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  1. #176
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    legal US permanent resident and Texas A&M scientist Will Kim freed after months of abusive and arbitrary ICE detention

    every US officer who touched this should go to prison


    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/new...n-21190951.php

  2. #177
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    former DOJ lawyers spill the tea


    The prime example I saw was the investigation into the U.C. school system about allegations of antisemitism on campus. In March, Andrea Lucas, who Trump appointed to be acting chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, filed what’s called a Commissioner’s Charge, which is essentially a complaint of employment discrimination. It was my section’s job to investigate it. We were told: “You have 30 days to do an investigation and give us a Justification Memo” — which is what we write after we conclude there is a legal violation.

    Multiple teams of attorneys went to Berkeley, U.C.L.A., U.C. Davis and U.C.S.F. Mostly they didn’t find sufficient evidence to bring suit. The teams were so scared that in real time, every day, they were summarizing and reporting up to office management, back to Michael Gates, the deputy assistant attorney general, to create a paper trail for how they were not finding evidence.

    Julia Quinn, Civil Rights Division: Leo Terrell, who ran the antisemitism task force, sells merch, and one of the very few people in our office who stayed behind, who got in with the administration, bought a hat, one of his “Leo 2.0” hats. He had it in the background of a Zoom.



    Protesters at U.C.L.A. in March after the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, a pro-Palestinian graduate student at Columbia University. Daniel Cole/Reuters

    Ejaz Baluch: The only school, it became clear, where there might be a violation was U.C.L.A. One colleague said, “We have to feed something to the wolves.” The team concluded that the complaint process at the school was broken. Some professors we interviewed really did suffer on campus. They were harassed by groups of students.

    But the D.O.J. demand letter to U.C.L.A. asked for $1 billion in damages. We thought, $1 billion? They are making that up out of thin air. There is no way the damages we found added up to anything like that amount.
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...e=articleShare

  3. #178
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    only Congress can dismantle US agencies created by law

    Trump gunning for Special Ed this way is an abdication of good governance and frankly tyrannical

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/educa...ducation-dept/

  4. #179
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Universities with fair hiring policies targeted

    Resegregation of the workforce is the order of the day

    The state department is proposing to suspend 38 universities including Harvard and Yale from a federal research partnership program because they engage in diversity, equity and inclusion hiring practices, according to an internal memo and spreadsheet obtained by the Guardian.


    The memo, dated 17 November, recommends excluding ins utions from the Diplomacy Lab – a program that pairs university researchers with state department policy offices – if they “openly engage in DEI hiring practices” or set DEI objectives for candidate pools.



    Elite ins utions including Stanford University, Yale University, Johns Hopkins University, Duke University and the University of Southern California are among those marked for suspension, effective 1 January 2026. Other targeted schools include American University, George Washington University, Syracuse University and several University of California campuses.
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...search-program

  5. #180
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Prior restraint of speech and state control of curriculum at Texas A&M


    https://drstaceypatton1865.substack.... ent-exposes

  6. #181
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Foreign students pay higher tuition, making more room for US students at universities

    Foreign students spend about $55B a year into the US economy -- ~1/4 of all foreign consumer expenditures in the US

    The WH just blasted this out as "good news you might have missed"


  7. #182
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    valid H-1B visa holding prof at OU arrested

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement reportedly arrested an OU professor at Will Rogers International Airport Saturday.


    College of International Studies professor Joshua Landis wrote in a Monday post on the social platform X that Vahid Abedini, an Iranian Studies professor, was boarding a flight on his way to attend the Middle East Studies Association in Washington, D.C. Abedini was then detained and placed in jail, according to Landis.
    “We’re waiting for him to get in front of a court. We were hoping (it) would be today, but of course, the lawyers say, ‘Oh, that’ll never happen,’” Landis said. “Because it evidently just takes forever to get a court hearing, so you just languish in jail.”

    Landis, who also serves as the co-director of the Center for Middle East Studies, said he helped Abedini with his legal do entation, and believes Abedini has followed all necessary steps to lawfully stay in the country.

    “This guy is illegally detained. He's following all the laws. The university has been following the laws. He's been impeccable about doing everything and signing papers, and I was deeply involved in that process,” Landis said. “The university has been extremely diligent in doing its duty.”
    https://www.oudaily.com/news/ou-prof...5464d017f.html

  8. #183
    right about pizzagate Blake's Avatar
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    Foreign students pay higher tuition, making more room for US students at universities

    Foreign students spend about $55B a year into the US economy -- ~1/4 of all foreign consumer expenditures in the US

    The WH just blasted this out as "good news you might have missed"
    ing morons.

  9. #184
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Texas Tech flow chart illustrates what state control of curriculum looks like

    So much for academic freedom and free speech for instructors

    https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aai...group-discover

  10. #185
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    library agency snapped back

    December 3, 2025
    Statement of Agency’s Reinstatement of Terminated IMLS Grants
    Washington, DC– Upon further review, the Ins ute of Museum and Library Services has reinstated all federal grants. This action supersedes any prior notices which may have been received related to grant termination.

    Grantees should access the agency's electronic grants management system for further information.
    https://www.imls.gov/news/statement-...ed-imls-grants

  11. #186
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    released after three days in ICE detention, more or less without explanation

  12. #187
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    Education Dept. asks hundreds of fired employees to temporarily return

    WASHINGTON – Facing a backlog of school discrimination cases, the U.S. Department of Education has asked hundreds of employees it fired months ago to temporarily return to work.

    A Dec. 5 email obtained by USA TODAY shows the agency ordered a significant portion of staffers in the Office for Civil Rights to come back later this month. In the "return to duty" directive, officials acknowledged they're facing a sizable caseload of civil rights complaints, and they underscored a need to utilize every resource at the government’s disposal to work through them.

    The agency said the request applies to roughly 250 workers who've been on administrative leave for months amid legal challenges to their March firings. Julie Hartman, the Education Department's press secretary for legal affairs, stressed there still aren't any plans to fully rehire those workers permanently.

    ...
    https://www.indystar.com/story/news/...p/87643095007/

  13. #188
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    The Trump/DOGE mass firings eliminated necessary state capacity, not waste and fraud. Begging fired civil service to come back to work proves it.

  14. #189
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    completely optional civilizational deterioration
    Modern industry does not so much depend upon factory workers as engineers, suppliers and technicians supervised by very highly qualified people

    The new pattern of automation and productivity in the USA is college-heavy, not blue collar heavy

    Last edited by Winehole23; 12-10-2025 at 08:07 PM.

  15. #190
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    one thing that stands out for me is the extent to which MAGAs are apparently willing to see Trump set their own futures on fire -- so long as an extraordinary example is made of uppity women, minorities and gays

  16. #191
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    (and poor people)

  17. #192
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    (greedy bas s)

  18. #193
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    OU students have veto power over professors

    www.oudaily.com/news/ou-poli...





  19. #194
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    OU telling OU student journalists to file open record requests to find out about university policies


  20. #195
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    pretextual investigation of colleges, deprofessionalization of the DOJ continues apace

    Four attorneys said they were particularly troubled by two matters. First, they were asked to write up a “j-memo” — a justification memorandum — that explained why UC should face a lawsuit “before we even knew the facts,” one attorney said.


    “Then there was the PR campaign,” the attorney said, referring to announcements beginning with a Feb. 28, 2025, press release saying investigators would be visiting UCLA, UC Berkeley, USC and seven other universities nationwide because the campuses “have experienced antisemitic incidents since October 2023.”


    “Never before in my time across multiple presidential administrations did we send out press releases essentially saying workplaces or colleges were guilty of discrimination before finding out if they really were,” said one attorney, who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation.
    Jen Swedish, a former deputy chief on the employment discrimination team who worked on the UCLA case, said “virtually everything about the UC investigation was atypical.”


    “The political appointees essentially determined the outcome almost before the investigation had even started,” said Swedish, referring to Trump administration officials who declared publicly that punishing colleges for antisemitism would be a priority. She resigned in May.
    https://www.latimes.com/california/s...-investigation

  21. #196
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    this article by Charles Ornstein is only tangentially about education and more about the official change in demeanor under Trump 2.0

    to hostility, peevishness and self-pity

    This summer, my colleagues were reporting out a story about the Department of Education’s “final mission,” its effort to undermine public education even as the Trump administration worked feverishly to close the agency.

    As we do with all stories, the reporters reached out to those who would be featured in the article for comment. And so began a journey that showed both the emphasis we place on giving the subjects of our stories an opportunity to comment, as well as the aggressively unhelpful pushback we’ve faced this year as we’ve sought information and responses to questions.

    Megan O’Matz, a reporter based in Wisconsin on ProPublica’s Midwest team, first asked the department’s press office for an interview in mid-August. At the same time, we emailed top administration officials who were making crucial decisions within the agency, including Lindsey Burke, deputy chief of staff for policy and programs, and Meg Kilgannon, director of strategic partnerships.

    In response to the outreach to Kilgannon, department spokesperson Madison Biedermann told O’Matz to “Please direct all media inquiries to [email protected].” Reached on her cellphone that day, Biedermann said she was happy to look into the request. We asked for a response within a week.

    At that time, the published press phone number for the department appeared, at all hours, to be a black hole, with a recorded message saying it was “temporarily closed.” (It still indicates that.)

    Hearing nothing more, O’Matz emailed the press office again Aug. 18. And again Aug. 28 with detailed questions. She left follow-up messages on Biedermann’s cell. And on Burke’s cell, including once on her husband’s cell as ProPublica tried to find a direct way to contact Burke. To ensure fairness and accuracy, it is our long-standing practice to try to reach those who are part of our stories so that they have an opportunity to respond to them. We’d rather get responses before we publish an article than after.

    Reached on her cell Aug. 29, Kilgannon said she had no comment and hung up before O’Matz could explain what we planned to publish about her and her work. She did not respond to a subsequent email with those details.

    On Sept. 8, still hearing nothing from Burke, O’Matz reached out to the department’s chief of staff, writing: “We have been seeking to talk to the secretary and to Dr. Burke. … Can you help us arrange that?” A week later, ProPublica arranged for a letter to be delivered via FedEx to Burke’s home outlining what our reporting had found so far and to let us know if anything was inaccurate or required additional context. We invited her again to talk with us, to comment or provide any additional information.

    Finally, on Sept. 17, Biedermann wrote: “Just heard from an ED (Education Department) colleague that you sent these inquiries in writing to their home address. This is highly inappropriate and unprofessional. You have also reached out to employees on their personal cell phones, emails, and even reached out to employee’s family members. This is disturbing. Do not use an employee’s home addresses or relatives to contact them.” (The emphasis was hers.)

    ProPublica replied the following day that it’s common practice for journalists to reach out to people we are writing about. “In fact, it’s our professional obligation,” O’Matz wrote.

    Biedermann responded: “Reaching out to individuals about a work matter at their private address is not journalism — it is borderline intimidation. In today’s political climate it is particularly unacceptable. We received your inquiries (via email, phone calls, text messages, both on work and personal email address) and made a conscious decision not to respond, as we have every right to do.”

    “You are not en led to a response from us, or anyone, ever,” Biedermann wrote.

    To be clear, at no time prior to this email did the department tell O’Matz that it had received her inquiries and would not comment. The article ran on Oct. 8, about two months after we first contacted the department. (I would highly encourage you to read it.)
    https://www.propublica.org/article/p...ting-obstacles
    Last edited by Winehole23; 12-29-2025 at 08:06 PM.

  22. #197
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    official animus to the public stands out

  23. #198
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    US universities slipping in global rankings


    Harvard is #3

    (paywalled)https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/15/u...rump-cuts.html

  24. #199
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Texas A&M banned Plato last week and business ethics this week


    https://pen.org/report/americas-cens...eb-of-control/

  25. #200
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    Trump TACOs on Harvard


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