Showing posts with label Professor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Professor. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Pissed off professor destroys laptop with liquid nitrogen.

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Pissed off professor destroys laptop with liquid nitrogen.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Calif. Professor Charged in Clash With Teen Abortion Protester

A feminist studies associate professor at the University of California-Santa Barbara is facing criminal charges, accused of stealing a sign from an anti-abortion protester on campus and then physically attacking the teenager in an incident that was captured on a cellphone video.

Mireille Miller-Young, an associate professor, was charged with misdemeanor counts of theft, battery, and vandalism, accused of  accosting 16-year-old Thrin Short. She is scheduled to be arraigned on April 4.


Short and her older sister, Joan, 21, were among a group distributing pamphlets for the nonprofit, anti-abortion group Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust in a free speech zone on campus on March 4 when Miller-Young became disruptive.


Story continues below video.


“Before she grabbed the sign, she was mocking me and talking over me in front of the students, saying that she was twice as old as me and had three degrees, so they should listen to her and not me,” Short wrote in an email to FoxNews.com. “Then she started the chant with the students about ‘tear down the sign.’ When that died out, she grabbed the sign.”


The Short sisters and two other UC-Santa Barbara students followed Miller-Young, who specializes in and teaches courses on pornography, as she made off with the sign and tried to recover their property. After walking through an outdoor corridor and into a building, Miller-Young attempted to board an elevator with the sign. When Thrin Short blocked the elevator door from closing with her foot, Miller-Young “pushed and grabbed at the girl.”


“She then got off the elevator and tried to pull me away from the elevator doors so the others could get away with the sign,” Short wrote in her email to FoxNews.


Thrin Short, who suffered scratches on both wrists during the incident, captured much of the confrontation on video with her cellphone and has posted it on YouTube. She said campus police are now reviewing the video.


According to the Santa Barbara Independent, Miller-Young suggested in her interview with police that the activists had violated her rights by displaying upsetting imagery at her place of work and that she believed she had a “moral right” to take down the sign. She added that she is pregnant and was “triggered” by the graphic nature of the imagery on the sign.


It has not yet been determined whether Miller-Young faces any punishment from UC-Santa Barbara. A school spokesman declined to comment on personnel matters, per policy, but acknowledged the university was aware of the incident and said, “It is being reviewed by the appropriate offices.”


William Short, father of the two young activists, said Miller-Young went about her objection in the wrong way and that he hopes the impending legal proceeding will set a better example than she did.


“She was free to engage in a rational dialogue with them. Instead, she chose to bully them, steal and destroy their property, and hit and scratch my daughter,” Short told FoxNews. “After doing so, she said she thought she was setting a good example for her students. I think the goal of this prosecution should be to set a good example for her students, one that will not only deter her from repeating this conduct, but will also deter those who approve of her actions from imitating her appalling behavior.”


Related Stories:


© 2014 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Calif. Professor Charged in Clash With Teen Abortion Protester

Friday, March 14, 2014

Harvard Professor Frankel Proposes "ECB Should Buy US Treasuries" to Fix Eurozone Problems

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Harvard Professor Frankel Proposes "ECB Should Buy US Treasuries" to Fix Eurozone Problems

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement

Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement
http://yarpp.org/pixels/c6bb0b5b7ce803685f4ea949415b8bfd


CBS Philly
March 11, 2014


Chris Stigall talked with Dr. Rudy Bell Tuesday on Talk Radio 1210 WPHT.


Dr. Bell is a professor of history at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ who helped organize a petition and faculty protest against the school’s decision to offer their commencement keynote address to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.


“Rice we feel is a particularly inappropriate choice because the controversy about the degree to which she actively is involved in interrogation techniques which were declared by international courts to amount to torture. She brings no positive merit,” Bell said, explaining why he’s against Rice speaking.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 2:33 pm










Infowars




Read more about Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement

Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement
http://yarpp.org/pixels/c6bb0b5b7ce803685f4ea949415b8bfd


CBS Philly
March 11, 2014


Chris Stigall talked with Dr. Rudy Bell Tuesday on Talk Radio 1210 WPHT.


Dr. Bell is a professor of history at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ who helped organize a petition and faculty protest against the school’s decision to offer their commencement keynote address to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.


“Rice we feel is a particularly inappropriate choice because the controversy about the degree to which she actively is involved in interrogation techniques which were declared by international courts to amount to torture. She brings no positive merit,” Bell said, explaining why he’s against Rice speaking.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 2:33 pm










Infowars




Read more about Rutgers Professor Explains Why He’s Opposed To Condoleezza Rice Speaking At Commencement and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, January 16, 2014

China Detains Uyghur Professor

China Detains Uyghur Professor
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



Plus, new info on China’s ADIZ, the anti-Japan media blitz, and the hyper-sonic missile test. China links.




The New York Times’ Sinosphere blog reports on the detention of Ilham Tohti, a Uyghur professor who has a history of speaking out about anti-Uyghur discrimination in Xinjiang. Tohti, who lives and works in Beijing, had experienced increased pressure since the October 2013 attack in Tiananmen Square, where a purposeful car crash killed five. The attack was blamed on a Uyghur terrorist group. The Chinese government has said Tohti is “suspected of breaking the law,” but so far there has been no information on what charges he faces. In response, Tohti’s wife, Guzailai Nu’er told Reuters that her husband “didn’t do anything unlawful … All he has done is write detailed articles researching the population in Xinjiang. There’s nothing else to it.”


Since the Tiananmen attack, there has been increasing violence in Xinjiang, especially near the city of Kashgar. The Chinese government typically attributes deaths in Xinjiang to terrorist attacks or police counterterrorism efforts. Uyghur activists, however, have said that several of the incidents involved Chinese police firing on peaceful protestors. With the rise in violence in Xinjiang, the Chinese government has grown increasingly sensitive about the topic of Uyghur repression, which may have been the driving factor behind Tohti’s arrest.


In other news, the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun reported that China’s original draft air defense identification zone (ADIZ) was smaller than the final version. The original proposal had China’s ADIZ more or less matching China’s Exclusive Economic Zone. The ADIZ was later revised to extend eastward towards Japan. Apparently, the Chinese government wanted to make sure that, at its closest point, the ADIZ was 130 kilometers away from a Japanese island, because Japan’s own ADIZ ends only 130 km away from China. The Asahi Shimbun account is another example of China’s strategy — Beijing is so far being careful to provide cover for itself by matching Japan’s moves tit-for-tat.


Meanwhile, China continues its global media battle against Japan, as Jin Kai noted in an article for The Diplomat.  The Chinese government is stepping up its efforts to remind Western countries that they too were victimized by Japanese aggression during World War II. Reuters reports that journalists were taken to visit a camp in Shenyang where Japan kept prisoners-of-war from the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the Netherlands. At the camp, reporters “were shown graphic images of the terrible conditions endured by some 2,000 prisoners,” wrote Megha Rajagopalan for Reuters.


During Thursday’s press conference, a reporter specifically asked Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hong Lei if China was “trying to remind the U.S., Australia and other western countries that Japan also committed war crimes against them during WWII and that they should side with China?” Hong replied, The Chinese Foreign Ministry and embassies have called on all countries to … be vigilant against [Shinzo] Abe’s actions, [and] jointly uphold the victory of WWII won at the cost of tens of millions of lives.”


In a follow-up to news of a deadly explosion in Guizhou province, the BBC (citing Chinese state media) reported that eight people have been arrested in connection with the blast.  The death toll was increased to 15. Little more news is available on the explosion, but the Wall Street Journal’s China Real Time Report explored the site’s alleged connection to gambling. According to the article, police estimate that in Qiandongnan prefecture, where Laoshan village is located, illegal gambling dens are worth more than 100 million RMB ($ 16.5 million).


Finally, in response to Western reports of a Chinese hypersonic missile test, the Chinese government is attempting to downplay the threat. China Daily cited the Ministry of National Defense as calling the test a “scientific experiment.” “The tests were not aimed at any nation nor any specific target,” the ministry’s statement added. The article further cited Chinese experts who reassured the U.S. on its dominant military position. Fan Jishe from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences told China Daily that “the U.S. still enjoys the leading position in military ability, both strategic weapons and conventional armaments” while “China is still rather backward” in the field of high-tech weapons.




The Diplomat




Read more about China Detains Uyghur Professor and other interesting subjects concerning Asia at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Professor Dongping Han

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Professor Dongping Han

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Professor blames "southern white radicals" for Obamacare debacle

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Professor blames "southern white radicals" for Obamacare debacle

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Fake Professor Pranks Students in College ! Vitalyzdtv


Fake Professor Pranks Students in College & force them to hide their Iphone & Laptop vitalyzdtv , Prank, FouseyTube, RomanAtwood,
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Fake Professor Pranks Students in College ! Vitalyzdtv

Fake Professor Pranks Students in College ! Vitalyzdtv


Fake Professor Pranks Students in College & force them to hide their Iphone & Laptop vitalyzdtv , Prank, FouseyTube, RomanAtwood,
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Fake Professor Pranks Students in College ! Vitalyzdtv

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

[258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power

[258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power
http://img.youtube.com/vi/wFcf3XntXjo/0.jpg


Abby Martin Breaks the Set on Government Shutdown Stupidity, Touchy Feely TSA, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power. LIKE Breaking the Set …




Read more about [258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

[258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power

[258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power
http://img.youtube.com/vi/wFcf3XntXjo/0.jpg


Abby Martin Breaks the Set on Government Shutdown Stupidity, Touchy Feely TSA, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power. LIKE Breaking the Set …
Video Rating: 4 / 5




Read more about [258] Gov. Shutdown Sham Delayed, NSA Sponsored Drones, Professor Griff Fights the Power and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, December 13, 2013

Professor Griff on Miley Cyrus and the Twerking Industrial Complex

At A Political Statement, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by A Political Statement and how it is used.

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Professor Griff on Miley Cyrus and the Twerking Industrial Complex

Monday, November 18, 2013

Chicago Law Professor Claims No Privacy In Your Emails, As Long As The Content Isn’t Used To Detain Or Harass You


from the oh-really? dept


Mike Masnick
Tech Dirt
November 18, 2013


Eric Posner, a law professor in Chicago and a full-blown supporter of extreme authoritarian governments (he’s even written a book about why the US presidency needs more power and less respect for the Constitutional separation of powers), is, not surprisingly, a big fan of the NSA’s surveillance efforts. In the past, he’s mocked Snowden and Manning, and talked up why a government that keeps secrets is better than one that’s actually accountable to its public. In other words, he’s the perfect stooge to try to come up with a justification for Rep. Mike Rogers’ ridiculous claims that your privacy isn’t violated if you don’t know about it.


His latest article isn’t directly a justification for that statement — in fact, it doesn’t even mention it — but it’s clearly cut from the same cloth. He makes the argument that the NSA should keep spying on all foreigners in part because they spy on us (and also because he thinks we’re good at it). However, he also has a rather unique interpretation of privacy:


Mass surveillance—where emails and other communications are vacuumed up, stored in databases, and then searched for keywords—doesn’t harm anyone in itself. The problem only arises when the information is used to detain, interrogate, or harass people.



He’s using this bizarre and laughable line of argument to suggest that it’s okay when governments spy on citizens in other countries because their “intelligence agents do not have the time or inclination to harass random Americans, nor the capability as long as Americans remain in the United States.” So, in his mind: no privacy violation happens.


He doubles down on this thinking later, arguing again that if there’s no known “harm” to the individual, there’s no privacy issue at all.


Suppose that the NSA collects the emails of foreigners and conducts searches of them for keywords. Occasionally a false positive turns up, and an analyst reads someone’s email to his lover, therapist, or doctor, ascertains that the email contains no information that identifies terrorists or other security threats, and deletes it. The writer of the email never finds out, and the analyst of course has no idea who this person is. Has a human right been violated? It is hard to identify an affront to human dignity, or even a harm, any more than if a police officer overhears a snatch of personal conversation on the bus.



Of course, how hard is it to reword that paragraph just slightly, to demonstrate the insanity of Posner’s claim?


Suppose that some hackers collect the emails of Eric Posner, and conducts searches of them for keywords. Occasionally a really embarrassing one turns up, and the hacker reads about Posner’s sexual proclivities, financial difficulties, medical problems or similar such things, ascertains that the email contains no information that identifies crimes that Posner is planning to commit and deletes it. Or maybe he saves it for use at a later date. Or to share with a friend. Or a lot of friends. Posner never finds out, and even though the hacker knows who Posner is, he’ll never see him in person. Has a human right been violated? It is hard to identify an affront to human dignity, or even a harm, any more than if a police officer overhears Eric Posner talking on a bus.



Posner’s basic assumption is flat out crazy. He’s arguing that there’s no privacy violation until something bad happens with the information, not when it was seized, and not even when it was perused by human eyes — but only when something nebulously bad happens with it. That makes no sense. The violation comes much earlier. There is real harm in having your information exposed, even if you don’t know about it.


Beyond the fact that Posner is simply wrong about when the privacy violation occurs, even if we accept his wacky argument, he’s still wrong. That’s because he’s making two giant assumptions. First, that such information isn’t abused. He pretends that “national borders” protect spying on foreigners because you can’t do something legally to a person in another country. I would imagine that people killed by US drone strikes might disagree with that assessment. He also argues it’s unlikely that there would be many abuses of this information, because any abuses would harm the spying country and its spies once they came out. Pretty much all of civilized human history suggests that’s wrong. Give people power, as Posner is aching to do, and they abuse it. Over and over again. But, I guess he’s okay with that, just as long as he never finds out about it. Dictatorships and ignorance are bliss!


This article was posted: Monday, November 18, 2013 at 11:38 am


Tags: big brother, domestic spying









Infowars



Chicago Law Professor Claims No Privacy In Your Emails, As Long As The Content Isn’t Used To Detain Or Harass You

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Professor Fires Off Email In Defense Of Student Forbidden From Handing Out Copies Of Constitution


techdirt.com
November 2, 2013


On Constitution Day (Sept. 17th), a student of Modesto Junior College, Robert Van Tuinen, was prevented by Modesto Junior College administration from handing out copies of the Constitution. The college apparently believes free speech is limited to a single small concrete slab on campus, generously named the “Free Speech Zone.” Contrary to the First Amendment (and the state’s laws governing public university policies), MJC restricts free speech to no more than two people per day, subject to approval of the administration.


Van Tuinen set out to challenge the stupidity of this policy and MJC administration obligingly played its part, resulting in a story that spread across blogs and news sites. As a result of its actions, the staff at MJC was “subjected” to insults, death threats, and even worse, an “unfair and negative portrayal” by the media. While no one condones death threats, one would be hard pressed to agree with Jill Stearns, the president of MJC, that the portrayal was “unfair” or that the school’s willingness to place policy above all else, including the Constitution and common sense, wasn’t deserving of a few disparaging remarks.


Shortly after MJC went into damage control, Van Tuinen sued the school for violating his First Amendment rights. Van Tuinen is seeking a permanent injunction against the school’s unconstitutional policies, as well as damages and court costs.


Now the organization that originally brought the Van Tuinen’s experience to national attention (FIRE) brings news that a Modesto Junior College professor has written a lengthy email to all Modest Junior College faculty members to call attention to the college’s actions which the administration seemingly wants to let recede into the background.


Professor William J. Holly was kind enough to forward his entire email to me, as well as provide some additional info on California laws governing schools and students’ First Amendment rights, as well as this bizarre and tense interaction with school security over the supposed rule changes President Jill Stearns said were underway.


I do not know what rules are now in effect. Last week I stopped by campus security and asked what the rules now were, and he referred me to ASMJC office on the other campus. I said he must know what the rules are since he was responsible for enforcing the rules. He kept pushing the paper with the name of the office on it, saying he was referring me to that office. It got a little tense because I kept saying he must know the rules and should be able to let us know what the rules are. Finally, he said he was not allowed to discuss this with anyone because they are under litigation. Stearns says the rules are being reviewed. Does that mean there are no rules?



Stearns’ statement says the college is “evaluating its policies and procedures.” It also says this:


There is absolutely no requirement that a student register weeks in advance and hand out his literature only in a small marked area.



There may not be one now, but that requirement was certainly in place back in September.


It also says this.


To those who were offended by the appearance of censorship, we again affirm the commitment of the college and district to civil discourse.



Hilarious. Pity the poor people who took offense at Van Tuinen being accosted by a campus cop and repeatedly told he’d need to get on the waiting list for the Freedom Slab and mistakenly believed it violated his First Amendment rights.


Holly does a wonderful job in his email dismantling Stearns’ non-apology.


[I]t is unclear what she means when she addresses “those who were offended by the appearance of censorship.” Van Tuinen was not subjected to the mere “appearance of censorship.” He was silenced and he was prevented from distributing his literature. That is outright censorship, pure and simple, whether it resulted from a misunderstanding or not.



But Holly’s letter is more than just a deconstruction of Stearns’ statements and MJC’s dubious policies. It’s also a wakeup call directed at his colleagues, many of whom were either unaware of this event or simply stood by and let incident pass by not remarked on.


Dear Colleagues:



The paper attached above (Destructing Causal Deconstruction) exposes some of the absurdities that are committed in the name of “Deconstruction.” I think it is a good read — clear, amusing, imaginative, and instructive. If you ever wondered what “deconstruction” is really about, you would be hard pressed to find a better introduction. One question that I cannot answer, however, is whether or not I would be arrested by a security officer if I insisted on wandering about the quad on our campus, handing out copies of this paper and discussing it with those who might be interested in the topic. This is not a silly question…


Nearly a month ago (Sept. 17th) one of our MJC students, Robert Van Tuinen (also a veteran), was trying to pass out copies of our federal Constitution on Constitution Day. He was prevented in this exercise of free speech by an MJC security officer, and then by an official at the office of Student Services who told him he was allowed freedom of speech and the right to pass out literature only in certain tiny restricted areas on our campus, and then only after booking a reservation — which would not be available until the following month!


I am puzzled why there has been no faculty outcry over this ugly incident. Why are we not standing up for our student who only wanted to exercise his constitutional right to free speech? Do we really want to be known nationwide as the college that wouldn’t let a veteran pass out copies of our Constitution on Constitution Day?



Holly’s not being facetious about “nationwide.” The story was picked up by the Huffington Post, the Washington Times, FOX News, the L.A. Times, along with numerous other well-read sites like Reason, the Daily Caller and National Review Online. But Modesto Junior College itself? Apparently it isn’t interested in providing current or prospective students (or faculty, for that matter) with anything more than the president’s statement.


The First Amendment in pertinent part says, ” Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press …” Some have taken this to be a right you have against the Federal Government, but not (say) against the State of California (as though the rights you thought you had simply in virtue of being a citizen of the United States could be nullified by the particular state in which you live). Happily, the point is largely moot because the constitution of California has its own guarantees of rights that largely parallel the U.S. Constitution Bill of Rights — including separation of church and state, etc. Guarantees of freedom of expression even exist in parts of the California Code of Education, and even the University of California has a constitution that holds out these rights, and even individual campuses have their own codes regarding such things as Academic Freedom. At CSUS and at PLU, the rules that claim Academic Freedom for faculty make clear that such freedom should extend equally to students!



The most pertinent part of the California Education Code is this section.


66301. (a) Neither the Regents of the University of California, the Trustees of the California State University, the governing board of a community college district, nor an administrator of any campus of those institutions, shall make or enforce a rule subjecting a student to disciplinary sanction solely on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication that, when engaged in outside a campus of those institutions, is protected from governmental restriction by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Section 2 of Article I of the California Constitution.



Considering Van Tuinen’s lawsuit, the directly-following subsection is also relevant.


(b) A student enrolled in an institution, as specified in subdivision (a), at the time that the institution has made or enforced a rule in violation of subdivision (a) may commence a civil action to obtain appropriate injunctive and declaratory relief as determined by the court. Upon a motion, a court may award attorney’s fees to a prevailing plaintiff in a civil action pursuant to this section.



Given the state law governing the public college, it would appear that MJC’s free speech policies are in violation of state law, not to mention the state’s constitution, even granting a very generous reading of “time, place and manner” wording.


Holly also questions the “formal apology” extended by the school to Van Tuinen. Whatever it was (and no one has seen it but Van Tuinen and administrators), it’s clearly not sufficient.


[W[e are told that a formal apology has been provided the student. It seems to me, however, that apologies in such cases are best made in public. I think Van Tuinen would want a published apology, a public admission that MJC had no right to deny him the exercise of his liberties that they did, and a promise that no other students would have their rights similarly violated. And, since the violation of the rights of one of our fellow citizens violates us all, I believe that we all are entitled to see a copy of that apology, to see the particulars of the concessions made, and to see in what manner those liberties now are affirmed that then were denied.



As Holly points out, the fact that Van Tuinen is proceeding with his lawsuit is a good indicator that the apology offered wasn"t satisfactory.


Holly then goes further, suggesting what should be done, not only to satisfy Van Tuinen, but to make sure other students know their rights are protected and ensure this sort of restriction doesn"t make its way back into the school policies in the future.


In one interview, [Van Tuinen] has said that he is not doing this for the money. I think what he wants is a civil rights victory. That should be easy to give him, especially if President Stearns is right this all has just been a misunderstanding…


If he doesn’t really care about money, if he just wants public acknowledgement that he was wronged, perhaps we should offer this: Buy him a couple thousand copies of the Constitution or of the Bill of Rights, and offer to make the individuals he has sued do community service that is relevant. Make them each do twenty hours of community service that consist of passing out copies of the Constitution and explaining to people the importance of everyone’s right to free speech. That ought to make him whole. And, to show my sincerity, I hereby offer to do 20 hours of such community service myself. Perhaps I too bear part of the responsibility here, because this one flew under my radar too. I did not check to see if my students’ rights to free speech were properly protected. Sometimes the implications of rules just do not strike us until we see them enforced.



Summing things up, Holly asks what some famous free speakers would run into if attempting to speak on MJC’s campus.


Now, if you do not like my suggestion that we should have a policy of completely free, unfettered and unqualified freedom of thought and expression on this campus, just ask yourself this one question: Suppose that Thomas Paine, the great pamphleteer (“These are the times that try men’s souls…”) were to come to MJC. Would you make him show his ID or make an advance appointment? Would you sic campus security and Student Services on him before allowing him to distribute his literature? Hell, what would you do if Jesus came? Would you have Student services tell Him he needs an appointment in advance, that the free speech zone is booked up until next month, and that He needs to confine his speech to the designated free speech zone areas? I say, Let Freedom Reign!



Holly’s effort to light a fire under his colleagues is admirable. Many people are too willing to defer to existing policy, especially if it doesn’t apply directly to them. Van Tuinen pushed back against an unconstitutional policy and has brought the idiocy of campus “Free Speech Zones” back into the national limelight. Holly doesn’t suggest throwing away all restraints on speech (exempting classrooms and faculty offices in order to prevent disruption of educating), but his view of what a “Free Speech Zone” should actually include covers far more area than MJC’s infamous concrete slab.


The entire email is worth a read, as is his Deconstructing Casual Deconstruction. Holly’s defense of students’ rights is a rarity in institutes of higher learning, many of which seem to believe the restraint of speech somehow creates better students.


This article was posted: Saturday, November 2, 2013 at 10:55 am


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Infowars



Professor Fires Off Email In Defense Of Student Forbidden From Handing Out Copies Of Constitution

Monday, July 29, 2013

Professor accused of poisoning wife with cyanide to face extradition




  • Robert Ferrante is expected to waive extradition

  • The cause of his wife’s death is cyanide poisoning

  • “He’s anxious to defend himself,” his lawyer says



(CNN) — A University of Pittsburgh research professor faces an extradition hearing in West Virginia on Monday as authorities seek his return to Pennsylvania where he’s accused of killing his wife with a lethal dose of cyanide.


Robert Ferrante is not expected to put up a fight.


“He’s anxious to defend himself, have his day in court, prove his innocence,” said Ferrante’s defense attorney William Difenderfer.


Ferrante is accused of killing Autumn Klein, a 41-year-old accomplished Pittsburgh doctor. She was the former head of women’s neurology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.


Ferrante is a researcher and professor of neurological surgery at the University of Pittsburgh.


As part of his position there, Ferrante managed a laboratory where he conducts trials of various drugs and chemicals, according to a criminal complaint.


According to the complaint, text messages were found between the couple on April 17, the day Klein fell ill. The exchange included Ferrante suggesting creatine to Klein in hopes of stimulating egg production.


The complaint also alleges that a day earlier, Ferrante placed an order for an “overnight delivery of cyanide.”


Investigators allege that Ferrante laced the creatine with cyanide.


Cyanide is a naturally occurring toxic substance that can be found in seeds of different plants. It is widely distributed throughout research laboratories as a chemical used in scientific experiments.


Cyanide interferes with the ability of the body to use oxygen to produce energy, which can lead to rapid death.


On April 17, Allegheny County 911 dispatch received a call from Ferrante requesting medical assistance for his wife, who he said was possibly having a stroke, the complaint read. He described her condition as “conscious and breathing, but not alert.”


When paramedics arrived, they found the victim on the floor of the kitchen with a plastic bag containing creatine.


She died April 20.


According to Karl Williams, chief medical examiner of Allegheny County, there is no connection with creatine and fertility. Creatine is a supplement that bodybuilders use to increase body mass, Williams said.


“The amazing amount of subpoenas of investigation that went in to determining in fact that it was a homicide. That’s what took so long,” Williams said.


Ferrante’s arrest Thursday ended a nationwide manhunt. Officials said West Virginia State Police apprehended him after his car was stopped while heading north on Interstate 77 near Beckley, West Virginia.


“He was relatively quiet,” said State Police Sgt. William Tupper. “He knew there were warrants for him. Said he was en route back to Pittsburgh.”


Ferrante has been placed on immediate and indefinite leave from his university, according to school spokesman John Andrew Fedele.


Sole and legal custody of Ferrante’s child has been placed with the maternal grandparents, according to a statement form the district attorney’s office.


His financial assets have also been frozen.


CNN’s Erinn Cawthon and Dominique Debucquoy-Dodley contributed to this report.




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Professor accused of poisoning wife with cyanide to face extradition

Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Alex Jones Show - Tuesday, July 02, 2013 (Full Show): Professor Griff, Raymond Teague



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The Alex Jones Show - Tuesday, July 02, 2013 (Full Show): Professor Griff, Raymond Teague

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Law Professor: Even If NSA Domestic Surveillance Is Legal, It"s Unconstitutional




Laura K. Donohue is a professor at Georgetown University Law Center and director of Georgetown’s Center on National Security and the Law.



The National Security Agency’s recently revealed surveillance programs undermine the purpose of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which was established to prevent this kind of overreach. They violate the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee against unreasonable search and seizure. And they underscore the dangers of growing executive power.


The intelligence community has a history of overreaching in the name of national security. In the mid-1970s, it came to light that, since the 1940s, the NSA had been collecting international telegraphic traffic from companies, in the process obtaining millions of Americans’ telegrams that were unrelated to foreign targets. From 1940 to 1973, the CIA and the FBI engaged in covert mail-opening programs that violated laws prohibiting the interception or opening of mail. The agencies also conducted warrantless “surreptitious entries,” breaking into targets’ offices and homes to photocopy or steal business records and personal documents. The Army Security Agency intercepted domestic radio communications. And the Army’s CONUS program placed more than 100,000 people under surveillance, including lawmakers and civil rights leaders.




After an extensive investigation of the agencies’ actions, Congress passed the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to limit sweeping collection of intelligence and create rigorous oversight. But 35 years later, the NSA is using this law and its subsequent amendments as legal grounds to run even more invasive programs than those that gave rise to the statute.


We’ve learned that in April, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) ordered Verizon to provide information on calls made by each subscriber over a three-month period. Over the past seven years, similar orders have been served continuously on AT&T, Sprint and other telecommunications providers.


Another program, PRISM, disclosed by the Guardian and The Washington Post, allows the NSA and the FBI to obtain online data including e-mails, photographs, documents and connection logs. The information that can be assembledabout any one person — much less organizations, social networks and entire communities — is staggering: What we do, think and believe.


The government defends the programs’ legality, saying they comply with FISA and its amendments. It may be right, but only because FISA has ceased to provide a meaningful constraint.


Under the traditional FISA, if the government wants to conduct electronic surveillance, it must make a classified application to a special court, identitying or describing the target. It must demonstrate probable cause that the target is a foreign power or an agent thereof, and that the facilities to be monitored will be used by the target.


In 2008, Congress added section 702 to the statute, allowing the government to use electronic surveillance to collect foreign intelligence on non-U.S. persons it reasonably believes are abroad, without a court order for each target. A U.S. citizen may not intentionally be targeted.




Politics



Law Professor: Even If NSA Domestic Surveillance Is Legal, It"s Unconstitutional

Monday, June 3, 2013

Professor Calls For NRA Members To Be Shot By Firing Squad For Treason


NRA 2 SC Professor Calls for NRA Members to be Shot by Firing Squad for Treason


A professor in West Virginia provides yet another example of the inescapable reality that the real threat to America, beyond a complicit media, is likely to be found in college classrooms.


Christopher Swindell, journalism professor at Marshall University, is calling on National Rifle Association members to be shot before a firing squad.


In an op/ed published in the Charleston Gazette on Thursday, Swindell offered his version of the “final solution” for supporters of the Second Amendment, as Independent Journal Review’s Michael Miller characterized his vile rhetoric.


Read More at joemiller.us . By Tom Tillison.


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Professor Calls For NRA Members To Be Shot By Firing Squad For Treason