Tag: diversity

Simultaneously Seeing and Not Seeing Race

Commentary Fifty years ago this year, I attended a performance in London of a Zulu version of “Macbeth.” It impressed upon me that Shakespeare was, if not quite universal (I doubt that his plays would mean much to the uncontacted tribes of the Amazon jungle, for example), of very wide appeal across cultures. About a…


‘Religious Organisation Should Hire to Ethos’ Argues Archbishop

In the second Religious Discrimination Bill meeting on Jan. 13, Melbourne Archbishop Peter Comensoli stated that he would not put forward any amendments and expressed that this act will finally protect all different groups of discrimination following disability, LGBTIQ and aged groups. At the meeting, Comensoli expressed that religious schools should be allowed the right…


It Pays to Be an Activist 

Commentary Do you recall the shrieking undergrad at Yale, the one yelling at professor Nicholas Christakis on the quad? As the professor spoke calmly to dozens of students surrounding him, at one point she commanded him to shut up, tossed a few f-words at him, and wondered how he ever got his faculty post in…


Fair Play for the Majority

Commentary Over the past 50 years, we have reorganized American and Canadian societies to favor and benefit less successful racial and ethnic minorities, particularly African Americans and Canadians, Hispanics, and American Indians in the United States and First Nations in Canada. Females are included, not because they’re underperforming, but because of past constraints. This is…


‘The View’? Sure, the Democrat View

“The View,” the women’s talk show on ABC, was created to be a thoughtful discourse for women by women. But a deeper look into its roots, its formula, and its talent reveals a desire to push a uniform viewpoint beneath the diversity it claims to purport. I present a factual analysis of the show and…


Bringing Social Justice to Sports

Commentary Sports are an expression of our physical energy, skills, and competitive instinct. They’re an inherent part of human nature. Even when we’re spectators rather than players, watching sports is a celebration of physical excellence, or at least attempts at excellence. For the tens of millions of spectators at stadiums, rinks, courts, and fields, vicarious…


The Myth of the Academic Dissident 

Commentary For the last 50 or 60 years in the humanities and intellectual spheres, the main goal, value, method, technique, motivation—whatever you want to call it—has been this: to uncover latent meanings in seemingly neutral or obvious texts, images, ideas, or practices. That has been the especial talent of teachers and scholars and critics. A…


BC Liberals Leadership Candidate Says Rejection From Race ‘An Affront to Democracy’

Conservative commentator and advocate Aaron Gunn says the rejection of his application to run in the BC Liberals’ leadership contest goes against party members’ democratic rights to choose their own leader. “It’s an affront to democracy,” Gunn told The Epoch Times, adding that the rejection is an example of elites “thinking that they know better than…


Rare Open Intelligence Hearing Focused on Diversity Discussions

It’s not every day that the heads of the CIA, NSA (National Security Agency), DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency), and ONI (Office of Naval Intelligence) all testify to Congress in an open setting. An Oct. 27 House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence hearing was one of those rare occasions. But instead of focusing on any of…


California Teacher Placed on Administrative Leave After Video Emerges of Her Wearing Faux Native American Headdress and Dancing in Class

A teacher at a Riverside, California school has been placed on administrative leave after a video emerged showing her wearing a faux Native American headdress while dancing and chanting in front of her class. Video footage of the clip, which was filmed in the classroom and shared on Twitter, shows the John W. North High School teacher waving…