Society's ChildS


Books

Flashback Liberal education and the moral homicide of America

Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus

Comment: Though written in 1991 this article is absolutely prophetic as to the current landscape of American universities.


A review of Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus by Dinesh D'Souza

[A] cultivated intellect, a delicate taste, a candid, equitable, dispassionate mind, a noble and courteous bearing in the conduct of life; these... are the objects of a University.
-John Henry Newman, The Idea of a University (1852)

The idea that the curriculum should be converted to any partisan purposes is a perversion of the ideal of the university. The objective of converting the curriculum into an instrument of social transformation (leftist, rightist, centrist, or whatever) is the very opposite of higher education.
-John Searle, "The Storm Over the Universities" (1991)

It was not long ago that these preeminently liberal propositions drawn from Cardinal Newman and the philosopher John Searle could have been embraced as mottos by the American academic establishment. This is not to say that our institutions of higher education necessarily lived up to the ideal that Newman enunciated, or that they always avoided the perversion against which Professor Searle warns. But the ability to recognize an ideal as an ideal, or a perversion as a perversion, had not yet atrophied. Indeed, until quite recently there was robust agreement about the intellectual and moral purpose of a liberal-arts education. Above all, there was a shared commitment to the ideal of disinterested scholarship devoted to the preservation and transmission of knowledge, pursued in a community free from ideological intimidation. If one fell short of the ideal, the ideal nevertheless continued to command respect and allegiance.

Comment: Just a sampling of the results of illiberal education today:


Pirates

Church congregation gives Rev. Robert Lee the boot after he goes full-millennial on national television

Rev Robert Lee
He was the great-great-great-great-nephew of Confederate Army General Robert E. Lee, and he felt it was his moral duty to speak out against his ancestor, "an idol of white supremacy, racism and hate." He said as much when he took the microphone near the end of the 2017 MTV Video Music Awards, when he introduced himself by a familiar-sounding name: Robert Lee IV.

Lee's speech at the VMAs on Aug. 27 followed the glitz and glam of red carpets and all-star performances by the likes of Lorde and Ed Sheeran. But his appearance quickly caught Internet fame as among the night's most memorable. As he appeared before the cameras, Lee stood in stark contrast to the sleek, geometric set behind him, dressed simply in a black cleric's shirt and collar. Soon he would introduce Susan Bro, whose daughter Heather Heyer had been killed 15 days before, after being mowed down by a car as she protested white supremacy in Charlottesville.


Comment: Did it ever cross this pastor's mind that perhaps his congregation and community are not actually racists and white supremacists, and that preaching and going on national television to decry their racism could be well understood as a betrayal in service to a myopic and divisive ideology (which he narcissisticly identifies as speaking in 'God's name')? Of course his 'flock' would want him out! Seems this millennial doesn't have a clue about the world in which he lives and shouldn't be in a leadership position for a community in the first place.


Attention

Congratulations? Finland indulging Daesh defectors with increased social benefits

Daesh terrorists with flag
© REUTERS/ Stringer/File Photo
Like its Nordic neighbors, Finland has "exported" its fair share of jihadists to the Middle East, who are now returning "home" after a streak of Daesh defeats. To tackle this problem, Finnish officials are considering providing apartments and social services to Daesh returnees out of turn.

Dozens of Finnish Daesh defectors may have picked a lucky lottery ticket, as Finnish officials are now seriously considering providing former terrorist organization members with extra social services to reintegrate back into society.

Finland's Interior Ministry called for cooperation between the relevant bodies to increase the level of integration by providing apartments and livelihoods to repentant jihadists, the Finnish daily Ilta-Sanomat reported.

No Entry

Utah hospital bans police contact with care staff after nurse's tyrannical arrest was caught on video

Alex Wubbles
When an incident of police misconduct is caught on video, and that video goes viral on the internet, there is hope that the officers will be held accountable for their actions in court-but there is never a guarantee that things will change. The only certainty seems to be that attention will eventually shift to the next officer who is caught on video abusing the same citizens they claim to "serve and protect."

The University of Utah Hospital was thrust into the spotlight last week after Body Cam footage was released that showed Detective Jeff Payne arrest Nurse Alex Wubbels on July 26. One of the most astonishing aspects of the encounter was that Wubbels did nothing wrong. She was defending the rights of an unconscious patient when police demanded a blood sample from him, and the fact that she told Payne "No" became probable cause for her arrest.

While Salt Lake City Police claimed they changed their procedures for how police officers interact with medical professionals, it should be noted that a criminal investigation into Payne's actions was not issued until the video of the encounter went viral-over one month after it happened.

Instead of waiting for the local police to take action, the University of Utah Hospital has responded by changing its policies and banning police officers from patient-care areas and from direct contact with nurses.

Comment: Nurse forcibly arrested for not allowing cop to draw blood of unconscious patient who was a victim - UPDATE: Cop now under criminal investigation


Heart - Black

Houston: Looters rob elderly woman's house with her dead body still floating inside

flood cleanup
Almost every house on this street has piles of soaked furniture, ruined belongings and soggy sheetrock out front.

Most homes had about 4 feet of water inside. One woman tells me she swam through 10 feet of flood water, and broke into this home trying to check on her elderly neighbor.

She says she will never forget what she saw.

Michele Poche is a trained paramedic, and was quick to act when her home and others on Meyerwood Drive started taking on water.

"Rescue mode, yeah," Poche said. "I knew my kids were safe. I wanted to take care of everyone else at that point."

One of the first people that came to mind: her 90-year-old neighbor, Agnes Stanley.

She had insisted on riding out the hurricane in her home.

Robot

Hawaii's fear of robots leads to examination of universal income

robots
© Tomohiro Ohsumi, Photo Illustration: Tom Hall/Bloomberg
Driverless trucks. Factory robots. Delivery drones. Virtual personal assistants.

As technological innovations increasingly edge into the workplace, many people fear that robots and machines are destined to take jobs that human beings have held for decades--a trend that is already happening in stores and factories around the country. For many affected workers, retraining might be out of reach -unavailable, unaffordable or inadequate.

What then?

Enter the idea of a universal basic income, the notion that everyone should be able to receive a stream of income to live on, regardless of their employment or economic status.

It isn't an idea that seems likely to gain traction nationally in the current political environment. But in some politically progressive corners of the country, including Hawaii and the San Francisco Bay area, the idea of distributing a guaranteed income has begun to gain support.

Comment: Robotics have come a long way in the past decade, but it sounds like Hawaii lawmakers are engaging in a bit of paranoid and detached fantasy. People who have the ability to work need to do so to fulfill very basic experiences as a part of being human. Resources should benefit communities, but not to the extent that it removes purpose.


Pistol

Chicago gun violence continues: 7 dead, 35 wounded in Labor Day weekend shootings

chicago violence labor day 2017
Chicago Police credited a pre-holiday round-up of troublemakers and 1,300 extra officers on the streets each day with a year-to-year decline in shootings over Labor Day weekend.

Between 11 p.m. Friday and 5 a.m. Tuesday, seven people were killed and 35 others were wounded in shootings across the city, according to Chicago Sun-Times records.

First Deputy Supt. Kevin Navarro, leading the department while Supt. Eddie Johnson recovers from kidney transplant surgery, said Monday night that violence was down from last year. By 8 p.m. Monday, CPD officers had seized more than 100 guns.

"That's more than one gun an hour so far," Navarro said during a brief press conference outside the 7th District headquarters in Englewood.

Attention

The dark side of Airbnb: Homeowners faced with financial nightmare after renters use properties illegally

Airbnb
© Yuya Shino / Reuters
Drew Grewal faced fines of nearly half a million dollars because his Miami Beach home was being listed illegally on Airbnb.

In Miami Beach - as in New York, San Diego and many other U.S. cities - short-term rentals of the kind facilitated by Airbnb, VRBO, Tripadvisor and others are strictly limited. Laws, fees and taxes vary regionally, but fines for violations are typically high. In Miami Beach, the fines run at $20,000 for a first violation and rise from there.

When the first notice arrived on Jan. 19, Grewal thought the city of Miami Beach must be mistaken. He hadn't used Airbnb as a host in years. Then it dawned on him that his long-term tenants might be responsible, despite a clause in their lease barring them from using his place for transient occupancy.

An agent checked up on the property for him and confirmed his suspicions. The yard had been trashed, with some patio furniture shredded. Somebody had installed electronic locks - presumably so guests could check in and out.
Airbnb
Long-term tenants rented out Drew Grewal's home to travelers on Airbnb, who left his back yard and patio furniture shredded.

Gear

Majority of Americans, including minorities, report they do not face discrimination

happy people
A new study conducted by a group of university professors found that most Americans actually report experiencing very little discrimination.

The study, led by Professor Brian Boutwell, consisted of reviewing response data from a survey of more than 14,000 Americans, finding that the vast majority claim to have "never" or "rarely" been a victim of discrimination.

"It was lower than what we might have thought going into it."

The results, relatively consistent across racial lines, found that only 25 percent of Americans responded "yes" to ever experiencing discrimination.

Comment: This report is probably surprising to many who have succumbed to the left's victimization and polarization agenda. The extent of the left's claims are not based in reality. While racism and various forms of discrimination exist and always will, the heavy majority of people actually get along just fine with one another.


Wolf

Edinburgh student who ridiculed head-chopping ISIS online being investigated for 'Islamophobia'

Robbie Travers islamophobia
© Robbie Travers/FacebookRobbie Travers is being investigated for Islamophobia aftermocking ISIS on Facebook
A law student has become subject of an investigation by his university after allegedly mocking Islamic State (formerly ISIL/ISIS) on social media and undermining minority students' safety.

Robbie Travers, a third-year-law student at Edinburgh University, is being investigated after an official who carried out the preliminary investigation claimed he had committed a "hate crime." No criminal investigation, however, has been opened by the police.

Travers posted the allegedly-racist material on Facebook in the aftermath of the US Air Force bombing an IS stronghold in Afghanistan back in April.

"Excellent news that the US administration and Trump ordered an accurate strike on an IS network of tunnels in Afghanistan.

"I'm glad we could bring these barbarians a step closer to collecting their 72 virgins," Travers wrote.

Although he acknowledged that his comments were highly opinionated, Travers denied they were of a racist nature.

Comment: The world has gone insane.