spot_img
Monday, December 23, 2024
spot_img
HomeHappening Now"Don't expect better college presidents" until they are

“Don't expect better college presidents” until they are

-

A leading American newspaper has called on American colleges to “eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion [DEI] bureaucracies and policies”.

“The moral degeneration of the presidents of three prestigious universities who recently refused to condemn calls for genocide is clearly symptomatic of a larger problem,” the magazine's editors. Washington Examiner he wrote on sunday. “The long-term solution must be to eliminate the bureaucracies and policies of diversity, equity and inclusion, root and branch, from higher education.”

The paper called on university boards to “fire presidents who will not act to curb the proliferation of anti-Semitic harassment on campus,” adding that the boards “should insist that DEI regimes be dismantled “.

However, the editors point out, it is these same boards that have been enabling DEI on campuses across the country.

“Congress should pull its leash by making federal funding contingent on the proper application of First Amendment free speech principles,” they stated.

The examiner's editors criticized university leaders for lacking “an adequate ethical framework to ensure real academic freedom”.

“This appalling shortcoming was on full display at a Dec. 5 hearing of the House Education and Workforce Committee when chairmen Claudine Gay of Harvard, Sally Kornbluth of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Elizabeth Magill of the University of Pennsylvania were despicably wrong on a simple question of whether they would discipline students who called for the genocide of the Jews,” they write. “All three used the same words, 'depend[ing] about the context', refusing to answer yes or no. They sniffed even when Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) gave them second and third chances to claim that “calling for the genocide of the Jews … constitutes[s] bullying or harassment'”.

The reaction to his misunderstandings – “even from prominent leftists” – has been “ironic”, say the editors.

In fact, how BizPac Review reported Magill on Saturday “voluntarily tendered his resignation” as a result of the national outrage he helped fuel.

“These school presidents who claim to value free speech oversee campuses where using a disfavored pronoun can lead to students or faculty being investigated,” the Examiner's editors write.

Readers are reminded that Harvard was named this year by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression as “the worst university in the country for weak speech protections.” The Ivy League institution can now boast the organization's first “zero” grade.

“A Harvard evolutionary biologist may be forced off campus for asserting the truth that there are only two biological sexes,” according to the editors. “However, calls for genocide do not necessarily count as harassment.”

“One of the reasons presidents are so confused or duplicitous about the boundaries between protected speech and unprotected, harmful conduct is that DEI regimes insist that it is not the actual words or actions in question that matter. , but the “identity” of the group of the speaker or actor.” they explain. “Instead of applying neutral principles to everyone, which is what the Constitution, laws, Supreme Court decisions and common decency require, DEI classifies people as oppressors or oppressed. They then penalize the harmless speech of the former while excusing the seriously injurious conduct of the latter.”

“Anyone who is from or an open ally of an anti-Western group can threaten the intifada or join mobs forcing Jews to hide in library attics,” they continue. “But a teacher, after warning students that he would recite offensive language in a culturally contextual manner, can be fired just for saying the N-word out loud while reading Mark Twain.”

The editors say the double standards are “morally and legally inexcusable.” Worse, they are an “intended result of DEI”.

“Until DEI regimes are gutted and replaced with clear, neutral policies that protect speech and punish real threats, college presidents will defend the indefensible,” the Examiner editors write. “If college boards don't fix this, Congress should use its power of the purse to force DEI's dismantling.”

DONATE TO BIZPAC REVIEW

Please help us! If you're sick of letting radical tech execs, bogus fact-checkers, tyrannical liberals, and the lying mainstream media have unprecedented power over your news, consider donating to BPR to help us fight back them. Now is the time. The truth has never been more critical!

Success! Thanks for donating. Please share BPR content to help fight lies.

Latest messages from Melissa Fine (see everything)

We have zero tolerance for comments that contain violence, racism, profanity, profanity, doxing, or rude behavior. If a comment is spam, instead of replying to it, click the ∨ icon below and to the right of that comment. Thank you for engaging with us in a fruitful conversation.

JOIN OUR NEW COMMENT SYSTEM! We love hearing from our readers and invite you to join us for feedback and good conversation. If you've commented with us before, we'll need you to re-enter your email address for this. The public won't see it and we won't share it.

SOURCE LINK HERE

Related articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
spot_img

Latest posts

en_USEnglish