NEW: Boston University is requiring all students and faculty to affirm that they should "intervene" if a woman is complimented on her husband or encouraged to have children, guidance transmitted during a mandatory Title IX training this semester. 🧵
The training included multiple-choice questions that had to be answered correctly in order to complete it. Some questions were empirical—"How often do you think people make false allegations?"—while others asked about the appropriate course of conduct in a given scenario.
Faculty who did not complete the training would "not be eligible for merit-based salary increases," the school said in an email, with further penalties possible for "continued non-compliance." Students who did not complete it would "be blocked from registering next semester."
In one vignette from the training, an Asian woman is told that her white husband is "good-looking" and that "half-Asian babies are the cutest." Asked "what should you do," students and faculty were forced to select "Intervene" to advance through the training.
Even though the woman "smiled" at the compliment, the training explains, she still "might have felt uncomfortable" about comments relating to "her race, her husband's appearance, or the prospect of having children" itself.
The training also required students and faculty to affirm that people "rarely" make false accusations. "You might be surprised to learn that false reports aren't common, and frivolous claims are almost nonexistent," the training says.
"Sometimes" was not an acceptable answer—though one study found that as many as two-thirds of hate crime accusations turn out to be false.
The training drew sharp criticism from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), which told the Washington Free Beacon that Boston University was violating its own free speech policies.
"BU makes clear commitments to free expression and academic freedom, and that includes the right to be free from compelled speech," FIRE's Aaron Terr said. But to complete the training, students and faculty "must select the university’s preferred answers as their own."
"This is compelled speech and has no place at a university that promises its faculty expressive freedom," Terr said.
Boston University did not respond to a request for comment.
The training, which was created by the education consultancy EVERFI and appears on the school's "compliance services" website, demonstrates how the antidiscrimination law can become a Trojan Horse for compelled speech.
Universities frame such compulsion as a way of complying with Title IX and other civil rights statutes, even when it goes far beyond what the law requires.
Simply quizzing students and faculty on their legal obligations does not violate academic freedom, Terr said. But the Boston University training, which requires "them to express agreement with particular viewpoints," does.
BU has seen several such violations. Last year, the university's theater and playwriting programs adopted a policy of requiring "land acknowledgment[s]" before performances, with the theater program also requiring all instructors to "include a DEI statement in their syllabus."
In October, FIRE sent the university a letter of concern about both policies but has yet to receive a response.
Statutes like Title IX can give administrators cover for this sort of overreach.
After YLS pressured Trent Colbert to write a pre-drafted apology for a "triggering" email, the dean of the law school claimed the administrators were merely "attempting to carry out their obligations under university policy whenever discrimination complaints are filed."
She also invoked Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which "oblige[s] the law school to ensure a learning environment free of discrimination." scribd.com/document/54053…
In the name of complying with these laws, universities have attempted to regulate a quotidian and constantly expanding list of behaviors.
The BU training goes so far as to imply that telling someone to put their phone away could constitute illegal discrimination or harassment.
One question asks about the "best path forward" when a classmate "keeps checking their phone" while working on a project. The "right" answer involves giving the classmate "the benefit of the doubt"; the wrong one involves telling them to "stop checking your phone—that's rude."
Other questions encourage people to police flirtatious encounters and potentially offensive jokes. "You sit near Heidi, and for the past week you've seen David come over to talk to her several times," one scenario begins.
"You’re not sure, but you thought you saw David rubbing her back at one point today. What should you do?" Students and faculty who said "Nothing" were told to "try again."
"You don't have to be certain that potentially concerning behavior crosses the line before taking action," the training states.
Nor must you be certain that anyone finds a joke offensive before speaking up about it. "What should you do" if "Greg begins speaking loudly in a stereotypical Chinese accent," the training asks. "Say something. Mocking an accent is offensive"—even if nobody registers offense.
The training justifies such interventions by positing that "microaggressions" are more damaging to "employee well-being" than "overt harassment."
Even "[w]ell-meaning people can still cause harm," one module says. "It's important to separate someone's intention from the impact of their actions."
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
I am sympathetic in principle to (certain) Covid restrictions, and to (certain) critiques of ossified Reaganism. But Covid poses a real problem for conservatives trying to define themselves in opposition to the Reaganite Right.
Even if you like lockdowns, the FDA, NIH, and CDC have spent the last two years vindicating, over and over again, every imaginable warning about government incompetence and bureaucratic malevolence. It’s hard to look at Covid and think: “see, the government CAN do things.”
There are counterexamples, of course. Warp Speed was triumph (though private corporations did most of the leg work), and the US did some of the most aggressive economic stimulus in the world. But these exceptions seem to prove the Reaganite rule.
To hear the media tell it, the emergence of the Omicron variant in South Africa is the direct result of "vaccine hoarding" by Western countries. As @DrewHolden360 and I explain in the Free Beacon, this narrative is mostly false.
@DrewHolden360 Five of the eight countries from which the Biden administration has suspended travel have pumped the brakes on new vaccine shipments because the countries have more doses than health officials can administer. That's a tragedy, but it's not due to vaccine hoarding.
Vaccine hesitancy is widespread across Africa. A recent survey that spans five West African countries found that 6 in 10 people were vaccine hesitant—compared with 13 percent or less in France, the United Kingdom, and other parts of Europe and 27 percent in the United States.
NEW: The dean of Yale Law School authorized the email condemning second-year law student Trent Colbert for his use of the term "trap house." The revelation suggests she has been downplaying or deliberately obfuscating her involvement in the scandal.
The revelation comes amid a contentious review of Gerken's deanship. Gerken vowed in October not to "act on the basis of partial facts" and tasked Yale Law School deputy dean Ian Ayres with assembling a report on the incident.
In a follow-up email that appeared to summarize the report, Gerken said that the administration's message condemning Colbert was inappropriate and implied it had been sent without her permission.
SCOOP: The two accrediting bodies for all US medical schools now say that meritocracy is "malignant" and that race has "no genetic or scientific basis"—positions many doctors worry will lower standards of care and endanger lives.
The Liaison Committee on Medical Education, which accredits all medical schools in North America, is cosponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Association for Medical Colleges (AAMC).
Those are the same groups that on Oct. 30 released a controversial guide to "advancing health equity" through "language, narrative, and concepts."
Yes, the same guide everyone was mocking on twitter the other week.
New research finds that 1/5th of academic jobs require DEI statements; that the statements are significantly more common at elite schools than non-elite ones; and that jobs in STEM are just as likely as jobs in the social sciences to require DEI statements.freebeacon.com/campus/study-d…
The last finding surprised James Paul, one of the study's co-authors. He'd hypothesized that the more empirical a field, the less likely it would be to use "soft" criteria when evaluating applicants. But when he actually ran the data, that hypothesis collapsed.
"The most surprising finding of the paper is that these requirements are not just limited to the softer humanities," Paul said. "I would have expected these statements to be less common in math and engineering, but they're not."
NEW: The YLS administrator at the center of Traphouse-gate pushed the Yale Law Journal to host a diversity trainer who said anti-Semitism is merely a form of anti-blackness and suggested the FBI artificially inflates the number of anti-Semitic hate crimes. bit.ly/3pZ5oXZ
The comments from diversity trainer Ericka Hart—a self-described "kinky" sex-ed teacher who works with children as young as nine—shocked members of the predominantly liberal law review, many of whom characterized the presentation as anti-Semitic.
"I consider myself very liberal," a student said. But Hart's presentation, delivered Sept. 17 to members of the law review, was "almost like a conservative parody of what antiracism trainings are like." Hart had been recommended to the Journal by YLS DEI director Yaseen Eldik.