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YFJF&F URGENT action needed. Call Congress re next week's testimony by college presidents

 

Friends,

Next week, presidents Kornbluth (MIT), Gay (Harvard), Magill (PENN) will be testifying in front of the House Education and Workforce Committee re antisemitism on their campuses.??

see?

?

Kornbluth has been totally ineffective and a coddler of lawbreakers, Gay has proved clueless (how many statements did she have to issue?), and Magill has been outright defiant.

?

Most of you who live in CT are constituents of Joe Courtney who is on the committee.

Please call him

Phone: (202) 225-2076? (Washington office)

?

Demand that Courtney hold these losers' feet to the fire.

Tell the staffer you are a constituent.

Tell the staffer you are an alum (if you are).

Demand that Courtney get them to admit that they have abandoned Jews on campus. Say that the majority of Jews now feel unsafe on campus. Death threats are not free speech. Assault is not free speech. Ask if they would have acted so weakly if one minority student had been threatened on campus. Ask each president to resign.? Tell Courtney that as a constituent, a professor, and an alum, you are disgusted at the ineffective and feckless actions of all three college presidents. Tell him that all 3 must resign.

?

DO IT NOW.

Evan


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: How University Presidents are able to say legally that they are not getting funding from the “State of Qatar.”

 

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Yale is mentioned extensively in this report.



-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: How University Presidents are able to say legally that they are not getting funding from the “State of Qatar.”
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 2023 18:21:56 +0000
From: ISGAP <info@...>
Reply-To: ISGAP <info@...>
To: harvey.risch@...



?How University Presidents are able to?say legally that they are not getting funding from the “State of Qatar.”

ISGAP REPORT LAYS OUT HOW QATAR IS FUNNELLING MONEY INTO THE USA, EUROPE AND THE REST OF THE WORLD THROUGH STATE PROXIES.
?
As part of the Follow the Money Project, the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP) released a report:

Yesterday, on December the 5th, 2023 - U.S. House of Representatives committee members asked the Presidents of four prestigious universities in the United States about the foreign funds that they received from Qatar. The impression given by most of them was that the Qatari funding is not coming from the state. This answer is a partial truth as billions of American dollars are going to their institutions via Qatari State-owned NGOs and commercial entities.
?
The ISGAP Follow the Money project’s previous reports have laid out the following:
  • Qatar is the largest foreign donor to U.S. universities.
  • The Muslim Brotherhood’s Islamist ideology is intertwined with the State and?links Qatar with the Muslim Brotherhood’s Palestinian Chapter: Hamas.
  • The fact that money sent by foreign states such as Qatar has?a?direct effect on increasing antisemitism and anti-democratic views/activity.
The latest report, Networks of Hate, lays out the way that Qatar is operating a war chest valued between?$500 billion USD?—?and $1 trillion USD of assets and growing, using soft power as an influence in the West, including prestigious American universities. ?
?
The report also examines the main Qatari institutions, their investments, and amounts of money being funnelled directly into U.S. campuses by using Qatari state-owned NGOs such as The Qatar Foundation, as well as other methods of transferring funds unreported to the Department of Education or the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).
?
ISGAP inspects the following sectors:
  • Hospitality.
  • Real Estate.
  • Energy.
  • Food and Beverage.
  • Media.
  • Education.
For the first time, the mechanisms and figures are laid out in one comprehensive report. ISGAP recommends the following actions be undertaken immediately: ?
  1. All institutions where the ruling family of Qatar have a controlling interest,?for instance, Al Jazeera Media Network and Al Jazeera International, and all subsidiaries, should be registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) 1938.?
  2. FARA must require?agents of foreign principals who are engaged in political or other activities, specified under the statute, to make periodical public disclosure of their relationship with the foreign principal, as well as activities, receipts and disbursements in support of those activities. ?
  3. Congressional Hearings should be convened to fully understand the impact of Qatar’s aggressive investment strategies to?assess their influence on Western democratic values and potential security implications.
  4. Investigate universities that take funds from Qatar, and assess the impact on education and curriculum, scholarship, and discourse.?Is this a cause of the explosion of antisemitism in higher education that has placed Jewish students and faculty in disproportionate targeting??
  5. Financial records must be disclosed regarding all WISH and WISE expenditures related to U.S. academia, including grantees and conference attendees. This should reveal the extent of Qatar's shadow influence over U.S. campuses, facilitated through these entities.?
  6. Full transparency regarding contract terms between Qatari entities and universities is needed to ascertain the full extent of Qatar's influence.?
  7. Close U.S. university campuses in Education City, Qatar. This includes Texas A&M University, Carnegie Mellon University, Northwestern University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Cornell University and Georgetown University campuses. Their operations enable Qatari soft power infiltration into U.S. academia, both ideologically and scientifically.
  8. Prohibit any further direct Qatari government funding to U.S. universities operating in Qatar or the United States. Require full disclosure under the Foreign Agents Registration Act of any Qatar-linked funds already received by U.S. universities.?
  9. Open a Federal Government investigation into the non-reporting of foreign donations to U.S. universities and take criminal action against systematic underreporting by U.S. universities and individuals of financial donations received directly or indirectly from Qatar. The investigation should explore the impact of Qatari funding on the increase of antisemitism in higher education.
  10. Quash indirect funds that circumvent reporting requirements.
  11. Add a provision to Section 117 of the Higher Education Act 1965 which mandates the disclosure of grantees who have any connection to Qatar directly or indirectly.?
  12. Establish ethics review boards at American?universities to monitor foreign funding sources and block unacceptable donations or partnerships compromising academic integrity and national security.
  13. Enact further transparency laws requiring full public disclosure of any foreign contracts, grants or donations received by U.S. universities, including itemized reporting on collaborative projects, travel sponsorship, endowed faculty chairs and other benefits.
ISGAP Executive Director, Dr. Charles Asher Small shared, “Nazism was a combination of unbridled corporate control of the economy mixed with genocidal antisemitism. This resulted in the devastation of Europe. German intellectuals and scholarship were at the forefront of supporting the Nazis and normalizing antisemitism. What we witnessed yesterday in Congress in the United States of America were the corporate figureheads of major Ivy League universities with billions of dollars in endowments, normalizing antisemitism here in our nation. This while they want unregulated access to blood money, from state-owned entities whose ideology wants to destroy the Jewish people and our democracy. This must end now.”
?
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Letter to Penn president in response to her testimony to Congress yesterday

 

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A real answer to the craven weasels.



-------- Forwarded Message --------

?

?

?Dear President MaGill I write to inform you of the severe distress and outrage that your congressional testimony caused me today. I am a proud undergraduate alum from the Class of 83 and the Law School Class of 1986. My father Stephen H. Joseph

Dear President MaGill
 ?
I write to inform you of the severe distress and outrage that your congressional testimony caused me today.? I am a proud undergraduate alum from the Class of 83 and the Law School Class of 1986. My father Stephen H. Joseph graduated with an undergraduate degree from the Wharton School in the Class of 1953.? My sister Janis Joseph graduated in the Class of 1985 and the Class of 1986 from the Graduate School of Education. Janis’ husband Dr. Albert Ritter graduated in the Class of 1984.? My wife Dale Grayson graduated from the Penn Law School in the Class of 1987. My son Michael Joseph graduated from the Penn Law School in the class of 2014. We are a three generation Penn family. 
??
Your testimony today, without hyperbole, was one of the most chilling utterances that I have heard in my lifetime. The president of the University of Pennsylvania testified under oath that advocating genocide in an on campus demonstration was not, in and of itself, a violation of the University’s code of conduct, but was a matter of “context.”? You presumably justify such a statement by the importance of free speech and academic freedom. I might understand such a misguided view from a non-lawyer, but you are a distinguished lawyer who knows that as a matter of Constitutional law, only the federal and state governments, through the 14th Amendment, are prevented from regulating speech. However, even the First Amendent is not absolute, as threats and exhortations to commit violence are not protected speech. The Supreme Court ruled when I was young that the government couldn’t prevent actual Nazis from marching through the predominantly Jewish neighborhood of Skokie Illinois on First Amendment grounds. And as odious as that march was, I agree that, in the United States, the government does not and should not have a role in regulating such speech. Even though many of the residents of Skokie Illinois were actual holocaust survivors. 
??
But, to state the obvious, Penn is NOT the government. It is a private entity, devoted to education and the high ideals and morality. Indeed, its very motto is “Laws Without Morals are Useless.” And it also has an obligation to protect vigorous academic and political debate.? But the advocacy of genocide on campus by students and faculty is not academic, and genocide is not political. Particularly given the annihilation of millions of Jews in the last 80 years, advocacy for the genocide of Jews is particularly egregious. This is especially true given that the October 7 terrorist attacks resulted in the largest massacre of Jews since the holocaust. The University of Pennsylvania can certainly commit to protect and encourage vigorous and robust academic and political debate and still draw a bright line at advocating genocide. To say that whether advocating genocide of Jewish people is a matter of context, and that it does not violate the code of conduct unless it constitutes “harassment” or “bullying” is nothing short of astonishing. Is it possible to have student demonstrations at Penn that advocate genocide of Jewish people that do NOT constitute harassment, intimidation or bullying to Jewish students and faculty?? The answer to that (what should be a rhetorical) question is that there is no way to advocate for genocide of Jews that does not bully and intimidate the Jewish students at Penn. And this harassment has played out in outrageous and terrifying conduct and antisemitic vandalism. 
??
Your testimony is also patently disingenuous as it is dangerous. Can you state with a straight face that the University would not have swiftly disciplined students if they demonstrated advocating lynching of black people in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd? It is beyond doubt that any such demonstration would have been met with swift action by the University, and deservedly so. To say that it would depend on “context” would be laughable, if it weren’t so deadly serious. 
??
I have listened to the debate. I gave you the benefit of the doubt after you revised your initial statement to rightly characterize the attack of October 7 as a terrorist act. But after your disturbingly callous, mendacious and immoral testimony today, I have come to the inescapable conclusion that you are the wrong person, at the wrong time at the wrong institution, and that if you care at all about Penn, you should resign your position as President. Rest assured that I will be in touch with my network of alumni to work hard to make that happen. We cannot have a President that cannot stand up to those that advocate genocide against any race, ethnicity or religion. 
??
John N Joseph, CAS 83/Law 86


Mockery and Satire

 

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Re: Letter to Penn president in response to her testimony to Congress

 

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Attached letter worth reading.

President Salovey today released a letter of his position and plans (see below).? Has anyone heard of the "Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group"?? I have not.? I wonder who participated in this group and how much it involved views among Jewish students, faculty and staff across the university.

Harvey


Dear Members of the Yale Community,

Over the past two months, I have heard from many of you through letters, emails, and conversations. You have shared with me your experiences and worries, including your despair that the Hamas-Israel war has stoked waves of antagonism and revived feelings of anguish and fear that have been borne by many members of Arab, Israeli, Jewish, Muslim, Palestinian, and other communities over generations. My colleagues and I have met with many leaders, faculty members, students, staff, and alumni to discuss these matters. ?

When we see bitter discord spread around the globe, we must stand united against hatred directed at any group and hold tight to our common values. Our university mission to improve the world compels us to create knowledge, promote understanding, and contribute solutions to pressing challenges. We do this work by embracing the open exchange of ideas and by welcoming diverse experiences, cultures, backgrounds, and perspectives. As I have , our forceful rejection of discrimination and prejudice must be matched by our will to act with compassion and civility. These are the values we stand for, and we have traveled far together over the years to create and sustain a thriving academic environment.?

Today, as we face the resurgence of hate around the world and in our nation, we must build on the work we have done together to meet the needs of our community. In reviewing our current efforts, we have found opportunities to enhance support for those most affected by the Hamas-Israel war. Below, I describe new actions we are taking and provide an update on the campus climate, including our unwavering commitment to campus safety and core principles of free expression. In the coming weeks, you will receive additional updates.?

Supporting Communities Most Affected by the War

Our ongoing efforts to address racism, nativism, and prejudice through , launched in 2019, now help us to respond to the national climate of rising intolerance and hate toward Arab, Jewish, Muslim, and Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) individuals. The MENA community includes Israelis and Palestinians; Arabs and non-Arabs; Iranians and Turks; Christians, Jews, and Muslims; among others.?

Improving Jewish Student Life and Addressing Antisemitism

Over the past two years, we have been working with national Jewish organizations to enhance a supportive campus climate for students and other members of the Jewish community at Yale and to combat antisemitism. Based on foundational work conducted in partnership with Jewish community leaders and on the feedback received from students, faculty, staff, and alumni, Yale is taking additional actions to address antisemitism:?
  • Yale is establishing a standing advisory committee on Jewish student life to build on the recently completed work conducted by the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group, formed in 2022 in partnership with the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life as part of the Hillel International Campus Climate Initiative. Over the past 18 months, members of the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group have obtained input from focus groups of Jewish and non-Jewish undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, and faculty members; last week, they provided a report of their findings and recommendations. The new standing advisory committee we are establishing will help implement and amplify the recommendations of the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group and will continue to identify and address issues related to campus climate for the Jewish student community. The committee will report to Secretary and Vice President Kimberly Goff-Crews and advise the president and other university leaders. It will conduct cross-sectional work with a new committee that will examine and respond to the needs and interests of the MENA and Muslim communities on campus (described below).
  • Yale will incorporate new educational programming on antisemitism into Belonging at Yale and offer it broadly to the campus community, from students to trustees. The Office of Institutional Equity and Accessibility will work with the newly formed advisory committee on Jewish student life to assess and expand training and educational opportunities on antisemitism. In the meantime, Yale will continue to offer in-depth professional workshops, including on antisemitism, to faculty and staff who support students across the university.
  • Yale will convert the pilot program that began in 2022 between Yale Security and the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life into an ongoing initiative to fund fully the cost of day-to-day security service for the Slifka Center and will review this partnership every three years.?
  • Recognizing the importance of kosher dining for the Yale community, the university will provide significant additional funding to expand its partnership with the Slifka Center to further support the operational infrastructure for kosher meals, as we do for Halal, vegan, and other dietary options.

Improving Arab, MENA, and Muslim Student Life and Addressing Islamophobia

In recent years, we have been working with faculty, students, and staff to learn about and respond to the needs of the university’s Arab, MENA, and Muslim communities. Building on these efforts, the information we have gathered over the years, and the comments and suggestions we have received from members of the Yale community in the past two months, we are taking new actions in response to anti-Arab and Islamophobic sentiments:
  • Yale will formalize and expand an existing advisory group into a standing committee that will examine the needs and interests of the MENA and Muslim communities on campus and recommend ways to enhance support for them. Following the start of the Hamas-Israel war, Yale responded by convening university leaders and faculty and staff experts to provide guidance on how to better understand and respond to the needs of the Arab, MENA, and Muslim communities, including Palestinian students. The new committee will report to Secretary and Vice President Kimberly Goff-Crews and advise the president and other university leaders. This committee will conduct cross-sectional work with the new committee on Jewish student life.
  • The university will incorporate new educational programming on Islamophobia into Belonging at Yale and offer it broadly to the campus community, from students to trustees. The newly formed committee will partner with the Office of Institutional Equity and Accessibility to assess and make recommendations on training and educational programming. This builds on the work conducted at Yale by the Chaplain’s Office to inform and educate staff members who support students. Combating prejudice or discrimination against Arabs, Muslims, and MENA groups and identities is also included in the work of Belonging at Yale.
  • The university will increase staffing and secure space on campus for the MENA student community. In recent years, university leaders have discussed with MENA students their requests for additional space and recognition, and we are committed to work with them and to provide resources and guidance.
  • Yale will hire a second Muslim chaplain, who will work with the current Yale Muslim chaplain and director of Muslim Life, to increase the university’s capacity to provide pastoral care and direct support for the Muslim community.?

Campus safety

The actions we are taking complement our steadfast commitment to the safety and well-being of all members of our community. The Yale Police Department (YPD) has strategically increased security measures, including implementing additional patrols across the university. YPD is constantly monitoring the status of our campus.?

YPD is working with the New Haven Police Department and Connecticut Intelligence Center as well as other state and federal partners to gather information regarding any possible external threats to the campus or the broader community. We are not aware of any credible threats against Yale or any member of our campus community.?

There has been one reported incident where a person not affiliated with Yale spat on a student wearing a keffiyeh. This behavior is absolutely unacceptable. YPD is investigating, and we have provided support to the student. Outside of this incident, there have been no reported physical confrontations and violence related to the Hamas-Israel war at Yale to date.?

A “doxing” truck sponsored by an external group drove through and parked near our campus in the middle of November. It was a despicable attempt to intimidate and harass our students. The university swiftly reached out to provide support to each student whose name and image was displayed on the truck, and we guided them toward for doxing and other forms of abuse and harassment.?

I remain in regular contact with YPD and will continue to focus on the safety of everyone on our campus. YPD Chief Anthony Campbell will provide additional campus safety updates soon. In the meantime, if anyone needs support, please see for safety, mental health, free expression, discrimination and harassment, and other topics.

Free expression

Yale stands resolutely as a place that welcomes many beliefs, identities, views, and cultures, and we are unwavering in our devotion to , open dialogue, and civil debate. Our right to free expression does not obviate our responsibility as colleagues and peers to one another. Yale aims to be a place where all students feel free to express their views inside and outside the classroom. Yale will not tolerate discrimination and harassment, including threats of violence, intimidation, or coercion.

Over the past two months, our students have participated in a range of that highlight the breadth of campus conversations related to the Hamas-Israel war, and some have taken part in protests and demonstrations. Students and other members of our community have worked together to avoid the violent outbursts we have seen at some other universities. For that, I am immensely thankful. However, I am deeply disappointed by incidents of hurtful and thoughtless words, social media posts, malicious messages sent to individuals and groups, and other behavior that erodes our sense of belonging to the Yale community.?

Chants or messages that express hatred, celebrate the killing of civilians, or contain calls for genocide of any group are utterly against our ideals and certainly are not characteristic of our broader community. As I have in recent weeks, members of our community do not need to agree on everything, but we must share a commitment to open, civil discourse and respect for one another.?

Our commitment to open and civil discourse must be matched by our dedication to providing and to creating a welcoming and productive university environment. Belonging at Yale will expand efforts to support Arab, Israeli, Jewish, MENA, and Muslim communities. The next Belonging at Yale annual report will highlight how every part of the university is working to sustain a community where everyone has opportunities to contribute, to thrive, and to feel a sense of belonging.?

***

Yale has unfinished work to pursue, and I look forward to receiving the recommendations from the newly established committees.?

I thank you for sharing insights that have informed the new actions we are taking. As I noted in my October 10th , we must not waver from our commitment to support Yale’s community. Today, with these new actions, I am confident that we can maintain that commitment and grow stronger together. ?

Sincerely,
Peter Salovey, signature
Peter Salovey
President
Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology


Re: Letter to Penn president in response to her testimony to Congress

 

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i believe that AEN, Hillel International, and ADL were all involved in constructing the survey… but we can find out.

Founder,
Latest OpEd in The America Spectator, “”
New Podcast appearance, on “?


From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Harvey Risch via groups.io <Harvey.Risch@...>
Sent: Thursday, December 7, 2023 11:52:51 AM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [YFJFF] Letter to Penn president in response to her testimony to Congress
?

Attached letter worth reading.

President Salovey today released a letter of his position and plans (see below).? Has anyone heard of the "Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group"?? I have not.? I wonder who participated in this group and how much it involved views among Jewish students, faculty and staff across the university.

Harvey


Office of the President
Dear Members of the Yale Community,

Over the past two months, I have heard from many of you through letters, emails, and conversations. You have shared with me your experiences and worries, including your despair that the Hamas-Israel war has stoked waves of antagonism and revived feelings of anguish and fear that have been borne by many members of Arab, Israeli, Jewish, Muslim, Palestinian, and other communities over generations. My colleagues and I have met with many leaders, faculty members, students, staff, and alumni to discuss these matters. ?

When we see bitter discord spread around the globe, we must stand united against hatred directed at any group and hold tight to our common values. Our university mission to improve the world compels us to create knowledge, promote understanding, and contribute solutions to pressing challenges. We do this work by embracing the open exchange of ideas and by welcoming diverse experiences, cultures, backgrounds, and perspectives. As I have , our forceful rejection of discrimination and prejudice must be matched by our will to act with compassion and civility. These are the values we stand for, and we have traveled far together over the years to create and sustain a thriving academic environment.?

Today, as we face the resurgence of hate around the world and in our nation, we must build on the work we have done together to meet the needs of our community. In reviewing our current efforts, we have found opportunities to enhance support for those most affected by the Hamas-Israel war. Below, I describe new actions we are taking and provide an update on the campus climate, including our unwavering commitment to campus safety and core principles of free expression. In the coming weeks, you will receive additional updates.?

Supporting Communities Most Affected by the War

Our ongoing efforts to address racism, nativism, and prejudice through , launched in 2019, now help us to respond to the national climate of rising intolerance and hate toward Arab, Jewish, Muslim, and Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) individuals. The MENA community includes Israelis and Palestinians; Arabs and non-Arabs; Iranians and Turks; Christians, Jews, and Muslims; among others.?

Improving Jewish Student Life and Addressing Antisemitism

Over the past two years, we have been working with national Jewish organizations to enhance a supportive campus climate for students and other members of the Jewish community at Yale and to combat antisemitism. Based on foundational work conducted in partnership with Jewish community leaders and on the feedback received from students, faculty, staff, and alumni, Yale is taking additional actions to address antisemitism:?
  • Yale is establishing a standing advisory committee on Jewish student life to build on the recently completed work conducted by the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group, formed in 2022 in partnership with the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life as part of the Hillel International Campus Climate Initiative. Over the past 18 months, members of the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group have obtained input from focus groups of Jewish and non-Jewish undergraduates, graduate students, postdocs, and faculty members; last week, they provided a report of their findings and recommendations. The new standing advisory committee we are establishing will help implement and amplify the recommendations of the Yale Antisemitism Campus Climate Group and will continue to identify and address issues related to campus climate for the Jewish student community. The committee will report to Secretary and Vice President Kimberly Goff-Crews and advise the president and other university leaders. It will conduct cross-sectional work with a new committee that will examine and respond to the needs and interests of the MENA and Muslim communities on campus (described below).
  • Yale will incorporate new educational programming on antisemitism into Belonging at Yale and offer it broadly to the campus community, from students to trustees. The Office of Institutional Equity and Accessibility will work with the newly formed advisory committee on Jewish student life to assess and expand training and educational opportunities on antisemitism. In the meantime, Yale will continue to offer in-depth professional workshops, including on antisemitism, to faculty and staff who support students across the university.
  • Yale will convert the pilot program that began in 2022 between Yale Security and the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life into an ongoing initiative to fund fully the cost of day-to-day security service for the Slifka Center and will review this partnership every three years.?
  • Recognizing the importance of kosher dining for the Yale community, the university will provide significant additional funding to expand its partnership with the Slifka Center to further support the operational infrastructure for kosher meals, as we do for Halal, vegan, and other dietary options.

Improving Arab, MENA, and Muslim Student Life and Addressing Islamophobia

In recent years, we have been working with faculty, students, and staff to learn about and respond to the needs of the university’s Arab, MENA, and Muslim communities. Building on these efforts, the information we have gathered over the years, and the comments and suggestions we have received from members of the Yale community in the past two months, we are taking new actions in response to anti-Arab and Islamophobic sentiments:
  • Yale will formalize and expand an existing advisory group into a standing committee that will examine the needs and interests of the MENA and Muslim communities on campus and recommend ways to enhance support for them. Following the start of the Hamas-Israel war, Yale responded by convening university leaders and faculty and staff experts to provide guidance on how to better understand and respond to the needs of the Arab, MENA, and Muslim communities, including Palestinian students. The new committee will report to Secretary and Vice President Kimberly Goff-Crews and advise the president and other university leaders. This committee will conduct cross-sectional work with the new committee on Jewish student life.
  • The university will incorporate new educational programming on Islamophobia into Belonging at Yale and offer it broadly to the campus community, from students to trustees. The newly formed committee will partner with the Office of Institutional Equity and Accessibility to assess and make recommendations on training and educational programming. This builds on the work conducted at Yale by the Chaplain’s Office to inform and educate staff members who support students. Combating prejudice or discrimination against Arabs, Muslims, and MENA groups and identities is also included in the work of Belonging at Yale.
  • The university will increase staffing and secure space on campus for the MENA student community. In recent years, university leaders have discussed with MENA students their requests for additional space and recognition, and we are committed to work with them and to provide resources and guidance.
  • Yale will hire a second Muslim chaplain, who will work with the current Yale Muslim chaplain and director of Muslim Life, to increase the university’s capacity to provide pastoral care and direct support for the Muslim community.?

Campus safety

The actions we are taking complement our steadfast commitment to the safety and well-being of all members of our community. The Yale Police Department (YPD) has strategically increased security measures, including implementing additional patrols across the university. YPD is constantly monitoring the status of our campus.?

YPD is working with the New Haven Police Department and Connecticut Intelligence Center as well as other state and federal partners to gather information regarding any possible external threats to the campus or the broader community. We are not aware of any credible threats against Yale or any member of our campus community.?

There has been one reported incident where a person not affiliated with Yale spat on a student wearing a keffiyeh. This behavior is absolutely unacceptable. YPD is investigating, and we have provided support to the student. Outside of this incident, there have been no reported physical confrontations and violence related to the Hamas-Israel war at Yale to date.?

A “doxing” truck sponsored by an external group drove through and parked near our campus in the middle of November. It was a despicable attempt to intimidate and harass our students. The university swiftly reached out to provide support to each student whose name and image was displayed on the truck, and we guided them toward for doxing and other forms of abuse and harassment.?

I remain in regular contact with YPD and will continue to focus on the safety of everyone on our campus. YPD Chief Anthony Campbell will provide additional campus safety updates soon. In the meantime, if anyone needs support, please see for safety, mental health, free expression, discrimination and harassment, and other topics.

Free expression

Yale stands resolutely as a place that welcomes many beliefs, identities, views, and cultures, and we are unwavering in our devotion to , open dialogue, and civil debate. Our right to free expression does not obviate our responsibility as colleagues and peers to one another. Yale aims to be a place where all students feel free to express their views inside and outside the classroom. Yale will not tolerate discrimination and harassment, including threats of violence, intimidation, or coercion.

Over the past two months, our students have participated in a range of that highlight the breadth of campus conversations related to the Hamas-Israel war, and some have taken part in protests and demonstrations. Students and other members of our community have worked together to avoid the violent outbursts we have seen at some other universities. For that, I am immensely thankful. However, I am deeply disappointed by incidents of hurtful and thoughtless words, social media posts, malicious messages sent to individuals and groups, and other behavior that erodes our sense of belonging to the Yale community.?

Chants or messages that express hatred, celebrate the killing of civilians, or contain calls for genocide of any group are utterly against our ideals and certainly are not characteristic of our broader community. As I have in recent weeks, members of our community do not need to agree on everything, but we must share a commitment to open, civil discourse and respect for one another.?

Our commitment to open and civil discourse must be matched by our dedication to providing and to creating a welcoming and productive university environment. Belonging at Yale will expand efforts to support Arab, Israeli, Jewish, MENA, and Muslim communities. The next Belonging at Yale annual report will highlight how every part of the university is working to sustain a community where everyone has opportunities to contribute, to thrive, and to feel a sense of belonging.?

***

Yale has unfinished work to pursue, and I look forward to receiving the recommendations from the newly established committees.?

I thank you for sharing insights that have informed the new actions we are taking. As I noted in my October 10th , we must not waver from our commitment to support Yale’s community. Today, with these new actions, I am confident that we can maintain that commitment and grow stronger together. ?

Sincerely,
Peter Salovey, signature
Peter Salovey
President
Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology


Something to learn from this

 

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MEF Campaign Success: Oberlin Ousts Iranian Professor Accused of Prisoner Massacre

Oberlin College has removed Professor Mohammad Jafar Mahallati from his tenured position following a months-long campaign to oust him. (Photo: YouTube screenshot)

PHILADELPHIA – December 7, 2023 – The Middle East Forum (MEF) played a pivotal role in the months-long to oust Professor Mohammad Jafar Mahallati from his tenured position at Oberlin College. Partnering with Iranian American activists, MEF combined exclusive reporting and relentless advocacy to pressure Oberlin's administrators into placing Mahallati on "indefinite administrative leave."

Oberlin informed MEF that Mahallati had been removed from the campus on Nov. 28, his office vacated, and references to him scrubbed from the college's website.

"Mahallati's suspension punctuates the combined efforts of MEF and its dedicated Iranian-American partners who held protests, circulated petitions, and galvanized lawmakers," said Benjamin Baird, director of MEF Action.

Mahallati's ouster provides some small justice to family members of the Islamic Republic's 1988 prison massacres in which Mahallati had a key role, a fact that Oberlin College administrators repeatedly . The professor's suspension also follows a , first revealed by MEF's coalition, concerning Mahallati's sex-for-grades relationship with a Columbia University graduate student.

MEF joined the Alliance Against Islamic Republic of Iran Apologists (AAIRIA), an anti-regime committee of former political prisoners and surviving family members, in efforts to build public opposition to Mahallati. MEF organized an Iranian American at the Ohio Statehouse and convinced members of the U.S. Congress to send a to Oberlin College requesting answers about the school's hiring practices.

MEF's reporting exposed Mahallati's ongoing links to Iran's regime, his part in an Office of Civil Rights into charges that the professor taught students "support for Hamas," and his for the destruction of Israel. Most recently, MEF unearthed from a accusing Mahallati of forcing a graduate student into an "emotionally abusive" sexual relationship in exchange for "academic benefits" while serving as an adjunct professor at Columbia University.

"Mahallati's suspension brings a profound sense of justice and accountability, not only to the victims' families, but to all those who have supported the tireless campaign for his removal as an educator," said Gregg Roman, director of MEF. "This long-awaited decision attests to the commitment of all those involved to safeguarding national security within the academic sphere and ensuring that educators act in the best interests of their students."

MEF now calls on Oberlin College to clarify the circumstances behind Mahallati's suspension and to initiate an independent inquiry into the school's hiring practices. Furthermore, Oberlin administrators must deny Mahallati future opportunities, pensions, or favorable references stemming from his work at Oberlin College.

MEF will continue to closely monitor developments in this case and advocate for responsible academic conduct.


The Middle East Forum, a non-profit organization, promotes American interests in the Middle East and protects Western civilization from Islamism. It does so through a combination of original ideas, focused activism, and funding allies. For more information, visit .

For immediate release
For more information, contact:
Gregg Roman
roman@...
+1 (215) 546 5406

Related Topics:? , ,


Harvard Bans ‘Cisheterosexism’ but Shrugs at Antisemitism

 

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A Hanukkah gift from Wharton's board of trustees

 

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?

Edward H. Kaplan
William N. and Marie A. Beach Professor of Operations Research
Professor of Public Health
Professor of Engineering
Yale School of Management
Box 208200
New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8200

Phone:? 203-432-6031
e-mail: edward.kaplan@...

?


House members call for the firing of the 3 stooges

 

Joe Courtney (who is my rep in CT) is one of 3 dems to sign. ?If you are a PENN, Harvard or MIT alum, and are so onclined, please call Courtney and tell him you approve. ?It took a bit of guts to defy most of the Dems.

House members call on Harvard, MIT and Penn to fire presidents

Seventy-four members of Congress on Friday signed a letter urging the governing boards of Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania to fire their presidents as fallout continued from the campus leaders' disastrous testimony during a hearing on antisemitism Tues

Seventy-four members of Congress on Friday??urging the governing boards of Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania to fire their presidents as fallout continued from the campus leaders' disastrous testimony during a hearing on antisemitism Tuesday. ??

"Testimony provided by presidents of your institutions showed a complete absence of moral clarity and illuminated the problematic double standards and dehumanization of the Jewish communities that your university presidents enabled,"??... "[W]e demand that your boards immediately remove each of these presidents from their positions and that you provide an actionable plan to ensure that Jewish and Israeli students, teachers, and faculty are safe on your campuses.

"Anything less than these steps will be seen as your endorsement of what Presidents Gay, Magill, and Kornbluth said to Congress and an act of complicity in their antisemitic posture. The world is watching - you can stand with your Jewish students and faculty, or you can choose the side of dangerous antisemitism."

The highly unusual request from nearly one in five members of the House of Representatives—all but three of whom are Republican—carries no legal weight. But the lawmakers' letter was the latest sign of how much the politics of the Israel-Hamas war have poisoned the political climate surrounding higher education.

The failure of the three college presidents to clearly say that calling for the genocide of Jewish people violated their campus policies?on social media—galling alumni, free speech??and??in the Jewish community alike. Pennsylvania's governor, a Democrat, called Wednesday for Penn to fire Liz Magill, and Claudine Gay, Harvard's president, has also come under intense pressure from alumni and some students.

The lawmakers' letter was led by Elise M. Stefanik, the Republican congresswoman from New York whose??of the three presidents was the hearing's seminal moment. Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat from Florida, was the other lead co-signer.

?


The problem is bigger than three college presidents

 

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End DEI

 

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?

The Day The Empress' Clothes Fell Off

Did the Congressional hearings finally expose the scandal of the Ivy League?

?

ANDREW SULLIVAN | DEC 8, 2023

?

It may be too much to expect that the Congressional hearings this week, starring the three presidents of Harvard, MIT, and Penn, will wake people up to the toxic collapse of America’s once-great Ivy League. But I can hope, can’t I? In the immortal words of Hitch (peace be upon him), as you listen to these people, “You see how far the termites have spread, and how long and well they have dined.”

?

The mediocrities smirked, finessed, condescended, and stonewalled. Take a good look at them. These are the people who now select our elites. And they select them, as they select every single member of the faculty, and every student, by actively discriminating against members of certain “privileged” groups and aggressively favoring other “marginalized” ones. They were themselves appointed in exactly the same way, from DEI-approved pools of candidates. As a Harvard dean, Claudine Gay’s top priority was “making more progress on diversity,” i.e. intensifying the already systemic race, sex and gender discrimination that defines the place.

?

Thanks to the recent Supreme Court case, the energetic discrimination against Asian-American candidates for admission at Harvard is no longer in doubt. But countless other candidates for admission have little to no chance, regardless of their grades, or extracurriculars, because they belong to the wrong race, sex, sexual orientation, and “gender identity.” As soon as students are admitted under this identity framework, they are taught its core precepts: that the “truth” — or, in Harvard’s now-ironic motto, “Veritas” — is a function not of logic or reason or of open, free, robust debate and dialogue, let alone of Western civilization, but of inimical and evil “power structures” rooted in identity that need to be dismantled first. Identity first; truth second — because truth is rooted in identity and cannot exist outside of it.

?

In the hearings, President Gay actually said, with a straight face, that “we embrace a commitment to free expression even of views that are objectionable, offensive, hateful.” This is the president whose university mandates all students attend a Title IX training session where they are told that “fatphobia” and “cisheterosexism” are forms of “violence,” and that “using the wrong pronouns” constitutes “abuse.” This is the same president who engineered the ouster of a law professor, Ronald Sullivan, simply because he represented a client, of whom Gay and students (rightly but irrelevantly) disapproved, Harvey Weinstein.

?

This is the same president who watched a brilliant and popular professor, Carole Hooven, be effectively hounded out of her position after a public shaming campaign by one of her department’s DEI enforcers, and a mob of teaching fellows, because Hooven dared to state on television that biological sex is binary. This is the president of a university where a grand total of 1.46 percent of faculty call themselves “conservative” and 82 percent call themselves “liberal” or “very liberal.” This is the president of a university which ranked 248th out of 248 colleges this year on free speech (and Penn was the 247th), according to the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. Harvard is a place where free expression goes to die.

?

The critics who keep pointing out “double standards” when it comes to the inflammatory speech of pro-Palestinian students miss the point. These are not double standards. There is a single standard: It is fine to malign, abuse and denigrate “oppressors” and forbidden to do so against the “oppressed.”

?

Freedom of speech in the Ivy League extends exclusively to the voices of the oppressed; they are also permitted to disrupt classes, deplatform or shout down controversial speakers, hurl obscenities, force members of oppressor groups — i.e. Jewish students and teachers in the latest case — into locked libraries and offices during protests, and blocked from classrooms. Jewish students have even been assaulted — at Harvard, at Columbia, at UMass Amherst, at Tulane. Assaults by woke students used to be rare, such as the 2017 mob at Middlebury that put Allison Stanger in a neck brace — but since 10/7, they’re intensifying.

?

If a member of an oppressor class says something edgy, it is a form of violence. If a member of an oppressed class commits actual violence, it’s speech. That’s why many Harvard students instantly supported a fundamentalist terror cult that killed, tortured, systematically raped and kidnapped Jews just for being Jews in their own country. Because they have been taught it’s the only moral position to take. They’ve diligently read their Fanon, and must be puzzled over what the problem is. Palestinians are victims of a “colonial,” “white,” “settler-state” and any violence they commit is thereby justified.

?

It would be wrong to see this as a function merely of old-school anti-Semitism. The new anti-Semitism is simply a subsidiary of the entire rubric of “anti-Whiteness” that is taught as the supreme principle of “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.” DEI does not mean and has never meant diversity, equity and inclusion for all. It means active support for the “oppressed” against the “oppressors.” It means challenging “whiteness,” as represented by individual white people. Let’s go to the Smithsonian to read a definition of the term:

?

Since white people in America hold most of the political, institutional, and economic power, they receive advantages that nonwhite groups do not. These benefits and advantages, of varying degrees, are known as white privilege. For many white people, this can be hard to hear, understand, or accept — but it is true.

?

Now replace the word “white” with “Jewish,” and it all fits neatly into place, doesn’t it? Jews “hold most of the power.” Jews “receive advantages” others do not. Jews have “Jewish privilege.” Within “white supremacy” there is, definitionally, “Jewish supremacy,” because Jews in America (and even Israel!) are defined by their “whiteness.” They may not want to hear it, but they are the oppressor class now. If “white supremacy” is changed to “Jewish supremacy,” you even get the title of David Duke’s 2003 book, Jewish Supremacism.

?

The tropes, the structure, and the psyche of anti-Semitism have simply been copied and pasted onto anti-whiteness. There’s the same envy and resentment of an all-controlling racial group that is deemed not inferior (as in anti-black racism), but superior — by underhanded, shifty, rigged means. That’s why the word “merit” is now derided in the Ivy League: it doesn’t exist in neo-Marxist eyes. Only power exists.

?

As whites, Jews helped construct a Constitution long ago that pretends to guarantee equal rights, but once you “awaken” to the racist conspiracy that will always define America, you can see it was actually designed to oppress non-white goyim forever. This is what the New York Times believes, as we discovered in 2019, in an entire issue of their magazine, which they then distributed to high-school kids, so they could learn which groups to hate in America, and which groups to love.

?

This is why when non-whites commit hate crimes, they are instantly redefined as enacting “white supremacy.” It is why it is not “triggering” to call a conservative student a “white supremacist” or a white gay man of my generation a “queer” — we deserve it as oppressors — but it is a form of violence if you misgender a trans person or ask where someone is from. Even “Silence Is Violence,” as the BLM protestors insisted. In fact, some say, “silence is the worst form of violence.” Could Chairman Mao have put it better?

?

It is why you can set up a segregated dorm at MIT, call it “Chocolate City,” and be praised by the president, Sally Kornbluth, as being about “positive selection.” It’s why due process exists in sexual abuse cases for women on campus, but is denied to all men. It’s why these universities have racially segregated graduations for everyone — except “whites.” And because this grotesque racist engineering requires admitting vast numbers of students who cannot meet the academic standards of the evil past, 80 percent of Harvard and Yale students now get an A or A- as a grade. This is not “equity,” however they re- and re-define it. It is the hard bigotry of no expectations.

?

The absolute worst thing you can do right now is what the presidents of these woke institutions now say they intend to do: switch Jews out of the “oppressor class” and into the “oppressed one,” and re-apply all the DEI discrimination on their behalf.

?

That doesn’t solve the problem; it compounds it. Pro-Palestinian, and anti-Israel speech should no more be censored than any other — and the suppression is real. There should be one standard and it should be free speech. But there can be no free speech and no guarantee of it until the toxins of critical theory, and the architecture of its enforcement, DEI, are excised from the university altogether. Asking the current leadership to correct these lost institutions is an exercise in futility.

?

End DEI in its entirety. Fire all the administrators whose only job is to enforce its toxic orthodoxy. Admit students on academic merit alone. Save standardized testing — which in fact helps minorities, and it’s “the best way to distinguish smart poor kids from stupid rich kids,” as Steven Pinker said this week. Restore grading so that it actually means something again. Expel students who shut or shout down speech or deplatform speakers. Pay no attention to the race or sex or orientation or gender identity of your students, and see them as free human beings with open minds. Treat them equally as individuals seeking to learn, if you can remember such a concept.

?

David Wolpe is a distinguished and learned rabbi who resigned this week from Harvard’s advisory committee on anti-Semitism. In a tweet, he wrote:

?

Harvard is still a repository of extraordinary minds and important research. However, the system at Harvard along with the ideology that grips far too many of the students and faculty, the ideology that works only along axes of oppression and places Jews as oppressors and therefore intrinsically evil, is itself evil.

?

Yes, it is evil. This is no time to be mealy-mouthed about it. And we must root it out. Before its poison makes our liberal democracy almost impossible to reconstruct.

?



? ?







Re: The problem is bigger than three college presidents

 

Yes. The problem is much bigger. But it is important for those three to lose their jobs as a warning to others. Frankly, I am going to write to Elise Stefanik and ask her to call the Brown and Columbia presidents to a hearing. ?Eacvh one of them is irredeemable. They need to be removed. If not, nothing will change.

At Columbia



At Brown


There must be a reckoning throughout academia - please write to Elise Stefanik, or to your rep

 

I wrote to Elise Stefanik


I asked her (note the 500 word limit of the form) to call the Presidents of Brown and Columbia before her committee. At Columbia, the lawbreaking continues apace. At Brown, the President removed references to Jews from her speech.
At Yale, there has not been a SINGLE campus-wide email that mentions the word “Jew”. Salovey avoided using the word on Oct 11. Nancy Brown did not mention Jews on Oct 9, Darin Latimore failed to mention Jews on Dec 9. The universities are doing what the Nazis dreamed of. Erasing us.?

At Brown:?

At Columbia:?

Please consider doing the same. ?It will take 3 minutes.
You may not like Elise Stefanik. But she is the current instrument of a much needed reckoning.

Evan


Watch this attack on New Haven Green Menorah yesterday...no news coverage, no arrests I am aware of

 

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https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0qX7rMKsWU


Sent from my T-Mobile 5G Device



-------- Original message --------
From: "Evan Morris via groups.io" <evan.morris@...>
Date: 12/10/23 10:33 AM (GMT-05:00)
Subject: [YFJFF] There must be a reckoning throughout academia - please write to Elise Stefanik, or to your rep

I wrote to Elise Stefanik


I asked her (note the 500 word limit of the form) to call the Presidents of Brown and Columbia before her committee. At Columbia, the lawbreaking continues apace. At Brown, the President removed references to Jews from her speech.
At Yale, there has not been a SINGLE campus-wide email that mentions the word “Jew”. Salovey avoided using the word on Oct 11. Nancy Brown did not mention Jews on Oct 9, Darin Latimore failed to mention Jews on Dec 9. The universities are doing what the Nazis dreamed of. Erasing us.?

At Brown:?

At Columbia:?

Please consider doing the same. ?It will take 3 minutes.
You may not like Elise Stefanik. But she is the current instrument of a much needed reckoning.

Evan


Re: Watch this attack on New Haven Green Menorah yesterday...no news coverage, no arrests I am aware of

 

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Thanks Ed, I was just about to send this out as well.?

Here’s a longer video where others plead with him to take it down because “it’s going to look bad.”






On Dec 10, 2023, at 10:36?AM, Edward Kaplan via groups.io <edward.kaplan@...> wrote:

?

https://www.instagram.com/reel/C0qX7rMKsWU


Sent from my T-Mobile 5G Device



-------- Original message --------
From: "Evan Morris via groups.io" <evan.morris@...>
Date: 12/10/23 10:33 AM (GMT-05:00)
Subject: [YFJFF] There must be a reckoning throughout academia - please write to Elise Stefanik, or to your rep

I wrote to Elise Stefanik


I asked her (note the 500 word limit of the form) to call the Presidents of Brown and Columbia before her committee. At Columbia, the lawbreaking continues apace. At Brown, the President removed references to Jews from her speech.
At Yale, there has not been a SINGLE campus-wide email that mentions the word “Jew”. Salovey avoided using the word on Oct 11. Nancy Brown did not mention Jews on Oct 9, Darin Latimore failed to mention Jews on Dec 9. The universities are doing what the Nazis dreamed of. Erasing us.?

At Brown:?

At Columbia:?

Please consider doing the same. ?It will take 3 minutes.
You may not like Elise Stefanik. But she is the current instrument of a much needed reckoning.

Evan


Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green

 

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FYI, I sent this letter to President Salovey, Provost Strobel, and Secretary Goff-Crews moments ago. I have shared with Gayle Slossberg at Federation.
I encourage others to write as well if they wish.




From:?Sasso, David <david.sasso@...>
Sent:?Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:38 PM
To:?President Peter Salovey <president@...>; Salovey, Peter <peter.salovey@...>
Cc:?Strobel, Scott <scott.strobel@...>; Goff-Crews, Kimberly <kimberly.goff-crews@...>
Subject:?Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
Dear President Salovey,

I hope that you and your loved ones are enjoying a happy Hanukkah, made all the more difficult, and meaningful, by the events we confront at this time.?

Following up on our conversation in October and your letter after the recent congressional hearings, I want to make sure that you are aware of this incident on the New Haven Green yesterday. It was part of an event that I understand was cosponsored by Yalies4Palestine. (Some will argue that the other participants wanted the flag taken down because it was important to them not to vandalize a menorah. It is clear from listening to the video that they were instead concerned with optics.)


I trust that Yale will investigate to determine if any of these were Yale students. Will there be a statement from the University condemning what occurred? Even if these were not Yale-affiliated students, this occurred in Yale‘s backyard, and the event was sponsored by a Yale?affiliated group (which should no longer receive Yale support or recognition).?

I urge you to consider what kind of statement Yale would release if such an incident were to occur in New Haven, cosponsored by a Yale student group targeting a religious or cultural symbol of any other group and to act without double standard.

Your recent letter stated: “
Chants or messages that express hatred, celebrate the killing of civilians, or contain calls for genocide of any group are utterly against our ideals and certainly are not characteristic of our broader community.”

The march yesterday included chants that, as you well know, do all of those things. I urge you to demonstrate to the world that Yale will not tolerate such behavior or language, just as you would do, and have done, in many other instances.?

Free speech is a bedrock principle. What is occurring has crossed from free speech into calls for violence and actual vandalism of a religious symbol. The double standards are glaring. This is not the time to hide behind free speech. We have seen what the world thinks of that sort of equivocation.?

As always, I welcome your response and further conversation.

Sincerely,

David?

--
David A. Sasso, MD, MPH
Assistant Clinical Professor
Department of Psychiatry / Child Study Center
Yale School of Medicine
Therapeutic Center for Children and Families, Westport, CT
Phone: (203) 454-2428, ext. 718


Re: Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green

 

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Excellent letter
Evan


From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of David Sasso via groups.io <david.sasso@...>
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:42:18 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [YFJFF] Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
FYI, I sent this letter to President Salovey, Provost Strobel, and Secretary Goff-Crews moments ago. I have shared with Gayle Slossberg at Federation.
I encourage others to write as well if they wish.




From:?Sasso, David <david.sasso@...>
Sent:?Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:38 PM
To:?President Peter Salovey <president@...>; Salovey, Peter <peter.salovey@...>
Cc:?Strobel, Scott <scott.strobel@...>; Goff-Crews, Kimberly <kimberly.goff-crews@...>
Subject:?Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
Dear President Salovey,

I hope that you and your loved ones are enjoying a happy Hanukkah, made all the more difficult, and meaningful, by the events we confront at this time.?

Following up on our conversation in October and your letter after the recent congressional hearings, I want to make sure that you are aware of this incident on the New Haven Green yesterday. It was part of an event that I understand was cosponsored by Yalies4Palestine. (Some will argue that the other participants wanted the flag taken down because it was important to them not to vandalize a menorah. It is clear from listening to the video that they were instead concerned with optics.)


I trust that Yale will investigate to determine if any of these were Yale students. Will there be a statement from the University condemning what occurred? Even if these were not Yale-affiliated students, this occurred in Yale‘s backyard, and the event was sponsored by a Yale?affiliated group (which should no longer receive Yale support or recognition).?

I urge you to consider what kind of statement Yale would release if such an incident were to occur in New Haven, cosponsored by a Yale student group targeting a religious or cultural symbol of any other group and to act without double standard.

Your recent letter stated: “
Chants or messages that express hatred, celebrate the killing of civilians, or contain calls for genocide of any group are utterly against our ideals and certainly are not characteristic of our broader community.”

The march yesterday included chants that, as you well know, do all of those things. I urge you to demonstrate to the world that Yale will not tolerate such behavior or language, just as you would do, and have done, in many other instances.?

Free speech is a bedrock principle. What is occurring has crossed from free speech into calls for violence and actual vandalism of a religious symbol. The double standards are glaring. This is not the time to hide behind free speech. We have seen what the world thinks of that sort of equivocation.?

As always, I welcome your response and further conversation.

Sincerely,

David?

--
David A. Sasso, MD, MPH
Assistant Clinical Professor
Department of Psychiatry / Child Study Center
Yale School of Medicine
Therapeutic Center for Children and Families, Westport, CT
Phone: (203) 454-2428, ext. 718


Speech by Geert Wilders

 

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Dear friends,

Thank you very much for inviting me.

I come to America with a mission. ?All is not well in the old world. ?There is a tremendous danger looming, and it is very difficult to be optimistic. ?We might be in the final stages of the Islamization of Europe. ?This not only is a clear and present danger to the future of Europe itself, it is a threat to America and the sheer survival of the West. ?The United States as the last bastion of Western civilization, facing an Islamic Europe.

First, I will describe the situation on the ground in Europe . ?Then, I will say a few things about Islam. ?To close I will tell you about a meeting in Jerusalem .

The Europe you know is changing.

You have probably seen the landmarks. ?But in all of these cities, sometimes a few blocks away from your tourist destination, there is another world. ?It is the world of the parallel society created by Muslim mass-migration.

All throughout Europe a new reality is rising: entire Muslim neighborhoods where very few indigenous people reside or are even seen. ?And if they are, they might regret it. ?This goes for the police as well. ?It's the world of head scarves, where women walk around in figureless tents, with baby strollers and a group of children. Their husbands, or slaveholders if you prefer, walk three steps ahead. With mosques on many street corners. ?The shops have signs you and I cannot read. You will be hard-pressed to find any economic activity.
?These are Muslim ghettos controlled by religious fanatics. These are Muslim neighborhoods, and they are mushrooming in every city across Europe . These are the building-blocks for territorial control of increasingly larger portions of Europe , street by street, neighborhood by neighborhood, city by city.

There are now thousands of mosques throughout Europe . ?With larger congregations than there are in churches. ?And in every European city there are plans to build super-mosques that will dwarf every church in the region. ?Clearly, the signal is: we rule.

Many European cities are already one-quarter Muslim:
?just take Amsterdam , ?Marseille and Malmo in Sweden . ?In many cities the majority of the under-18 population is Muslim. ?Paris is now surrounded by a ring of Muslim neighborhoods. Mohammed is the most popular name among boys in many cities.

In some elementary schools in Amsterdam the farm can no longer be mentioned,
?because that would also mean mentioning the pig, ?and that would be an insult to Muslims.

Many state schools in Belgium and Denmark only serve halal food to all pupils. ?In once-tolerant Amsterdam gays are beaten up almost exclusively by Muslims.
??Non-Muslim women routinely hear 'whore, whore'. ?Satellite dishes are not pointed to local TV stations, but to stations in the country of origin.

In France school teachers are advised to avoid authors deemed offensive to Muslims,
?including Voltaire and Diderot; the same is increasingly true of Darwin . ?The history of the Holocaust can no longer be taught because of Muslim sensitivity.

In England sharia courts are now officially part of the British legal system.
?Many neighborhoods in France are no-go areas for women without head scarves. ??Last week a man almost died after being beaten up by Muslims in Brussels , because he was drinking during the Ramadan.

Jews are fleeing France in record numbers,
?on the run for the worst wave of anti-Semitism since World War II. ??French is now commonly spoken on the streets of Tel Aviv and Netanya , ?Israel . ??I could go on forever with stories like this. ?Stories about Islamization.

A total of fifty-four million Muslims now live. ?San Diego University recently calculated that a staggering 25 percent of the population in Europe will be Muslim just 12 years from now.
??Bernhard Lewis has predicted a Muslim majority by the end of this century.

Now these are just numbers. ?And the numbers would not be threatening if the Muslim-immigrants had a strong desire to assimilate.
??But there are few signs of that. ??The Pew Research Center reported that half of French Muslims see their loyalty to Islam as greater than their loyalty to France . ??One-third of French Muslims do not object to suicide attacks. ?The British Centre for Social Cohesion reported that one-third of British Muslim students are in favor of a worldwide caliphate. ?Muslims demand what they call 'respect'. ? And this is how we give them respect. ?We have Muslim official state holidays.

The Christian-Democratic attorney general is willing to accept sharia in the Netherlands if there is a Muslim majority. ?We have cabinet members with passports from Morocco and Turkey .

Muslim demands are supported by unlawful behavior, ranging from petty crimes and random violence, for example against ambulance workers and bus drivers,
?to small-scale riots. ? Paris has seen its uprising in the low-income suburbs, the banlieus. ??I call the perpetrators 'settlers'. ??Because that is what they are. ?They do not come to integrate into our societies; they come to integrate our society into their Dar-al-Islam. ?Therefore, they are settlers.

Much of this street violence I mentioned is directed exclusively against non-Muslims,
?forcing many native people to leave their neighborhoods, their cities, their countries. ?Moreover, Muslims are now a swing vote not to be ignored.

The second thing you need to know is the importance of Mohammed the prophet.
??His behavior is an example to all Muslims and cannot be criticized. ?Now, if Mohammed had been a man of peace, let us say like Ghandi and Mother Theresa wrapped in one, ?there would be no problem. ??But Mohammed was a warlord, a mass murderer, a pedophile, and had several marriages - at the same time. ??Islamic tradition tells us how he fought in battles, how he had his enemies murdered and even had prisoners of war executed. ??Mohammed himself slaughtered the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza. ??If it is good for Islam, it is good. ?If it is bad for Islam, it is bad.

Let no one fool you about Islam being a religion.
??Sure, it has a god, and a here-after, and 72 virgins. ??But in its essence Islam is a political ideology. ??It is a system that lays down detailed rules for society and the life of every person. ?Islam wants to dictate every aspect of life. ?Islam means 'submission'. ??Islam is not compatible with freedom and democracy, because what it strives for is sharia. ?If you want to compare Islam to anything, compare it to communism or national-socialism, these are all totalitarian ideologies.

Now you know why Winston Churchill called Islam
?'the most retrograde force in the world', ?and why he compared Mein Kampf to the Quran. ?The public has wholeheartedly accepted the Palestinian narrative, and sees Israel as the aggressor. ?I have lived in this country and visited it dozens of times. ??I support Israel . ? First, because it is the Jewish homeland after two thousand years of exile up to and including Auschwitz; ?second because it is a democracy, and third because Israel is our first line of defense.

This tiny country is situated on the fault line of jihad,
?frustrating Islam's territorial advance. ??Israel is facing the front lines of jihad, like Kashmir, Kosovo, the Philippines , Southern Thailand, Darfur in Sudan , Lebanon , and Aceh in Indonesia . ??Israel is simply in the way. ??The same way West-Berlin was during the Cold War.

The war against Israel is not a war against Israel .
??It is a war against the West. ? It is jihad. ?Israel is simply receiving the blows that are meant for all of us. ??If there would have been no Israel , ?Islamic imperialism would have found other venues to release its energy and its desire for conquest. ? Thanks to Israeli parents who send their children to the army and lay awake at night, ?parents in Europe and America can sleep well and dream, unaware of the dangers looming.

Many in Europe argue in favor of abandoning Israel in order to address the grievances of our Muslim minorities. ?But if Israel were,
?God forbid, ?to go down, ?it would not bring any solace to the West It would not mean our Muslim minorities would all of a sudden change their behavior, and accept our values. ??On the contrary, ?the end of Israel would give enormous encouragement to the forces of Islam. ??They would, and rightly so, see the demise of Israel as proof that the West is weak, and doomed. ? The end of Israel would not mean the end of our problems with Islam, but only the beginning. ?It would mean the start of the final battle for world domination. ?If they can get Israel , they can get everything. ?So-called journalists volunteer to label any and all critics of Islamization as a 'right-wing extremists' or 'racists'. ?In my country, the Netherlands , 60 percent of the population now sees the mass immigration of Muslims as the number one policy mistake since World War II. ??And another 60 percent sees Islam as the biggest threat. ?Yet there is a greater danger than terrorist attacks, the scenario of America as the last man standing. ?The lights may go out in Europe faster than you can imagine. ??An Islamic Europe means a Europe without freedom and democracy, an economic wasteland, an intellectual nightmare, and a loss of military might for America - as its allies will turn into enemies, enemies with atomic bombs. ?With an Islamic Europe, it would be up to America alone to preserve the heritage of Rome , Athens and Jerusalem ...

Dear friends, liberty is the most precious of gifts.
??My generation never had to fight for this freedom, it was offered to us on a silver platter, by people who fought for it with their lives. ??All throughout Europe , American cemeteries remind us of the young boys who never made it home, and whose memory we cherish. ??My generation does not own this freedom; we are merely its custodians. ??We can only hand over this hard won liberty to Europe 's children in the same state in which it was offered to us. ??We cannot strike a deal with mullahs and imams. ?Future generations would never forgive us. ?We cannot squander our liberties. ?We simply do not have the right to do so.

We have to take the necessary action now to stop this Islamic stupidity from destroying the free world that we know.


Re: Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green

 

开云体育

Excellent letter from David Sasso.?

Listen as the crowd is shouting "Knock it down" referring to the Menorah as they hoisted the Palestinian flag.

The faces can be identified in slow motion.

They need to be prosecuted.?


From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Evan Morris via groups.io <evan.morris@...>
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:44 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [YFJFF] Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
Excellent letter
Evan

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of David Sasso via groups.io <david.sasso@...>
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:42:18 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [YFJFF] Letter to Pres. Salovey fw: Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
FYI, I sent this letter to President Salovey, Provost Strobel, and Secretary Goff-Crews moments ago. I have shared with Gayle Slossberg at Federation.
I encourage others to write as well if they wish.




From:?Sasso, David <david.sasso@...>
Sent:?Sunday, December 10, 2023 12:38 PM
To:?President Peter Salovey <president@...>; Salovey, Peter <peter.salovey@...>
Cc:?Strobel, Scott <scott.strobel@...>; Goff-Crews, Kimberly <kimberly.goff-crews@...>
Subject:?Vandalism of menorah on the Green
?
Dear President Salovey,

I hope that you and your loved ones are enjoying a happy Hanukkah, made all the more difficult, and meaningful, by the events we confront at this time.?

Following up on our conversation in October and your letter after the recent congressional hearings, I want to make sure that you are aware of this incident on the New Haven Green yesterday. It was part of an event that I understand was cosponsored by Yalies4Palestine. (Some will argue that the other participants wanted the flag taken down because it was important to them not to vandalize a menorah. It is clear from listening to the video that they were instead concerned with optics.)


I trust that Yale will investigate to determine if any of these were Yale students. Will there be a statement from the University condemning what occurred? Even if these were not Yale-affiliated students, this occurred in Yale‘s backyard, and the event was sponsored by a Yale?affiliated group (which should no longer receive Yale support or recognition).?

I urge you to consider what kind of statement Yale would release if such an incident were to occur in New Haven, cosponsored by a Yale student group targeting a religious or cultural symbol of any other group and to act without double standard.

Your recent letter stated: “
Chants or messages that express hatred, celebrate the killing of civilians, or contain calls for genocide of any group are utterly against our ideals and certainly are not characteristic of our broader community.”

The march yesterday included chants that, as you well know, do all of those things. I urge you to demonstrate to the world that Yale will not tolerate such behavior or language, just as you would do, and have done, in many other instances.?

Free speech is a bedrock principle. What is occurring has crossed from free speech into calls for violence and actual vandalism of a religious symbol. The double standards are glaring. This is not the time to hide behind free speech. We have seen what the world thinks of that sort of equivocation.?

As always, I welcome your response and further conversation.

Sincerely,

David?

--
David A. Sasso, MD, MPH
Assistant Clinical Professor
Department of Psychiatry / Child Study Center
Yale School of Medicine
Therapeutic Center for Children and Families, Westport, CT
Phone: (203) 454-2428, ext. 718