How To Get Rid of a Tenured Professor
"Officially, it was a voluntary departure. But I sure felt like I'd been pushed out."

I was a tenured full professor at the University of Colorado Boulder for almost 24 years. At the end of 2024, I left. Officially, it was a voluntary departure. But I sure felt like I'd been pushed out.
My story started in 2015, when Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D–Ariz.) asked the university to investigate me. He alleged that I may have been secretly taking money from Exxon in exchange for the substance of my congressional testimonies, in which I reported on the consensus scientific findings of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change—that while heat waves and extreme precipitation had increased, there was vanishingly little evidence to support claims that hurricanes, floods, and drought have become more common or intense.
I was not taking Exxon's (or anyone's) money—not in exchange for testimony and not for anything else. What was odd was that after the investigation was announced and conducted, no campus administrator ever spoke to me about it, not even to check in and see how I might be doing. I heard only from university lawyers.
Not long after, I was told that university support for the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, which I had been recruited to Colorado to found in 2001, could no longer be guaranteed, and that the center might be closed. No one linked this explicitly to the Grijalva-related investigation, but I could not help but think they were related.
Sensing the issue was really me, I chose later in 2015 to leave the science policy center and the university institute it was a part of to go across campus and create a new sports governance center, focused on another of my intellectual passions, far from the reach of the climate police. I hoped that leaving the science policy center would allow it to continue while I continued to do teaching, research, and university service in another area where science meets politics.
Thanks to enthusiastic support from two successive athletic directors, the university allowed me to move into the Athletic Department to develop the new center—making me the only tenured full professor rostered in a Division I athletic program. For four years things went well: I created and taught a popular undergraduate class, developed with colleagues a novel proposal for a new professional master's degree program, produced collaborative world-leading research, and engaged a great group of university and international collaborators.
Meantime, as I was expanding a new career focus in sport governance, across campus Colorado faculty and administrators began moving the university headlong into climate advocacy.
In 2016, the Boulder Faculty Assembly (the faculty's primary governing body), led by a professor of environmental studies, adopted a generic and highfalutin statement in support of institutional climate advocacy. Over the next seven years, the assembly issued eight statements and resolutions calling for climate advocacy on campus, including encouraging students to engage in nonviolent "confrontations" and joining with student activists and external nongovernmental organizations to declare a "climate emergency."
All of this might have been laughed off as a handful of self-important professors role-playing as world leaders. Soon, however, the empty exhortations turned into demands that the entire university morph into a climate advocacy organization.
In 2023, the activist professors produced a new faculty resolution demanding that the university refocus its mission on climate activism, including demands that climate advocacy be taught in "all" departments and units (emphasis in original) and that the university prioritize training all students to be "climate solution leaders." The entire campus was to engage in advocacy: They called for "policy makers, including the regents, system administrators, and campus leadership, to implement swift and systemic changes in order to avoid the worst impacts of extreme weather events, the devastation of human habitats, the collapse of ecosystems, and the loss of biodiversity." This reads more like a mission statement for Greenpeace than anything remotely related to the mission of a flagship state university.
A Cold War
Working at the sports governance center, I was generally unaware of these changes. For me, things were going great, or so I thought.
For reasons never made clear to me, the experiment in marrying academics and athletics ended after four years, in 2019. Rather than return me to the campus institute where I had previously been rostered (as was in the terms of the memorandum of understanding that transferred me to Colorado Athletics), administrators instead placed me into the environmental studies department. In the process, the university doubled my teaching load from that in my original contract.
For an office, environmental studies allocated a small, windowless room previously used for storage (and labeled as such on the building plans) deep in the bowels of the soulless building in the office park where the department was located, about a mile east of the main campus. My little office was far removed from other environmental studies faculty and the environmental studies office.
In 2020, the university terminated the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research that I had created and led. A little later, the university also decided to terminate the graduate certificate in science and technology policy that I had established. Then all eight graduate courses that I had developed and taught as part of the graduate certificate program were no longer to be offered. This meant that all of the classes I had been recruited to Colorado to develop and teach were no longer being offered.
I asked the environmental studies chair to let me take complete responsibility for continuing the science policy center (I even found an external partner) and said I would be willing again to oversee the science and technology policy graduate certificate program. He told me no, absolutely not, he would not allow that.
Over the next few years, I was repeatedly told to develop and teach new undergraduate courses, with new requests just about every semester—nine new preps in four years. (And one of those years was a sabbatical.) For example, I taught a popular upper-division energy policy course that received rave reviews from students, tripling the class size in just two years. And then I was removed from teaching it.
I rolled with it. What was the alternative?
In mid-2020, I was told that the university was going to use my little office for storage of a large number of boxes and several file cabinets that were not mine but apparently were connected with the science policy center I had left five years earlier. The storage of these items rendered my little office completely unusable, as you can see in the photo at right. I never touched them out of fear that I'd be accused of something nefarious if I did. (Later we learned that the file cabinets stored in my office were actually empty. Funny!)
A Sham Investigation
As the pandemic unfolded into 2021, it was clear that having a usable office on campus was not actually that big a deal, so I let it ride. But later in 2021, after we returned to campus, I mentioned the unusable office to everyone who would listen—and also, I guess, to some who didn't—requesting the situation be fixed. Nothing was done for years. My faculty colleagues were aware and many were sympathetic, but the department chair did not budge.
Around the same time, the department chair placed me under investigation. Bizarrely, he accused me of winning a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant in violation of university procedures.
I'm not sure how one might get a grant outside university procedures, so the accusation was clearly a sham. But he went through with an investigation that spanned almost a year, empaneling some cronies to write a report, and finding me guilty of something or other and sanctioning me—which mainly just meant a strongly worded letter in my permanent file. But he did throw around phrases like "possible termination," and administrators acted like they were taking it seriously, so I took it seriously as well.
I appealed the sham investigation and sanction to a faculty committee from outside my department. Unsurprisingly, it found no factual basis for the investigation, and it concluded that my due process rights may have been violated. There were no consequences for the environmental studies department chair for bringing the false allegations.
As this harassment was playing out, I repeatedly asked campus administrators to either implement a formal process of mediation with my department chair or find me a new home on campus where I was not subject to a hostile work environment. Administrators did neither.
In 2023, soon after I returned from the sabbatical, a new dean of the College of Arts and Sciences (who I had never met) finally decided to move me out of environmental studies but for some reason did not place me into a new unit. I was given an office (with a window!) in the stadium—which housed the academic version of an Island of Misfit Toys.
In what must be some sort of joke from the university gods, the new office I was provided was then rendered unusable for about a year because the campus was installing a new gigantic video screen on the south end of the stadium, directly over my office. I was given several days' notice about the lack of access and not provided any alternative space on campus.
Nowhere To Go
So at the start of 2024, I found myself with no future courses to teach, no space on campus, no home academic unit, no university service, no way to obtain basic administrative support (much less prepare, submit, and oversee grants for research funding), no possibility of having graduate students, and no way to address any of this on my own. I contacted many departments and units to see if I could secure a home on campus, with some showing interest, but with absolutely no upper level support for finding me a campus home, I had no luck.
I got the impression that the university might be preparing to oust me by claiming that I was not fulfilling my job duties of teaching and service. Of course, the campus had made that impossible.
I considered just going with it: showing up to my office in the stadium, collecting a paycheck, and being a unit of one person with no teaching or service. Instead, more than nine years after my university first investigated me at the request of Grijalva, I finally took the hint—Colorado administrators did not want me on campus and they were going to turn the screws until I left. In 2024 I chose to retire, and I am glad I did.
Was the harassment and hostile work environment since 2019 connected to the Grijalva investigation or the institutionalization of climate advocacy on campus? I couldn't tell you for sure, but I have suspicions.
Was the apparent vendetta against me by the climate campaigning chair of the environmental studies department motivated by his politics or his perceptions of mine? I couldn't tell you for sure, but I have suspicions.
What I do know for sure is that academic freedom and tenure mean little without administrators who stand up for their faculty when they are under attack—whether from inside or out, whether from the left or the right. When a university institutionalizes political advocacy, it grants a green light to campaigning faculty and administrators to come after colleagues they view as their political enemies, misusing the policies and procedures of the institution to do so.
I expect that the fever of climate advocacy on campus will break at some point and mainstream views such as mine might again be welcome. But what happened to me was wrong and should not happen to any instructor. And my experiences, while extreme, illustrate larger problems.
It's Not Just Me
Other faculty at Colorado have had similar experiences with administrative discipline and diminishment of their roles, seemingly as punishment. More broadly, a survey of faculty by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) indicates that 7 percent of Colorado faculty have been disciplined or threatened with discipline associated with their teaching, research, or expression. Almost a third of the university's faculty believe that academic freedom is not very or not at all secure on their campus. These are not numbers indicating a healthy academic workplace.
These numbers are broadly representative of how faculty see their universities across the country. Among FIRE's survey of 6,269 faculty at 55 major colleges and universities, 35 percent of faculty say they self-censor their written work, nearly four times the number of social scientists who said the same in 1954, at the height of McCarthyism. About 87 percent of faculty reported finding it difficult to have an open and honest conversation on campus about at least one hot-button political topic.
Against this backdrop, public confidence in colleges and universities has dropped. In 2015, 57 percent of Americans had "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in higher education, according to Gallup's first measurement on the issue. By 2024, that same number had plummeted to 36 percent—and 32 percent said they had little confidence or none at all. Among those with very little confidence, 41 percent cited political agendas as their top reason, with another 7 percent and 3 percent, respectively, mentioning political unrest and free speech concerns.
Over my career, I've seen professors and administrators increasingly emphasizing political advocacy over research and scholarship. Individual faculty members should of course be perfectly free to advocate whatever causes they'd like. That goes with academic freedom. But there has been an institutionalized politicization of curricula, departments, and even entire campuses.
"In reading articles and book manuscripts for peer review, or in reviewing files when conducting faculty job searches, I found that nearly every scholar now justifies their work in political terms," Michael W. Clune, a humanities professor at Case Western Reserve University, wrote in The Chronicle of Higher Education in November. "Venerable scientific journals—such as Nature—now explicitly endorse political candidates; computer-science and math departments present their work as advancing social justice. Claims in academic arguments are routinely judged in terms of their likely political effects."
Administrators and faculty alike push progressive political projects—in many cases extreme ones, as when climate researchers advocate degrowth and millenarianism. Clune explains the consequences: "If this is truly what the university stands for, if these are our values, then when we are called before our elected representatives to answer for ourselves, what can we say? Colleges have no compelling justification for their existence to give when the opposing political party comes into power. We have nothing to say to the half of America who doesn't share our politics."
Actually, it turns out some professors and administrators do have something to say to those fellow Americans. They tell them that they are misinformed, evil, even Nazis—and that academia is part of a "resistance" and should be "prepared to go to the barricades." They say we academics should be waging a "new climate war" against our fellow citizens.
Partisan Professors
Institutionalizing a political agenda on any college campus would be pathological whether that agenda came from the left or right. But faculty in today's American universities overwhelmingly hold views on the political left.
Professors are almost all Democrats. In 2020, the National Association of Scholars published a survey of more than 12,000 tenure-track faculty in the top-ranked universities in each state, based on publicly available information. Results were presented as a ratio of Democrats to Republicans among faculty who were registered voters and who had donated to political candidates. The results show that among those registered to vote by party ID, Democrats dominate. The ratio is even stronger among those who donate to campaigns. Even chemistry, a discipline far from partisan politics, has a ratio of 113 donors to Democrats for every one donor to Republicans.
A somewhat older dataset, from the work of Matt Nisbet of Northeastern University, looked at the political and ideological views of members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) back in 2011 (though not all members are university faculty). The data show AAAS members self-reported ideological views and partisan affiliations that were more liberal than black churchgoers and more Democratic than MSNBC viewers, with a combined partisanship/ideology score comparable only to Tea Party supporters on the right.
The extreme leftward lean of the academy has not always been the case.
A 2017 analysis by Samuel Abrams of Sarah Lawrence College showed the political orientation of faculty members had moved to the left over several decades, with a notable increase starting about 2004. In contrast, the ratio of Democrats to Republicans among students and citizens changed little over the same period. As Abrams wrote in his analysis: "The problem here is actually quite simple: When almost everyone in a field or department shares the same political orientation, certain ideas become orthodoxy, dissent is discouraged, errors can go unchallenged, and these orthodoxies inhibit scholarly inquiry."
When researchers in 1968 looked at the political affiliation of professors, they found that behavioral (or social) scientists leaned left but physical scientists and those in the fine arts were evenly distributed between Democrats and Republicans and "no affiliation." Even among behavioral scientists, more than 20 percent reported being Republicans. Another 1968 study of faculty politics also found that social scientists tended to be on the left, whereas a majority of botanists, geologists, mathematicians, and engineers characterized themselves as conservatives. I am not aware of any recent research that shows any academic discipline with a majority of faculty self-describing themselves as conservative—it's not even close.
Commenting on the trend, Phillip Magness and David Waugh wrote in the Winter 2022/2023 issue of The Independent Review: "Faculty and university administrators have increasingly prioritized overt political activism as a primary emphasis of classroom instruction. The changing ideological landscape has not only made nonleft constituencies feel increasingly unwelcome on campus—it has also started to materialize in hiring discrimination against faculty applicants with nonleft perspectives in several of the most politically skewed disciplines."
As Abrams wrote, this harm hits students as well: "As teachers, we fail in teaching students how to think. When students are shielded to divergent view points and counter-arguments on the issues that are more salient to them, the students understandably become confused and angered by others who see the world differently. This diminishes our national discourse and frays our civic bonds."
And it's not just teaching and research that suffers from the narrowing of political perspectives on campus. In some cases, like-minded faculty have repurposed universities for political advocacy in service of their favorite causes, losing sight of why we have universities in the first place and contributing to the loss of public confidence.
From 'Science Communication' to the 'Science Police'
The end of the Cold War marked the end of the post–World War II consensus on the social role of scientific research. In 1995, Rad Byerly and I characterized this general agreement as a social contract, one that was necessarily undergoing change: "With the Cold War ended, science is adapted to an obsolete environment….Problem resolution will become increasingly important in justifying support for science. Legislatures challenge research universities to contribute more to society, to better educate undergraduates, and to study practical problems."
The changing social context meant policymakers and the public would expect research institutions, including universities, to be more accountable to serving social needs. Through the 1990s and 2000s, there was indeed greater pressure for more accountability from the scientific community.
One consequence of these pressures was demands from funders that researchers demonstrate impact. One important example of this dynamic occurred in 1997, when the NSF—a leading federal funder of university-based research—changed its merit review criteria for evaluating research proposals. The two new criteria announced in 1997 were "intellectual merit" and "broader impacts," to be considered equally important.
Increasing demands that researchers demonstrate impact were not limited to the NSF or the United States—they became ubiquitous across scientific institutions, including universities.
A phrase that began to be popularized about 20 years ago, "science communication," characterized one increasingly popular approach to demonstrating impact. It became so popular that it developed into its own field. Some cautioned against seeing science communication in terms of overt or stealth advocacy. Despite these warnings, the field reflects a turn within the academic community to institutionalize and legitimize political advocacy, with "science communication" frequently interpreted to mean simply sharing one's political views.
Some practitioners of science communication have not limited themselves to advocating policies, politicians, or a cause—they have also tried to limit the expression of other academics whose views they disagree with or do not find helpful for advancing their causes. In 2017, the journalist Keith Kloor labeled these activists the "science police," explaining: "Highly charged issues, such as climate change, engender the most active policing in the scientific community and that the intensity of this policing is proportional to the perceived influence of the person on the receiving end of it."
Such policing has become institutionalized in yet another new field, called "misinformation research," in which certain professors appoint themselves arbiters of truth in scientific and public debates. Like most academics, the self-described political views of misinformation researchers are skewed to the political left.
So large parts of science communication are about promoting the right messages, and large parts of misinformation research are about preventing others from promoting the wrong messages. Unsurprisingly, data show a sharp increase in the use of both phrases that coincides with the increasing politicization of universities—"science communication" took off around 2000 and "misinformation research" in 2010.
The dynamics here are not limited to these two areas of research. A more general perspective has spread through academia, one where faculty and their research ought to be judged by political criteria: Do they express the "correct" views?
An example of how this dynamic became institutionalized in our universities can be found in the 2024 course-correction decision by the University of Michigan to eliminate the requirement that its faculty prepare statements on diversity, equity, and inclusion. A faculty committee concluded: "As currently enacted, diversity statements have the potential to limit viewpoints and reduce diversity of thought among faculty members."
Small wonder confidence in U.S. universities has dropped so precipitously. What did they expect would happen?
Fixing Universities
As university leaders become more aware of diminished public confidence, the notion of institutional neutrality has found support in a growing number of campuses. At least 29 schools have adopted a policy of institutional neutrality (or restraint). As FIRE defines it, this is the idea that "colleges and universities should not, as institutions, take positions on social and political issues unless those issues 'threaten the very mission of the university and its values of free inquiry.' Instead, these discussions should be left to students and faculty."
Such policies shouldn't be empty words. On many campuses, taking institutional neutrality seriously will mean making difficult and politically fraught decisions about how to reform entrenched programs that operate with a decidedly nonneutral stance. Such changes must be made from within—they should not and almost certainly could not be imposed on universities from the outside.
And such changes must be made soon. Universities are supposed to serve common interests, not the narrow political agendas of faculty, administrators, or public officials.
This article was adapted from a post on The Honest Broker Substack.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Wonderful morality-based interview of Prof by Natl Association of Scholars.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFOzhXxVSxA
But about FIRE and neutrality, I have watched the founding of maybe 4 universities in the recent years and I've complained to all because they don't bring in Founding Principles or Christianity or the Bible and that is a HUGE mistake
Ralston College in Georgia boasts of its neurtrality-- Rod Dreher (Benedict Option) raves about it -- and there are good points --but the world will get nowhere if all we do is 'kill' our enemies. WE NEED TO ESTABLISH GOOD AND TRUTH.
To be fair, all the religious universities like Harvard, Yale, Rutgers, Dartmouth, and Princeton, went apostate and then actively anti-Christian years ago, and their slippage into woke misanthropy and Gaia worship coincides with that.
These guys just want to get ahead of that and start serving the darkness early.
I have been a faculty member at a Jewish academic institution for over 23 years. Not everyone is religious and many aren't Jewish. But everyone is in alignment with the mission of the institution especially the Jewish values of helping those less well off. We have kosher food and don't have classes on the Sabbath or holidays. And we have a synagogue on campus. So not all religious academic institutions have dissed their origins.
Yes, and I have worked for 10 years at a Catholic seminary and once they let FEMA in it all went to hell. The Feds dictate everything now.
NO, they didn't go apostate at all They ", gradually secularized, moving away from their core religious missions and embracing broader academic and societal ideals over time. "
And then they didn't go activelly anti-Christian. Who is the "they" in that statement ? At every Ivy League school I have contacts that are most vocally religiouis. Mary Ann Glendon, Robert George at Harvard and Princeton respectively.
This was done almost entirely by govt coercion.
This is not to say that all religiously affiliated colleges and universities followed this path. Wheaton College, Calvin College, the University of Dallas, Hillsdale College, Liberty University, Ave Maria University, Patrick Henry College, and Brigham Young University are examples of colleges of differing faiths that appear to be resisting the tide.
Prior to the Obergefell decision, Yeshiva University had justifiable standards but the school was forced to admit the same-sex couples to their married student housing. Such perversion is poison to a school
Gordon College had standards about homosexuality and sex outside of marriage but the accrediting groups went after them
"was able to keep its accreditation, but it is required to provide updates on various initiatives it promised to undertake, thereby permitting greater inroads against its religious values."
YOU ARE WORKING FOR THE ENEMY ????
Trolling?
Another MAGA cry baby. If that were a Democrat aligned profit you'd be jumping for joy. Retire, move on, see the grands!
So damn stupid to think the world divides into you and MAGA
Many are opposed to those you oppose and are opposed to YOU
...and because all you did was quit means they can keep doing it to other Profs. Good job!
News flash: Keyboard warrior braver than real human in real situation.
Pot, meet kettle.
Joining sarc in defending the status quo of corruption?
Sometimes people have to be push back. I get you're easily tricked to accept bad acts, but the 40+ years of state and political intrusion deserves push back.
What exactly do you think was the harm for doing so here? He already left his position lol. A lawsuit would have done what?
The capture of climate science mirrors the capture of much of industry. And you are fine with it. Never fight back.
Exactly the same as your economic theory to never push back against anti market actions of others. So was expected.
You read too much into too little.
That you make up noise over nothing shows I alarm you. That you cannot and do not even try to defend Trump's ignorance over trade deficits and foreign investments shows you know he's ignorant.
That you make up noise over nothing shows I alarm you.
I don't think you realize that Jesse reacts like this to pretty much all bullshit equally. I certainly don't always agree with him, but he at least (usually) argues in good faith with actual citations.
I've even provided him links to the issues with his belief system. He chose not to click them or reference books. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I've been very clear I'm not an idealist, because no ideal system actually exists. This irks those whose thinking stopped at discussions around ideal states.
I was amused yesterday when sarc and Tony were using his same arguments though.
He has not made a single argument against free trade except to throw in everything but the kitchen sink. He loves government meddling when it goes his way. He will not even acknowledge the basic fact that trade deficits and foreign investment rise together, by definition.
He's great at finding all sorts of interesting news. He's great at arguing when he has the facts on his side. But here, when he does not ... *crickets*.
Sure he has, you just don't agree with them.
'No argument' is not the same as 'arguments I don't agree with'.
You said nothing of value. Just like yesterday. If you made an intelligent argument i could argue against it.
You even conti me to switch where I agree with Trump with strawman arguments. Show me defending him on trade deficits or foreign investments. Hint I haven't. I don't give a shit about trade deficits.
You continue to show an inability to understand arguments longer than a bumper sticker. And now are resorting to strawman arguments. Lol.
This is why I don't bother even replying to you in economic arguments. You're simply wrong and have an inability to understand economics isn't simple, but a complex system. And inability to understand what disadvantaged trade is, hint, not about trade deficits. You simply don't know enough, why you rely so strongly on very entry level bumper stickers and ideal systems that simply don't exist. Once you figure out bad marlet actors will continue acting badly if there is no response, maybe you can start your education in reality.
To read 'too much" MEANS 'too little' do you even read what you post.
" . . . more than nine years after my university first investigated me at the request of Grijalva, I finally took the hint . . . "
Are you sure you were really smart enough to teach?
News flash: Keyboard warrior smarter than real human in real situation.
Been there, left sooner.
Retired keyboard warriors still have memories.
(and they don't cut and paste comments just to get the post count up)
Dingbat, they kept pushing him out due to his lack of unerring faith in the Climate Change Crisis (TM). And Piekle is far from the only one out there. It’s an orthodoxy that’s taken over universities and the Democrat Party.
Finnish EPPGroup MEP, european parliament Foreign Affairs committee member and EPP EUDS coordinator Mika Aaltola:
.....
"The United States has given us three weeks to agree on terms for Ukraine's surrender. If we don't, the United States will withdraw from Europe."
9:01 PM · Feb 19, 2025
Europe sees Fatass Donnie as the modern day Neville Chamberlain.
Certainly the US has the right to appease the Soviets.
But never surrender, Zelensky.
Europe has had eighty years to rebuild their defensive capabilities. Instead they've spent on lavish social policies while sneering at the US and its armed forces that held back Soviet aggression. Now the USSR is gone, and much of Eastern Europe is part of the EU. If Europe can't handle only Russia by now, tough shit.
Agree though don't like the way you state it.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Sell all your stuff, and get the proceeds and your fat ass on a plane to Kiev. Then pick up a rifle and head to the front line. Oh, never surrender.
It is telling how the 'Live Free or Die' mindset has completely left the MAGA movement.
turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
BTW shit-stain, it was never 'We should make sure the Ukrainians have a crooked government or die'.
But then you never do anything other than lie.
He rapes children too.
Living free, doesn’t mean free money from the American taxpayer.
Those goddamn Europe-fags can learn to defend themselves.
How about you go over, enlist, and fight yourself, Bushpig.
I love that you’ve fully embraced your inner Warhawk, you fifty centing bushpig demshill.
Fuck Europe.
If they want war, then so be it as long as the US is not involved.
Let the Europeans pay for their own wars whether it be in money or blood...as along as its theirs and not Americans.
We should’ve left them to their own devices in 1917 rather than joining WWI.
But then how could Wilson pursue Globalism 1.0?
"The United States has given us three weeks to agree on terms for Ukraine's surrender. If we don't, the United States will withdraw from Europe."
This is probably the best news for Ukraine and Ukrainians in a decade. If Shrike wasn't a deatheating neocon he wouldn't be bitching about it here.
Getting American troops out of Europe is one of the best things to happen to the US as well. Another libertarian moment.
So much winning. Amazing.
Nothing Libertarian about it. It is pure ORDO AMORIS.
“ordo amoris” means that there’s a hierarchy to our moral obligations: We should prioritize our family and our community over people outside our borders.
As to the so-called reading of Pope Francis, wrong too
Yes, he said : "the true ordo amoris that must be promoted is ... the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception.”
But where logically is there contradiction. Show me.
A university professor asking for sympathy? Oh please. Professors are all leftist which means this guy is a leftist. Leftists are all wrong and evil which means this guy is wrong and evil. So, just by judging the person, it can be concluded that the article is a bunch of shit without bothering to read it. Ad hominem for the win.
When you talk to yourself, do you imagine another person? Does he/she/it encourage you to post this crap?
The only real people who’ll talk to him anymore are bartenders, and even they can’t stand him.
Bartenders? You mean the guys behind the bullet-proof glass in the 24 hour discount liquor stores?
I didn’t realize mouthwash was locked up in liquor stores.
Sarc could be schizophrenic. All that booze has done a lot of damage. So why not?
Nice, you post a strawman that proves you never bothered to read the article or learn who the author is.
All the ire and fire that Sarcasmic attracts from the mindless grade-school-insults brigade just validates his messages, to the casual readers here. Keep up the good work, jerks!
Jealous huh? To many people just ignoring your lunatic ravings?
Not me though, Sqrlsy. Here's your attention.
According to many idiots... Including PervFected YOU at times, as I recall... Sarcasmic and I are one and the same! So I consider that to be a complement... Brilliant minds think alike! Sarcasmic is just better talented (than I am) at aping the stupidity of simple-minded sore-in-the-cunt cuntservaturds, is all...
PS, the below psychology describes why You and Other PervFected Ones smear all that smart people together, and call them all the same, one giant sock...
ALL of the "Team R" Loyal Tribalists, in their MILLIONS, are Real and True Good Folks, and NONE are trolls and-or socks!!! Shit is known!!!
ALL of the NON-loyal deviants are butt ONE centralized troll-sock! Shit is known!!! The GOOD Folks are LEGION, opposed by just about NONE! So just go ahead and STEAMROLLER and DOGPILE that one lonely deviant; shit is GOOD to do that!
So there, there, GOOD Folks! Better now? Does THIS appease Your PervFected Paranoia and Power Piggery?
And THIS is almost EXACTLY the same arrogant and egotistic attitude of Emperor Trump, who essentially has said, "All votes not for MEEEE are fraudulent!"
Yes, yes, here's some more attention.
"All votes not for MEEEE are fraudulent!", says The Hero (besides the Evil One, and Herself) of Moose-Mammary-Necrophiliac.
"All voices and posts not for MEEEE and My Vast Following of Ditto-Headed Internet Cesspool of Cuntsorevaturd Cuntformists are fraudulent trolls and socks of 1 or 2 so-called 'persons'!", says Moose-Mammary-Necrophiliac Herself.
If Ye can SNOT see the Near-PervFect similar-shitties here, then Ye are PervFectly SNOT thinking, ass usual!
Evidence that what I wrote about Dear Leader is true:
https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/24/politics/trump-election-warnings-leaving-office/index.html
A list of the times Trump has said he won’t accept the election results or leave office if he loses.
Essential heart and core of the LIE by Trump: “ANY election results not confirming MEEE as Your Emperor, MUST be fraudulent!”
September 13 rally: “The Democrats are trying to rig this election because that’s the only way they’re going to win,” he said.
Trump’s constant re-telling and supporting the Big Lie (any election not electing Trump is “stolen”) set up the environment for this (insurrection riot) to happen. He shares the blame. Boys will be boys? Insurrectionists will be insurrectionists, trumpanzees gone apeshit will be trumpanzees gone apeshit, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Trump was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
It really should immediately make us think of Krystallnacht. Hitler and the NAZIs set up for this by constantly blaming Jews for all things bad. Jew-haters will be Jew-haters, so let’s forgive and forget? Poor Hitler was misunderstood? Does that sound good and right and true?
Tell us you didn't read the article without saying it, Sarckles.
That’s a shitty strawman you’ve built. Shame if’n it caught fire.
I recommend applying for a position with DOGE. See who Grijalva has been taking money from to destroy the industrial base of our country.
His corruption is already well known in southern Arizona. But overwhelmingly democrat. So they applaud it.
Grijalva is a neo-socialist cunt who deserves his terminal cancer.
If the yammering commenters had wanted to spout off useful informed opinions on the bravery and intelligence of Roger Pielke, they could have read an article or two on his Substack.
But they only got as far as the spouting off part.
The treatment of Pielke was a disgrace and the university should be investigated and if necessary a top-down sweep conducted.
Southern Arizona is ruled by democrats. Your party shrike. Grijalva is the center of this.
Although I love southern Arizona, and have family there, I would support undoing the Gadsden Purchase.
My ‘Landfills for Democrats’ plan works much better. And we keep everything.
That's a waste of perfectly good fertilizer!
So should the UN IPCC for spreading lies.
Raul Grijalva is your standard alcoholic corrupt democrat. His entire family is. He has somehow spread his influence to the county and has family in many government positions. He is known for being a raging alcoholic, smelling like peppermint schnapps even in morning press events.
He maintains this with connections to corrupt business partners throughout Southern Arizona. One example is one of the primary developers in downtown tucson has been given sweetheart deals from government sell offs or auctions. Then when covid hit, the city made it more profitable to keep stores and buildings empty through government subsidy. Downtown is largely a ghost town while rents continue to rise to gain this subsidy.
The UA has a pretty good engineering and science branch, but the school is totally controlled by the humanities colleges. I keep linking about the overhead costs from federal grants, the colleges of engineering and optics donate a quarter if their grants to administration in the humanities. Totally illegal process, but the DoEd doesn't care. No federal agency cares.
Better an alcoholic Congressman than an alcoholic Sec of Defense.
Congress can all drink on the job. It might improve their legislation.
turd, the ass-wipe of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Please explain to the commentariat how and why you got your original account permabanned. And don’t lie about a forgotten password.
Ooh, ooh, I know. He posted links to child porn and got the entire thread wiped and his original account nuked. (No, really)
Hey pussy, not that you would know it, but military guys tend to drink a bit. Not Sarc level drinking, but still a lot.
The only drunks you’re interested in are those sedative laced juice boxes you give the neighborhood kids.
Get, and read, at a minimum:
“Unsettled”, Steven Koonin
“Apocalypse Never”, Michael Shellenberger
“Climate Uncertainty and Risk”, Judith Curry
“Fossil Future”, Alex Epstein
We are being (blatantly) lied to by those purportedly driven by scientific motives, who are, in fact, purely political animals.
To be clear, if you have not read at least a couple of those books, you are not capable of intelligently commenting on 'climate change', nor the politics surrounding it.
Agreed on all those books.
The global climate warming change crisis is run by and for watermelons, and maybe a few retarded actual Gaia worshippers.
The website Yale Climate Connection finds purpose in raze reviews of books that support climate alarmism and flaming those that don’t:
A critical review of Steven Koonin’s ‘Unsettled’
‘Tilting at strawmen.’ Or ‘red flag.’ There are no finer shorthand descriptions of a controversial new book on climate science.
Bad science and bad arguments abound in ‘Apocalypse Never’ by Michael Shellenberger
How YouTube’s climate deniers turned into climate doomers
A new report documents a sharp rise in arguments that clean energy and climate policies won’t work.
Been a climate 'warmist' for quite a while, and decided to do some reading on the matter.
Those four books are filled with facts real numbers and lists of (failed) predictions by catastrophists who continue to be quoted to this day:
Hansen, 1990s predicted temp change by 2020: +3*F to +5.5*F; reality = 1.9*
Holden's claim of climate-induced famine "could kill as many as a billion people before the year 2020". Instead, climate "related" deaths are at an all-time minimum, perhaps 50 per million population. Those are from "Fossil Future", there are many more.
All of those books are written by those formerly held in esteem for their research, but who all got fed up with the distortions and outright lies spread by the catastrophist watermelons.
https://extinctionclock.org/ is a great site for predictions, both past and future.
TY.
Don't recall a single catastrophist prediction which has proven to be true. Do recall that good science is built upon making predictions which prove to be true.
Having looked into the code for climate models, their predictions are wrong because their models are quite frankly shit. It is essentially a meteorology model but with assumptions that have been proven incorrect over and over. The models assume linearity for many functions when there are interdepencies. Models aren't repeatable. They utilize numerous variables that act more as knows than a scientific basis, such as particulates, cloud cover projections, and even cloud reflectance. They use these knows randomly and inconsistently to "match the past."
If you let any of them run for 50 years their response goes unstable which shows their models are simply wrong.
Who'd have thought a complex system built on shitty assumptions doesn't reflect reality. Wonder if STG can make the connection to economics. Probably not.
My semi-informed perspective as a solid earth scientist tells me that atmospheric science might be the most challenging of all, even just for present day "weather". Extrapolating back and forward decades and centuries might be impossible.
About 10yrs ago I ran one of the early models through a Static Analyzer. After the Analyzer committed suicide for all the errors, vulnerabilities, and other bullshit, I concluded that it was a festering pile of spaghetti code.
You are correct that with modern config management tools, every run for record should be repeatable but they are not.
Before Koonin became Obama's DOE Undersecretary he was PB's chief scientist.
Now he's the most lucid fossil fuel apologist around, and does his office fairly, which is just as well, as they have more to apologize for than ever.
The Tourette's Syndrome Chorus has been muted to make room for actual comments.
Exactly who has to apologize for what? If you mean the fossil fuel industry, then are you willing to first credit them for positive outcomes, like the creation of modern society and generally affluent life styles of billions of people (and probably your very existence) before you start dinging them for hypothetical negatives?
"Now he's the most lucid *commenter* regarding fossil fuel around,
Fixed it for you, watermelon.
Fuck off and die.
Roger, you obviously figured out that your science contradicted The Science. And your support for free thinking and open research threatens the holy doctrine. Too many academic departments and universities have crossed the line into religious seminaries, and thus can only see their purpose as promoting and propagating the faith (and smiting the wicked).
Of course, American academia has also been coopted by the Neo-Marxist critical theorists. Perhaps we should thank them for providing some distraction from climate hysteria with Racist! Racist! Racist! But the ultimate goal is still the same: a societal police state with strict socialist ethics, managed by the self-anointed elite.
Higher education in this country has reached a tipping point. Young people are no longer buying the credential racket. We're going to see colleges and universities shrinking or going under by the dozens in the next few years.
Already happening. And from my seat on the inside, the activist zealots only know they must progressive harder.
Commie-Indoctrination would've been wiped-out years ago if they didn't have Gov-Gun THEFT to survive on their ?Free? pony ride.
And there would be a lot more actual Education taught by 'value' tested enterprises. We're so far down the Nazi-Empire track I can only imaginatively dream how smart the population would be if actual 'value' tested means were the roots of research and education.
It would be a good thing if that happened, and perhaps we'll see a return to what used to be called polytechnics in Britain.
But IMO the issue is that universities are being used as a sorting mechanism to preserve the best-paid jobs fore the children of the "higher classes".
Mollie
@MZHemingway
Yesterday, Susan Rice said of the Trump-Zelensky meeting, "There is no question this was a set up." She revealed full knowledge of the mineral agreement, complained that it didn't include "concrete" security agrees (meaning, apparently, commitment of US troops on the ground if conditions merit), and then mischaracterized Trump's behavior, counting on most Americans to not have watched what transpired over the entire hour in the Oval Office.
You can look at this and dismiss it as typical Democrat talking points, but you could also view it as almost a confession, one that includes details about the current "Get Trump" effort.
Yes, Trump won the popular vote against unbelievable odds, but if you think Team Obama is being any less involved in quiet insurrections than they were during the first Trump administration (Russia collusion, Ukraine impeachment, etc.), you're clueless. I'll remind you that Susan Rice was in the small Jan. 5, 2017 meeting in the WH with other key Russia collusion hoax perpetrators.
Zelensky repeatedly declined opportunities to sign the deal in Kyiv and Munich, and requested the meeting at the White House. It later came out that Rice and Tony Blinken, Victoria Nuland, and Alexander Vindman may have been personally advising Zelensky to do this meeting in the way he did -- that they recommended him to be hostile and to try to goad Trump into blowing up. Even though he didn't, and even though Zelensky's actions horrified many normal Americans, the Obama team went on the airwaves to falsely characterize what happened.
I think their goal was to have a wonderful performance by Zelensky, an angry Trump appearing to scuttle the deal, and the support of the neocon portion of the GOP to start applying pressure on Trump to have US Troop commitments as part of the "security guarantee." It was a set-up, in Susan Rice's interesting choice of words.
Instead, Zelensky had one of the worst stage performances of his acting career, and Trump was statesmanlike (against all odds) throughout. Zelensky followed Team Obama's advice to be hostile to a tee, but it didn't land how they thought it would. Surprisingly, one of the most important aspects of it not working out might have been Lindsay Graham's reaction. Had he and other neocons thought Zelensky was being reasonable, Trump would be having to fight (even moreso) the neocon portion of the GOP in addition to Team Obama's dirty tricks. Even the "conservative" neocon pundits on TV last night were admitting Zelensky had royally messed up.
As you can see from the hostility of the bureaucracy to any Republican oversight, no matter how reasonable or minor it may be, the entrenched bureaucracy and permanent DC apparatus is quite active. That goes quadruple for the deep state in the Intelligence Community. I'd expect more and more shenanigans and to be prepared so that you don't fall for the next information operation. The post-WWII architecture in Europe and the US needs this war to continue or be settled on "US troops on the ground" type guarantees, even though that's not what Americans want.
Things will heat up here, and it's a very dangerous time.
The DNC-WEF-elite establishment blob can't stop themselves, even if they want to. Their entire existence and self-worth is now dedicated to manipulating governments to attain their righteous vision (and for the thrills). If nothing else, they are defining a new opposite of libertarian philosophy.
Trump was statesmanlike (against all odds) throughout.
Gaslighting or just delusional? Trump was his usual Toddler self, but JD was the real instigator here.
Now Trump won't get his "raw earth." Some mastery "art of the deal" shit on display there.
So to you, the US is the world’s doormat?
What flavor was the kool-aid?
Proggish.
https://www.instagram.com/liberaljane/p/B-Znr6dAkxv/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading
You tell us, delusional pile of shit.
Yours? I bet Blue Euro-sexual.
Did you watch the whole thing? You didn't, did you? Just the fifteen second snippet ActBlue asked you to post to your BlueSky account, right?
Trump and Vance put up with Zelenskyyyy's rudeness and insults for several minutes before they read him the riot act. He came in, making demands for money, acting like a jackass and trying to bully them into compliance before the news cameras; only to find out that Trump and Vance don't give a fuck about the cameras the hard way.
Zelenskyy took 175 BILLION from the US and can't account for most of it. Fuck Zelenskyy. Hold elections and let the Ukrainian people decide.
Of course he didn't watch it. He was told what narrative to use. Selectively avoids the actual facts around it.
This was the third attempt to sign the minerals deal. Big Z keeps saying yes prior then demanding troops and support in Ukraine. And more free money.
Just came out this morning that the democrats told Bug Z to try to make Trump blow up to gain a political effect, it backfired. Which is why Rice is out there saying the opposite of what happened. That works for QB though.
Just came out this morning that the democrats told Bug Z to try to make Trump blow up to gain a political effect
What is the evidence for this?
Yes, I watched the whole thing. I didn't see anything like what you described.
V.Z. acted better than I'd expect for someone that was treated the way he was treated by this administration.
Can you pinpoint the timestamps of the behaviors you describe?
https://youtu.be/BhquAWlke2o?si=Gjb4UNXoX4xjrkQ4
They should be treating that little tyrant a lot worse.
Likewise with Putin, but I think Trump would be better off treating all national leaders with respect instead of just being the anti-Biden.
This whole mess could have been avoided if Obama/Biden had treated Putin with the respect Russia deserves rather than the respect Putin deserves.
Zelenskyy took 175 BILLION
Did he? Much of that was not cash, but equipment, training etc. No one can account for that money other than the 10% that went to the big guy.
Zelensky owns a 35 million dollar house in Florida.
Check your facts.
Zelensky owns a 35 million dollar house in Florida.
OK. I'll call your bluff. Show me the evidence of this house.
I could post hundreds of debunking links, but I'm sure you saw those and don't believe them.
So we have one anonymous guy online vs the world. Make your case.
Didn’t we give Ukraine outdated weapons systems that the U.S. was going to replace anyway? In addition we got value out of Ukraine for forcing Russia to spend so much of its own resources.
I finally watched the whole thing today. Actually very impressed with Trump's patience with this clown. Bottom line. Z refused to consider or negotiate a ceasefire. From his very first comment it was nothing but demands for security guarantees from the US taxpayer. Trump, to his credit, cares more about Ukrainian lives than Zelenski does. I've had the occasion to meet several draft age Ukrainian men over the last year and they are fully aware that the dictator comic grifter is operating a meat grinder and they're nothing but red meat. Very impressed with the restraint shown by Trump and Vance in the face of this asshole. Z ran back to Europe to the loving arms of the dead broke idiots that can't even heat their fucking houses in the dead of winter. Trump will negotiate a ceasefire with Putin with or without these suicidal retards. No fucking way they can beat Russia without the US. They'll come to the table very quickly and Zelensky will be irrelevant.
My theory is they (rightly perhaps) think the old Soviet mineral surveys were inaccurate, but rather than backing out and embarrassing themselves they tag teamed the guy to put all the blame on him.
Fuck off and die, slimy pile of TDS-addled lying lefty shit.
Maybe. I think it's just Trump's Dunning-Kruger diplomacy failing in public view.
No, it's your dishonesty, idiocy and raging case of TDS in public view.
"...Gaslighting or just delusional?..."
Neither.
Trump was the adult, pointing out to the infantile Z that he was a supplicant, not in the position of dictating the terms, and it would serve his purposes to act like it.
Zelenskyy, trained by meetings with sloppy Joe, didn't get the message; not real bright, and he loses, we don't.
The Ukrainians (not necessarily including the idiot Zelenskyy) have my moral support; they were invaded.
But get your hand out of my pocket.
Right. It's not our place to fund them, nor extort them.
Trump is trying to take full credit for what WE gave Ukraine simultaneously while buddying up to Putin and extorting a war-torn invaded nation.
Trump overestimated his ability to end this and took it personally (of course) that Zelensky didn't want to give up territory to Putin, "raw earth" to the US with no security guarantees.
No security guarantee? Trump promised that he and future administrations will support 20 year plans to eventually put American workers there. And that will stop Putin better than any military action. Don’t you see how genius that is?
The genius that befriends Putin while pissing off Europe as he starts a trade war with our allies and neighbors after record breaking inflation?
Even if true, since most Americans want Trump to do these things, how are you going to cope?
since most Americans want Trump to do these things
I don't think so.
how are you going to cope?
The fish will be biting soon, but none of this is a big deal to me anyway.
78 percent polled want a ceasefire in Ukraine. Zelensky refuses to negotiate. Looks like Trump is doing what the people want.
I don't think EbHS was referring to the ceasefire. If he was, I retract my comment. I'm in favor of a ceasefire too. Up until this display, I thought Trump had succeeded.
Most people (especially Trump defenders) are economically ignorant and believe that Trump will stimulate the economy by breaking windows, I mean with tariffs. Not that there’s much difference. And everyone, with the exception of a few crony rent-seekers who benefit from tariffs, will cope the same way - by tightening their belts as things get more expensive. Only question is if they will put the blame where it belongs, or on whatever the politicians tell them to blame.
"...The genius that befriends Putin while pissing off Europe as he starts a trade war with our allies and neighbors after record breaking inflation?..."
Lie, lie and lie.
Fuck off and die, shitbag.
"...Trump is trying to take full credit for what WE gave Ukraine simultaneously while buddying up to Putin and extorting a war-torn invaded nation...."
Lie, lie and lie.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
Gaslighting or just delusional? Trump was his usual Toddler self, but JD was the real instigator here.
This means you didn't watch it I assume. I'd be hard pressed to point to Zelly as any kind of 'good guy' from that exchange, and in fact now I'm 100% on board with letting Ukraine figure their shit out on their own absent any help from the U.S.
The guy is, at best, a grifter. I know it's a little thing, but the guy didn't even wear a suit to meet the President. Sure, he's a 'President' too but notably he's a beggar coming into the Oval Office demanding to be a chooser. That isn't how that works.
This means you didn't watch it I assume.
Sigh How many times?....Where do you think I got "raw earth" from?
The rest I agree with, except the suit griping. Trump didn't seem to care when Z. was questioned about it.
I think Z. went in knowing he would reject the extortion offer. My only point here is that Trump didn't come off looking statemen like. All 3 look pretty bad.
Trump held fire until Z started lecturing Vance. Zelensky is a grifter and a dictator. Really no comparison to legitimately elected US president and vice president. He's an irrelevant punk way out of his depth.
https://youtu.be/BhquAWlke2o?t=2429
What was wrong with this? Seems like a fair question to Vance's claim.
Well what's obviously wrong is that beginning in 2014 Ukraine was launching missiles and killing civilians in the Donbas provinces. Zelensky can rewrite history but that doesn't entitle him to a blank check.
I don't see the relevance with that to JD losing his cool.
And I'm not arguing we owe him a check. I've never been in favor of us funding this war. Trump is better than Biden on this issue, but let's not fool ourselves and think this was some kind of master class of diplomacy.
Perhaps not, but your TDS-addled, abysmally stupid take on it should be a cause for embarrassment, if you are intelligent enough to experience it.
I disagree with your assessment... in this case Quicktown is asking reasonable questions and making non hyperbolic opinions.
You can disagree with him but in this case I am not seeing TDS.
"...I think Z. went in knowing he would reject the extortion offer..."
It takes a special sort of bullshitter to claim asking pay for goods is "extortion", usually a slimy pile of lefty shit bullshitter.
When the reporters pressed Trump (well, the reporters who were not total Trump dicksuckers anyway) about the security guarantees, he just filibustered away. I got the distinct impression that the only security "guarantee" that Trump is offering Zelensky is a pinky-swear promise that Putin made to Trump that THIS TIME he totally won't break the ceasefire.
I love how miserable you are right now. Here's to more of your globalist world order falling down around you.
Well of course. Why else would the Gov-'Guns' be needed in the equation?
If it isn't to Gun threat gang-built conformance and STEAL funding.
...because there is no human 'value' test in Gov-Gun threats.
Demonstrating once again the cheerleading fascists who do not brook anyone to teach or research in their re-education camps who are not in lock step with their asinine politically correct policies.
The biggest fascists in the US are on the left, and this is a good example.
Not true. Trump is the biggest (and only) threat to democracy. Reason told me so. A LOT.
Since when was it impossible for fascism to be 'democratic'?
The USA *is* a *Constitutional* Republic NOT a 'democracy'.
Literally every fascist regime came out of 'democracy'.
NATO was originally established to combat communist aggression. Which means at this point its primary threat is from American universities.
America spent 50 years fighting communist aggression just to develop a gay, retarded version at the end.
Are you saying they took communism and made it a chick and gay? Kathleen Kennedy wins again.
yup
And most NATO countries.
*In 2023, the activist professors produced a new faculty resolution demanding that the university refocus its mission on climate activism, including demands that climate advocacy be taught in "all" departments and units*
This is so entirely on-brand for Boulder. While every other blueniversity was busy ramping up anti-racist indoctrination and chaging every math question to "2+2=Black is Beautiful," lily-white Boulder instead went all in on climate alarmism. Because even the perfume of social justice can't cover the smell of those icky, icky brown people in our town.
Boulder, where Trust Fund kids go to emote about the evils of capitalism while living off their capitalist families dividends.
I know at least one guy that lives in Boulder and works as a petroleum plant inspector. He loves the money, but hates himself so he then volunteers for organizations that work against the oil industry. If I were his employer, I'd be interested in knowing that since it's an informative conflict of interest.
He's an otherwise pretty smart guy and a nice person generally, but it's amazing to watch the mental gymnastics these people put themselves through. I wonder if that level of cognitive dissonance and bias is physically painful. It sure seems to be emotionally painful for many of them.
Does extreme cognitive dissonance and emotional instability lead people to become progressives, or does progressive ideology lead people to cognitive dissonance and emotional instability?
yes!
It might also reflect Boulder being home to roughly a thousand scientists & a serious climate modeling supercomputer at the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
Cue usual suspects asking Grok3 what to say.
Producing the same lies as you?
“Unsettled”, Steven Koonin
“Apocalypse Never”, Michael Shellenberger
“Climate Uncertainty and Risk”, Judith Curry
“Fossil Future”, Alex Epstein
We are being (blatantly) lied to by those purportedly driven by scientific motives, who are, in fact, purely political animals.
To be clear, if you have not read at least a couple of those books, you are not capable of intelligently commenting on 'climate change', nor the politics surrounding it.
And I'm sure you haven't read a single one.
Lol and what have those 1000 scientists and serious climate modeling supercomputers ever got right?
Well, they did all get rich on our tax dollars. I guess we at least have to acknowledge the success of the scam.
When does "DOGEing" become a verb? Not nearly soon enough, like
"Unsettling" the climate bullshitter Public Entelectual.
Fuck off and die, watermelon; you are seen to be the lying pile of shit which you are.
(directed at the lying POS PE, not you).
Even chemistry, a discipline far from partisan politics, has a ratio of 113 donors to Democrats for every one donor to Republicans.
It seems pretty clear that these political activists know exactly which side of their bread is buttered. This is one of many reasons why academia needs to support itself on funding outside the government. It's amazing that people see the inherent conflict with organizations such as, say, Exxon paying for research but fail to see the same issue with governments or 'correctly aligned' corporate interests.
I don't really have a solution beyond 'burn it all down' and that's mostly because the whole thing is so rotten that fiddling about the edges is unlikely to change anything.
For an office, environmental studies allocated a small, windowless room previously used for storage
Did they take his red stapler as well?
To the extent that Reason stands opposed to government growth, I presumed it would stand in opposition to the growth of proactive "governance" and the schools of governance that spawned the anti-'misinformation ' industry
Instead, we get a substack reprint from a reflexively contrarian (second academic generation ) climate bore whose 24 years on the case had such policy impact that he had time to develop a second career in forensic sports medicine.
Yawn.
You link a fake vvebsite in your header, vvanker.
I vvas vvondering vvhere this scammer vvent to lately.
Vvanking.
Fuck off and die and take your fake web site with you, shitbag.
"...Instead, we get a substack reprint from a reflexively contrarian (second academic generation ) climate bore whose 24 years on the case had such policy impact that he had time to develop a second career in forensic sports medicine..."
TDS addled watermelon making unsupported assertions and lying.
Yawn.
Fuck off and die, shitstain.
Reason: I've heard the kids are all about this bad situation in academia... what say we do an article on it?
It’s utterly hilarious that these idiots think people will pay money to argue with them. If anything people might pay to use the mute button, but that’s it.
You're lucky they let you out. Most cults just straight up kill you when you try to leave.
Poor Reason:
European leaders decided in London today that they want to go on with the war instead of opting for peace. They decided that Ukraine must continue the war.
This is bad, dangerous and mistaken. Hungary remains on the side of peace. Ceterum censeo.
https://x.com/PM_ViktorOrban/status/1896308913949290759
We have about 2 weeks to withdraw from NATO.
Europe voting to risk a worldwide war over literal bullshit?
Why, this is unprecedented!
Seriously. No way we should defend these lunatics. Europe can fuck right off.
Pulling out as they go to war would... be... *awesome*.
I mean it would be absolutely shit for your average EU citizen but, as far as cultural ethos and optics go... just awesome.
There's a piece of fiction, likely cinema, on the edge of my consciousness, where a/the Big Bad's minions are talking shit and agitating to confrontation and when they try and cajole the Big Bad to get him to drop the hammer, he says, "Nah!" and the minions freak out.
There would/will be the loudest screeches you've ever heard about "MUH SOVIUT YOUNYUN!" but, at the end of the day, Putin isn't going to beat the EU, certainly not past the Donbas, and the EU sacrificing blood and treasure to stop it would be a brilliant lesson.
Enjoy your artisanal hydroponic Dutch shrubberies, I'm sure they'll come in handy.
I'm told that that guy is a far right Christian nationalist populist or something. Right thinking libertarians are all in for endless war.
Here is the actual news.
https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-britain-zelenskyy-europe-starmer-trump-russia-b980170ead74a1a7914c565f14ee6cc9
Orban wasn't even at the meeting.
So they are going to try to come up with a better cease-fire deal, one that doesn't rely on Trump's "trust me" security "guarantee".
Here is the actual news.
No, it's AP.
Surprised to see their still publishing though. It must be tough without all that government money.
No you're right, OANN and MTG's boyfriend are real news.
We're not talking about OANN or MTG, we're talking about the president of Hungary. Another very dishonest tactic Lying Jeffy.
Starmer said free speech is being respected in the UK right now, so it's no wonder you're going to take his word for it, liar to liar.
Also I love how you have zero criticism for the content of the article itself. You can't disagree with it on its merits so you attack the source. Meanwhile, Troll Mac regurgitated literal state media and you happily accept this.
I shared a tweet from the president of Hungary, you shared an AP article that states what Starmer told them. You think your post wasn't state media, lol?
You either haven't been paying attention the last month or you're being dishonest. Again.
Why not both?
Hey Lying Jeffy, you never answered DesigNate’s question a couple weeks ago, been trying to get an answer from you since then:
https://reason.com/2025/02/14/j-d-vance-brings-the-culture-war-to-europe-there-is-a-new-sheriff-in-town/?comments=true#comment-10917697
Do you think free speech and free exercise of religion are “culture war” issues?
"The steps toward peace would: keep aid flowing to Kyiv and maintain economic pressure on Russia to strengthen Ukraine’s hand; make sure Ukraine is at the bargaining table and any peace deal must ensure its sovereignty and security; and continue to arm Ukraine to deter future invasion."
LMAO Lying Jeffy, you think these are steps toward peace? Again, either very dumb or very dishonest.
Again, why not both?
(I love that you keep bringing up my question to him. One day, he might actually answer it.)
Neville Chamberlain was in the side of peace. A lot of folks commenting here would have been on the side of Hitler, few on the side of Benes.
They don't call it the People's Republic of Boulder for nothing.
Many universities shelter banana republics in their athletic departments
Historically universities were centers where professors and students could conveniently meet in person, usually in cities with infrastructures capable of supporting private students who had money and professors who did research as well as teaching but who produced nothing consumable. It was one of the earliest parts of the trend towards modern subspecialization in society. Just as modern cities long ago outlived their original purpose due to technical innovations, universities have outlived the "campus" mode. Professors can conduct their research and teach from home. Only laboratories requiring physical space for equipment need still exist. For many decades, for example, astronomers and physicists based at university campuses far away from observatories, reactors and colliders would schedule their experiments in advance and only show up at the facilities for the length of their experiments, and then leave. Even modern high schools no longer need classrooms and buildings except for laboratory space. Decentralizing academic research would go a long way towards eliminating the radically political hotbeds of university "faculties." Bottom line: eliminate all government funding of universities at all levels, break up the universities into virtual research centers with no official faculties and near-zero resident students. When everyone is a visiting researcher and an online student, this expensive boondoggle will finally dry up and blow away.
Your insights are much more sophisticated than mine but I've reached the same conclusions. I see very little need for brick and mortar universities and without government subsidies in the form of grants and student loans they would quickly disappear. I'd like to see DOGE expedite the process but I'm not hopeful.
Zero point for universities and credentialism anymore (which may impact my job). There needs to be a series of widely agreed upon tests where the ability to pass one is the credential you need to be accepted by the field. How you obtain the knowledge to pass the tests being irrelevant.
"...How you obtain the knowledge to pass the tests being irrelevant..."
1) Pretty sure the bar is arranged that way in many states.
2) Christiaan Barnard, according to a source long since lost, did not perform the first heart transplant. It was performed by a black veterinarian surgeon who had performed the surgery on animals, but who could not be licensed as a surgeon to practice on humans, since he was black. Barnard watched and learned.
2) Christiaan Barnard, according to a source long since lost, did not perform the first heart transplant. It was performed by a black veterinarian surgeon who had performed the surgery on animals, but who could not be licensed as a surgeon to practice on humans, since he was black. Barnard watched and learned.
This sounds very... Mother Jones. Not only does it not make sense logically, even logistically and contextually it doesn't make sense. Very "I don't care what the history books say, Cleopatra was black."
First, the first heart transplant was chimp-to-human, performed by James Hardy. To wit, the vast majority of organ replacement and other surgeons at the time were racking up dog-to-dog and same-animal-to-same-animal surgery/transplants and, even today, veterinarians virtually never do this. Outside of a handful of breeding stock animals, there's virtually no value in it. You're essentially talking about a whole surgical team going to work to save a handful of steak dinners at best. Moreover, this was still largely/mostly in the days of medical theater, where a large surgery team would be involved and then a similarly large team of doctors and educators would oversee. There was detailed discussion and observation as to Barnard's technique and methodology for years, correspondence with his brother who was assisting, dozens of witnesses... in the late 60s... seems exceedingly unlikely that nobody in all the world thought to id this nameless veterinarian who actually performed the surgery.
It may be that when Barnard first went to practice on animals, a black veterinarian, practiced at cutting open dogs post-mortem to diagnose heartworms or whatever, showed him how a dog differed from a human or whatever but, as indicated, doctors were routinely going through a half dozen other animals or more and the idea of two dozen or more people standing around observing the surgery and nobody even mentioning this nameless veterinarian seems exceptionally contrived.
I don't disbelieve that a black veterinarian was kept out of a human medical position by discrimination and/or apartheid, especially decades earlier, but the idea that the person performed the surgery and Barnard and everyone else just watched doesn't hold water.
I stand corrected.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6062759/
He did do some transplants in dogs as practice and whether I confused that or whether I read an account by a writer who was confused is lost in time.
Lol and who writes these tests? Maybe experts in the field? How do we know these experts are qualified?
Besides we all know what you think of "experts". They're frauds, snobs, and authoritarian monsters right?
If this plan ever were enacted it would take your team approximately 10 nanoseconds to complain about how "unfair" it was that they ask questions like "Are sex and gender different?" and "Is evolution real?" You and your team would never accept or trust a genuinely objective test of this nature because it would have too many facts that you disagree with.
Unless the real plan here is to rig the tests so that they are MAGA-approved. That is probably it.
Also look at Japan which actually has something like this, high stakes testing to decide one's future career. Then look at their teen suicide rate. It's not a coincidence.
There is 0 reason to continue the systems that have been erected over the last 50-100 years, all in the name of public safety (but actually in the name of protectionism). That you would scoff and argue against the idea of decentralization of this (or anything really), says a great deal about you and your ideas on liberty.
You don't want to go to a doctor who never saw a patient in person while in training.
These are unpleasant times in academia for any one who is not a race, sex and climate-fixated, hard-left, progressive.
And keeping one's mouth shut 100% of the time takes an emotional, social and physical toll.
Actually it is an impossible time for everyone in academia because Musk is trying to destroy everyone regardless of ideology.
This is what they did to Prof Bruce GIlley for his wonderful work on Colonialism. Reason's approach does not work. Neutrality is like when the big gorrilla in the forest agrees with the does that we will all just do what we want -- and the gorilla eats the does. OF COURSE.
Musk is trying to do this to thousands of faculty. And he will likely succeed. 🙁
Just the opposite. Musk trying to make YOU live up to what YOU profess. hard to argue with that.
Maybe he should have been less amenable to rolling with it.
I pay the professor's salary. And my sending of my kids there is an enforcable contract.
The issue is however live and important at religious schools, private schools, where re-instatement isn't justice, it's coming back to a place that now hates you. I can only speak of Catholic schools and seminaries. What is needed is effectual access to Canon Law. I was told to teach against Catholic teaching on the Bible and silenced for using a textbook that had one paragraph questioning an aspect of evolution because another teacher had a Templeton grant to teach about evolution.
Academic freedom lthere must be a force against the silencers and not a force on behalf of the teacher. That approach is like forcing a bad doctor to watch you die. It might make the doctor said, but it makes you : DEAD
The Government Has Borrowed $1.7 Trillion From The Social Security Trust Fund. The government has borrowed the total value of the Trust Fund to pay for other government spending.