Society's ChildS

NPC

Homonationalism? Amherst College's leftist Common Language Guide sparks free speech debate

Protesters in Berkeley
© Reuters / Stephen LamProtesters in Berkeley, 2017
Massachusetts' Amherst College has drawn criticism for publishing a 'language guide' to the latest social justice buzzwords. The ensuing fiasco is the latest battle in the neverending war over free speech on America's campuses.

The college's Office of Diversity circulated a 'Common Language Guide' last week. Flicking through its pages, the guide is an exhaustive list of the latest, politically correct, university-approved terms to describe pretty much everything.

Predictably, much of the guide's pages are devoted to issues of class, race, gender, and sexuality, all covered from the furthest left position possible. From 'Cultural Appropriation' to 'Biological Determinism,' every social justice box is ticked. Did you know that "women cannot be 'just as sexist as men,'" because 'Reverse Oppression' is not real? And when LGBT people's achievements in the military are celebrated, that's a blatant case of 'Homonationalism.'

Attention

Measles hysteria grips New York suburb as unvaccinated children get banned from public spaces

measles vaccine
© Brian Snyder / Reuters
A New York suburb has banned children not vaccinated against measles from public spaces, such as schools and shopping malls, as it fights the state's worst outbreak in decades of the potentially deadly disease.

Rockland County declared a state of emergency on Tuesday and said the ban would remain in place for 30 days or until unvaccinated children get the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) shot.

The Rockland announcement follows measles outbreaks in California, Illinois, Texas and Washington and is part of a global resurgence of the viral infection, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"We will not sit idly by while children in our community are at risk," County Executive Ed Day said in a statement. "This is a public health crisis, and it is time to sound the alarm."

Comment: It'll be interesting to see how officials enforce this ban. Will health officials take up posts at every church and shopping mall in the area asking for vaccination records? This is madness.


Blackbox

No one is asking this question of academics on campus, so we did

McGill University
McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
We are students, academics and medical science researchers at the University of Alberta. We've had our eye on the state of academic freedom in Canada for years, in large part due to our experiences serving on various academic-governance bodies. In mid-2017, we began to wonder if there was any way we could quantify free speech on campus. Was there a threat? Was it widespread-or just a localized phenomenon that characterized elite American liberal-arts schools (which is where most of the most widely shared anecdotes are rooted)? Having just observed Bret Weinstein's ordeal at Evergreen State College and Jordan Peterson's fight for free speech at the University of Toronto, we wanted to see if concerns in this area were shared by academics at other institutions.

So we decided to start asking questions. And in the process, we collected some interesting statistics. For example, 39% of Canadian academic respondents to our survey said that if they had more academic freedom, their students would receive a better education. We also found out how difficult it could be to ask even simple questions that touch on such a highly charged topic.

In August, 2017, we formulated our survey questions and got feedback from others, which helped us fine-tune their wording. Consistent with our training, we wrote up the study design and asked our university's research ethics office to review it. This was technically research on "human subjects." And even though we were not collecting or publishing personally identifiable details, we wanted to cross the T's and dot the I's. Our research ethics office asked us to explain the questions we wanted to ask. And then things went sideways.

The research ethics office told us that they couldn't even look at our study because it was out of its jurisdiction. We disagreed: As a matter of policy, they really should want to help make research more ethical; moreover, we were students at the university, and the resources they offered should be available as much to us as to anyone else. So we appealed-more or less begging them to have a look. We thought we may at some point want to publish our results academically, and the research ethics office serves as a gatekeeper to academic publication.

Comment: See also:


Black Cat

Chicago Police Union wants federal investigation into Kim Foxx's handling of case after she exchanged texts with Smollett's relatives [Update]

foxx smollett
Attorney Kim Fox (L) Jussie Smollet (R)
Crooked Chicago prosecutors dropped the charges against hate hoaxer Jussie Smollett on Tuesday.

Chicago police are furious over state's attorney Kim Foxx's decision to drop all charges against Jussie Smollett.

Comment: Breitbart has dug up a George Soros-Kim Foxx connection:
Soros has spent heavily on backing "progressive" candidates for local prosecutorial offices across the nation, following the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2014, which alleged that black defendants have been treated unfairly by the justice system.

Foxx ran in 2016 against incumbent Anita Alvarez, who faced intense public controversy over the 2014 murder of a black teenager, LaQuan McDonald, by Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke.

Foxx ran on a platform of criminal justice reform, telling local ABC News affiliate WLS-7 that she wanted to focus on "restoring faith in our criminal justice system" and "bridging the divide between the community and law enforcement."

As chicagoist.com reported in 2016, Alvarez received donations from the "old-boy" network, but Foxx found other donors, including Soros:
But Kim Foxx has also found two other sources of cash, in the form of twin $300,000 donations to a Super PAC supporting her called Illinois Safety & Justice. The sole donors to the PAC are neoliberal superdonor and conservative-boogeyman George Soros and a "dark-money" group called Civic Participation Action Fund. A Super PAC is a fundraising group, created by the 2010 Supreme Court Citizens United decision, that can raise as much money as they want for any candidate or cause-as long as they don't coordinate on any level with political campaigns, which have much smaller campaign limits.
State campaign finance records show that Soros personally contributed a total of $333,000 to Foxx's super PAC before the March 15, 2016 primary was over, and an additional $75,000 after she won.

Foxx defeated Alvarez in the primary, and won easily in the fall.

As Breitbart News has reported extensively, Soros has been intervening in local races for prosecutor, state's attorney, and district attorney - often backing left-wing Democrats against other Democrats in doing so.

Breitbart News reported in 2018 (original links):
Left-wing billionaire George Soros continues to pour millions of dollars into hitherto-obscure local races for district attorney, backing "progressive" candidates who are opposing more traditional law-and-order prosecutors.

...

The Los Angeles Times reported earlier this month that Soros is involved in 21 district attorney races across the country - and that is just the spending that is known. He is also contributing money to non-profit organizations that are engaged in certain political activities but are not required to report donations.
Foxx's office explained the decision to drop charges against Smollett by referring to his previous community service. The decision to drop the charges was officially made by Joe Magats, first assistant state's attorney.
'Whitewash of justice': Chicago prosecutors drop charges against Jussie Smollett - Mayor blasts decision


No Entry

At Cambridge University, 'inclusivity' means disinviting Jordan Peterson

Jordan Peterson
© Gage Skidmore/Jordan PetersonDr. Jordan Peterson
He has sent so many cliques and groups into titters of anger, and the indignant have attempted to turn on him. The university environment should be the last place where dangerous ideas, and views, are stifled and stomped upon. In actual fact, we are seeing the reverse; from students unions to middle- and upper-managerial parasites and administrators, the contrarian idea must be boxed, the controversial speaker silenced and sent beyond the pale. Dissent and disagreement are lethal toxin to such affected notions as "diversity" and "inclusiveness".

It should be very clear that meaningless terms such as diversity and inclusiveness do very little to the content of actual intellectual conversation. Ideas are there to be debated, not accepted by high caste strictures. The modern academic environment suggests something quite opposite: a policing rationale, an insistence on thought control that is insidious and all too common in managed structures. When incorporated into the university structure, the bureaucrat takes precedence over the intellectual, the mindless cherry picker over the polymath. The more ideas you have, the more of a threat you will be, requiring regulation and the occasional ostracising. In broader public spaces, this may even require you losing a platform altogether.

Which leads us, then, to Jordan Peterson, agent provocateur and psychology professor at University of Toronto who was led to believe that he would be taking up residence for two months at the Faculty of Divinity in Cambridge University in Michaelmas Term. In a statement to the Cambridge student newspaper, Varsity, a University spokesperson confirmed "that Jordan Peterson requested a visiting fellowship, and an initial offer has been rescinded after a further review."

Comment: See also:


Target

I am sick of being silenced by social-justice warriors whose self-assurance is only matched by their ignorance

Jordan Peterson
© Chris Williamson/Getty Images
Cambridge University's deplorable decision to withdraw its offer of a visiting fellowship to Jordan Peterson is yet more evidence that, contrary to time-honoured practice, students are now telling their teachers what to think and do. The abominable blizzard of snowflakes has university authorities frozen with fear, and winter is coming for free speech.

A Canadian professor of psychology, Peterson has unfashionable views on gender, masculinity and political correctness. To the horror of his critics, he has drawn the kind of crowds normally associated with rock stars, not bearded academics discussing Genesis (the Bible book, not the band).

He came to fame in 2016 when he opposed an anti-discrimination law requiring him to use the preferred pronouns of his students and colleagues. Learning on the grapevine last week that he was no longer welcome, Peterson said he had fallen foul of the "diversity, equality and inclusivity mob", and rebuked Cambridge for its "cowardly" decision.

Comment: Well said. What these pathetically entitled students need is a serious wake-up call. If they expect to be insulated from opinions they don't like for their entire lives, they're in for a tremendously rude awakening. And it couldn't happen too soon.

See also:


Attention

CNN drops contributor Mark Geragos after accusation of 'co-conspirator' ties to Michael Avenatti extortion scheme

Mark Geragos CNN
© CNNMark Geragos
Mark Geragos, an attorney who became famous for defending celebrities and trying high-profile cases, has reportedly been fired as a contributor to CNN after multiple media outlets reported he is a "co-conspirator" in a lawsuit filed against attorney Michael Avenatti.

"Mr. Avenatti and Mr. Geragos, the alleged co-conspirator, met with lawyers for Nike in New York on March 19 and threatened to release damaging information unless the company agreed to pay the two lawyers millions of dollars and another $1.5 million to the client Avenatti claimed to represent," the claim filed in New York stated, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Avenatti was arrested Monday and charged with wire fraud, bank fraud and allegedly trying to extort $20 million from Nike, according to the Associated Press. Geragos' involvement in the alleged federal extortion case is unknown, and he hasn't been charged with any crime.

Comment: So CNN is fine having a contributor who defends murderers, pedophiles and brutal women-beaters, but if he's possible suspect in an extortion case, he's crossed the line. Hardly surprising.

See also: #CreepyPornLawyer Michael Avenatti's attempted Nike extortion


Dollar Gold

Duke University settles doctored data lawsuit for $112.5 million

Duke University
In one of the largest-ever such agreements with an academic institution, Duke University, in Durham, North Carolina, has settled a whistleblower lawsuit alleging that lung researchers there used fake data in National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant applications.

The settlement, for a case brought under the False Claims Act (FCA), is for $112.5 million, according to attorneys for the whistleblower who brought the case. The act allows for whistleblowers to receive substantial payouts. Under the terms of the settlement, Joseph Thomas, a former biologist who worked in the department where the data were faked, will receive 30% of the $112.5 million. The rest will be paid to the US government.

"I am glad that the legal system has helped to return research funding to the United States government and shine a light on the importance of research integrity," Thomas told Medscape Medical News. He said he is "hopeful that this case bodes well for the future of scientific research."

Comment: Is it any wonder trust in medical research is waning? Make no mistake, this is not an isolated incident. For every researcher or institution that gets caught, there are dozens, if not hundreds, that get away with fraud. When science is corrupted to this level, how long before the entire facade collapses and we're faced with the undeniable reality that we don't have a clue what's really going on?

See also:


Bullseye

Saudi Arabia will soon break its own record for number of executions

Riyadh Skyline
© CC BY-SA 4.0 / B.alotaby
With 43 people already executed in Saudi Arabia in the first few months of 2019, the kingdom is well on its way to setting a new record for the greatest number of executions in a year, according to reports.

Of the 43 executed so far, 21 were beheaded for drug offenses, while the remainder were put to death for crimes including treason, renouncing Islam, adultery, murder, burglary, rape, espionage and terrorism, according to the Gulf Times.

Should the Riyadh maintain its present rate, experts have projected that a whopping 172 executions will have taken place by the end of 2019 - the highest total recorded in Saudi Arabia since human rights groups first began tracking the data in the early 2000s.

According to Business Insider, the 43 recorded executions in 2019 took place between January 1 and March 13, with the most recent beheading involving a Syrian man who was condemned to death for smuggling amphetamine pills.

Comment: Saudi Arabia is considered 'progressive' now?


Wolf

#CreepyPornLawyer Michael Avenatti's attempted Nike extortion

avenatti nike extortion
© Stephanie Keith/Getty ImagesMichael Avenatti speaks to the media after being arrested for allegedly trying to extort Nike for $15-$25 million on March 25, 2019 in New York City.
Stormy Daniels' ex-lawyer Michael Avenatti arrested for alleged $20 million extortion scheme against Nike, embezzling client's money, defrauding bank Dan Mangan,Kevin Breuninger

Celebrity lawyer Michael Avenatti was arrested Monday in New York City on charges of trying to extort up to $25 million from Nike by threatening to publicize claims that company employees authorized payments to the families of top high school basketball players.

Avenatti also was separately charged in a second federal case in Los Angeles with embezzling a client's money "in order to pay his own expenses and debts" and those of his law firm and coffee company, and of "defrauding a bank in Mississippi," prosecutors said.

Comment: ZeroHedge adds some juicy bits:
Avenatti's most famous client revealed in a statement published Monday afternoon that she was "saddened, not shocked" by news of Avenatti's indictment, adding that she fired him after discovering that he had dealt with her in an "extremely dishonest" way.


With Avenatti in cuffs, and the Russia collusion narrative finally, definitively debunked, Michael Avenatti's star turn as a CNN stalwart are fading into the distance...except for the CNN hosts who feted him at their Hamptons estates.


As one reporter pointed out, the funniest part of the NY Avenatti indictment is the seemingly obvious (for everyone but Avenatti) setup engineered by Nike's lawyers.