foter.com / CC BY-NC

Column So Over-the-Top with Trump Derangement, It (Almost) Seems Fake

Column So Over-the-Top with Trump Derangement, It (Almost) Seems Fake

Hyperbole shouldn't be the only tool in a writer's kit.

     
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SF Gate blogger and yoga instructor Mark Morford doesn't like Donald Trump. Hereally doesn't like him. Judging from his most recent column, which attempts to make sense of President Trump's first 100 days in the Oval Office, he might need to take a step away from the keyboard and toward a good counselor's office. He begins by asking, "Did you survive? It would appear you have survived."
After establishing that the person reading his words has survived the apocalypse of Trump's first 100 days, he gets to the heart of his angst:
It’s only been 100 days, but that’s a lifetime in Trump years. If disillusion is your measure, Trump is a runaway success. If moral heartache is the yardstick, we are miles high, and screaming doom. If this had all been a reality TV-show contest to see how quickly a single human could disembowel the national spirit, poison international goodwill and bring a pox upon all our houses, Trump has indeed proven to be the biggest loser.
Right now, there is, across the media spectrum, analysis, commentary, a number of outlets sort of half-heartedly attempting to take the “100 days” benchmark semi-seriously. As in, “Trump promised these 30 things in the first 100 days. How did he do?” and the like, as though he were an actual, functioning politician with actual, functioning ideas designed to improve the well-being of the nation.
He has nothing of the sort. He is just an ogre, the hell-mouth incarnate, a shockingly incompetent, weak-kneed, kindness-abhorring con man incapable of a single complex thought, a charlatan merely using the most powerful office in the land to rape the U.S. Treasury and launder mountains of cash through his own businesses. But wait, our president does “tell more untruths than any president in American history,” says Texas A&M political scientist George Edwards, editor of the scholarly journal Presidential Studies Quarterly. Does that count as an accomplishment?
So, is this the first time someone has referred to the President of the United States as the "hell-mouth incarnate?" I'd put money on the probability that it is. The piece gets even worse, believe it or not, but it says more about its unhinged, hate-spewing writer than it does about the President. The media have been living in La-La-land for the past 8 years, and this column is evidence that reality is sometimes a cold, harsh teacher.  Disappointed columnists could take a lesson from the rest of America and just suck it up, deal with the loss, and move on. But that would require them to acknowledge that the rest of America actually, you know, exists.
Read the rest of his piece here, if you want a good laugh or cry, depending on whether you see liberal tears as comic or depressing. Either way, Morford might want to add another literary tool to his arsenal other than hysterical hyperbole. And he might want to get some professional help.
Photo Credit: TorBakHopper at FlickR
​h/t Ricochet

JW: Federal Court Hearing Today on Jeh Johnson, Other DHS Officials Over...

Published on May 1, 2017

"We've been fighting the Obama administration for these emails forever, it seems like. And now we hope the Trump administration will make these records available to the American people as they're supposed to, under law." JW President Tom Fitton

via http://www.judicialwatch.org/press-ro...
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Knights of Malta find compromise after papal clash

Knights of Malta find compromise after papal clash

FILE PHOTO - Pope Francis meets Robert Matthew Festing, Prince and Grand Master of the Sovereign Order of Malta during a private audience at the Vatican
FILE PHOTO – Pope Francis (R) meets Robert Matthew Festing, former Grand Master of the Sovereign Order of Malta, during a private audience at the Vatican June 23, 2016. REUTERS/Gabriel Bouys/Pool/File Photo
ROME (Reuters) – The Knights of Malta, a Catholic chivalric order and global charity, elected a new, interim leader on Saturday to oversee a period of reform and restore calm to the organization after its recent row with the Vatican.
The previous grand master, Briton Matthew Festing, resigned in January after a month-long, highly public spat with the Vatican over the running of the group, which laid bare tensions between a reformist Pope Francis and his conservative critics.
In a secret ballot, 56 electors appointed Italian Giacomo Dalla Torre as Lieutenant of the Grand Master, giving him just a one-year mandate while reforms are carried out.
“Pope Francis has been informed by letter of the election result,” the Knights said in a statement.
The Vatican appointed a special delegate to run the Rome-based body following Festing’s departure and had pushed, behind the scenes, for the appointment of a compromise, interim leader.
Reformers, backed by the Vatican, want to re-vamp the order’s constitution to make its government more transparent and better able to respond to the massive growth it has seen in recent years. They also want to make it possible for commoners to reach top positions.
Under the current monarchical hierarchy, the top Knights are required to have noble lineage.
The organization has a multi-million dollar budget, 13,000 members, 80,000 volunteers and 20,000 paid medical staff running refugee camps, drug treatment centers, disaster relief programs and clinics around the world.
(Reporting by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Pope calls for end to violence, respect for human rights, in Venezuela

Pope calls for end to violence, respect for human rights, in Venezuela

Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead special audience for Catholic Action members in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican
Pope Francis waves as he arrives to lead special audience for Catholic Action members in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, April 30, 2017. REUTERS/Tony Gentile
ROME (Reuters) – Pope Francis called on Sunday for the respect of human rights and an end to violence in Venezuela, where nearly 30 people were killed in unrest this month.
Francis, speaking to tens of thousands of people in St. Peter’s Square for his weekly address, decried a “grave humanitarian, social , political and economic crisis that is exhausting the population”.
Venezuela’s opposition is demanding elections, autonomy for the legislature where they have a majority, a humanitarian aid channel from abroad to alleviate an economic crisis, and freedom for more than 100 activists jailed by President Nicolas Maduro’s government.
“I make a heartfelt appeal to the government and all components of Venezuelan society to avoid any more forms of violence, respect human rights and seek a negotiated solution …,” he said.
Supporters say Leopoldo Lopez, the jailed head of the hardline opposition Popular Will party, and others are political prisoners whose arrests symbolize Maduro’s lurch into dictatorship.
Maduro says all are behind bars for legitimate crimes, and calls Lopez, 45, a violent hothead intent on promoting a coup.
Vatican-led talks between the government and the opposition have broken down.
Francis told reporters on the plane returning from Cairo on Saturday that “very clear conditions” were necessary for the talks to resume.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Ros Russell)
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