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#91
The State of Higher Ed / Re: Protests and police on cam...
Last post by dismalist - April 23, 2024, 03:45:45 PM
Agitprop.
#92
The State of Higher Ed / Re: Protests and police on cam...
Last post by Parasaurolophus - April 23, 2024, 03:22:56 PM
Quote from: spork on April 23, 2024, 11:57:40 AMThe USA also heavily subsidizes Egypt's military, as part of the Camp David Peace Agreement. In an excellent example of making America great again, ammunition fired at Egyptian pro-democracy demonstrators in January 2011 was manufactured in the USA with U.S. taxpayer money. Didn't see any Ivy League campus protests about that. Although I can list numerous other examples (looking at you, Saudi Arabia, killing Yemenis with your American weapons), but I won't.

I certainly took part in demonstrations related to those conflicts, but not at a US university, let alone an Ivy League institution. I can't, offhand, remember whether there were any. But let's suppose not. The fact that in the past students didn't come together to protest against American aid to Saudi Arabia or Egypt, if it is one, has no bearing on whether the students there here and now are right to protest American involvement in the war on Gaza. There will always be some other event we can point to that did not gather sufficient attention and outrage (though it certainly merited it), but that doesn't mean that the attention and outrage that some conflict does garner is misplaced, especially when it involves a client state of one's own country.



QuoteHamas, or what's left it of it, has managed to persuade, with the connivance/laziness of mainstream U.S. media outlets, a chunk of Ivy League college students that American white vs. brown race politics maps exactly to the Palestinian-Israeli situation. Score one for American ignorance.

This isn't a very plausible analysis. Hamas hasn't convinced anyone; instead, people have been convinced by the atrocities Israel has perpetrated in full public view. (I write this, incidentally, as the UN has uncovered mass graves at hospitals containing the headless, limbless, and handcuffed corpses of men, women, and children alike; but that's not what I mean, because it didn't take place in full public view.)


The most charitable explanation--and this is clearly the explanation Ockham's razor favours--is just that they've seen and heard about what's going on, and found it appalling, and they've seen their own government's response, and judged it wanting.
#93
The State of Higher Ed / Re: Colleges in Dire Financial...
Last post by downer - April 23, 2024, 02:43:50 PM
Nassau Community College isn't on the brink of collapse, but it is going through hard times. Massive consolidation of departments, and they have got rid of all their food services.

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/institutions/community-colleges/2024/04/17/nassau-community-college-consolidates-departments
https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/nassau-community-college-cafeteria-cafe-snack-bar-close/

Given the massive taxes residents of Nassau County pay, it's a little ironic. But their property taxes don't go towards the community college.
#94
General Discussion / Re: Movie Thread
Last post by ab_grp - April 23, 2024, 01:55:22 PM
We watched Chinatown (1974) and Escape from New York (1981) last weekend and This Is the End (2013) and A Million Miles Away (2023) this past weekend.  I don't have a lot to say about any of them, but they were each good in their own way.  Chinatown (Jack Nicholson) was an intriguing noir detective movie about a chief water engineer opposed to a dam project in a California valley.  Nicholson is hired by the engineer's wife to investigate his adultery, but things take a turn (of course). 

Escape from New York (Kurt Russell) is an action/sci-fi/thriller about a prisoner's quest to free the President of the US from New York, which is at this time a maximum security prison.  It's apparently a cult favorite and definitely has that 80's feel.  I feel like those characters and the characters from The Warriors might buy their clothes from the same shops. 

This Is the End (Seth Rogen) probably surprised us the most.  It looks like an extremely dumb comedy about a bunch of celebs having a party and experiencing the apocalypse, and it was.  But it was so zany and took so many unexpected turns that it was just wildly entertaining and pretty funny at times.  I'm sure it would have been even better if we were as high as the actors probably were.  The main group is Rogen, James Franco, Jay Baruchel, Craig Robinson, and Jonah Hill.  The humor is so juvenile, but there's just something about the movie that kept us in stitches and on the edge of our seats.  Apparently, a fair portion was improvised, and that makes me appreciate it even more. 

Finally, A Million Miles Away (Michael Pena) is based on the true story of the first Hispanic migrant farm worker to become an astronaut.  It's definitely inspiring and sweet, funny, and sad.  I realized after that I didn't love it.  I think that's because it never really fully came together for me.  I mean, this is the kind of movie that I would be going through boxes of tissues on, normally.  It's a great story! But I guess I didn't really come to feel that strongly about the characters, and I really wish that they had gone a bit more into the actual space program training and his hard work there to overcome a lot of obstacles.  It was definitely good, but it could have been even better.
#95
General Discussion / Re: The Venting Thread
Last post by EdnaMode - April 23, 2024, 12:46:56 PM
At my institution, faculty are not allowed to schedule meetings in the conference rooms, and in the School of Engineering, all the scheduling goes through one person and I'm not sure how they manage to keep their job. Here's a synopsis of an email exchange.

Dear Glennis (not her real name),
Dr. Smith, Dr. Jones, Dr. Who, and I would like to schedule a meeting on Friday of this week sometime between noon and 4:30 PM. We do not care which conference room we are in as long as it has a projector and screen.
Thanks,
E M

Good afternoon, Dr. Mode,
I have scheduled Room 123 in our building for your meeting on Thursday at 10:30 AM.
Glennis

Glennis,
We cannot meet on Thursday, the only time we all have available this week is on Friday between noon and 4:30.
Thanks,
E M

Dr Mode,
My apologies, I changed it to 1:30 on Thursday.
Glennis

Glennis,
Again, none of us can meet on Thursday, we can only meet on FRIDAY between noon and 4:30. No other days or times will work.
Thank you,
E M

Dr. Mode,
So, does 1:30 on Friday in room 123 in our building work for you all? Let me know and I'll schedule that for you.
Glennis

Glennis,
Yes, that works, thank you for setting it up for us.
E M

And thankfully, the meeting did appear on all of our calendars. Finally.
#96
General Discussion / Re: What Have You Read Lately?...
Last post by spork - April 23, 2024, 12:07:33 PM
Eat the Buddha by Barbara Demick. Good history of a Tibetan town suffering from cultural genocide by the PRC.
#97
The State of Higher Ed / Re: Protests and police on cam...
Last post by spork - April 23, 2024, 11:57:40 AM
Quote from: Parasaurolophus on April 22, 2024, 03:23:14 PM
Quote from: spork on April 22, 2024, 11:07:37 AMI was being, as my immigrant Arab Muslim wife would put it, facetious.

There haven't been protests against wars in Ethiopia, Sudan, or Ukraine. Gaza is a cause célèbre.

Quote from: Wahoo Redux on April 22, 2024, 01:24:00 PMThe standard answer is that Israel is an important ally in an oil-rich and unstable part of the world.  It makes the news.  We have many people who have relocated here from Israel and Muslim countries.  They also make the news with their extremism.  Africa? 


Crucially, Israel is a client state which receives enormous subsidies from the United States--along with the very weapons they are using to willfully murder Palestinians and annex their land, and not to mention the extensive diplomatic cover the US has given them at the UN. That's just not true of Ethiopia, Ukraine, or Sudan. It's entirely appropriate to try to exert pressure on one's own government when that government (1) is so heavily (if indirectly) involved, and (2) has the diplomatic power to affect the conditions in question.

[. . .]

The USA also heavily subsidizes Egypt's military, as part of the Camp David Peace Agreement. In an excellent example of making America great again, ammunition fired at Egyptian pro-democracy demonstrators in January 2011 was manufactured in the USA with U.S. taxpayer money. Didn't see any Ivy League campus protests about that. Although I can list numerous other examples (looking at you, Saudi Arabia, killing Yemenis with your American weapons), but I won't.

Hamas, or what's left it of it, has managed to persuade, with the connivance/laziness of mainstream U.S. media outlets, a chunk of Ivy League college students that American white vs. brown race politics maps exactly to the Palestinian-Israeli situation. Score one for American ignorance.

As for tent encampments and whatnot at places like Columbia, last I checked those campuses are private property. Interfere with business operations, suffer the consequences. Back in the Vietnam War era, getting arrested was the whole point of protesting. I guess not anymore. Students spending their time not being students have to be protected from the emotional harm of being held accountable for their actions.
#98
General Discussion / Re: NYT Spelling Bee
Last post by ab_grp - April 23, 2024, 09:46:53 AM
Good morning!

Got the pangram right away, but it took forever to get to genius! I am just not seeing words today.  Yesterday we had team QB.  I needed help with cringing.

No luck on LB again!

Happy solving!
#99
General Discussion / Re: The TV Series Thread (Fall...
Last post by ab_grp - April 23, 2024, 09:44:32 AM
Quote from: Hegemony on April 22, 2024, 11:15:44 PM
Quote from: ab_grp on March 17, 2024, 10:06:48 AMI am interested to see what the next doctor (David Tennant) does with the role. 

Some people hold that one of the David Tennant episodes, "Blink," is the best single episode of any TV show. I'd agree that it is certainly the best single science fiction episode of any TV show. Of course maybe I'm overselling it. But see what you think.

Okay, I have to say that I am now looking forward to season three and that episode! It's rated 9.8 on IMDB.  "The Girl in the Fireplace" has been a favorite so far.  Thanks for the info!

Quote from: Sun_Worshiper on April 22, 2024, 04:12:32 PMI watched the final season of Curb Your Enthusiasm, including the final episode, over the last couple of weeks. It was a lot of fun and ended on the right note. It also gave Seinfeld the send off that show deserved. As a long-time fan of both shows, I was actually a little moved.

LD is a comedy legend, Curb is one of the GOAT shows, and the finale was pretty pretty pretty good.

Can't wait to watch this season! Sounds great.
#100
Research & Scholarship / Re: April Research Thread
Last post by Parasaurolophus - April 23, 2024, 09:18:09 AM
T1 and refereeing today. Got a new referee request this morning, too, from a top subfield journal which specifically noted my 'general expertise', which is nice.