Wednesday, February 27, 2019

They're coming, you know



Study of American Democracy on Cal State Chopping Block
(Inside Higher Ed)
     Historians across the California State University System are voicing concerns about a new general education task force report that recommends halving the six-credit U.S. history and government requirement in place on most campuses.
     The university system says it hasn’t even formally received the faculty-led report yet and that it remains a mere set of ideas.
     Still, some professors worry that Cal State’s six-credit requirement has long been a target for those who see it as a barrier to completion.
     “Students here do a lot of work in U.S. history and government -- it’s a rigorous course of study, and we stand to lose that right now,” said Bridget Ford, professor of history at Cal State’s East Bay campus and a critic of the general education task force report. “We’re worried about what democracy in our state will look like without it.” …. [continued]


When they kick at your front door
How you gonna come?
With your hands on your head
Or on the trigger of your gun
When the law break in
How you gonna go?
Shot down on the pavement
Or waiting on death row



We are the Village Green Preservation Society
God save Donald Duck, vaudeville and variety

We are the Desperate Dan Appreciation Society
God save strawberry jam and all the different varietiesPreserving the old ways from being abused
Protecting the new ways, for me and for you

What more can we do?


I was born, lucky me
In a land that I love
Though I am poor, I am free
When I grow I shall fight
For this land I shall die
Let her sun never set
Victoria, Victoria, Victoria, 'toria
Victoria, Victoria, Victoria, 'toria
Land of hope and gloria
Land of my Victoria
Land of hope and gloria
Land of my Victoria
Victoria, 'toria
Victoria, Victoria, Victoria, 'toria....
STEM Education Is Vital--but Not at the Expense of the Humanities
(Scientific American)
Politicians trying to dump humanities education will hobble our economy
By THE EDITORS on October 1, 2016

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

This Week in White Supremacist Activity in Orange County: Patriot Front at Saddleback College

On January 30, Patriot Front posted this photo from Saddleback College on their twitter feed with this caption: #PatriotFront  activists placed stickers around Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. 

Rebel Girl loves the OC Weekly. Why? Let her count the reasons (there's so many!), but here's today's:

Savannah Munoz's article  "FASHYS TRY TO POSTERIZE ORANGE AND ANAHEIM, GET FOILED BY RAIN AND ANTIFA"

In it, Munoz documents the latest white supremacist activity in the county. She writes:
Patriot Front, a fascist extremist group, boasted about its poster party antics over the weekend in cities across the nation, including Orange and Anaheim. They tweeted pictures of their fashy propaganda on street signs and light poles, including a “Keep America American” poster in Orange encouraging folks to report “illegal aliens” to the Department of Homeland Security. Over in Anaheim, a map of the United States featured the caps locked caption: “CONQUERED, NOT STOLEN.”
For those not in the know, "fashy" is slang for facists and "antifa" is well, anti-facist.

The Southern Poverty Law Center describes Patriot Front this way: "Patriot Front is a white nationalist hate group that broke off from Vanguard America in the aftermath of the deadly “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, of August 12, 2017."

Among the sites targeted by the Patriot Front: Santiago Canyon College.

This made Rebel Girl curious.  If Patriot Front struck at SCC, why not the fair colleges of the SOCCCD? 

A quick dive into Patriot Front's twitter feed (hold your nose) not only shows activity at UC Irvine - but also at Saddleback College - as well as communities and campuses across the county and country.

Saddleback College

The Saddleback College Crime Blog does report "vandalism" on January 30 - the day Patriot Front images from Saddleback were posted on Twitter - but it's unclear if this is the offense cited.

Saddleback College

Saddleback College
Rebel Girl hasn't seen such activity at the little college in the orange groves but then again she's been inside the Liberal Arts building all day.

Clearly though, they are out there.

UPDATE: In between the time Rebel Girl posted this initial post and the time she arrived home, more recent activity showed Patriot Front was out and about in the canyons today:



The caption reads: "Patriot Front activists went on a hike and placed stickers around Trabuco Canyon, California."

UPDATE: From the headlines Wednesday morning:

USA Today:  Number of hate groups hits 20-year high amid rise in white supremacy, report finds

NPR:  U.S. Hate Groups Rose 30 Percent In Recent Years, Watchdog Group Reports

The Guardian: US hate groups have seen ideas enter mainstream in Trump era, report finds

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Synagogue massacre cited in hate-group report, which shows rising levels of hatred


*

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Gauchos confront the "Gaucho" issue and come up with shite


     It appears that the original board was responsible for Saddleback College’s unfortunate mascot, the “Gaucho.” (What do South American cowboys have to do with the OC? Did those notorious right-wingers imagine that the Gaucho is a Mexican cowboy?)

     According to the district website, “Saddleback College was officially named by action of the board on February 26, 1968. In June of that year, the board approved the Gaucho as mascot and school colors as cardinal and gold.”

     But since (according to the website) the first students didn’t arrive until September, it follows (more or less) that students didn’t choose the “Gaucho.” So it was the early board.

     Since then, some Saddlebackians (their identity no doubt by now lost in time) chose a series of "Gaucho" graphics that imply continued utter cluelessness about the Gaucho's South American identity—and an embrace of ugly Mexican stereotypes. ("I don't have to show you no stinkin' badges!")

     We’ve long objected to the “Gaucho” mascot and especially its associated images, sometimes drawing the interest of local press. Check out this squawk from thirteen years ago:
The Lariat "gaucho" - Feb. 8, 2006
     Recently, I've learned, some faculty at Saddleback have made yet another attempt to dump all this unfortunate Gauchoery in favor of something sensible and inoffensive.
     So what’s happened?

* * *

     TODAY, a friend sent me the latest chapter in the saga. Here’s a letter, sent out last month to Saddlebackians, from spankin' new College President Elliot Stern.
Colleagues: 
     Prior to my arrival, the college undertook a survey about whether to keep the Gaucho. The survey results are attached. Response rates were exceptionally high for a campus-wide survey. The majority favored keeping the Gaucho. [66.5% of students/alumni voted to keep Gaucho. 64.4% of faculty/staff voted to keep Gaucho.] These results were shared with Consultation Council this past Tuesday, which then voted to recommend going forward with the original design on the AstroTurf for the primary field in the new stadium—with “Saddleback” in one end zone, “Gauchos” in the other, and our existing “G” logo at the 50-yard line. The Council also recommended not to include the “G” logo on the training field turf. (Nor was “Gauchos” in the design for the end zone on the training fields.) Finally, Council voted unanimously to recommend immediate formation of a working group representing stakeholders across campus, including students, to plan and oversee development of a new symbolic logo for the Gaucho (one that honors the Gaucho and the culture from which it comes) and the re-design of our “G.” As President, I accepted these recommendations and gave the greenlight to fabrication of the AstroTurf. We will form a re-design task force in the near future, ensuring that multiple perspectives are represented in that group. Nothing about the Council’s recommendation or my decision to follow it precludes ongoing discussion of the Gaucho. Nor does a re-design of our G mean that we are planning wholesale replacement of the existing G logo in the near future. In the face of our budgetary constraints, changes in the G logo and introduction of a new Gaucho symbol would need to be done over time. 
AstroTurf decisions
     I know that many on our campus have strong feelings about this issue. This is not an easy discussion to have. But I am glad that we are having it, and I am glad that it will continue. I am grateful to be supporting a campus where such discussions are being had and where we are being respectful of one another and giving each other time and space to process and evolve. This is Saddleback. 

-Elliot
     Inexplicably (i.e., stupidly), Saddleback College faculty and students has decided to keep the Gaucho mascot, despite the absence of any discernible connection between South Orange County and, um, South American cowboys.
     But they’ll be replacing the old images. Maybe for the right reasons. That's good.
     --With what? I guess we'll see.

* * *
Gaucho
The decision to remove Gaucho mascot has been made, but no plans are underway - Lariat, 11/18/2014
Very little say
   On Nov. 5, Saddleback College’s Academic Senate reaffirmed that the Gauchos mascot is not to be used by any college entity for any purposes moving forward.
     The issue [?] of the culturally insensitive [Argentinian] riding a horse should completely be banned, said Academic Senate President Dan Walsh.
     The Academic Senate had taken a stance against the mascot years ago.
     “We actually passed a resolution, saying to remove the Gauchos’ mascot and the students did as well,” Walsh said.
     The college’s Associated Student Government and the Consultation Council had both passed a resolution to take down the mascot.
     “We thought it was going to be a done deal. We were not going to have the logo anymore, but it started showing up again,” Walsh said.
     As of now there is no set date to when the mascot’s image will be completely removed from the college, or replaced with a different mascot.
     “Athletics has had very little to say about [the mascot],” said Assistant Athletic Director Jerry Hannula, though the image is displayed in almost all athletic forums on campus….
—As usual, the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing. We've got the same problem at IVC. We decided years ago, as per process, to dump and replace the "Laser" mascot. That somehow got lost; now we have roads named "Laser." We're committed to that absurdity forever.


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

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...