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Social Evergreen State College After Meltdown: Enrollment Drops by 40%, Faculty down 20%

I just want to tell everyone, that outside of seattle and the Universties, Washington state is full of social libertarian, economic progressives.

This cultural marxist BS is being engineered.

I though it was kind of like California, Oregon. Leftist Socialist along the coastal towns near Puget Sound. And in the east it's redneck red conservative near Spokane, Richland, Kennewick,Walla Walla and farming regions.
 
I am still surprised that the liberal mainstream media has not even breathed a word about this.
To be fair it is a culture wars story and Evergreen state is just nothing to care about. But yeah, they would go nuts if the right did anything like this. Plus it's a story about looney chimp outs that don't block traffic or steal the attention of anyone disinterested in these stories. They aren't going to cast light on black misbehavior and lies.
 
of course the liberal media like Vox isn't covering this

it just inherently shows the flaws in most of their own arguments

they're absurd liars, but they're not flatout dumb
 
A 'social evolution' of sorts. I think he'd need to flesh out what he means, because to me it is just saying that humans are very adaptable to changing environments in the social realm, and the social environment also evolves, or changes, over time. I think this is obviously true.

I don't know how he is applying that concept to those students though. They have adopted a man made ideology and are acting that out. What are they adapting to? Maybe the social environment makes them susceptible to it, I don't know.

I didn't get where he was going really.

Yes it's an inversion of hierarchy, as defined by them. That is what ideological subversion does. It's designed to destabilize order, which is what Yuri Bezmenov explains. It's a warfare strategy from the perspective of the big international players and we are looking at ground level effects of it.

"Subversion refers to an attempt to transform the established social order and its structures of power, authority, and hierarchy. Subversion (Latin subvertere: overthrow) refers to a process by which the values and principles of a system in place are contradicted or reversed. More specifically, subversion can be described as an attack on the public morale and, "the will to resist intervention are the products of combined political and social or class loyalties which are usually attached to national symbols. Following penetration, and parallel with the forced disintegration of political and social institutions of the state, these loyalties may be detached and transferred to the political or ideological cause of the aggressor"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subversion

It is also codified at ground level in the 'progressive stack' idea.
As to the white anti-fa acting types he described, yeah they are operating out of a sense of guilt and reparations. The guilt psychology of the 'kulaks' is a big component of the overall strategy. They are guilty by basis of their skin color and they can try to redeem themselves (atone for their original sin) through a sort of masochistic slave mentality.

I'm not exactly sure, so it's hard to argue, but I'll note that he did mean evolution in it's truest sense, and that's why he prefaced his statements by mentioning Darwin, and that because of Darwin, evolution is incorrectly viewed as being only genetic. I'll have to listen to him further, but I'm intrigued.

I'm also intrigued by the alliance forged by Rubin and Weinstein, with Rubin in particular pushing it, given that he's a staunch anti-progressive. This alliance could prove to be meaningful in a broader sense of ideologies meeting in the middle, finding common ground, and maybe most importantly, highlighting the real enemy.
 
I'm not exactly sure, so it's hard to argue, but I'll note that he did mean evolution in it's truest sense, and that's why he prefaced his statements by mentioning Darwin, and that because of Darwin, evolution is incorrectly viewed as being only genetic. I'll have to listen to him further, but I'm intrigued.

I'm also intrigued by the alliance forged by Rubin and Weinstein, with Rubin in particular pushing it, given that he's a staunch anti-progressive. This alliance could prove to be meaningful in a broader sense of ideologies meeting in the middle, finding common ground, and maybe most importantly, highlighting the real enemy.

Yeah I dunno. Seems wishy washy to me.

I don't know much about Rubin but he seems slightly left of center. A more classic liberal probably, valuing free speech.

The Marxists in the midst of the left are becoming more and more visible it seems, and they are dangerous to anyone that is outside of their extreme (and to themselves I would say). So classic liberals (and even progressives if they want to be taken seriously) are going to have to separate themselves and push back a bit. It can only be a good thing for this to happen IMO.
 
I though it was kind of like California, Oregon. Leftist Socialist along the coastal towns near Puget Sound. And in the east it's redneck red conservative near Spokane, Richland, Kennewick,Walla Walla and farming regions.

Almost every Washington state 'liberal' I know, is a social libertarian, which includes being pro 2nd.

If by socialist, you mean economic progressives, then yes, guilty as charged, but you won't find much support for hate speech laws, forced vaccinations, or the social progressive agenda, and leftist hawk FP.
 
Lmao...and yours what I would expect from a self important sjw turd. Get lost. .. Don't give a shit what you think
Presuming i'm a SJW is more evidence of your stupidity. You might as well say i'm just like Hitler. Same logic.
 
According to Bret Weinstein the campus was closed down and he is being blamed for it. :eek::eek:

 
You know, we make fun of Europe here over the migrant crisis, but we've got a lot of cleaning up to do in our own backyard with these types of retards.
 
According to Bret Weinstein the campus was closed down and he is being blamed for it. :eek::eek:



What was there reasoning.. he was creating an 'unsafe atmosphere for learning' or some other emotionally manipulative boilerplate drivel?
 
What was there reasoning.. he was creating an 'unsafe atmosphere for learning' or some other emotionally manipulative boilerplate drivel?

Whiteness is the most evil system to ever exist which means Bret Weinstein is a force of pure evil and must be kept away from the campus at all costs even if that means shutting it down.
 
The Campus Mob Came for Me—and You, Professor, Could Be Next
Whites were asked to leave for a ‘Day of Absence.’ I objected. Then 50 yelling students crashed my class.
By Bret Weinstein | May 30, 2017

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I was not expecting to hold my biology class in a public park last week. But then the chief of our college police department told me she could not protect me on campus. Protestors were searching cars for an unspecified individual—likely me—and her officers had been told to stand down, against her judgment, by the college president.

Racially charged, anarchic protests have engulfed Evergreen State College, a small, public liberal-arts institution where I have taught since 2003. In a widely disseminated video of the first recent protest on May 23, an angry mob of about 50 students disrupted my class, called me a racist, and demanded that I resign. My “racist” offense? I had challenged coercive segregation by race. Specifically, I had objected to a planned “Day of Absence” in which white people were asked to leave campus on April 12.

Day of Absence is a tradition at Evergreen. In previous years students and faculty of color organized a day on which they met off campus—a symbolic act based on the Douglas Turner Ward play in which all the black residents of a Southern town fail to show up one morning. This year, however, the formula was reversed. “White students, staff and faculty will be invited to leave the campus for the day’s activities,” the student newspaper reported, adding that the decision was reached after people of color “voiced concern over feeling as if they are unwelcome on campus, following the 2016 election.”

In March I objected in an email to all staff and faculty. “There is a huge difference between a group or coalition deciding to voluntarily absent themselves from a shared space in order to highlight their vital and under-appreciated roles . . . and a group or coalition encouraging another group to go away,” I wrote. “On a college campus, one’s right to speak—or to be—must never be based on skin color.”

My email was published by the student newspaper, and Day of Absence came and went almost without incident. The protest of my class emerged seemingly out of the blue more than a month later. Evergreen has slipped into madness. You don’t need the news to tell you that—the protesters’ own videos will do. But those clips reveal neither the path that led to this psychosis, nor the cautionary nature of the tale for other campuses.

Evergreen is arguably the most radical college in the country—and while it does lean far to the left in a political sense, it is the school’s pedagogical structure to which I refer. Rather than placing students in many separate classes, most of our curriculum is integrated into full-time programs that may run the entire academic year. This structure allows students and professors to come to know each other very well, such that Evergreen can deliver a deep, personally tailored education that would be impossible elsewhere. When it works well, it is unlike anything else. Last week’s breakdown of institutional order is far from an indictment of our founder’s wisdom.

Rather, the protests resulted from a tension that has existed throughout the entire American academy for decades: The button-down empirical and deductive fields, including all the hard sciences, have lived side by side with “critical theory,” postmodernism and its perception-based relatives. Since the creation in 1960s and ’70s of novel, justice-oriented fields, these incompatible worldviews have repelled one another. The faculty from these opposing perspectives, like blue and red voters, rarely mix in any context where reality might have to be discussed. For decades, the uneasy separation held, with the factions enduring an unhappy marriage for the good of the (college) kids.

Things began to change at Evergreen in 2015, when the school hired a new president, George Bridges. His vision as an administrator involved reducing professorial autonomy, increasing the size of his administration, and breaking apart Evergreen’s full-time programs. But the faculty, which plays a central role in the college’s governance, would never have agreed to these changes. So Mr. Bridges tampered with the delicate balance between the sciences and humanities by, in effect, arming the postmoderns.

The particular mechanism was arcane, but it involved an Equity Council established in 2016. The council advanced a plan that few seem to have read, even now—but that faculty were nonetheless told we must accept without discussion. It would shift the college “from a diversity agenda” to an “equity agenda” by, among other things, requiring an “equity justification” for every faculty hire.

The plan and the way it is being forced on the college are both deeply authoritarian, and the attempt to mandate equality of outcome is unwise in the extreme. Equality of outcome is a discredited concept, failing on both logical and historical grounds, as anyone knows who has studied the misery of the 20th century. It wouldn’t have withstood 20 minutes of reasoned discussion.

This presented traditional independent academic minds with a choice: Accept the plan and let the intellectual descendants of Critical Race Theory dictate the bounds of permissible thought to the sciences and the rest of the college, or insist on discussing the plan’s shortcomings and be branded as racists. Most of my colleagues chose the former, and the protesters are in the process of articulating the terms. I dissented and ended up teaching in the park.


Mr. Weinstein is a biology professor at the Evergreen State College.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-campus-mob-came-for-meand-you-professor-could-be-next-1496187482
 
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Someone leaked some footage from one of the math classes

 
I am still surprised that the liberal mainstream media has not even breathed a word about this.

Breaking news! A full week later, the venerable New York Time finally found out about what's happening at Evergreen and green-lit an opinion piece on it!

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When the Left Turns on Its Own
Bari Weiss | JUNE 1, 2017

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Bret Weinstein is a biology professor at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash., who supported Bernie Sanders, admiringly retweets Glenn Greenwald and was an outspoken supporter of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

You could be forgiven for thinking that Mr. Weinstein, who identifies himself as “deeply progressive,” is just the kind of teacher that students at one of the most left-wing colleges in the country would admire. Instead, he has become a victim of an increasingly widespread campaign by leftist students against anyone who dares challenge ideological orthodoxy on campus.

This professor’s crime? He had the gall to challenge a day of racial segregation.

A bit of background: The “Day of Absence” is an Evergreen tradition that stretches back to the 1970s. As Mr. Weinstein explained on Wednesday in The Wall Street Journal, “in previous years students and faculty of color organized a day on which they met off campus — a symbolic act based on the Douglas Turner Ward play in which all the black residents of a Southern town fail to show up one morning.” This year, the script was flipped: “White students, staff and faculty will be invited to leave campus for the day’s activities,” reported the student newspaper on the change. The decision was made after students of color “voiced concern over feeling as if they are unwelcome on campus, following the 2016 election.”

Mr. Weinstein thought this was wrong. The biology professor said as much in a letter to Rashida Love, the school’s Director of First Peoples Multicultural Advising Services. “There is a huge difference between a group or coalition deciding to voluntarily absent themselves from a shared space in order to highlight their vital and under-appreciated roles,” he wrote, “and a group or coalition encouraging another group to go away.” The first instance, he argued, “is a forceful call to consciousness.” The second “is a show of force, and an act of oppression in and of itself.” In other words, what purported to be a request for white students and professors to leave campus was something more than that. It was an act of moral bullying — to stay on campus as a white person would mean to be tarred as a racist.

Reasonable people can debate whether or not social experiments like a Day of Absence are enlightening. Perhaps there’s a case to be made that a white-free day could be a useful way to highlight the lack of racial diversity, particularly at a proudly progressive school like Evergreen. Yet reasonable debate has made itself absent at Evergreen.

For expressing his view, Mr. Weinstein was confronted outside his classroom last week by a group of some 50 students insisting he was a racist. The video of that exchange — “You’re supporting white supremacy” is one of the more milquetoast quotes — must be seen to be believed. It will make anyone who believes in the liberalizing promise of higher education quickly lose heart. When a calm Mr. Weinstein tries to explain that his only agenda is “the truth,” the students chortle.

Following the protest, college police, ordered by Evergreen’s president to stand down, told Mr. Weinstein they couldn’t guarantee his safety on campus. In the end, Mr. Weinstein held his biology class in a public park. Meantime, photographs and names of his students were circulated online. “Fire Bret” graffiti showed up on campus buildings. What was that about safe spaces?

Watching the way George Bridges, the president of Evergreen, has handled this situation put me in mind of a line from Allan Bloom’s book “The Closing of the American Mind.” Mr. Bloom was writing about administrators’ reaction to student radicals in the 1960s, but he might as well be writing about Evergreen: “A few students discovered that pompous teachers who catechized them about academic freedom could, with a little shove, be made into dancing bears.”

At a town hall meeting, Mr. Bridges described the protestors as “courageous” and expressed his gratitude for “this catalyst to expedite the work to which we are jointly committed.” Of course, there was also pablum about how “free speech must be fostered and encouraged.” But if that’s what Mr. Bridges really believes, why isn’t he doing everything in his power to protect a professor who exercised it and condemn the mob that tried to stifle him?

The Weinstein saga is just the latest installment in a series of similar instances of illiberalism on American campuses. In March, a planned speech by Charles Murray at Middlebury ended with the political scientists escorted off campus by police and his interviewer, Professor Allison Stanger, in a neck brace. In April, a speech at Claremont McKenna by the conservative writer Heather Mac Donald had to be livestreamed when protestors blocked access to the auditorium.

Shutting down conservatives has become de rigueur. But now anti-free-speech activists are increasingly turning their ire on free-thinking progressives. Liberals shouldn’t cede the responsibility to defend free speech on college campuses to conservatives. After all, without free speech, what’s liberalism about?

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/01/opinion/when-the-left-turns-on-its-own.html
 
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Breaking news! A full week later, the venerable New York Time finally found out about what's happening at Evergreen and green-lit an opinion piece on it!

----

When the Left Turns on Its Own
Bari Weiss | JUNE 1, 2017

01weissWeb-master768.jpg



https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/01/opinion/when-the-left-turns-on-its-own.html

Bari Weiss is right on the money in the last paragraph of her opinion piece when she writes:

"Shutting down conservatives has become de rigueur [fashionable]. But now anti-free-speech activists are increasingly turning their ire on free-thinking progressives. Liberals shouldn’t cede the responsibility to defend free speech on college campuses to conservatives. After all, without free speech, what’s liberalism about?"
 
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