MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘UCLA’

Risk Benefit of the Vaccines Is NEGATIVE According to a New Paper From Stanford, UCLA, Others. Whoops!

Posted by M. C. on June 24, 2022

Peter Doshi is an author of this paper. This paper puts my status as a “misinformation spreader” in serious jeopardy. They may have to start calling me a “truth teller” soon.

By Steve Kirsch
Steve’s Kirsch newsletter

https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/uh-oh-risk-benefit-of-the-vaccines

This preprint paper, Serious Adverse Events of Special Interest Following mRNA Vaccination in Randomized Trialswas written by a team of highly credible authors and is now undergoing peer review. It points out that the vaccines carry more risk than benefit.

Big whoops. That’s not what the CDC and FDA have been saying. This is really embarrassing for them that now others are starting to discover what I’ve been saying for over a year now.

Don’t expect the mainstream media to cover this or ask any questions. That’s not the way it works.

Tennessee and Publix Super Markets get it

Woo hoo!

Read the Whole Article

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In the War for Social Justice, Academic Freedom Is an Early Casualty | The American Spectator

Posted by M. C. on June 14, 2020

Here’s what I think Klein’s real mistake was. He didn’t fawn over the student for caring so deeply that he wanted faculty to lower standards for black students.

Instead, Klein saw a totally stupid idea, and he let the student have it. He didn’t sugarcoat his response. He didn’t apologize for not agreeing. A white professor, he did not exhibit self-loathing.

The dean’s message to faculty was clear: The students know more than the faculty. Professors are there to learn from social justice activists. And they should never talk back. Academic freedom is over.

https://spectator.org/in-the-war-for-social-justice-academic-freedom-is-an-early-casualty/

Washington

In the war for social justice, academic freedom is an early casualty.

Consider the plight of UCLA Accounting Professor Gordon Klein.

A student sent Klein an email, screenshots of which were reviewed by Inside Higher Ed, that asked for “no-harm” grading for the final exam. (That term means counting a grade only if it improves a student’s overall course grade.) The student also asked for shorter exams and extended deadlines for black students who attended protests after the death of George Floyd.

As FIRE’s Katlyn Patton wrote in a letter to the university, “Surely, UCLA does not intend to send the message that its faculty members must grant or deny privileges or obligations based on race.”

Inside Higher Ed described the email as “a request from students who identified themselves as nonblack allies of their black peers.”

Klein wrote back that he “gives black students special treatment” and then asked for the names of black classmates; he had been conducting class online and wasn’t sure about students’ ethnicity.

Klein also wondered if some white students, say those from Minneapolis, might be traumatized and in need of an edge as well. And what of students of mixed race? He questioned how he could give a “no-harm” test when the final exam is the only exam of the semester. And he wondered how Martin Luther King Jr. might have reacted to the suggestion that students be evaluated based on the “color of their skin.”

A complaint was lodged. On June 3, UCLA suspended Klein until June 24 to give administrators time to consider the complaint. Anderson School of Management Dean Antonio Bernardo wrote that it appeared Klein had “disregard for our core principles, including an abuse of power.”

The group FIRE, or Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, has advocated for Klein on the grounds that UCLA has infringed on Klein’s academic freedom.

The decision doesn’t make sense. As FIRE’s Katlyn Patton wrote in a letter to the university, “Surely, UCLA does not intend to send the message that its faculty members must grant or deny privileges or obligations based on race.”

Or maybe administrators do believe there should be different standards for different ethnic groups. Maybe they also believe that protest is so important it’s OK if students don’t learn course work.

Here’s what I think Klein’s real mistake was. He didn’t fawn over the student for caring so deeply that he wanted faculty to lower standards for black students.

Instead, Klein saw a totally stupid idea, and he let the student have it. He didn’t sugarcoat his response. He didn’t apologize for not agreeing. A white professor, he did not exhibit self-loathing.

The change.org petition, signed by more than 20,000 nags, to have Klein fired, argued that Klein should get canned for “his extremely insensitive, dismissive, and woefully racist response to his student’s request for empathy and compassion during a time of civil unrest.”

Nor did Klein subscribe to the apparent belief that protest is more important than learning. He actually expects students to learn the subject matter.

And maybe he thinks that students should be able to do two things at once — march and study — which is clear to those of us who worked our way through school.

It’s interesting that the fire-Klein petition complains about Klein’s tone with no apparent understanding of how their voices sound. Entitled. Privileged. Race-conscious. Oblivious to how they are perceived by others. Expecting praise for their every action.

UCLA actually apologized to all who were “offended” as UCLA brass were by Klein’s email, which he had not written for public consumption.

How does UCLA talk itself out of this tiny box? The dean’s message to faculty was clear: The students know more than the faculty. Professors are there to learn from social justice activists. And they should never talk back. Academic freedom is over.

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EconomicPolicyJournal.com: UCLA Professor: ‘We need to seriously question the ideal of private home ownership’

Posted by M. C. on January 12, 2020

Who owns the property if we don’t. You guessed it. Think about YOUR home.

Private property includes capital. Buildings, factories, machines…

“more collective” cities. Where have I heard that term collective?

https://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2020/01/ucla-professor-we-need-to-seriously.html

In a recent op-ed for The Nation, Professor Kian Goh, assistant professor of urban planning at UCLA, whose specialties include urban ecological design, spatial politics, and social mobilization in the issues of climate change and global urbanization, stated that what makes the California forest fires even worse is urban planning.

The essay’s subtitle reads, “if we want to keep cities safe in the face of climate change, we need to seriously question the ideal of private homeownership.”

“Yes, climate change intensifies the fires—but the ways in which we plan and develop our cities makes them even more destructive. The growth of urban regions in the second half of the 20th century has been dominated by economic development, aspirations of homeownership, and belief in the importance of private property,” she writes.

Goh compared two ideas of thought: The American tradition of private property ownership and the collective property theories. She suggested the cause of the issue is private homeownership and advocated for “more collective” cities.

In other words, she has no understanding of how stricter respect for private property would reduce fire risk (See: Foundations of Private Property Society Theory).

It is remarkable how often socialists blame capitalism or private property for problems that emerge because of government institutions, that is, some degree of central planning, and then call for more central planning which would only intensify the problems via inefficiencies, distortion of incentives to protect property and plain old power grabs.

RW

(via Campus Reform – HT John K)

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UCLA, Cal State LA To Quarantine Students Who Cannot Prove They Had Measles Vaccination

Posted by M. C. on April 26, 2019

Quarantine CA. Better yet, just stay the hell out all together.

https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2019/04/25/measles-quarantine-ucla-cal-state-los-angeles/

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA/AP) – A quarantine order has been issued for students and staff at two Los Angeles universities who may have been exposed to measles and either have not been vaccinated or can’t verify that they have immunity.

The University of California, Los Angeles, said that as of Wednesday there were 119 students and 8 faculty members under quarantine. The exact number of those quarantined at California State University, Los Angeles, was not officially known.

But CBS2/KCAL9 reporter Leslie Marin said the number at Cal State University, Los Angeles was believed to be about 198 people, including students and staff.

UCLA Chancellor Gene Block announced the quarantines in a statement that confirmed one UCLA student has contracted measles.

“We were also informed that the student had attended classes at Franz Hall and Boelter Hall on three days — April 2, 4 and 9 — while contagious. The student
did not enter any other buildings while on campus”, said Block.

So far, “dozens” of such orders have already been issued for students who were in the CSULA campus library on April 11 between the hours of 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., officials said at a news conference Thursday afternoon.

Any student who has been exposed to a confirmed case of measles who could not provide evidence of two doses of measles immunizations or lab verified immunity to measles will be issued a health officer order for quarantine, which mandates the exposed person to remain at their residence…

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Vaccine

 

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