• A Boycott We Can Get Behind

    From zinn@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 9 08:31:52 2022
    XPost: alt.freespeech, alt.education, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    Three cheers for Judge James Ho and his fellow travelers, who are taking
    the fight to Yale

    Rejected. That word, perhaps above all others, strikes fear in the hearts
    of careerist, Ivy League overachievers and the administrators whose
    livelihoods depend on serving them by maintaining their perch atop the all-important U.S. News & World Report rankings.

    That is why Fifth Circuit Judge James C. Ho’s announcement last week that
    he will no longer hire clerks from Yale Law School, ostensibly the
    nation’s premier breeding ground for legal scholars and practitioners, is garnering so much attention, and why we expect our colleague Aaron
    Sibarium’s report — indicating that a dozen more federal judges are
    following suit — to turn heads, too.

    Three cheers for them. Changing the market demand for a Yale Law School
    degree is one way to motivate the feckless, dishonest, and unprincipled administrators in New Haven and elsewhere to do their jobs—that is, to
    reassert in clear terms that free inquiry is the primary function of a university and that it is to be protected at all costs, including, and
    perhaps especially, when free speech causes offense.

    It may not work and, if Yale continues on its current course, the boycott
    is telegraphing to anybody interested in a serious legal education that
    what’s on offer in New Haven is far from it.

    The pushback, some of which clearly comes from those troubled by the totalitarian atmosphere on the Yale campus that has been well documented
    in these pages, is well underway. Critics say this boycott will hurt
    innocent students and that it won’t affect change.

    Set aside the fact that this is a prospective boycott that won’t affect
    current Yale students. Innocent students are being hurt now: Look no
    further than Yale law student Trent Colbert, who was put through a
    Kafkaesque interrogation by administrators last year after sending a lighthearted email to his classmates, or to the dozens of students who
    showed up in March to hear a debate about civil liberties only to have
    their classmates disrupt the event and drown out the speakers.

    The question is, what is to be done? Yale Law School long ago gave up the
    idea of educating its students. It prizes nothing more than its own
    prestige, derived in part from the federal clerkships in which it places
    its graduates. As any parent resolved to deliver tough love and discipline
    to an unruly child knows, the punishment hurts us more than it hurts them.
    But it is necessary.

    https://freebeacon.com/campus/a-boycott-we-can-get-behind/

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  • From MarcusAurelius@21:1/5 to All on Mon Oct 10 19:25:57 2022
    Thank you for the original post. Judge James Ho, who is of Chinese ancestry, is fully aware
    of inequities, political authoritarianism, censorship, political persecution, and general economic, political, social, and cultural
    devastation caused by Chinese communism. As a result, his mission to stop the same from occurring here is emergent with him.
    Thank you Judge James Ho!

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