...On 'Cancel' Culture

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Re: ...On 'Cancel' Culture

Postby Harvey » Mon May 17, 2021 8:07 am

www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2021/05/what-is-left-for-palestine/

What is Left for Palestine?

May 17, 2021 by Craig Murray

Western media and politicians are now firmly coalesced around the Israeli government narrative. Israel is unwillingly fighting a war of self-defence in Gaza after hostilities were commenced by aggressive Hamas military attack. The storming of Al Aqsa mosque, the shooting at people in prayer, the right wing mobs attacking East Jerusalem, the Krystallnacht style destruction of Palestinian businesses and lynching of Arab Israelis, none of that ever happened at all. What happened was that Hamas launched a missile war and Israel was obliged, ever so reluctantly, to exercise its right of self defence, with enormous care not to hit civilians, except that, entirely accidentally, the IDF has killed a couple of hundred civilians including scores of children.

Palestinians die in the passive tense in western media. The media always says they “have died”; they were never “killed”, and there is virtually never any attribution of the death. By contrast, Israelis are active tense “killed by Hamas” or “killed by missile strikes”. Look out for this journalistic sophistry – once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

I used to be a firm opponent of missile strikes from Gaza. My view was firstly, that they cannot be militarily targeted so constitute an attack on civilians, secondly that they were a gift to Israeli propaganda, and thirdly that they were militarily ineffective. All of those remain true, and yet my view has changed and I find myself celebrating the fact that Hamas has, against all odds, managed to acquire more and better missiles. Part of that change of view is that I have come to see that there is no such thing as an innocent adult coloniser. But the bigger part is that I cannot see what on earth else the Palestinians are supposed to do.

Western politicians obviously believe that the Palestinians should accept apartheid quietly, and should have the good grace silently to wither away. The ultra-venal leaders of the majority of Arab states also wish the Palestinians would just die and allow them to enjoy the lavish personal benefits of their new alliances with Israel. It is absolutely plain there is no political process of any kind in train to alleviate the Palestinian plight, that even those “liberal” western politicians who floated the idea of a “two state solution” meant, at best, internationally recognised apartheid and bantustans. Joe Biden manages the remarkable feat of being still more zionist than Donald Trump.

Were I a Palestinian, I should undoubtedly have concluded that for an entire nation to turn the other cheek to a power which is seriously intent on genocide, is not a viable policy. Military resistance may seem hopeless, but sometimes to attempt to live with a shout of defiance and an effort to fight is the only dignified option remaining to a human.

It was a beautiful day in Glasgow yesterday for the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Committee demo, and it was great to be able to meet up again with so many magnificent and public-spirited people. It was an especially young crowd, which was excellent, and I was able to meet many Palestinians who drew comfort from the public support at a traumatic time.

Watching Mick Napier very much in charge of events, I was struck by the thought that there are so many really excellent and altruistic people who put their heart and entire lives into good causes for very little credit. Mick has been involved with SPSC as long as I can remember, has won important court victories in Scotland against ridiculous definitions of anti-semitism, and I have seen him at vigils on cold wet nights with a dozen people there. It made me realise how many Mick Napiers I have had the great privilege to know. We must not take the good-hearted for granted.
And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings
This he said to me
"The greatest thing
You'll ever learn
Is just to love
And be loved
In return"


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The real cancel culture strikes again...

Postby JackRiddler » Sat May 22, 2021 10:43 pm

.

Here's another case, below, that reminds us who among those targeted by social media mobbing actually loses their jobs, suffers career damage, is actually censored, or faces criminal charges:

    1. Palestinians and anyone who supports their cause, critics of Israel.

    2. Whistleblowers and those who take on the natsec state or imperialism.
    3. Leftists, especially if they toy around with the above two, or sometimes if they pay insufficient obeisance to fake identity politics (I use that term with "fake" for a reason, since issues of differential treatment by race and sex are real and intimately tied up with class society, but then there is the fake representational response).

All others? At a microscopic rate. Sometimes if they're actually caught engaging in undeniably corrupt practices for obvious personal gain, or committing sexual harrassment or worse, or declare out-and-out big lies that don't concord with the official big lies. Sometimes.

Currently underway but far from resolved into a consistent apparatus, because they are many: skeptics of Covidianism.

Remember - and THIS is the key to understanding the Cancel Culture Panic - that CC Panickers almost never mention the top three above, but pretend instead that it is conducted by a largely imaginary left or liberals and targets a persecuted right. They make martyrs, often out of themselves, unprompted.


In College, She Was A Pro-Palestinian Activist. The AP Just Fired Her After A Conservative "Witch Hunt."
Emily Wilder spoke with BuzzFeed News after she was fired by the Associated Press when conservatives shared her old social media posts and noted her pro-Palestinian college activism.

Tasneem Nashrulla
BuzzFeed News Reporter
Last updated on May 22, 2021, at 12:52 p.m. ET

Posted on May 21, 2021, at 4:25 p.m. ET
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ta ... ily-wilder


A 22-year-old Stanford graduate was fired by the Associated Press on Wednesday, after what she described as a "witch hunt" by conservatives who resurfaced her old social media posts critical of Israel, as well as her pro-Palestinian activism in college.

"It really felt like I got hung out to dry," said Emily Wilder, who was fired only three weeks after joining the AP as a news associate in Phoenix. The role was not a reporting position and did not involve covering international news.

A spokesperson for AP told BuzzFeed News that Wilder was dismissed for violating the company's social media policy "during her time at AP."

"We have this policy so the comments of one person cannot create dangerous conditions for our journalists covering the story," the spokesperson said.

However, Wilder told BuzzFeed News that her editors at AP refused to tell her which of her tweets or posts had violated the news agency's policies. The AP spokesperson also did not specify the offending posts.

Several journalists on Friday criticized the AP's decision to fire Wilder, noting the disproportionate backlash against peers who publicly hold pro-Palestinian views. Others were critical of firing journalists for their old college or high school tweets.

[... much more ...]
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ta ... ily-wilder

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Re: ...On 'Cancel' Culture

Postby JackRiddler » Sun May 23, 2021 9:27 am

.

On the main function of the Cancel Culture Panic at the universities, from leading socialist journal and recent target of CCP, Teen Vogue.

Campus Cancel Culture Freakouts Obscure the Power of University Boards

This op-ed argues that university boards are really in control of many core functions on college and university campuses.


Asheesh Kapur Siddique
MAY 19, 2021
https://www.teenvogue.com/story/campus- ... ity-boards

Do American universities lack ideological diversity? Are they bastions of left-wing thought and hostile to conservatives? In early April, the Crimson, the student newspaper of Harvard University, published an article asserting that the university’s conservative faculty are “an endangered species,” which quickly animated establishment concerns about the alleged lack of ideological diversity on American college campuses. But the right is not underrepresented in higher education; in fact, the opposite is true: The modern American university is a right-wing institution. The right’s dominance of academia and its reign over universities is destroying higher education, and the only way to save the American university is for students and professors to take back control of campuses.

Conservatives continually cite statistics suggesting that college professors lean to the left. But those who believe a university's ideological character can be discerned by surveying the political leanings of its faculty betray a fundamental misunderstanding of how universities work. Partisan political preferences have little to do with the production of academic knowledge or the day-to-day workings of the university — including what happens in classrooms. There is no “Democrat” way to teach calculus, nor is there a “Republican” approach to teaching medieval English literature; anyone who has spent time teaching or studying in a university knows that the majority of instruction and scholarship within cannot fit into narrow partisan categories. Moreover, gauging political preferences of employees is an impoverished way of understanding the ideology of an institution. To actually do so, you must look at who runs it — and in the case of the American university, that is no longer the professoriate.

Faculty once had meaningful power within higher educational institutions. In 1915, faculty at American universities organized themselves into the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), which championed academic freedom and significant faculty participation in the administration of appointments, peer reviews, and curriculum — a principle that came to be known as “shared governance.” Though it was resisted by administrators and boards of trustees for much of the early 20th century, the shared governance model was cemented within the modern university in the post-World War II era. This was especially apparent in the 1966 Statement on Government of Colleges and Universities, issued jointly by the American Council on Education, the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, and the AAUP, which specified that faculty, administrators, and boards of trustees formed a “community of interest” that should share responsibilities to produce well-governed institutions.

But from the mid-1970s on, as the historian Larry Gerber writes, shared governance was supplanted as the dominant model of university administration as boards of trustees and their allies in the offices of provosts and deans took advantage of public funding cuts to higher education and asserted increasing control over the hiring of the professoriate. They imported business models from the for-profit corporate world that shifted the labor model for teaching and research from tenured and tenure-track faculty to part-time faculty on short-term contracts, who were paid less and excluded from the benefits of the tenure system, particularly the academic freedom that tenure secured by mandating that professors could only be fired for extraordinary circumstances.

At the same time, Gerber details, the makeup of university boards of trustees became stacked with members from corporate backgrounds who made opposition to academic labor organizing part of the contemporary university's governance model. These boards exercise enormous power: controlling senior administrative appointments, approving faculty hiring, dictating labor policies, and, most importantly, controlling the university’s annual budget and setting tuition and fees. (Case in point: The UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees recently declined to appoint Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones to a tenure-track position following conservative outcry over her work on the 1619 project, documenting the history of slavery in the U.S. As one board member told NC Policy Watch, “This is a very political thing. …There have been people writing letters and making calls, for and against. But I will leave it to you which is carrying more weight.”)

The corporate capitalist regime that controls American university boards today has manufactured the current crisis of higher education by inflating tuition to compensate for state funding cuts while passing on the debt to students; hiring contingent rather than tenure-line staff to pay teachers less while withholding the security of academic freedom; and appointing administrators who are ultimately accountable to the regime.

At Harvard, the “corporation” that exercises significant sway over administrative appointments and policy includes six MBAs and only four Ph.Ds. Harvard’s “Board of Overseers,” which is charged with safeguarding “Harvard’s overarching academic mission and long-term institutional interests,” includes, among artists and doctors, senior leaders from Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, McKinsey & Company, Google, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. It's likely that boards with a substantial number of corporate managers regard “long-term institutional interests” as including vehement opposition to unionization by graduate workers and a sluggish response to students and alumni calling for divestment of Harvard’s assets from fossil fuels. (Teen Vogue has reached out to Harvard for comment.)

Far from an anomaly, Harvard’s corporate involvement is symptomatic of capitalism’s destructive takeover of American higher education. Across all types of institutions — from small, private liberal arts colleges to large public universities — higher education boards remain populated by business executives, bankers, and white-collar lawyers, many of whom lack experience in the classroom. At Oberlin College, widely regarded as one of the most left-leaning and progressive institutions in the country, and a consistent object of right-wing caricature, recent and current trustees include a partner at the investment bank Lion’s Head; the president & COO of a national radio conglomerate; the CEO of the investment bank Marathon Capital; a portfolio manager at Fidelity Investments; and a vice president at Apple. Contrary to Oberlin’s image, the institution is reactionary in its labor policies. And public universities are no different. At the University of Oklahoma, which has recently come under fire from the right for its employee diversity-training program, the seven members of the Board of Regents, the university’s governing board, include not what one would generally describe as “woke” radicals but instead the former president and CEO of the American Bankers Association, the director of a gas company, the president of a manufacturing company, the former president of an insurance company, and a managing partner at the accounting firm Ernst & Young.

(Comments to Teen Vogue from Oberlin College and the University of Oklahoma are included at the bottom of this article).

The decline of faculty governance and the corresponding ascendancy of corporate dominance of higher ed undermines the long-repeated canard about radical dominance of the university. Additionally, there are the recent right-wing efforts to undermine or revoke tenure at public universities, as the Texas legislature is currently considering, and the budgetary challenges facing higher education that have been heightened by the pandemic. It’s clear this is a harrowing time for colleges and universities nationwide.

What is the left to do about the corporate capture of the modern university? First and foremost, it must support and spread labor organizing across the country, building on the momentum established this spring with the strike by graduate workers at Columbia University. Second, relentlessly push the Biden administration toward canceling all student debt and supporting free public college for all. Third, assert shared governance on campus and work toward building a democratic university that secures labor protections and fair wages for all faculty, especially contingent and graduate workers. If we don’t act, the corporatization of universities will destroy American higher education.

Comments to Teen Vogue from Oberlin College Media Relations Director Scott Wargo:

“Oberlin College’s board of trustees is a diverse group of individuals that presents multifaceted and discernable professional expertise and draws on that rich experience to develop strategic initiatives through a rigorous and collaborative process. Among the varied professional experiences represented on the board are scientists, lawyers, artists and non-profit executives, a former college president, chief executive officers and investment officers, former college professors, a librarian, a teacher, and recent graduates who are pursuing advanced degrees.

Wargo added that changes to the contracts of unionized dining and custodial workers stemmed from a 2018 program intended to “build a new level of educational and operational excellence and preserve the institution’s long-term financial health."

Comments to Teen Vogue from University of Oklahoma Media Relations Director Kesha Keith:

“The University of Oklahoma Board of Regents members have diverse backgrounds that include, but are not limited to marketing, accounting, government, teaching, law, non-profit management, fundraising and investment. Among this group the OU Board of Regents also includes a former university president. Each member has a proven track record on how to lead a successful business. This expertise is an integral part to governing proceedings and conducting business for a university with a more than $2 billion operating budget. Oklahoma governing boards have a fiduciary duty for the operation and management of each State System institution or higher education program. This management extends beyond the classroom and into all aspects of universities. … The Board authorizes the presidents and their respective administrations to enact plans that will better serve students, employees, and the state.”


https://www.teenvogue.com/story/campus- ... ity-boards

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: ...On 'Cancel' Culture

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun May 23, 2021 10:14 am

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Calls this to mind:

Image
https://twitter.com/caroljsroth/status/ ... 27232?s=20

Your earlier points are worth repeating. A notable trend is developing Re: 'covidionism' given the outright censoring of science-backed data, or simply expressing valid viewpoints that counter primary narratives.

The blacklisting/censoring/'canceling' of views sympathetic to Palestine, and of course criticism of NatSec programs, have been consistent attacks for years.

JackRiddler » Sat May 22, 2021 9:43 pm wrote:.

Here's another case, below, that reminds us who among those targeted by social media mobbing actually loses their jobs, suffers career damage, is actually censored, or faces criminal charges:

    1. Palestinians and anyone who supports their cause, critics of Israel.

    2. Whistleblowers and those who take on the natsec state or imperialism.
    3. Leftists, especially if they toy around with the above two, or sometimes if they pay insufficient obeisance to fake identity politics (I use that term with "fake" for a reason, since issues of differential treatment by race and sex are real and intimately tied up with class society, but then there is the fake representational response).

All others? At a microscopic rate. Sometimes if they're actually caught engaging in undeniably corrupt practices for obvious personal gain, or committing sexual harrassment or worse, or declare out-and-out big lies that don't concord with the official big lies. Sometimes.

Currently underway but far from resolved into a consistent apparatus, because they are many: skeptics of Covidianism.

Remember - and THIS is the key to understanding the Cancel Culture Panic - that CC Panickers almost never mention the top three above, but pretend instead that it is conducted by a largely imaginary left or liberals and targets a persecuted right. They make martyrs, often out of themselves, unprompted.


In College, She Was A Pro-Palestinian Activist. The AP Just Fired Her After A Conservative "Witch Hunt."
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Re: ...On 'Cancel' Culture

Postby Belligerent Savant » Sun May 23, 2021 4:08 pm

.

One addendem: point 2 ("Whistleblowers and those who take on the natsec state or imperialism") is an issue that isn't specifically tied to a "left" cause, though I'm assuming you mean traditional or historical "left" vs the current/recent pseudo-left trend of cheering on Empire. There are those across political spectrums that may be against overtly imperialist aims, though frankly I've stopped tracking the boundaries of what may be considered "left" or "right" these days (I mean, there's the "mainstream" left and right talking points; the "alternative" or "fringe" left and right talking points; the 'historical' or 'traditional' -- whatever that may mean -- left and right talking points, etc.).

I believe we mentioned a few pages back the earlier version of 'cancel culture': extreme ends of the 'PC' movement, which became mainstream in the 80s. But again, there's the social media versions of how 'cancel culture' may be defined, which tends to focus on 'Woke' - isms (currently viewed as 'leftist'), as identified by those on the right/libertarian ends of the spectrum (or at least however they tend to be defined in popular culture), and then cancellation of viewpoints in the areas you cover (anti-imperialism, the burgeoning cancellation of earnest covid inquiry, pro-Palestine positions, etc).

Red herrings and genuine articles, intertwined and out in the wild.
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Florida

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:54 pm

www.tampabay.com
Florida rule would limit talk of ‘social issues’ at public universities
By Divya KumarTimes staff
5-6 minutes
Published Oct. 23

A proposed regulation aimed at restricting diversity programs and social activism at Florida’s public universities has stirred confusion, with some saying its broadly worded passages could limit free speech.

The regulation, when approved, will determine how the state enforces the law known as Senate Bill 266, a measure pushed by Gov. Ron DeSantis that seeks to gut diversity, equity and inclusion programs at colleges and universities.

A draft version being circulated for feedback says in part that universities may not spend public money on activities that “advocate for diversity, equity and inclusion” or “promote or engage in political or social activism.”

It says political or social activism is “any activity organized with a purpose of effecting or preventing change to a government policy, action, or function, or any activity intended to achieve a desired result related to social issues, where the university endorses or promotes a position in communications, advertisements, programs, or campus activities.”

Social issues are defined as “topics that polarize or divide society among political, ideological, moral, or religious beliefs, positions, or norms.”

“I can’t think of anything that doesn’t,” said Gerard Solis, general counsel for the University of South Florida. Speaking to USF’s faculty senate on Thursday, he questioned whether that wording could prohibit commentary surrounding events like Black History Month or even American Pharmacists Month, which is observed in October.


The document is “absolutely horrific” and goes beyond what the legislation required, said Andrew Gothard, president of United Faculty of Florida, the statewide faculty union.

“It limits ways for students to be active members of society and speak their minds, regardless of where they fall on the political spectrum,” he said.

Gov. Ron DeSantis signs legislation banning state funding for diversity, equity and inclusion programs at Florida's public universities on May 15, 2023, at New College of Florida in Sarasota. The law resulted in a new regulation now under consideration by the state Board of Governors.

State Sen. Erin Grall, R-Vero Beach, sponsored the legislation that is tied to the proposed regulation. Rep. Alex Andrade, R-Pensacola, sponsored a similar bill in the Florida House. The lawmakers did not respond to messages Friday requesting comment.

The regulation makes exceptions for student-led organizations; certain activities by schools, such as lobbying; and activities where following the state law would jeopardize federal funding or accreditation.

It also says access programs may remain for military veterans, recipients of the federal Pell Grant for college, first-generation college students, nontraditional students, “2+2″ transfer students from the Florida College System, students from low-income families or students with intellectual disabilities.

The regulation takes aim at the concept of equity by prohibiting schools from “manipulating, or attempting to manipulate, the status of an individual or group to equalize or increase outcomes, participation or representation as compared to other individuals or groups; or advancing the premise or position that a group or an individual’s action is inherently, unconsciously, or implicitly biased.”

In targeting diversity, equity and inclusion programs, it defines them as “any program, activity, or policy that promotes differential or preferential treatment of individuals, or classifies such individuals on the basis of race, color, sex, national origin, gender identity, or sexual orientation.”

Solis, the lawyer for USF, said the university planned to express its concerns to the state, calling some language in the draft “overbroad.”

Danaya Wright, chairperson of the University of Florida’s faculty senate, questioned whether research on breast cancer or gynecological treatments would be allowed based on the language of the draft, because it involves spending in a way that classifies individuals by sex.

She also suggested that recent statements by university presidents regarding the Israel-Hamas war might violate the proposed regulation.

The document must be approved by the Board of Governors, which oversees the State University System. The board and its committees will convene on Nov. 8 and 9, and the public will have 14 days after that to comment on the regulation.

Ray Rodrigues, chancellor of the State University System, said in a statement that because of the law, “the Board of Governors is required to adopt regulations” to prohibit such spending.

The regulation is expected to come before the board for final approval in January.

Divya Kumar covers higher education for the Tampa Bay Times, working in partnership with Open Campus.

https://www.tampabay.com/news/education ... versities/
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