Monday, May 24, 2010

Meanwhile, in Arizona...

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Professor Sandra Soto was the faculty speaker at the graduation convocation last week for the University of Arizona's College of Social and Behavioral Sciences. Check out what happens when her remarks turn to the recent laws enacted in Arizona at about 45 seconds in.

(See this morning's Inside Higher Ed.)

excerpt:

Marisol LeBron, a Ph.D. student in American studies at New York University, said in a blog post that a majority of those weighing in have been "advancing the idea that universities and institutions of higher education should be depoliticized places where one goes to learn objective truths. Meanwhile, if you ask me, it's pretty inappropriate for an audience for presumably educated adults to boo a woman of letters."

LeBron added that the incident is typical of the way minority scholars are treated: "They get shouted down and told that they're advancing a narrow agenda or only telling half the story. The events that transpired were truly shameful, but unfortunately are becoming more common than not on college campuses. I applaud the stand that Soto and other educators in Arizona are taking despite the attempts to silence them. As Professor Soto urges us, we must fight for public education."
*

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well, that was ugly.

Anonymous said...

Well, just like Roy believes religion should be left out of invocations, shouldn’t politics? Seems to me this lady asked for it by injecting her politics into it, while knowing in advance it was an unpopular position for her to take. Oh yes, you’ll all jump on me and say it is popular according to the New York Times and NBC, but what do they know that the people of AZ don’t?

Anonymous said...

While I am catching up on recent posts, I just have to say of 7:04: this has to be the most incomprehensibly stupid comment I've yet seen on this blog--and that is SAYING something. One asks to be booed and treated disrespectfully if one expresses an unpopular position? Religion is on the same plane as political views in the public arena?

Good GAWD! Just plain stupid--and inexcusably so.

Anonymous said...

It's stunning that this occurred at a Commencement in a *School of Social and Behavioral Sciences*! Have these graduates learned nothing about mob psychology? About the psychology of prejudice? It's stunning that it would happen at any institution of higher learning, of course. These are extremely dark days.

MAH

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

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