Reimagining College: Three New Schools
…atheist institutions. Thales College This fall Thales College, the vision of Bob Luddy, opened near Raleigh, North Carolina to a handful of students. Bob, another really good friend, owns CaptiveAire,…
…atheist institutions. Thales College This fall Thales College, the vision of Bob Luddy, opened near Raleigh, North Carolina to a handful of students. Bob, another really good friend, owns CaptiveAire,…
…and the University of North Carolina.) However, the main reason for the ubiquity of such practices is that only people who are, in fact, victims of such discriminatory practices have…
…game and his Reformation Parliament of Henry VIII, in which you might suffer beheading, can be purchased from the University of North Carolina Press. Visit also reactingconsortium.org. Image: Adobe Stock…
…talk on “Monogamy, Polyamory, and Relationship Anarchy, Consent and Communication, Sexual Health, Porn, Sex Toys, Kink, and more.” Then there’s the sex week at the University of North Carolina at…
Last week, both Harvard and the University of North Carolina (UNC) filed their response briefs with the United States Supreme Court (SCOTUS), which is now considering two lawsuits against the…
…in the North and South, benefitted indirectly from it, and a minority deplored it. It was just a background fact of life, as the first North American legal code makes…
…Harvard University and the University of North Carolina (UNC). On May 9, 2022, my group filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court to support the plaintiff, Students for…
The United States Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear cases against Harvard University and the University of North Carolina challenging the use of racial preferences in college admissions. The…
The North Carolina General Assembly is considering a new bill (Senate Bill 729) which seeks to outlaw racial discrimination and racial preferences in public affairs. The bill’s language is identical…
…is also deeply troubling if not outright disqualifying,” said the committee’s ranking Republican, Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina. “Ms. Lhamon has a history of using inflammatory rhetoric, violating students’…
…Fair Admissions (SFFA), a nonprofit with more than 20,000 members, many of whom are Asian American, has filed lawsuits against Harvard, the University of North Carolina, the University of Texas…
…boasts 12 schools in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Four more academies are opening over the next two years, including one in Greenville, South Carolina. The academy’s mission is to…
…hoax, the district attorney persisted in prosecuting team members. Progressive journalists and many self-styled “criminal justice reformers” defended the prosecutor, including the executive director of the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry…
…victim status; rather, elite arbiters of culture portray them as race traitors, or not at all. Note the newspaper political cartoonists in Kentucky, North Carolina, and South Carolina who drew…
…Secession of South Carolina from the Federal Union. After a long list of depredations committed by the Northern states, such as denouncing slavery as “sinful” and urging slaves to revolt,…
…are a couple of new affirmative action cases entering the pipeline—the trial of SFFA v. The University of North Carolina has just begun, and the Department of Justice has just…
…and in some cases the letter of the regulations. In the first group, the University of North Carolina stands as a typical example. The university’s new procedures provide a clear…
…Notre Dame and the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, have abruptly reversed course and returned to exclusively online instruction following local surges in coronavirus infections. Similar to the frantic…
…to People Who Don’t Want to Know, Dissertation: 2010, University of North Carolina-Greensboro, p. 29. 6 The literature on the concepts of thought reform and thought remolding is immense. Major…
…of North Carolina-Wilmington (2011)). Indeed, the First Amendment even protects racist faculty publications, as an appeals court ruled in 1992. (See Levin v. Harleston (1992)). GMU could unconstitutionally use “anti-racism”…
…students, one that will incline them to activism against Progressivism’s designated villains. Murawski quotes Professor Julia Jordan-Zachery of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, who said, “I oftentimes think…
…In Massachusetts, a 1783 court decision ended slavery, and all of the Northern States had passed emancipations laws by 1803. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 outlawed slavery in territories north…
…wars, they only ensure future losses as well. What happened at North Carolina State this month shouldn’t be repeated. The episode followed a customary plot. An official at a university…
…restrictions on schools could be lifted. The University of North Carolina might have its governing board picked in a less political manner, or the University of California could select more…
…of blacks, Hispanics, and Native Americans. An Asian-American group is suing Harvard University for discrimination and is taking similar actions against the University of North Carolina and the University of…
…campus due process, Claire McCaskill, an article in Humanity and Society examining procedures in Maryland, and a Ph.D. dissertation examining policies in North Carolina. Strikingly absent from this list: articles…
…red states have tried, despite federal pressure, to create a fairer system. North Carolina and North Dakota enacted laws requiring schools to allow accused students to have lawyers. (UNC then…
…wrongfully accused students would have ignored the Innocence Project (with which they have, in fact, been actively involved), and instead focused on raising funds for the North Carolina NAACP. That…
…Court Justice William O. Douglas, Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff, Harvard historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Yale chaplain William Sloane Coffin, former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, University of North Carolina President…
…the University of Texas, a man who exposed an admissions scandal– and consequently faced impeachment and vindictive legal proceedings. Or how about governance in North Carolina’s Research Triangle, where Duke…