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Monday, November 14, 2011

University of Pennsylvania Professors Stand in SOLIDARITY with Occupy Wall Street Movement


Alfred E Pluribus Nooman


Hat tip to Students for Academic Freedom

It seems Penn State isn't the only institution of higher learning in the Keystone State infested with people with no common sense. Look at this letter signed by a bunch of professors at Penn:

http://www.studentsforacademicfreedom.org/news/2835/dozens-of-u-penn-professors-sign-statement-of-solidarity-with-occupy-wall-street-protestors

Occupy Wall Street solidarity statement





"As faculty members at the University of Pennsylvania, we wish to express our solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement now underway in our city and elsewhere.



This movement expresses widespread anger with the economic and political disenfranchisement of the great majority of the American people. Occupy Wall Street is protesting a system that provides increasingly few opportunities for the majority –– the 99% –– while generating vast profits for a tiny minority. Along with the demonstrators, we are demanding an end to the extreme inequalities that structure our society.

We share with many Americans acute anger at the government’s unconditional bailout of bankers and Wall Street firms that drove the economy to disaster. Our country urgently needs to address not the problems of Wall Street but the problems of the 99%: massive unemployment of the American people, the erosion of our social safety networks, our decaying infrastructures, social and education programs, and workers’ wages, rights, and benefits. We oppose the undemocratic collusion of big business with government at all levels.


We join Occupy Wall Street in calling for urgent action to increase employment and to protect programs such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, in part by requiring the wealthy, the investment bankers, and the large corporations to pay their fair share of taxes. We also join the protesters in decrying the disastrous effects of the costly, unjustified wars that the United States has been conducting overseas since 2001. Only by identifying the complex interconnections between repressive economic, social, and political regimes can social and economic justice prevail in this country and around the globe. We applaud the efforts to keep the protests peaceful and democratic.


As teachers we express our conviction that without social justice, education is a shell game. And as scholars we celebrate the creative and intellectual work of Occupy Wall Street as an essential partner to our own efforts to facilitate the emergence of a better social order and a smarter commitment to its lively perpetuation.


We join our colleagues in the labor movement, especially teachers unions, and at other universities and colleges, in supporting this movement. We call on all members of the Penn community to lend their support to this peaceful and potentially transformative movement."



Ania Loomba, English

Suvir Kaul, English

Anne Norton, Political Science

Charles Bernstein, English

Toorjo Ghose, Social Policy and Practice

Robert Vitalis, Political Science

Zachary Lesser, English

Deborah Thomas, Anthropology

Max Cavitch, English

Andrea Goulet, French

Jed Esty, English

Timothy Corrigan, Cinema Studies, English, and History of Art

John Richetti, English Emeritus

Marcia Ferguson, Theater Arts

Chi-ming Yang, English

Nicola M. Gentili, Cinema Studies

Eve Troutt Powell, History and Africana Studies

Katie L. Price, English

Rita Barnard, English

Lisa Mitchell, South Asia Studies

Salamishah Tillet, English

Thadious Davis, English

Kathleen Hall, Graduate School of Education

Amy Kaplan, English

Herman Beavers, English

Jim English, English

Phyllis Rackin, English Emerita

Jean-Michel Rabaté, English

Heather Love, English

Marie Gottschalk, Political Science

Bob Perelman, English

Andrew Lamas, Urban Studies

Karen Beckman, History of Art and Cinema Studies

Nancy Bentley, English

Nancy J. Hirschmann, Political Science

Demie Kurtz, Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies

Shannon Lundeen, Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies

Michelle Taransky, English

David L. Eng, English

Michael Leja, History of Art and Visual Studies

Tsitsi Jaji, English

Yin-Ling Wong, Social Policy and Practice

Mark Stern, Social Policy and Practice

Dennis Culhane, Social Policy and Practice

Tukufu Zubeiri, Sociology

Nina Auerbach, English Emerita

David S. Roos, Biology

Tulia Falleti, Political Science

Projit Mukharji, History and Sociology of Science

E. Ann Matter, Religious Studies

Jamal Elias, Religious Studies

Toni Bowers, English.

Devan Patel, South Asian Studies

Julia Lynch, Political Science

Ezekiel Dixon-Roman, Social Policy and Practice

Roberta Iversen, Social Policy and Practice

Michèle Richman, French

David Kazanjian, English

Tamara J. Walker, History

Christopher Nichols, History

Andrea Doyle, Social Policy & Practice

Sharon Ravitch, Graduate School of Education

Cheikh Babou, History

James Ker, Classical Studies

Emily Wilson, Classical Studies

Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, History of Art

Nuzhat Ahmad, Medicine

Bethany Wiggin, German

Josephine Parks, English

Steven Hahn, History

Devin Griffiths, English

Lydie Moudileno, French

Virginia Chang, Medicine

Margreta de Grazia, English

Emma Dillon, Music

Rahul Mangharam, of Electrical and Systems Engineering

Damon Freeman, Social Policy & Practice

Karin Rhodes, Social Policy & Practice

Paul K. Saint-Amour, English

Peter Stallybrass, English

Betsy Rymes, Graduate School of Education

Deborah Burnham, English

Howard C. Stevenson, Graduate School of Education

Michael Weisberg, Philosophy

Lyndon K. Gill, Anthropology & Africana Studies

Joan Goodman, Graduate School of Education

Deborah Luepnitz, Department of Psychiatry

Al Filreis, Department of English

Danny Snelson, Department of English
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Ain't solidarity grand?

7 comments:

Squid said...

Sure, these professors stand with the OWS unclean, ignorant, stupids. The professors teach unless courses that cannot be used in the job market, which demands real skills to produce products. In addition, the professors teach "Social Justice", Environmental Justice", "Oppression", "Corporate Greed" and Socialism/Marxist.
Thus, the great unwashed complain about not having jobs, and students loans (to learn unusable skills, with exception of English). The professors need to perpetuate their failure at these violent, anti-Semitic, rapefests.

Squid

Squid

Findalis said...

It is so nice to see these upstanding professors take a positive stand in favor of rape, murder and assault.

I did notice not one signature of a Professor of a "real" science.

Gary Fouse said...

Findalis,

You hit upon the secret. It is the humanities where the problems lie.

Miggie said...

Good point. Of all these academics only one is from a discipline (Electrical and Systems Engineering) where a graduate could expect a job offer.

This is typical of liberal "stage one" thinking. They never, ever, think about "what comes next." This goes from selecting a major useful in the marketplace to trying to duplicate the Tea Party with Occupy Wall Street. Try finding a job with a Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies degree. The obvious thing that would happen once you set up tents with free food, etc., is that you will draw derelicts, drug dealers, and assorted crazies. This trait is embedded in the liberal mind from academia to Obama.

Siarlys Jenkins said...

Newsflash: Gary Fouse equates anyone who has a different opinion than himself with rape of ten year old boys. Wasn't there an expatriate Austrian who used to talk like that, name of Schickelgruber or something like that? Had a Jewish grandparent if I remember right.

Gary Fouse said...

Siarlys,

I love your method of connecting dots. It's called the Rorschach test, isn't it?

Siarlys Jenkins said...

Gary Rohrschach.