The RoanokeSlant

This file is a US personal journal of commentary of examples of the Roanoke Times and Liberal Media Slant...... lbhagen@aol.com

Sunday, March 09, 2014

 

Respect Condi Rice And All Black Conservatives

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Rutgers rage against Rice -- why do liberals have so much hate for black conservatives?
By: Juan Williams 3-9-2014 (Juan happens to be black)
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2014/03/09/rutgers-rage-against-rice-why-do-liberals-have-so-much-hate-for-black/
“Condoleezza Rice lacks “moral authority.” She fails to meet the standards of “exemplary citizenship” and she does not have what it takes to “inspire” graduating college seniors.
That crazy thinking comes from the New Brunswick Faculty Council of Rutgers University. They voted last week to ask university leadership to cancel Rice’s invitation to be this year’s Commencement Speaker and receive an honorary degree.
There is an added element at play here. There is a disgraceful double standard amongst liberals, particularly those in academia, in the hatred they direct at black conservatives.”
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Apparently the Rutgers Faculty Council would rather have a nice Liberal Democrat like Queens College had at their commencement.
6/2/06: NY Democrat: Shoot Pres. Bush between the eyes http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,197935,00.html
"NY Dem. Sen. Schumer is the man who would put a bullet between the president’s eyes if he could get away with it."
This from NY State Comptroller Democrat Alan Hevesi, long term prior professor of government and politics at Queens College, who made this statement to all assembled while participating in the commencement address at Queens College!
http://roanokeslant.blogspot.com/2006/06/ny-democrat-shoot-pres-bush-between.html
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I am a Rutgers Graduate, BSME Class ’60.  I wrote a three word email to my school: “Respect Condi Rice”. 
 I was very pleased and proud to receive back the following:
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Dear Mr. Hagen,

Thank you for sharing your input regarding Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice’s delivery of the 2014 Rutgers University–New Brunswick commencement address. The opinions of our alumni are important to us, and we appreciate your taking the time to write to us and express your thoughts.

In response to your email, I’d like to share the following message that President Barchi has issued regarding the 2014 commencement speaker.

Best,
Ayesha Gougouehi
Communications Assistant
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901
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Dear Members of the Rutgers Community,

On May 18, we will welcome former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to deliver the 2014 Rutgers University–New Brunswick commencement address. In recent weeks, members of our University community have engaged in spirited discussions, and faculty, staff, students, alumni, and a range of individuals from across the nation have written both in strong support of, and in opposition to, Condoleezza Rice as our commencement speaker. We have even heard from high school students who have written to say that they would withdraw their Rutgers applications if we rescind—or fail to rescind—our invitation to her. These are the kinds of exchanges that every great university welcomes. Like all vibrant intellectual communities, Rutgers can thrive only when it vigorously defends the free exchange of ideas in an environment of civil discourse. Our students—like all members of our University community—benefit from these kinds of energetic civic exchanges, and through them learn to develop, articulate, and defend their own values and their moral and ethical positions.

Whatever your personal feelings or political views about our commencement speaker, there can be no doubt that Condoleezza Rice is one of the most influential intellectual and political figures of the last 50 years. She has been on the Stanford faculty as a professor of Political Science since 1981, and she has won two of the university’s highest teaching distinctions. From 1993 to 1999, she served as Stanford’s Provost, the institution’s chief academic officer. In 2001, she accepted the offer to serve in Washington, D.C. as National Security Advisor and later United States Secretary of State, the first woman of color to serve in that role. In March 2009, Dr. Rice returned to Stanford University as a professor of political economy in the Graduate School of Business and in political science and as the Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy at the Hoover Institution. Dr. Rice’s success and influence is all the more impressive when considered in the context of her childhood in the segregated South, during the most tumultuous and violent years of the Civil Rights struggle.

As many of you have suggested in your letters and in discussions with me, we live in a time when politics can be deeply polarizing. Like our fellow citizens, you and I—our colleagues—have deep and sincerely held beliefs and convictions that often stand in stark contrast to others around us. Yet, we cannot protect free speech or academic freedom by denying others the right to an opposing view, or by excluding those with whom we may disagree. Free speech and academic freedom cannot be determined by any group. They cannot insist on consensus or popularity. These principles are, in fact, best illustrated and preserved when we defend perspectives that we oppose or when we protect what may appear to be a minority view.

My hope is that we can use these seemingly controversial moments to reaffirm our commitment to open and civil discourse. Indeed, they provide strong evidence of a healthy and engaged University community. I will continue to work with you to guarantee the University remains a space where ideas can be considered, discussed, and debated, a space that embraces and defends civil discourse, free speech, and academic freedom.

Sincerely,
Bob Barchi

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