More than 200 Chapman University faculty are demanding that school officials recommit themselves publicly to diversity and inclusion reforms, responding to a fellow professor’s viral op-ed that questioned whether Democratic vice presidential pick, Kamala Harris, could legally become president over her parents’ citizenship status despite being born in the U.S. Faculty in an online Change.org petition called the op-ed “poorly argued, inaccurate, and racist.”
Meanwhile, Chapman Law School professor and former Dean John Eastman stands by his op-ed, saying he’s been raising these issues for years.
The argument, since its Aug. 12 publication, has been associated by critics with racist conspiracy theories that first targeted former president Barack Obama, alleging he was ineligible for office on false claims he was born in Kenya. The collective conspiracy theories came to be known as “birtherism.”
An online petition signed by hundreds of Chapman faculty is now calling on the administration to enhance or reaffirm its diversity and inclusion policies and commitments.
Chapman University’s own Chairman of the Board of Trustees, trial lawyer Wylie Aitken (also a Voice of OC board chairman), in a response op-ed criticized Eastman’s argument as “absurd” and voiced support for the faculty petition.
“I would sign such a petition if I was eligible,” Aitken wrote.
After initially opting not to step into the debate, Chapman University’s President Daniele Struppa issued a statement Monday morning, refusing to take a stance on the issue but defending faculty members’ academic freedom to make an argument.
“First, the university is not responsible for the ideas of its faculty. As President, I will neither endorse nor refute them. The strength of a university comes in its commitment to free speech and to academic freedom,” Struppa wrote. “We cannot simply pick and choose when to support free speech, despite the personal views of the president, provost, dean or any university administrator.”
Struppa also defended Chapman’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, adding “when incidents of division and injustice impact our community, they do not reflect the entire community nor should they be interpreted as to alter what is our concrete commitment to those values.”
Eastman’s Newsweek piece, which the publication has since apologized for, questioned whether the U.S. Constitution actually grants birthright citizenship to Harris — who was born in Oakland, California, in 1964 — questioning whether Harris’ foreign-born parents had insufficient legal residency status that negated her own.
Harris, a California senator running alongside Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, is Black and Indian. Her parents are from Jamaica and India.
“Chapman is being associated with the vilest notions of anti-immigrant sentiment and racism, via birtherism 2.0.,” the university’s Humanities and Social Sciences professor, Lisa Leitz, who started the online petition, said in a statement on behalf of the petitioning faculty.
Eastman in a phone interview denied trying to push racist conspiracy theories with the op-ed in response to the possibility of Harris taking office, saying “I have been taking the exact same position for 20 years.”
The Constitution requires presidents to have been born in the U.S. The Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment also specifies that people “born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”
Eastman in his op-ed questions whether Harris’ parents had sufficient status to satisfy the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” section of the Citizenship Clause or if they were still subject to the jurisdictions of their own countries. Subsequently, Eastman argues that could impact Harris’ own citizenship despite her birth inside the country.
Federal courts have upheld that people born on U.S. soil are citizens regardless of their parents’ citizenship…. [
A sprawling report from a Republican-led panel laid out an extensive web of contacts between Trump campaign advisers and Russian government officials.
NYT
✅OC Continues to See Improvement in Virus Trends; School Openings in Waiting Pattern
Voice of OC
Orange County is continuing to see hospitalizations and other coronavirus trends improve, which local health officials attribute partly to more people wearing face coverings, as school reopenings remain in a holding pattern for the time being.
✅State coronavirus watch list unfrozen; Orange County remains on it, but is trending toward an exit
The state had frozen its pandemic watch list because lagging COVID-19 testing data led to inaccurate metrics.
OC Reg
✅From ‘firenadoes’ to record heat, California extreme weather a glimpse of future -- In the last few days, a moisture-laden heat wave has unleashed extreme weather in almost every corner of California. Tony Barboza, Louis Sahagun, Joseph Serna in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 8/18/20
✅California State University now requires ethnic studies -- Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature Monday on AB 1460 means students in the CSU system will have to take an ethnic studies course before graduation. The bill overrides a similar but less strict requirement the system imposed earlier this summer. Mikhail Zinshteyn CalMatters Ashley A. Smith EdSource -- 8/18/20
✅Bernie Sanders won big in California. Here’s why his Golden State delegates are settling for Biden -- Bernie Sanders’ California delegates to the Democratic National Convention say they’re disappointed he won’t be the candidate accepting the party’s presidential nomination this week, but they’re mostly ready to back Joe Biden this fall. Kate Irby in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 8/18/20
✅D.A. files charges in Newport Beach protest gun case -- A Newport Beach man has been charged with two misdemeanors after being accused of pulling a loaded gun on Black Lives Matter protesters during a local protest in June. Hillary Davis in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 8/18/20 [See YouTube]
✅Five automakers finalize deal with California to clean up car emissions -- California’s clean air enforcers have finalized a deal with five automakers to cut greenhouse gases from cars despite the Trump administration’s rollbacks. Rachel Becker CalMatters -- 8/18/20
✅Former DHS official: Trump wanted to withhold California wildfire money for political reasons -- President Donald Trump wanted to shut off emergency relief for California amid devastating wildfires because it was a blue state, and he tried to deliberately separate families to deter immigration, according to a scathing account given by a former administration official on Monday. Matthew Choi Politico -- 8/18/20
They came. They saw. They clustered. Now, a week after starting classes at UNC Chapel Hill, undergraduates are being sent home as coronavirus spreads on campus.
Inside Higher Ed
No comments:
Post a Comment