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Great White North |
Canucki moonbat profs reject scholarships for war orphans |
2010-03-26 |
![]() The chief question is "just how low can these parasites and leeches go?" They say they're concerned about Project Hero, a program that pays the tuition of students who have had a parent die while on military duty for Canada. More than 80 universities and colleges in Canada have committed to the project, which pays for four years of tuition, plus $1,000 for books. U of R president Vianne Timmons announced two weeks ago the university would provide the scholarship, but that has led to a campus controversy. Sixteen professors have signed a letter to Timmons stating the program glorifies military action and they don't want their school to be part of it. Among those with concerns is Jeffrey Webber, who teaches political science and who says the name of the program celebrates military intervention abroad. "We think this is a glorification of the Afghan effort," he said. Excuse me, asshole, this is not about your perception of political symbolism and the dialectic of imperialism or whatever. It is about children, about 200 of them so far, who have lost a parent through no fault of their own, but through deliberate acts of public policy. Webber said it's not that they are against helping the children of the Canadian military. "Why stop at the question of dependents of Canadian Forces personnel? There's all kinds of people who are killed in workplace accidents," he said. Equate a combat death with a "workplace accident?" Are you against free tuition for children of Paleos who lose their lives because of that red/green wire confusion thing? I doubt it. As an alternative to the program, the group says there should be universal access to post-secondary education. The program was started about a year ago by Toronto businessman Kevin Reed and retired general Rick Hillier. "We just thought it was the right thing to do for these men and women in uniform," said Reed, who's an honorary lieutenant-colonel of the military's Canadian Brigade Group service units. Reed said he's never heard of any kind of protest associated with the program. These are the 16 profs who signed the petition: Joyce Green, Department of Political Science J.F. Conway, Department of Sociology and Social Studies George Buri, Department of History Emily Eaton, Department of Geography Jeffery R. Webber, Department of Political Science David Webster, International Studies Annette Desmarais, International Studies Darlene Juschka, Women's and Gender Studies and Religious Studies Meredith Rogers Cherland, Faculty of Education Garson Hunter, Social Work John W. Warnock, Department of Sociology and Social Studies William Arnal, Department of Religious Studies Leesa Streifler, Department of Visual Arts Carol Schick, Faculty of Education Ken Montgomery, Faculty of Education André Magnan, Department of Sociology and Social Studies Note that not one of these sanctimonious ani is from the classics, business, engineering, or the hard sciences. Only one is from history, another from geography. The rest are from free-roaming "disciplines" that are little more than sinecures and propaganda platforms for the otherwise useless drones and lefty infiltrators who have hijacked western academia over the past 50 years. |
Posted by:Atomic Conspiracy |
#8 No worries, Chemist dear. You'd probably be surprised at how many fellow Rantburgers are also academicians, and not all in the hard sciences. The ability to think clearly is scattered throughout the population. |
Posted by: trailing wife on the other computer 2010-03-26 19:47 |
#7 We love Chemists here. They know how to make stuff go BOOM! |
Posted by: Deacon Blues 2010-03-26 18:20 |
#6 Not to worry, Chemist. You're an actual scientist, not one of those loony useless |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2010-03-26 16:22 |
#5 I am a bit reluctant to admit this here but I am a professor (in Chemistry)...I just want Rantburgers to know that although academia is overflowing with left wing hacks, not all professors are leftists. Some of us actually believe in freedom and responsibility and openly challenge socialist drivel, even in the hallowed ivory tower. And yes, some of us even respect our brave men and women in uniform, openly support them, and are most greatful for our freedom which they have paid for and continue to pay for. And yes, some even support scholarships for those they leave behind. Count me as one academic who opposes those in U Regina. |
Posted by: Chemist 2010-03-26 15:22 |
#4 Good job, Sniper! I read this last night and had the same reservations. It reminds me of our own Two-year-old-in-Chief who refused to wear the American flag pin because he didn't agree with our involvement in the Iraq war. AKA Teh Great Uniter. |
Posted by: Gomez Threter7450 2010-03-26 11:35 |
#3 Yesterday I read about the U of R professors' letter arguing against scholarships for Canadian soldiers' dependents. Found the link to it on Kate Macmillan's site, smalldeadanimals dot com. I decided to express my displeasure to those profs by sending them all emails. Sent an email to every last one of them. I was quite surprised to get three replies (so far) with somewhat "interesting" content. The reply from professor Hunter was an automatic reply stating that the referenced professor was on sabbatical and hence not available. The second reply, from Professor Meredith Cherland, was similar but stating that the professor was on sabbatical until June 30, 2010. The third reply, from Leesa Streifler, insisted that her name had been placed on the list without her knowledge and that she had contacted the organizer (referred to as "he") of the letter to have her name removed and, in a second reply, continued on to say that there is no need for me to research this any further as her name has been removed from the list. Here is her exact quote copied and pasted "Dear Canuckistan sniper (I just put that in now), Thank you for your reply. It is not necessary for you to do extra research on this, as I have spoken to the organizer and he has taken my name off the list, and it has been resolved to my satisfaction. I know that this has been a distressing and hurtful situation and I hope that it doesn't continue to cause you any more discomfort. Sincerely, L. Streifler Now I'm wondering exactly how many of those 16 professors actually signed the letter or actually gave their permission for their name to be used. |
Posted by: Canuckistan sniper 2010-03-26 11:25 |
#2 Mods, please remove vowel movements above. I strongly suspect we're being used to transmit coded messages. |
Posted by: Redneck Jim 2010-03-26 06:28 |
#1 JUST IN! I thought I was picking up a familiar stench from this rhetoric. Sure enough, this Webber anus is an outright communist and Chavista lackey. This is from one of his lectures: After the debt crisis of the 1980s and the parallel right-wing neoliberal assault across Latin America, roughly the last decade witnessed resurgence in leftist movements and governments in the region, says Webber. As imperial wars advanced in other areas of the world, Latin America served as a beacon of hope, a site of resistance. This is from his blurb at the UR website: Jeffery R. Webber began teaching at the University of Regina in the Fall of 2009. He spent the last several years splitting time between Canada, Europe, and various countries in Latin America. His main focus has been Bolivia, but he is now expanding his research into the rest of the Latin America. A revised version of his doctoral dissertation will be published as Red October: Left-Indigenous Struggles in Modern Bolivia (Brill Academic Publishers, 2010). In addition, he is currently at work on four major projects: a new book manuscript, Rebellion to Reform in Bolivia: Indigenous Liberation and Class Struggle under Evo Morales (Haymarket Books, 2010); a collective volume on the new Latin American Left, co-edited with historian Barry Carr (Rowman and Littlefield, 2010); a Spanish-to-English translation of Stefan Gandler's major text, Marxismo CrÃtico en México, or, Critical Marxism in Mexico; and, finally, early research preparations for an eventual book manuscript, Canada in the Americas: Imperialism and Resistance in the Age of Neoliberalism, to be co-authored with Todd Gordon. Webber is also an active member on the editorial boards of Historical Materialism, Latin American Perspectives, and New Socialist. |
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy 2010-03-26 01:41 |