Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Their monthly enbubblement (updated!)


[Please see significant UPDATE below!]

     I just happened upon the above video, posted by Tim Jemal in late September, in which he identifies his promises made, and kept, as SOCCCD trustee. 
     —For what it's worth. (It seems unobjectionable to me.)
     Recently, a friend alerted me to the following events at Monday's board meeting. He tells me that the trustees are back to giving "invocations" at the start of their monthly enbubblement, or at least they gave one in October and now one in November. On Monday, during the pre-meeting public comments I guess, IVC Academic Senate Prez June McLaughlin criticized the board's October prayer-invocation, no doubt citing the importance of separating church and state, etc. (As I recall, Trustee Wright used to lay it on pretty thick with his invocations, years ago. "Dear Heavenly Father," he would piously intone.) Soon thereafter, Tim Jemal offered yet another pre-meeting invocation, though, according to my witness (via Zoom, I guess), it was more of an expression of gratitude than a prayer. 
     But get this: my friend reports that Jemal expressed gratitude that we live in a country "where people like Roy Bauer can express their views freely without fear of retribution."—Something like that.
     Golly. 
     My first thought was: retribution for WHAT? During the trustee campaign, I expressed my views about trustee candidates and about our board, a crew that I have been observing for years. I carped about trustee Wright's seemingly incorrigible, set-in-his-ways nature and his nasty habit of referring to Saddleback College (where he worked for decades) as though it were The District. I also noted that this board repeatedly renewed the contracts of very shitty administrators, despite vociferous complaints from faculty, et al. 
     A case in point: Glenn "MAGA" Roquemore, who was granted a 17-year reign of error, academic suppression, and anti-intellectual buffoonery. (The current board can't take all the blame, of course, just recent years of the man's "leadership.")
     (Did I ever tell you about the time Roquemore blackballed an instructor candidate because the guy hailed from Colorado? "Colorado," he reportedly said, "is where Bauer comes from!" —Imagine having such a thought process! Note: I've never even been to freakin' Colorado.)
     So I was expressing opinions about candidates. Retribution for THAT? For expressing my views during an election campaign? —It's not like I was going crazy with Photoshop, pasting Wright's head onto pterodactyls, or walking into board meetings, menacingly waving a bottle of Wright's All Natural Hickory BBQ sauce!
     Sheesh!
     I've tried to view Jemal's Monday-night invocation, but the district's videos only work up through October. Dang! Tell me if you get the dang player to work for November.
     I too am glad I live in a country where I can express my views—well-grounded views offered sans hostility—without fear of retribution (unless, of course, its 1997 and I'm working at the SOCCCD). 
     —No thanks to you, pal!
     But seriously, folks; I'm mostly amused. It's like the good old days, getting mentioned by government officials as if I were the freakin' Golden State Killer
     (Remember when trustee John Williams compared me to the Unabomber? —When Raghu Mathur got a security stipend to protect him from the likes of Kate Clark and me? —Good times.)

Just for fun: 
UPDATE:

Trustee Tim Jemal has (evidently) sent me this email (using his district email account):

Here is the text of my invocation last night. Your friend misunderstood it:

"Thank goodness we live in a country where votes are counted. Imagine living in a country where at any moment you could be jailed, tortured or killed by simply engaging in free speech. Not hate speech, but free speech, like saying “I don’t like Joe Biden.” Dictators are toiling to stamp out the last vestiges of domestic dissent and spread their harmful influence to new corners of the world. According to Freedom House, there have been 14 consecutive years of decline in Global Freedom. More than half of world’s established democracies deteriorated over the past 15 years. Freedom of expression and belief, which includes academic freedom, and the rule of law, are the most common areas of decline. Imagine one day Roy Bauer suddenly disappears because someone from the state doesn’t like the content of his blog. This kind of action is a very real threat in many countries around the world.

Here in Orange County we had an amazing 87% percent voter turnout in this election. Think about that. 87%. Never before have I seen a turnout like this in my lifetime. We should all rejoice that the people’s voice was overwhelmingly heard and counted. Freedom flourishes when governments are held accountable by the people. Thank you."

—Well, that's great. It's clear that my friend did misunderstand Trustee Jemal's remarks, which included nothing about fear of retaliation for expressing my views. On the contrary, Jemal uses this blog as an example of something that should be allowed to exist—an example of free expression that is endangered increasingly in the world.

I can find nothing to object to here. Quite the contrary. And I too feel great about the 87% turnout. It is indeed a reason to rejoice.

So thank you, Trustee Jemal. And congratulations!

11-18: "Ignorant, anti-American and anti-Christian," imputed the Trumpian dean; Meanwhile, OC Covid numbers go up, up, up while Supes carp about state limits and defiant GOP governors spawn major health crises

—Inside Higher Ed 
     A dean who criticized supporters of Joe Biden as “ignorant, anti-American and anti-Christian” has resigned from his leadership position and his professorship at Virginia Wesleyan University, the institution announced this week. Paul Ewell, former dean of Virginia Wesleyan’s Global Campus and former professor of management, business and economics, made the controversial statements on Facebook, where he asked Biden supporters and Democrats to unfriend him, alleging that they had “corrupted” the recent election, “our youth” and the country. “I have standards and you don’t meet them,” Ewell wrote on his personal Facebook page, images of which were circulated online. “I wouldn’t hang out with you in real life, I don’t want to hang out with you virtually either.” 
     Ewell apologized for his comments as unbecoming of a Christian and asked for forgiveness in a statement to the college newspaper. An email from Virginia Wesleyan president Scott Miller to the university's governing board, obtained by the local Virginian-Pilot, says, “While we respect Dr. Ewell’s right to free speech, his comments, particularly coming from a dean of the institution, contradict the values and culture that are such a valued part of who we are.” 
     President Trump retweeted a news story about Ewell's comments, saying, "Progress!" 
—Inside Higher Ed 
     The University of California has new, systemwide gender identity and name options for UC-issued documents and information systems, it said Tuesday. The university system “continues to fully embrace diversity in our country,” said President Michael V. Drake, announcing the new policy. John A. Pérez, chair of the UC Board of Regents, said as the state’s third-largest employer, “UC’s recognition of nonbinary gender identities and lived names supports broader transgender rights, which has been a long time coming for California and the nation.” 
     University students, employees, alumni, retirees, vendors, medical center patients and others may now choose from man, woman or nonbinary gender identification options on official documents. They may also choose a lived name, or preferred name, that differs from their legal name, as a default for all documents. The legal name will be kept confidential and not published. 

Campus Reform, a website that calls out professors for spreading “liberal bias,” has become mainstream. And higher education is learning to live with that. 
—CHE 

✅ California State University faculty, administrators remain at odds over ethnic studies requirement -- California State University took another step Tuesday toward requiring students to take an ethnic studies class as part of their lower-division coursework, a move that would also have significant implications for the state’s 115 degree-granting community colleges. Michael Burke EdSource -- 11/18/20 

—CNN 
     …[South Dakota] Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican in office since 2019, has adopted much of the language of President Donald Trump during the pandemic…She has resisted restrictions on gatherings and given credence to those who question whether masks are helpful in stopping an airborne virus…. 
     Noem has also encouraged crowded gatherings with no social distancing, in particular at a Trump rally at Mount Rushmore in July. 
     The results have been devastating health-wise. South Dakota has averaged more than 1,400 new coronavirus cases per day over the past week in a state with about 885,000 people. Adjusted for population, it's the second-highest number of new average cases in the country. The state's seven-day positivity rate is a stunning 58%, and more people are hospitalized per capita than in any other state, according to the Covid Tracking Project. 
     Jodi Doering, a nurse at a South Dakota emergency room, said some people dying at the hospital are still in denial about the virus. 
     "They don't want to believe that Covid is real," she said. "Their last dying words are, 'This can't be happening. It's not real.' "

✅ The Trumpiest and most anti-Trump counties in California: Where does yours rank? -- November’s election results showed that most of California’s Democratic counties moved further away from President Donald Trump — and the bulk of its Republican counties did too. Ben Christopher CalMatters -- 11/17/20

The trend is bad; OC Supes don't seem to get it. They're Republicans. They don't believe in science and they condone pussy-grabbing and constant prevarication. God help us.

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...