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R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk! ~ R.I.P to our friend Caskur!

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Re: Forum gossip thread by Herman

How Modern Education Breeds Good Little Marxists

Started by Renee, October 12, 2020, 12:19:27 PM

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Lab Flaker

"Creeping crud of progressive ideology..." Lol...two nerds actually fucked to culture this conflicting spawn of desire.
Renee...bless your heart...you tried!

Lab Flaker

I would pay 100K for Renee to look into the camera and say, "creeping crud of progressive ideology", whilst teabagging her with my elongated scrotum sack drooping over her forehead.

Renee, I don't know you, but 100K will at least pay for your worthless Arts degree and any other tuition fees that sucked you in.

Stay barefoot and pregnant, and cook the man some bacon and eggs ffs!

God almighty...ease off on the gas girl!

Herman

Funny As Fuck! Funny As Fuck! x 1 View List

Herman

Funny As Fuck! Funny As Fuck! x 1 View List

DKG

About 1 in 5 graduates said they regretted their major overall.

Asurvey found that college graduates who earned a degree in liberal arts regretted their major the most of all respondents.

The ZipRecruiter study surveyed 1,500 graduates from the class of 2025 and another 1,500 students set to graduate in the spring.

The report said that many of the regretful liberal arts majors wished they had focused on scientific or quantitative fields instead.

After the liberal arts, recent grads with political science, international relations, or public policy degrees were the next-highest regretful, with about 46.3% ruing their decisions.

About 39.2% of grads with communications, media studies, or public relations majors said they wish they had chosen another focus.

Overall, about 1 in 5 of all grads said they were regretful of their majors.

Brent

Frances Widdowson was arrested this past weekend — again!

The former University of Calgary professor and outspoken advocate for academic freedom has seen this before. This time, it was at the University of Lethbridge, where she attempted to have quiet, informal conversations with students about the widely repeated claim of "215 unmarked graves" in Kamloops. It was meant to be low-key and non-confrontational.

Yet even that was enough to trigger her removal from campus by police, showing how quickly discussions on contested public narratives have become matters of law enforcement on Canadian campuses.

Widdowson was hoping for nothing more than coffee-table conversations.

Instead, she was handcuffed, detained, and escorted away in a police vehicle after university officials flagged her presence as a "health and safety risk."

Before she could even speak, an internal faculty association warning had already circulated, and campus security stepped in to enforce a trespass order.

What stands out is how quickly a discussion led to the arrival of law enforcement.

Canadian universities are no longer neutral spaces for inquiry when certain topics are involved. And "safety" is increasingly being used as a reason to shut down disagreement rather than engage with it.

And it's not just the arrest that should worry us, but how normal this kind of escalation has become on campuses that are expected to encourage open debate.