Aaron Sibarium Profile picture
Sep 5 30 tweets 7 min read Read on X
NEW: The University of South Carolina required all students to affirm the value of "diversity and inclusion" as part of a mandatory training this summer.

Then, when I reached out for comment, USC claimed the training was "optional" despite telling students it was "required."🧵 Image
In a module on "Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging," which included 10 multiple choice questions, the training asked students how "diversity and inclusion help create a healthy, positive campus environment." Image
Students who said these values do not create such an environment—or that they give "unfair advantages" to "people from marginalized identity groups"—were told that their answers were "incorrect." Image
The right answer was that "diversity and inclusion exposes students to people from different backgrounds, thus enriching the overall campus experience."
Though students could complete the module without answering every question correctly, they needed at least an 80 percent—on a quiz with just 10 questions—to pass the training and register for classes, according to the screenshots from the training. Image
When I asked USC about this, a university spokesman, Jeffrey Stensland, claimed the diversity module was "optional, not mandatory," and that students only needed to complete units on alcohol and sexual assault.
But an online portal for USC’s 35,000 students says otherwise, indicating the diversity unit is "required" for all undergraduates. Image
USC also warned students in emails that "registration holds will take effect if you do not complete" the module, which was offered through an outside vendor, Vector Solutions, and includes lessons on "allyship," "privilege," and "cultural appropriation." Image
"You are receiving this email because you have not yet completed all of the Required Community Education modules," the emails read. "Completion of your courses is required for all students at the University of South Carolina."

Sure doesn't sound optional to me!
The requirements could set back a yearlong campaign by USC to preempt the sort of controversies that have embroiled higher education amid a wave of anti-Israel protests, which amplified critiques of campus DEI programs and sparked heated debate about free speech.
Under pressure from state lawmakers, USC last year renamed its top diversity office to avoid the terms "diversity," "equity," and "inclusion."
With tensions rising over the Oct. 7 attacks, it also promised in a press release to "strengthen its free speech expression policies" and promote "a variety of opinions and ideas"—commitments that earned the university a top rating for free speech from FIRE this year.
"USC went above and beyond to make its campus friendly to free expression," FIRE’s Mary Griffin said in a statement.
"Not only did the institution seek to ensure its written policies aligned with the First Amendment, but it also prioritized communicating the importance of free expression as a valued principle to students, faculty, and staff."
The training, which also included a module on mental health, suggests some leaders at USC didn’t get the memo.
The training forced students to affirm a range of propositions aimed at policing speech and micromanaging relationships, docking points for answers deemed insensitive or prejudiced.
One true/false question, for example, indicates that students should not support a "friend in need" by suggesting that exercise will help them feel better. Image
"While you may want to offer positivity or ideas on how they can move forward, now might not be the best time or place," the correct answer reads. "Rather than offering advice, try simply validating their feelings." Image
Another question asks what students should do if they "have a great idea for a costume" but are "concerned about cultural appropriation." Image
Dismissing the concerns as "not that serious"—even if nobody from the relevant culture will be at the party—is "incorrect," according to the training. Instead, students should "educate" themselves through online research to determine whether the costume is acceptable. Image
Still another question asks why students might not learn about the "experience of the LGBTQIA+ community" before arriving at college. Image
Incorrect answers include "there wasn’t enough time in high school to cover LGBTQIA+ perspectives" and "this probably wasn’t an intentional or deliberate decision to exclude." Image
To get the question right, students must affirm that "history is frequently told through the lens of those in charge rather than those from marginalized identity groups." Image
Schools across the country have required similar trainings. A Title IX training at BU forced faculty to affirm that people "rarely" make false accusations of sexual assault, while a Harvard Title IX training told students that "using the wrong pronouns" can constitute "abuse."
At USC, the multiple-choice quiz penalized students who said that refusing to use a roommate’s preferred pronouns did not constitute bigotry. Image
Students were also dinged for saying that it would be best to let a Jewish roommate stand up for himself if a "mutual friend" were "making fun" of his "religious headwear." Image
"Pull them aside later to educate them on why their comments may have been offensive," the training enjoins. Image
Stensland, the university spokesman, said the quiz was "not intended to reflect university policy" but rather "encourage student reflection."
Pressed on why the "optional" module had been listed as a requirement, he promised in an email to "follow-up with our team to ensure the information sent to incoming [students] is accurate."

"I appreciate you bringing this to our attention," he wrote.
Read the full piece—complete with quotes from Speech First's @cherisetrump—here: freebeacon.com/campus/univers…

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More from @aaronsibarium

Sep 3
NEW: The RNC has sent letters to election officials in six swing states urging them to monitor Vot-ER, the nonprofit that helps doctors register their patients to vote, for possible violations of election law.

This is the Dem-aligned group registering patients in psych wards.🧵
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Addressed to secretaries of state in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina, Arizona, and Nevada, the letters argue that Vot-ER is "weaponizing the healthcare system" for partisan ends and "threatening … election integrity" with its materials.
"It is not difficult to imagine how a patient could feel pressured to register to vote or support a certain candidate to receive medical care," the letters say.
Read 16 tweets
Aug 26
NEW: Robin DiAngelo tells her "fellow white people" that they should "always cite and give credit to the work of BIPOC people who have informed your thinking."

But she appears to have plagiarized numerous scholars—including two minorities—in her doctoral dissertation.🧵 Image
"When you use a phrase or idea you got from a BIPOC person," DiAngelo says, "credit them."

But according to a complaint filed last week with the University of Washington, where DiAngelo received her Ph.D. in multicultural education, she hasn't always taken her own advice.
The 2004 dissertation, "Whiteness in Racial Dialogue: A Discourse Analysis," lifts two paragraphs from an Asian-American professor, Northeastern University's Thomas Nakayama, without proper attribution, omitting quotation marks and in-text citations. Image
Read 31 tweets
Aug 20
How bad are hate speech laws in the UK? Saying "it's OK to be white" can result in a harsher sentence than child pornography.

@abigailandwords found numerous cases in which UK judges jailed thought criminals while letting actual criminals off the hook.

The list is shocking.🧵 Image
Judge Benedict Kelleher sentenced a man to 18 months in prison for chanting "who the fuck is Allah?" He gave a lighter sentence to a man who physically assaulted a police officer. Image
Judge John Temperley gave a man 12 weeks in prison for a racist Facebook post. He did not impose any prison time on a man with 46 indecent images of children. Image
Read 6 tweets
Aug 16
NEW: Two professors on Columbia's top disciplinary body were involved in the unlawful encampment that upended campus life in April and led to the resignation of Columbia president Minouche Shafik, raising questions about the school's ability to keep order in the coming term.🧵
The professors, Joseph Slaughter and Susan Bernofsky, sit on the university senate’s rules committee, which helps set rules governing campus protests as well as the process for enforcing them.
Both have publicly defended the students involved in the encampment and—according to photographs and metadata reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon—appear to have participated in it themselves.
Read 29 tweets
Aug 12
NEW: Doctors at Seattle Children's Hospital were forced to attend a racially segregated DEI training that claimed black people are "systematically targeted for demise" and pressed white docs to "tap into their repressed racial memories" to develop a white "race-consciousness."🧵
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Held in August 2022, the training was mandatory for the gastroenterology department and divided participants into three "racial caucuses"—a white caucus, a black caucus, and a "Non-Black POC Caucus"—to "minimize harm to our black learners and facilitator." Image
Each caucus completed separate "racial identity development exercises" based on the work of prominent diversity consultants, including White Fragility author Robin DiAngelo. Image
Read 28 tweets
Aug 9
NEW: Tim Walz signed into law a bill that established racial quotas throughout the state's health department, from a requirement that two members of a pregnancy task force be "Black or African American" to rules governing the ethnic composition of a "health equity" council.🧵 Image
The legislation, which Walz signed last May, created race-based membership requirements for five separate committees while setting up additional race-conscious programs. Legal experts said the quotas were patently unconstitutional and would be easy pickings for a plaintiff.
"Any time the government uses a racial classification without a compelling state interest, that is unconstitutional," said Adam Mortara, the lead trial lawyer for the plaintiffs in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard.
Read 22 tweets

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