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UCLA professor suspended after refusing leniency for black students

UCLA campus
© UCLA Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images
A professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, says he was suspended from his job after refusing a student's request to effectively cancel final exams for black students amid protests over the death of George Floyd.

"I have been placed on involuntary leave for three weeks, and it looks like it may end up being more than that," Gordon Klein, who teaches accounting at the school, told The Post.

Klein — whom students slammed as "racist" and "dismissive" — was also placed under police protection at his Malibu home after receiving threats from critics furious over the email exchange, the Free Beacon reported.

Comment: The clown show continues as people who are clearly not racist are being labelled as such. There is no reason for anyone, regardless of skin color, to receive special treatment in regards to academic requirements simply because ideologically possessed mobs are protesting. The professor did the right thing, and for that he will be punished.

See also:


Cupcake Choco

The Color Revolution is Finally Home


Comment: The following is an analysis of current events in the US from a Serbian perspective, originally published here and translated for Sott.net by Svetlana Maksovic.


BLM floyd protest white house
When pro-Western liberals think of the West, they typically think of democracy, freedom of speech and human rights. The East, on the other hand, makes them think of dictatorship and repression. They generate misconceptions on the basis of media reports and propaganda that have been spread by global media for decades. If you ask them what they think about the enforcement of democracy by bombs, they will not have an answer to that question.

Their favorite subject is Soviet gulags, although they know little about them. The symbol of communist dictatorship is Stalin, and if you ask them about the bloody Lenin, you will hear only good things about him.

They can't stand Putin and they immediately have a nervous breakdown when his name is mentioned. It is very difficult to talk to them, especially if they are overzealous, and in most cases they are.

They are particularly intolerant of straightforward arguments. American democracy is their undisputed model and should be implemented everywhere. However, nothing is going well there anymore as democracy has just exploded in America. In the literal sense of the word. That does not make me happy at all. I know that the American establishment, in addition to bombing half the world - including my country - has destroyed its own state. And all this under the slogan of the so-called struggle for human rights.

But doctrine is one thing, statistics quite another...

Megaphone

Finland renames 'Negro Island' amid global anti-racism protests

negro island Neekerisaari
© Google Maps
The offensive islet as seen from space.
Despite lacking a history of colonialism or slavery, Finland has nonetheless decided to do its bit in the anti-racism drive gripping the Western world, by changing the "racist" name of a small island.

The landmass in the Pyhaselka Lake in eastern Finland bore the name Neekerisaari - which translates as "Negro Island." It has been designated an "exceptional case" by the state-run Institute for the Language of Finland (Kotus) due to its "absolutely derogatory" name, as official maps must not contain "racist expressions."

The name is now being removed from maps, and the island will be marked under by its older name, Seppanen.

Comment: Was anyone actually asking for this? Was anyone actually offended? While changing the name of the island seems harmless in and of itself, one has to wonder where the virtue signaling ends.


Magic Wand

Starbucks bows to online roasting and 'cancel' calls, changes dress code to declare 'Black Lives Matter'

starbucks broken window
© REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs
A damaged Starbucks window after a George Floyd protest in Manhattan, New York City, May 31, 2020.
Starbucks overrode its long-standing dress code and pledged to sponsor 'Black Lives Matter' merchandise after celebrities and activists threatened to 'cancel' the coffee chain for its perceived lack of wokeness.

The company announced on Friday it would sponsor 250,000 'BLM' shirts for its employees and allow buttons supporting the cause, reversing course after just one day of social media brigading.

The shirts are intended to "demonstrate our allyship and show we stand together in unity," the executives wrote in a letter on Friday, titled 'Standing together against racial injustice'.

Comment: It appears Starbucks still hasn't let learned the ultimate lesson when dealing with the outrage mob - the more you submit to their insane requests, the more insane their requests become. And they are never, EVER, satisfied.

See also:


No Entry

No-knock warrants banned in Louisville in law named for Breonna Taylor

justice for breonna taylor
© Darron Cummings/AP
A protester holds a sign during a June 1 protest over the deaths of George Floyd in Minneapolis and Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky.
The Louisville, Ky., Metro Council has voted unanimously to ban no-knock warrants. The legislation was titled Breonna's Law, in honor of a woman who was killed during a raid on her home earlier this year.

Her death became one of the rallying points in protests against police violence, along with that of George Floyd, who was killed by police in Minneapolis in May. Crowds all over the country have chanted her name.

Breonna Taylor was at home at her apartment with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, on March 13 when police arrived to execute a warrant in the middle of the night. Walker reached for his gun and fired at police, according to his lawyers, because he mistook the entering officers for a robber. Officers returned fire and Taylor, 26, was shot multiple times and later died.

Comment: See also:


Attention

COVID Censorship at ResearchGate: Facts about face coverings covered up?

censored banned denied
A Website that Makes Research Open to All?

My title has a question mark in it, and my first heading has a question mark in it. The question mark in the title means that there might be a question about whether censorship is actually taking place, while the second question mark means that there is definitely a question about the legitimacy of a mission-statement claim. A resolution of the second question mark would get rid of the first question mark, but I'll leave that resolution up to readers.

For readers who might not know, ResearchGate is a website that has established a professional network for scientists and researchers (with over 17 million members from all over the world) to share their publications, publish their data, and discuss their research. According to its terms of service, ResearchGate's mission is to connect the world of science and make research open to all.

You can check out the full terms of service here.

Attention

World faces worst food crisis for at least 50 years, UN warns

farmer harvests wheat
© Xinhua/Rex/Shutterstock
A farmer harvests wheat in Hebei province, China. The UN said harvests were healthy but food prices were rising as lockdown
The world stands on the brink of a food crisis worse than any seen for at least 50 years, the UN has warned as it urged governments to act swiftly to avoid disaster.

Better social protections for poor people are urgently needed as the looming recession following the coronavirus pandemic may put basic nutrition beyond their reach, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, said on Tuesday.

"Unless immediate action is taken, it is increasingly clear that there is an impending global food emergency that could have long-term impacts on hundreds of millions of children and adults," he said. "We need to act now to avoid the worst impacts of our efforts to control the pandemic."

Although harvests of staple crops are holding up, and the export bans and protectionism that experts feared have so far been largely avoided, the worst of the impacts of the pandemic and ensuing recession are yet to be felt. Guterres warned: "Even in countries with abundant food, we see risks of disruption in the food supply chain."

About 50 million people risk falling into extreme poverty this year owing to the pandemic, but the long-term effects will be even worse, as poor nutrition in childhood causes lifelong suffering. Already, one in five children around the world are stunted in their growth by the age of five, and millions more are likely to suffer the same fate if poverty rates soar.

Comment: See also:


Eye 1

Another day in paradise? Cops unable to respond to rapes, violence in CHAZ, armed anarchists allegedly extorting businesses

seattle police chief Carmen Best
Police have been unable to respond to "rapes, robberies, and all sorts of violent acts" occurring in Seattle's East Precinct, which authorities abandoned on Monday, leaving the area in the hands of activists who set up their own police-free "Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone" (CHAZ), Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best said Thursday.

The police chief is now working on a plan to reopen the precinct, telling reporters calls for service "have more than tripled."

"These are responses to emergency calls — rapes, robberies, and all sorts of violent acts that have been occurring in the area that we're not able to get to," she said.

Emergency response times in the area have tripled, she noted, going from just over five minutes to 18 minutes.

"If that is your mother, your sister, your cousin, your neighbor's kid that is being raped, robbed assaulted (or) otherwise victimized, you're not going to want to have to report that it took the police three times longer to get there to provide services to them," Best said.

Comment: See also:


Bullseye

Anonymous Berkeley professor shreds Black Lives Matter injustice narrative

Black lives matter
An anonymous history professor at U.C. Berkeley has penned an open letter against the current narratives of racial injustice underpinning the BLM movement and ongoing protests over the death of George Floyd.

Its authenticity was confirmed by Kentucky State University Assistant Professor of Political Science, Wilfred Reilley, who says he was sent a copy of the letter along with Stanford University economist Thomas Sowell.


Chalkboard

Massachusetts school district gets rid of art, music and PE teachers for coming school year

empty classroom
"When push comes to shove to make cuts, education is on the cut list."

Randolph Public School District, located in the Greater Boston, Massachusetts region, has cut their entire K-12 arts, music, and physical education (PE) programs and staff from their 2020-21 budget. In a district with only 250 teachers, at least 25 teachers and other workers were given RIF (reduction in force) notices this week. This already comes after extraordinary losses, with the Washington Post reporting in early May that the district told "dozens of workers — including teaching aides and food service staff [...] they will be furloughed full time or part time."

While the severity of these cuts may be particularly shocking, with the elimination of entire essential departments, Randolph is far from alone in the impact of budget cuts. With anticipated statewide cuts of up to 10 percent in Massachusetts, the nearby Public Schools of Brookline is facing as many as 300 pink slips for this coming school year, in a district with only 645 teachers. The city of Brookline projects that their deficit will be $12.8 million, and will cut $6.3 million of this total from their education budget.