Friday, March 23, 2018

Notable discourse: “Indulging victimhood”



     Part of a series: tapping into notable discourse, i.e., contemporary issues in academia, etc. (See Catching up with the Lindsay Shepherd (academic freedom) case [DtB, 3-2-18])
     This particular issue (or set of issues, viz., "political correctness," free speech, post-modernism in higher education, skepticism and realism, etc.) is complicated and difficult. Some of us find ourselves defending views associated with creeps and defending creeps associated with views that are "incorrect" but, well, correct. (The phenomenon is illustrated by this GOP-sponsored panel, three of whom seem to be political progressives. [Hoff Sommers is a moderate Democrat who is associated with—and associates with—conservatives.])
     Whatever. Here's a recent discussion sponsored by the Portland State "College Republicans." Ew.
     Have at it.

● Peter Boghossian: Atheist philosopher, Portland State
     Peter Gregory Boghossian is an American philosopher and atheism advocate. He is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Portland State University. His primary research areas are critical thinking, philosophy of education, and moral reasoning. Boghossian is a speaker for the Center for Inquiry, the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science, and the Secular Student Alliance. He has been nominated as a member of the Global Secular Council. (Wikipedia)

● Bret Weinstein: evolutionary biologist, Evergreen State U [Recently resigned.]
     The Controversy of Bret Weinstein Explained — The Evergreen Scandal (Medium)
     Bret Weinstein is an evolutionary biologist that made national headlines for being a racist. So… what exactly happened? Was it simply being politically incorrect? (From Medium article.)

● Heather Heying, Biologist, Evergreen State College [Recently resigned.]
     Heather Heying is a Member of the Faculty at Evergreen, whose scientific, creative, and teaching interests converge in an evolutionary toolkit that is both powerful and fun to use. Selection provides the explanatory world view for all emergent phenomena that are directly observable, and most that are not. This truth permeates pretty much everything that I think about. (Evergreen State College)

● Christina Hoff Sommers: American Enterprise Institute (Philosopher)
     ...Sommers (Who Stole Feminism?) pulls no punches in this critique of the current crop of "crisis" studies about boys. Methodically analyzing and dismantling what she calls the "myth of shortchanged girls" as well as the "new and equally corrosive fiction that boys as a group are disturbed"Atheories she calls "speculative psychology"Ashe bolsters her findings with extensive footnotes and data from such sources as the U.S. Department of Education. Sommers's conclusions are compelling and deserve an unbiased hearing, particularly since they are at odds with conventional wisdom that paints girls as victimized and boys as emotionally repressed. "Routinely regarded as protosexists, potential harassers and perpetuators of gender inequity, boys live under a cloud of censure," she writes, going on to show how they are also falling behind academically in an educational system that currently devotes more attention to the needs of girls. Pointing out that "Mother Nature is not a feminist," she also dismisses the current vogue to "feminize" boys, calling social androgyny a "well-intentioned but ill-conceived reform." Instead, Sommers champions "the reality that boys and girls are different, that each sex has its distinctive strengths and graces." Sure to kick up dust in the highly charged gender debates, Sommers's book is at its best when coolly debunking theories she contends are based on distorted research and skewed data, but descends into pettiness when she indulges in mudslinging at her opponents. Perhaps the most informed study yet in this area, this engrossing book sheds light on a controversial subject. It deserves close reading by parents, educators and anyone interested in raising healthy, successful children of both sexes. (Review of The War On Boys, Publishers Weekly)


The students devolve to an angry, unreasonable mob

RECEIVED VIEW'S COLLISION WITH REALITY & REASON


MUSIC!


Dig me out
Dig me in
Out of this mess
Baby, out of my head
Dig me out
Dig me in
Out of my body
Out of my skin

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

     Another round of cost cutting is under way at Antioch College, with faculty and staff members who earn more than $40,000 per year being required to take mandatory furloughs and a de facto hiring freeze being put in place.
     Affected faculty and staff at the small college in Yellow Springs, Ohio, will need to take 10 days of unpaid leave before June 30, according to The Yellow Springs News. That’s the equivalent of an 11 percent pay cut over the next several months, or 3.8 percent of their annual salaries. No jobs are being eliminated….

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Good mood Thursday


This song is more than 50 years old but these two make it sound like it's brand new. Amazing. It doesn't get much better than this.





Irish Schoolgirl Kaylee Rodgers Singing Hallelujah

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

WALKOUT a success

At the college this morning
     [SEE PHOTOS BELOW!]
    In a coordinated protest, students across the country left their classrooms and marched in the streets a month after 17 people were killed in a Florida high school. 
    A month ago, hundreds of teenagers ran for their lives from the hallways and classrooms of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 students and staff had been shot to death. 
    On Wednesday, driven by the conviction that they should never have to run from guns again, they walked. So did their peers. In New York City, in Chicago, in Atlanta and Santa Monica; at Columbine High School and in Newtown, Conn.; and in many more cities and towns, students left school by the hundreds and the thousands at 10 a.m., sometimes in defiance of school authorities, who seemed divided and even flummoxed about how to handle their emptying classrooms.... (National School Walkout: Thousands Protest Against Gun Violence Across the U.S. - New York Times)
     IRVINE - Don't know about anywhere else, but here at IVC, today's 17-minute school shooting "walkout" was a hit. At 10:00 a.m, about 200 students found their way to a presentation, led by writing instructor Lisa "the Reb" Alvarez (and dozens of students), in front of the Student Services Building. They took turns reading, school by school, a litany of persons killed or injured by gun incidents on campuses across the country. Hundreds of 'em. They had not finished when, at the 17-minute mark, the event came to a decorous close.
     Students immediately dispersed and returned to their classrooms.
     Several policemen were present.
     President Roquemore hovered in the background. He wasn't wearing his "Make America Great Again" cap. Must've left it at home.
     I surfed around a bit and found that similar events occurred all across the county.


Saddleback College plans to participate in the Women's March Youth Empower's country-wide demonstration on Wednesday, March 14 at 10 a.m.

Got these pics from Rebel Girl, who got 'em from friends


Don't know what the chairs were for. They looked sharp though.
Add caption
GUN LOVE



Meet Matti. She's cute. She shoots jackrabbits. Not to eat 'em, just to kill 'em. Yeah.
She even shoots at 'em in the dark. They haven't got a chance. That's called "sport."


MUSIC



Cat Power: Lived In Bars


Hank Williamss & Anita Carter (1952)

AT SADDLEBACK COLLEGE:

#Enough students and instructors speak out against gun violence (Saddleback College Lariat)

Monday, March 12, 2018

IVC's Walkout: Countdown continues


Full color flyers everywhere.

Rebel Girl had the unusual experience today of seeing flyers she herself had not made and posted up everywhere on campus. Full color too. Lots of push pins. Everywhere. Sometimes 2-3 flyers per bulletin board. It was heartening.


Even in the SSC building!
Meanwhile the denizens of the LA Building are busy putting together a program. During the 17 minutes, we'll be reading the names of the 301 school shootings and the number killed since 2013.  
This was Prof. Egasse's great idea.  She got her stats here at Everytown for Gun Safety. People have been writing on index cards for days now. We'll have a basket of the cards near the podium and if you'd like to join in, you will be welcome to do so.

*



Sunday, March 11, 2018

Celebrating Rosa


Two Rosas.
Some photos from last night's Foundation Dinner: Celebrating Excellence or, as we, the denizens of the Liberal Arts building called it, Celebrating Rosa.  


Proud parents with program. 

Parents and dear friend.

Table 26: the furthest from the stage but the best in the house. 




Rosa and her fans. 
Old friends. 

Virginia's handiwork.
 Proud of what we do together. It makes a difference.

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...