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Un enfant en or... pour la pause café tout en profitant des plaisirs ...
Livraison de cafĂ© ou de votre boisson prĂ©fĂ©rĂ©e d ! âđ
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by Seth Mandel
The biggest myth regarding the campus anti-Semitism crisis is that itâs about speech. It is a self-serving myth: Institutions and activists that want to disregard their abuse of Jewish students will fall back on the claim that any attempt to hold them accountable for their actions is actually an attack on free speech.
Columbia University is learning what happens when that disingenuous trick starts to backfire: Students and professors take it as a license to do whatever they want, people end up in the hospital, and the government steps in to say this cannot continue to be done on their dime.
The Biden administration was fearful of standing up to the Hamas youth groups on campus. The Trump administration is happy to do so. Thus we have the announcement that three government agenciesâHealth and Human Services, the Department of Education, and the General Services Administrationâwill be reviewing federal contracts and grants with Columbia totaling around $5 billion.
Crucially, the announcement clearly avoids the penalizing of mere speech:
âAmericans have watched in horror for more than a year now, as Jewish students have been assaulted and harassed on elite university campuses,â Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in a statement. âUnlawful encampments and demonstrations have completely paralyzed day-to-day campus operations, depriving Jewish students of learning opportunities to which they are entitled. Institutions that receive federal funds have a responsibility to protect all students from discrimination. Columbiaâs apparent failure to uphold their end of this basic agreement raises very serious questions about the institutionâs fitness to continue doing business with the United States government.â
Assault isnât speech. Harassment, the definitions of which are laid out in these schoolsâ policy handbooks, doesnât include âcriticism of Israeli government policy,â as activists and well-meaning but foolish free-speech groups routinely claim. At Harvard, for example, âsuch aggression must be sufficiently severe or pervasive, and objectively offensive, that it creates a work, educational, or living environment that a reasonable person would consider intimidating, hostile, or abusive and denies the individual an equal opportunity to participate in the benefits of the workplace or the institutionâs programs and activities. Unless sufficiently severe or pervasive, a single act typically would not constitute bullying.â
Last, discrimination is also not speech. I wrote about one such prominent example last week: George Washington Universityâs professional psychology program penalized Jewish students for their religious background and Israeli students on the basis of their national origin, a textbook Title VI civil-rights violation.
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I guess now I have a reason to watch the superblow game. đ€
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Most languages do this

Unironically I like this
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