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People ask me if I should comment about the reversal by Dease and the letter sent to the faculty and students.
I will say this.
If Dease had anything about him he would resign.
He is not fit to be the President of St. Thomas University, his actions have shown that.
Yes, it is likely they will appoint someone even worse.
This is a top-down elite-controlled University, as they all are.
But Dease is unfit to be President of your University.
Who they should appoint in his place is of course the person who asked Desmond Tutu to speak at the University.
The person who was demoted.
This person the university should acknowledge for the light brought to your campus.
This person should be promoted.
President of your university would be a fit place.
Kewe — TheWE.cc
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Wednesday, 9 July, 2003
Defining moments: Desmond Tutu
A BBC series is asking some of the world's most influential people about the defining moments in their life.
As the Archbishop of Johannesburg, Desmond Tutu was one of the key leaders in the fight to rid South Africa of apartheid.
More recently he chaired the country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which sought to heal the scars of apartheid.
I didn't know then that it would have affected me so much, but it was something that was really — it blew your mind that a white man would doff his hat.
And subsequently I discovered, of course, that this was quite consistent with his theology that every person is of significance, of infinite value, because they are created in the image of God.
And the passion with which he opposed apartheid and any other injustice is something that I sought then to emulate.
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First they came for the poor Arabs
Then they came for the blacks who spoke out...
Western Fascism Waxing
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InsideHigherEd.com — October 4, 2007 Desmond Tutu, Persona Non Grata at University of St. Thomas in Minnesota
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Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who won the prize for his nonviolent opposition to South Africa’s apartheid regime, was deemed unworthy of appearing at St. Thomas because of comments he made criticizing Israel — comments the university says were “hurtful” to some Jewish people.
Further, the university demoted the director of the program that invited Tutu after she wrote a letter to him and others complaining about the revocation of the invitation. (She retains a tenured faculty job.)
“There isn’t any academic freedom here when this happens,” said Marv Davidov, an adjunct faculty member who has taught courses about nonviolence for 15 years at the university. “This is cowardice.”
Tutu was invited to the university through a program called PeaceJam International, which organizes conferences for high school students on issues related to peace.
Consulted with some Jewish leaders
Doug Hennes, vice president for university and government relations at St. Thomas, said that when administrators were informed of the invitation, they did some research about Tutu, and found that some of his comments had been controversial.
Then, the university consulted with some Jewish leaders, and concluded that Tutu had made remarks that had been “hurtful” to Jewish leaders.
Cris Toffolo, an associate professor of political science and until recently director of the Justice and Peace Studies Program, questioned the idea that anyone who makes hurtful comments should be barred from speaking.
“There are some things in the world that are just hard to talk about, but when you get past the hurt, you can get to the real issues, and explore those in a way that could move the world to a more just place,” she said.
Toffolo said she believed in the guidelines on controversial speakers distributed by the American Association of University Professors, an approach that says that controversy should never justify keeping away a speaker.
Toffolo said that she was informed that she was losing the directorship of the program she led, and received a negative evaluation, right after she spoke out against rescinding the Tutu invitation.
She said that administrators were very clear with her about the relationship between their decision on her leadership of the program, and the invitation.
(Hennes, the St. Thomas vice president, confirmed that Toffolo was removed as chair shortly after she defended the Tutu invitation, but he declined to say why she was removed, citing the confidentiality of personnel decisions.)
“It’s outrageous and it infringes on my academic freedom,” said Toffolo of the university’s decision to strip her of the program director’s position.
“This case is interesting because there are so many faculty members running afoul because of their views on Israeli policy in the occupied territories or U.S. foreign policy in terms of Israel,” she said.
“We need to be able to have serious discussions of these issues.” |
Dances out of St. Paul's Cathedral in LondonDuring an interview on BBC 1's Breakfast with Frost programmehad earlier urged England's cricketers not to tour Zimbabwe
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Zimbabwe Homeless — Demolition, clearance of homes Porta Farm images |
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Tuesday, 23 November, 2004
Tutu warns of poverty 'powder keg'
Archbishop Desmond Tutu has warned that South Africa is sitting on a "powder keg" because millions are living in "dehumanising poverty".
The Nobel Peace laureate said attempts to boost black economic ownership were only benefiting an elite minority.
And he cautioned that political "kowtowing" within the ruling ANC was hampering democracy.The archbishop was speaking at the Nelson Mandela annual lecture in Johannesburg on Tuesday.He attacked the black economic empowerment programme for further enriching already wealthy blacks.
"What is black empowerment when it seems to benefit not the vast majority but an elite that tends to be recycled?" he asked.
He warned the system could be "building up much resentment which we may rue later."
"Gruelling, demeaning, dehumanising poverty" experienced by millions of South Africans was the biggest threat to the country's security, he said.
"We are sitting on a powder keg."
Security
The archbishop criticised politicians for debating whether to give the poor an income grant of $16 (£12) a month and said the idea should be seriously considered.
"We cannot glibly on full stomachs speak about handouts to those who often go to bed hungry," he said.
"It is cynical in the extreme to speak about handouts when people can become very rich at the stroke of a pen."
He called on ordinary citizens to "adopt" a poor family by giving them $16 to $32 a month or to pay their school fees.
While listing South Africa's successes since the end of apartheid, he warned against a tendency towards stifling political debate.
"Truth cannot suffer by being examined or challenged," he said.
"Unthinking, uncritical, kowtowing party line-toeing is fatal to a vibrant democracy," the archbishop added.
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Men who become Giants South Africa — South African political emancipation South Africa 1994 - 2006 |
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I don't think the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota will be inviting me to speak
Kewe — TheWE.cc
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Atrocities committed by Israel — graphic pictures What CNN never shows you |
Ahmed and Asma, story of two children dying — Lest we forget |
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And we did it!South Africa Freedom
... Sometimes they ask: “Does this mean you are pro-Palestinian?”
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And my brother Naim Ateek has said what we, that we used to say too: I am not pro this or that people, I am pro justice.
I am pro freedom.
I am anti-injustice, anti-oppression any and everywhere that it occurs.
But you know, as well as I do that somehow the Israeli government is placed on a pedestal where to criticize them is immediately to be dubbed anti-Semitic.
As if the Palestinians were not Semitic.
I have not been even anti-white despite all the suffering that that crazy group inflicted on our people. NO!
How could I be — if I wasn’t even anti those who did that to us — be anti-Jew?
Because that is actually the term that ought to be used — Are you anti-Jewish?
Not anti-Semitic.
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And then, you would have to say the same thing to the biblical prophets — because they were some of the most scathing critics of the Jewish leadership of their day.
We don’t criticize Jewish people.
We criticize, we will criticize, when they need to be criticized — the government of Israel.
... People are scared in this country [USA] to say wrong is wrong.
Because the Jewish lobby is powerful — very powerful.
So what? So what! This is God’s world! For goodness sake this is God’s world!
The Apartheid government was very powerful, but we said to them: Watch it! If you flout the laws of this universe, you’re going to bite the dust!
... An unjust Israeli government, however, powerful will fall in the world of this kind of God.
Because we don’t want for that to happen but those who are powerful have to remember the litmus test that God gives to the powerful — what is your treatment of the poor, the hungry?
What is your treatment of the vulnerable, the voiceless?
And on the basis of that, God passes God’s judgment.
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Ahmed and Asma, story of two children dying — Lest we forget |
Atrocities committed by Israel — graphic pictures What CNN never shows you |
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Friday, 17 February 2006
Tutu calls for Guantanamo closure
Archbishop Desmond Tutu has joined in the growing chorus of condemnation of America's Guantanamo Bay prison camp.
He said the detention camp was a stain on the character of the United States as a superpower and a democracy.
He also attacked Britain's 28-day detention period for terror suspects, calling it excessive and untenable.
His comments follow a UN report calling for the closure of the camp where some 500 "enemy combatants" have been held without trial for up to four years.
Speaking on the BBC's Today programme, Archbishop Tutu said he was alarmed that arguments used by the South African apartheid regime are now being used to justify anti-terror measures.
"It is disgraceful and one cannot find strong enough words to condemn what Britain and the United States and some of their allies have accepted," he said.
The respected clergyman said the rule of law had been "subverted horrendously" and he described the muted public outcry — particularly in America — as "saddening".
Archbishop Tutu also attacked Tony Blair's failed attempt to hold terrorist suspects in Britain for up to 90 days without charge.
"Ninety days for a South African is an awful deja-vu because we had in South Africa in the bad old days a 90-day detention law," he said.
Under apartheid, as at Guantanamo, people were held for "unconscionably long periods" and then released, he said.
"Are you able to restore to those people the time when their freedom was denied them? If you have evidence for goodness sake produce it in a court of law," he said.
"People with power have an incredible capacity for wanting to be able to retain that power and don't like scrutiny."
International pressure
Archbishop Tutu's comments add to the mounting international pressure on US President Bush to close the detention centre at Guantanamo Bay.
The UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, said on Thursday that America must close the camp "as soon as is possible".
His comments backed a UN report recommending that the US try the approximately 500 inmates, or free them "without further delay".
A senior British minister has also called for the camp to be closed.
Speaking on the BBC television Question Time programme on Thursday, Peter Hain said he would prefer to see Guantanamo Bay close.
He also indicated that the UK Prime Minister, Tony Blair, agreed with him.
The US has dismissed most of the findings of the UN report which include allegations of torture.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan on Thursday rejected the call to close the camp, saying the military treated all detainees humanely.
"These are dangerous terrorists that we're talking about," he said.
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First they came for the poor Arabs
Then they came for the blacks who spoke out..
Western Fascism Waxing
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School Guards Break Child's Arm And Arrest Her For Dropping Cake
Police and security violence continues unabated
Steve Watson Infowars.net Friday, Sept 28, 2007 School security guards in Palmdale, CA have been caught on camera assaulting a 16-year-old girl and breaking her arm after she spilled some cake during lunch and left some crumbs on the floor after cleaning it up. The incident occurred last week at Knight High School in Palmdale and was caught on a cell phone camera by another pupil who was then also assaulted by the security guards. Watch video of the incident here and here. The girl, Pleajhai Mervin, told Fox News LA that she was bumped while queuing for lunch and dropped the cake. After being ordered to clean it up and then re-clean the spot three times, she attempted to leave the area out of embarrassment but was jumped on by security who forced her onto a table, breaking her wrist in the process. Pleajhai also says that the security guard in the picture yelled "hold still nappy-head" at her, which at the time she did not know was a racist comment. |
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In an even more shocking development the security guards later had the mother of the girl arrested after she sought out an attorney and demanded that the guard be arrested, telling her that if she wanted the guard detained then she herself would also be charged with battery after she allegedly pushed the guard and an assistant principal of the school.
She has also been suspended from her job at another school in the county.
The school expelled Pleajhai for five days before then having her arrested for battery and for littering (the dropping of the cake).
Then they had the pupil who captured the video arrested along with his sister who was merely present at the scene.
A walkout is planned for this morning by some students, after which the protesters will call for the firing of the main security guard involved.
The incident serves as another unbelievable case in the wave of police brutality sweeping the country.
In recent days we have covered multiple incidents of this nature and have compiled them into a page which will no doubt be added to in the months to come.
Commentators have linked the increased cases of brutality with a post 9/11 mentality in America where civil liberties have been totally diminished and the anointed "authorities" simply consider themselves above the law.
Former Reagan government official Paul Craig Roberts, for instance, has succinctly described the mentality as having turned "an epidemic of US police brutality into a pandemic".
The media reports linked above clearly sympathize with the girl and her mother but only because the girl "fully complied with the guards' orders".
What on earth have things come to when children are being physically assaulted and arrested in schools by huge fat thugs 5 times their size for "not complying with orders"?
Police and security officials are being trained that it's OK to beat, torture and taser anyone should they not answer their questions or comply with their every order.
The "security" and well being of citizens is no longer the concern of these moronic hired beefbrains who revel in their false positions of power.
Ask yourself, why is the security guy pictured above wearing shades indoors?
Because it is part of the gang mentality of these idiots who think its cool to put the fear of life into small kids and then break their bones if they fail to cower like mice when picked upon.
We have been covering the rise of the police state mentality in tandem with the erosion of liberty for some time now.
The incident narrated above represents a stark evolution.
Watch the following clip from around ten years ago which was featured in Alex Jones' 2004 Film Martial Law: Rise of the Police State, where police assault and break the arms of peaceful protestors.
The difference now is that the police and security guards are breaking the arms of children and tasering students for merely asking questions or for dropping birthday cake.
Click here to view the clip of Martial Law: Rise of the Police State
Two weeks ago PrisonPlanet.com featured a story on a young 20 year old motorist who caught a St. George Police Sergeant named Kenline stating that he had the power to invent charges that would put the young man behind bars.
Click here to view videos on police brutality, a collection of stories by PrisonPlanet.com
PRISON PLANET.com © 2002-2007 Alex Jones |
Epidemic Of Police Brutality & Harassment Sweeps America & UK
An epidemic of violence and harassment is sweeping the country.
Police are being trained that the general public are the enemy and that they can engage in outright brutality without recourse.
Taser deaths are skyrocketing because the police have been ordered to use "pain compliance", otherwise known as torture, to subdue and oppress the citizenry.
Police are also increasingly completely unaware of the laws they are supposed to enforce and have resolved to invent offences out of thin air as an excuse to harass people.
To view the videos on police brutality, click here
PRISON PLANET.com Copyright © 2002-2007 Alex Jones All rights reserved. |
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First they came for the poor Arabs
Then they came for the blacks who spoke out
Then they came for the children...
Western Fascism Waxing
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Paraphrased from a report of two youth institutions: Oakley and Columbia Training Schools.
Youth Institutions, 'Youth Camps,' Paramilitary Abuse
Naked, Dark, cells smelling of urine and feces
On the day of our arrival we observed a 13-year-old boy sitting in a restraint chair. Reportedly, he was placed in the restraint chair to prevent self-mutilation.
No staff approached him, and he was not allowed to attend school or receive programming, counseling, or medication.
This boy had been severely sexually and physically abused by family members and had been in several psychiatric hospitals prior to being sent to the Institution.
Just before our arrival, he had been locked naked in his empty cell. His cell smelled of urine, and we observed torn pieces of toilet paper on the concrete floor that he had been using as a pillow.
Girls in the SIU (Special Intervention Unit for youth with behavioral and disciplinary problems, and youth who are suicidal) are punished for acting out or for being suicidal by being placed in a cell called the “dark room.”
The “dark room” is a locked, windowless isolation cell with lighting controlled by staff.
When the lights are turned out, as the girls reported they are when the room is in use, the room is completely dark.
The room is stripped of everything but a drain in the floor which serves as a toilet.
Most girls are stripped naked when placed in the “dark room.” According to staff, the reason girls must remove
their clothing before being placed in the darkroom, is that there is metal grating on the ceiling and the cell door which could be used for hanging attempts by suicidal girls.
Such suicidal hazards should be remedied rather than requiring suicidal children to strip naked.
One girl told us that the weekend prior to our visit, she was placed naked in the “dark room” from Friday until Monday
morning.
She stated that she was allowed out of the cell once a day to take a shower, but received all her meals inside of the cell.
Another girl told us that in July 2002, she was placed in the “dark room” with the lights off for three days with little access to water as her requests for water were largely ignored.
During our visit to the girls’ SIU there were 14 girls present. Nine of the girls had been locked in bare cells for more than a week; one girl had been locked in a bare cell for 114 days.
The conditions we observed in the SIU are particularly inhumane.
The cells are extremely hot with inadequate ventilation. Some girls are naked in a dark room where they must urinate and defecate in a hole that they cannot flush.
Punched and slapped as punishment for being re-committed
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Wednesday, 27 September 2006
S Africa is losing its way - Tutu
Nobel Prize winner Desmond Tutu has warned that South Africa is in danger of losing its moral direction.
He said it had failed to sustain the idealism that ended apartheid and warned of growing ethnic divisions.
Referring to South Africa's high murder rate and the rape of children as young as nine months, he said the African reverence for life had been lost.
The retired Anglican archbishop opposes ex-Vice President Jacob Zuma becoming president due to his "moral failings".
Mr Zuma's presidential aspirations received a major boost earlier this month after corruption charges were dropped against him.
He was acquitted earlier this year on a rape charge.
Respect
Archbishop Tutu said the country had achieved a remarkable degree of stability in 12 years of democracy despite problems poverty, Aids, corruption and crime.
But delivering the Steve Biko memorial lecture at University of Cape Town, he questioned why a respect for the law, environment and even life, were missing in South Africa.
"What has happened to us? It seems as if we have perverted our freedom, our rights into licence, into being irresponsible. Rights go hand in hand with responsibility, with dignity, with respect for oneself and for the other.
"The fact of the matter is we still depressingly do not respect one another. I have often said black consciousness did not finish the work it set out to do," he said.
He said government officials often acted like former officials during the apartheid era — treating people rudely.
He said South Africa should oppose xenophobia and act sensitively when place names were being changed rather than appearing to gloat and ride roughshod over the feelings of others.
He also made a plea for people to pick up litter, to care for their own environments and for their fellow citizens.
"Perhaps we did not realise just how apartheid has damaged us so that we seem to have lost our sense of right and wrong, so that when we go on strike as is our right to do, we are not appalled that some of us can chuck people out of moving trains because they did not join the strike, or why is it common practice now to trash, to go on the rampage?"
He said that South Africa remained a wonderful country that had produced outstanding people — such as Steve Biko, the anti-apartheid leader who died in police custody in 1977.
"The best memorial to Steve Biko would be a South Africa where everyone respects themselves, has a positive self image filled with a proper self esteem and holds others in high regard."
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First they came for the poor Arabs
Then they came for the blacks who spoke out
Then they came for the children
Then they came with the drugs...
Western Fascism Waxing
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Dark Alliance — The Story Behind the Crack Explosion The "Good Guys" Who Can Do No Wrong
Profoundest suspicions of white malfeasance were true |
Awful decision to allow brain-killing mercury to be injected into young children Children — Thimerosal, Autism, Mercury |
Atrocities committed by Israel — graphic pictures What CNN never shows you |
Ahmed and Asma, story of two children dying — Lest we forget |
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Unspeakable grief and horror
...and the circus of deception killing continues...
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Men who become Giants South Africa — South African political emancipation South Africa 1994 - 2006 |
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For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.cc website.The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues. |