Society's Child
Dear Provost Susan Jeffords,
I'm writing to you today to resign as assistant professor of philosophy at Portland State University.
Over the last decade, it has been my privilege to teach at the university. My specialties are critical thinking, ethics and the Socratic method, and I teach classes like Science and Pseudoscience and The Philosophy of Education. But in addition to exploring classic philosophers and traditional texts, I've invited a wide range of guest lecturers to address my classes, from Flat-Earthers to Christian apologists to global climate skeptics to Occupy Wall Street advocates. I'm proud of my work.
I invited those speakers not because I agreed with their worldviews, but primarily because I didn't. From those messy and difficult conversations, I've seen the best of what our students can achieve: questioning beliefs while respecting believers; staying even-tempered in challenging circumstances; and even changing their minds.
I never once believed — nor do I now — that the purpose of instruction was to lead my students to a particular conclusion. Rather, I sought to create the conditions for rigorous thought; to help them gain the tools to hunt and furrow for their own conclusions. This is why I became a teacher and why I love teaching.
Rescuers were called out after the explosion echoed through the streets at around 6.55am. They say it originated from a family apartment on the third floor of the building, and that as many as 30 other apartments had been damaged. Windows in neighboring houses were shattered, while shrapnel peppered cars parked outside.
Health officials in the city, located just outside the capital, Moscow, confirmed that at least thirteen people had been injured and that all victims had been hospitalized. Two victims are now understood to have died. Among those rescued from the building were two children aged between five and 11, who are understood to be in a stable condition and are receiving outpatient care.
Comment: Explosions and fires have been reported across much of the planet in recent months - not just in Russia - and one can't help but wonder, for at least some of them, is the cause the same? And just what exactly is causing them?
- Explosions and large industrial fire in Kidderminster, England - nearby residents evacuated (also today, 8th September)
- Massive fire engulfs high-rise residential building in Milan (29th August)
- Huge fire and explosion at industrial estate in UK's Leamington Spa (27th August)
- Fire tears through Chinese skyscraper as debris falls onto streets below (27th August)
- Passenger bus explodes in central Russian city of Voronezh (12th August)
- Gas explosion destroys hotel in Russian Black Sea resort town, 1 dead, 5 injured (12th July)
- Undersea gas pipeline rupture causes fire in Gulf of Mexico (3rd July)
- Huge explosion & fire underneath tube station in London (28th June)
- Fire at martial arts centre in China kills 18, mostly children (25th June)
- Scottish Dark Sky Observatory destroyed in suspicious fire (24th June)
- Fire at medical marijuana lab in Italy kills 1, injures 3 (8th May)
- Massive fire breaks out at Ambernath chemical factory, India (8th May)
- Fire rips through flat in Canary Wharf tower block which reportedly has same cladding as deadly Grenfell fire (7th May)
- 82 dead in fire after 'oxygen tanks explode' at Covid hospital in Iraq (25th April)
- Fire kills 55,000 animals at one of Germany's biggest pig farms (1st April)
- Massive explosion hits Balongan oil refinery in Indonesia (29th March)
Fire crews were swiftly dispatched to an industrial unit in the Worcestershire town after explosions were reported on Wednesday afternoon.
Video footage showed what appeared to be a burning factory, with a column of smoke rising over residential neighbourhoods nearby. The scene has been described as "absolute chaos" by locals.
Comment: Other fires and explosions that occurred in just the last few months:
- Fire tears through Chinese skyscraper as debris falls onto streets below
- Massive fire engulfs high-rise residential building in Milan
- Huge fire and explosion at industrial estate in UK's Leamington Spa
- Huge explosion & fire underneath tube station in London
- Massive explosion hits Balongan oil refinery in Indonesia
- Fire kills 55,000 animals at one of Germany's biggest pig farms
- Fire rips through flat in Canary Wharf tower block which reportedly has same cladding as deadly Grenfell fire
- Fire at medical marijuana lab in Italy kills 1, injures 3
- Massive fire breaks out at Ambernath chemical factory, India
On Monday, Judge Michael Oster of Butler county issued an order that sided with West Chester Hospital, citing a lack of "convincing evidence" that the drug - used in small doses in humans against external parasites such as headlice, and in larger doses for animals including cows and horses - could significantly improve the patient's condition.
The patient, Jeffrey Smith, was admitted to intensive care on 15 July. He has been on a ventilator since 1 August.
At a hearing on Thursday, Julie Smith, his wife, testified that neither she nor her husband were vaccinated against Covid-19. "We didn't feel confident [the vaccine] had been out long enough."
As Smith's condition deteriorated, his wife reached out to Fred Wagshul, a physician and founder member of the Front Line Covid-19 Critical Care Alliance, a nonprofit that promotes ivermectin as a preventative treatment. According to Oster's order, Wagshul, who does not have medical privileges at West Chester Hospital, prescribed 21 days of the medication without having seen Jeffrey Smith.
Comment: There is a lot of support for ivermectin taken at an appropriate dosage. Once again, it is bias that passes for knowledge - especially from an uninformed court perspective.
See also:
- Australia's ivermectin imports have increased tenfold, MPs lobby for its approval as a coronavirus treatment
- Indian Bar Association serves legal notice on WHO scientist who suppressed data on Ivermectin for COVID
- Covid deaths plunge after Mexico City introduces ivermectin, hospitalizations down 76%
- Top Yale Doctor/Researcher: 'Ivermectin works,' including for long-haul COVID
- Ivermectin's success in battling COVID-19
- YouTube removes U.S. Senate committee hearing videos discussing ivermectin as early COVID-19 treatment
The report released this week by Policy Matters Ohio, titled the State of Working Ohio 2021, showed that inconsistencies in assistance from federal and state administrations limited the effectiveness of relief plans like unemployment assistance.
While the study also showed that financial injections like supplemental unemployment, aid packages and direct stimulus payments "likely prevented the recession from dragging on months longer" in the state, the fact that they were one-time deals or deals that were taken away before the pandemic's end brought progress to an end as well.
Comment: Who's calculating the 'Cost' Virus? Any vaccine for that?
These were just some of the blunders and oversights that helped six highly dangerous Palestinian security prisoners tunnel out of one of Israel's most secure prisons in the early hours of Monday and evade capture for a day and counting.
Hebrew media reports detailed the laundry list of missed clues and mess-ups, as authorities vowed to both collar the escapees and fix holes they exploited to break free.
A day before the breakout, the most senior prisoner of the group, Zakaria Zubeidi, requested a transfer into the cell where the five other prisoners were located, Channel 12 news reported, adding that the transfer was accepted without any red flags raised. The Israel Prisons Service typically separates prisoners based on their terror group affiliation, but Israel did not have any intelligence that an escape was being planned, the network said.
Comment: Someday it will be a movie.
Abbott made his comments during a press conference in which he addressed how the law applies to instances of rape, according to a local NBC News station.
He said that the new law, which bans all abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, allows victims of rape up to six weeks to get an abortion, arguing that it "does not do [forcing victims to have their assaulter's child]," the news outlet reported. Abbott said, according to KXAN:
"Let's be clear: rape is a crime. And Texas will work tirelessly to make sure that we eliminate all rapists from the streets of Texas by aggressively going out and arresting them and prosecuting them and getting them off the streets."The law has been widely criticized by pro-choice advocates. President Biden last week condemned the law, saying it will "significantly impair" women's access to health care.
Comment: Governor Greg Abbott shakes up the status quo with more legislation changes:
Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday signed into law a GOP-led bill that includes some of the most comprehensive voting-reform measures in the country.See also:
State Democratic lawmakers had for months attempted to block the passage of the bill, even leaving the state to keep their Republican counterparts from having enough Assembly members to hold a vote.
Even before Abbott's signing, several groups, largely liberal leaning, opposed the new restrictions on mail-in voting and other balloting and mounted court challenges.
- Texas GOP's voting integrity bill passes key House vote
- Texas governor issues executive order banning vaccine mandates, is immediately overturned by judge
- Texas governor pushing to increase penalties for crimes against cops and extend hate crime protections to them
- Texas Governor Abbot announces end of mask mandate, state to be '100% open' March 10
- Texas House advances GOP-backed election security bill achieving quorum
- 'Wall of vehicles': Texas police to help border patrol stop caravan migrants
An article in today's Svenska Dagbladet, a Swedish broadsheet, observes:
It seems like an upside-down world all of a sudden: that the Danes, who at the start of the pandemic gave Swedish travellers the cold shoulder on the Öresund bridge and told them to turn back because Swedish Covid restrictions were too mild, are now letting go of the reins altogether. - SVENSKA DAGBLADET
Warm, still, autumn weather has meant wind farms have not generated as much power as normal, while soaring prices have made it too costly to rely on gas.
As a result, National Grid ESO - which is responsible for balancing the UK's electricity supply - confirmed coal was providing 3% of national power.
It said it asked EDF to fire up West Burton A, which had been on standby.
On Tuesday, the use of coal returned to 2.2% of the UK's electricity generation.
Comment: Back in 2018, when record cold hit the UK and the country struggled to supply power to people's homes, Russia bailed them out with multiple shipments of desperately needed gas. Perhaps that could be at least one positive outcome from the UK's unsolved energy crisis: that UK citizens will see the advantages of friendly relations with Moscow and its ample supply of affordable and reliable gas.
Our planet needs to have reliable sources of energy because we appear to be heading into another ice age: Texas cold snap linked to 40 years of increasing snowfall in Arctic & disruptions in stratospheric polar vortex - increase in extreme cold events likely - study
The actual number was 2 per cent.
Whoops!
Comment: The rabid censorship and smearing of viable alternatives to Covid vaccination continues (and their stories get less and less believable all the time).
See also:
- 'They're making s*** up': Joe Rogan lashes out at CNN's misinformation about him taking "horse dewormer"
- 'Cheers' star Kirstie Alley, 70, says she used Ivermectin, Joe Rogan protocol to treat COVID and recovered in 12 days
- Joe Rogan gets COVID-19: "I only really had one bad day"
- Rand Paul: 'Hatred for Trump' blocking research into ivermectin as COVID-19 treatment
- The unmistakable ivermectin miracle in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh
- 'For $1/day'... Double-blind ivermectin study reveals COVID patients recover more quickly, are less infectious
- Ivermectin's success in battling COVID-19
- Bill Maher slams tech giants for limiting COVID-19 info: 'Ivermectin isn't a registered Republican'
- Covid deaths plunge after Mexico City introduces ivermectin, hospitalizations down 76%















Comment: See also: