Wednesday, June 03, 2020

Overpaid Alumni Officials at Overpriced, Private Universities are Cancelling Alumni Celebrations, Out of Solidarity with Racist Rioters, Looters, and Arsonists

Wed, Jun 3, 2020 8:10 p.m.
Subject: See what you think about this

My response to a mass emailing from the UofChicago alumni mailing further below.



Sent: Wednesday, June 3, 2020 5:08 P.M.
To: alumni@uchicago.edu
Subject: Re: A note to the UChicago alumni community
 
Colin:

Your message below is uninformed crap.

Here's the Manhattan Institute's Heather Mac Donald, who's been writing about policing policies nationwide (among many other important societal themes) for years:

Facts don't matter to the academic victimology narrative. Far from destroying the black body, whites are the overwhelming target of interracial violence. Between 2012 and 2015, blacks committed 85.5 percent of all black-white interracial violent victimizations (excluding interracial homicide, which is also disproportionately black-on-white). That works out to 540,360 felonious assaults on whites. Whites committed 14.4 percent of all interracial violent victimization, or 91,470 felonious assaults on blacks. Blacks are less than 13 percent of the national population.
If white mobs were rampaging through black business districts, assaulting passersby and looting stores, we would have heard about it on the national news every night. But the black flash mob phenomenon is grudgingly covered, if at all, and only locally.
The national media have been insisting on the theme of the allegedly brutal Minneapolis police department. They said nothing as black-on-white robberies rose in downtown Minneapolis late last year, along with savage assaults on passersby. Why are the Minneapolis police in black neighborhoods? Because that's where violent crime is happening, including shootings of two-year-olds and lethal beatings of 75-year-olds. Just as during the Obama years, the discussion of the allegedly oppressive police is being conducted in the complete absence of any recognition of street crime and the breakdown of the black family that drives it.
Once the violence began, any effort to "understand" it should have stopped, since that understanding is inevitably exculpatory. The looters are not grieving over the stomach-churning arrest and death of George Floyd; they are having the time of their lives. You don't protest or mourn a victim by stealing oxycontin, electronics, jewelry, and sneakers.
See https://www.city-journal.org/terrifying-collapse-of-the-rule-of-law I'll send you more if you need more.

[N.S.: Identifying info deleted.]



From: Colin Hennessy <alumni@uchicago.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, June 3, 2020 4:42 P.M.
Subject: A note to the UChicago alumni community
 
Problems viewing this email? View online.

 
Dear ........,
 
I write to let you know that we have made the decision to cancel the general programming and events for Alumni Weekend @ Home scheduled for June 4–7.
 
Our nation is confronting painful issues in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis and a number of other recent racist incidents. UChicago students, faculty, and alumni are part of these critical national conversations about systemic racism, injustice, and discrimination. These conversations, in Chicago and across the country, have taken on a new urgency, but they reflect deep pain and inequality that minority communities in the United States—particularly African Americans—have confronted for decades. Alumni Weekend has traditionally been an event of celebration, and to hold it as planned would not reflect what our alumni and our communities are experiencing right now.
 
As an institution dedicated to free expression and discourse, we always want to amplify UChicago voices and share meaningful resources and research with you. We are looking at ways to provide opportunities to hear from faculty and leaders on these issues in the coming weeks and will be touch.
 
In the meantime, please see this note from the provost for additional resources.
 
For those of you celebrating a reunion this year, we will follow up separately about how you and your class can make plans to come together on campus in 2021.
 
Please reach out to us at alumni@uchicago.edu if we can provide resources or information during these difficult and concerning times for all of us.
 
Sincerely,
 
 
Colin Hennessy
Executive Director, UChicago Alumni
 
 
The University of Chicago Alumni and Friends
 
 
 
The University of Chicago
5801 South Ellis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60637
1.800.955.0065
 

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Solidarity. Too bad they didn't have any solidarity with white elderly murdered by the negro or white women raped by the negro.

Anonymous said...

TWO MORE WHITE APOLOGIES--FOR NO REASON
GRA:Drew Brees and Denver coach Vic Fangio were both forced to apologize for telling the truth about how they feel.If you're white and you don't publicly subscribe to the BLM b.s.,the proverbial noose goes around your neck:
(FOXNEWS)
New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees took to Instagram Thursday morning to apologize for comments he made about fellow NFL players who knelt during the national anthem in a protest against police brutality and racial discrimination.

"I would like to apologize to my friends, teammates, the City of New Orleans, the black community, NFL community and anyone I hurt with my comments yesterday," Brees said, in part. "In speaking with some of you, it breaks my heart to know the pain I have caused.


During an appearance on Yahoo Finance on Wednesday, Brees discussed the ongoing protests that have taken place throughout the country in the wake of the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis.

At one point during the interview, Brees was asked about players — led by San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick — who knelt during the national anthem in 2016 and 2017 in protest over the extrajudicial killing of black people by police.

"I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country," Brees said, according to CBS Sports. "Let me just tell you what I see or what I feel when the national anthem is played, and when I look at the flag of the United States. I envision my two grandfathers, who fought for this country during World War II, one in the Army and one in the Marine Corp. Both risking their lives to protect our country and to try to make our country and this world a better place."

Brees added that he believed standing for the flag was a way to bring "unity" to the country during times of division.

"Every time I stand with my hand over my heart, looking at that flag, and singing the national anthem, that's what I think about, and in many cases, it brings me to tears, thinking about all that has been sacrificed," Brees said. "Not just those in the military, but for that matter, those throughout the civil rights movements of the '60s, and everyone, and all that has been endured by so many people up until this point. And is everything right with our country right now? No, it's not. We still have a long way to go, but I think what you do by standing there and showing respect to the flag with your hand over your heart, is it shows unity. It shows that we are all in this together, we can all do better and that we are all part of the solution."

Brees' comments prompted an angry response from many current and former athletes, including his team's top wide receiver, Michael Thomas.

"We don’t care if you don’t agree and whoever else how about that," Thomas tweeted Wednesday.
GRA:How about Thomas' response for a cogent argument?
Bronco's coach Vic Fangio also apologized after saying he "didn't see racism in the NFL."
Probably not against blacks--probably true--since blacks are 60% of the players.Racism against whites?I'm SURE that's true,just based on attacks by black defensive players against white QBs last year.
The attempt at groupthink continues.Why did Brees apologize--is the question of the day--who advised him to apologize,since what he said wasn't racist in the least,but very American(the problem).Whites are being forced to agree with what blacks say,but CANNOT have their point of view accepted by blacks,without an outcry of derision and media attacks.Right now,this is a one way street and blacks are driving the narrative and the car.
--GRA

Anonymous said...

"Ignore the facts",is NNN and MSM's strategy and " Make up your own",is the parallel ruse to go with it.This is groupthink being shoved down white people's throats and some of them are swallowing it.Will Trump give in?That's the question.Will we see him take a knee?


--GRA