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View Full Version : Some Professors Sign Letter Telling Universities To Stand Up To CCP $$$$



Kathianne
02-23-2023, 02:46 PM
About time:

https://campusreform.org/article?id=21395


Professors are breaking the silence on China’s human rights violationsDozens of American professors signed a letter asking universities to break their silence on China’s human rights violations as the CCP cracks down on Zero Covid protesters.
The letter's authors imply that universities have remained silent because of “research access, collaborations or funding” from China.

Shelby Kearns | Associate Editor
February 23, 2023
Dozens of American professors signed a letter asking universities to break their silence on China’s human rights violations.


The recent letter addresses the former international students detained from the White Paper movement, the protests against China’s Zero Covid policies. The authors imply that universities remain silent because they fear losing “research access, collaborations or funding” from China.


“We, a group of scholars and students from around the world, call on universities, faculties, and others to speak up for Chinese students and scholars at risk,” the letter reads.


“Traditionally, universities have prioritized their research interests, while overlooking threats to academic freedom and issues of censorship. Few universities acknowledge the disparity in students’ rights to speak, let alone provide support to students when persecuted by authoritarian countries like China.”


[RELATED: READ: PROF. GIORDANO: American universities are 'turning a blind eye’ to 'foreign influence' on campuses]


Signatures are current as of Feb. 17, and interested students and academics can still sign the letter. Signatories include academics from Georgetown University, Yale, the University of Chicago, and others who joined this international effort to advocate for former students.


The University of Chicago’s Center for East Asian Studies previously issued a statement on alumna Qin Ziyi 秦梓奕, and within one day, Chinese authorities released her from detention, “though other factors may have contributed,” according to the letter.


One of the letter's signatories told Campus Reform that East Asian Studies centers could issue a joint statement like that of the University of Chicago.

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Gunny
02-24-2023, 09:26 AM
About time:

https://campusreform.org/article?id=21395Having a hard time getting past the source. So the very people teaching communism in our universities draw the line at what they consider "human rights violations"? Freely admit their silence was bought in research yuan?

Didn't these same universities shut down during the pandemic? Vilifying anyone that didn't get the immunization?

If China's zero tolerance covid policy/resulting actions is a human rights violation, where do these chuckleheads stand on the uyghurs? Gain of function testing?

Kathianne
02-24-2023, 12:01 PM
Having a hard time getting past the source. So the very people teaching communism in our universities draw the line at what they consider "human rights violations"? Freely admit their silence was bought in research yuan?

Didn't these same universities shut down during the pandemic? Vilifying anyone that didn't get the immunization?

If China's zero tolerance covid policy/resulting actions is a human rights violation, where do these chuckleheads stand on the uyghurs? Gain of function testing?

Campus Reform has zip to do with communism/socialism/revisionism/racism/ etc. It really is about REFORM.

Gunny
02-26-2023, 11:26 AM
Campus Reform has zip to do with communism/socialism/revisionism/racism/ etc. It really is about REFORM.

Reforming what the cost of what? Campus Reform, the publication, promoting a story about a group (?) of college professors urging established institution to speak out against its benefactors. In this case, the CCP and its commie practices within the institution itself. I was just wondering why they weren't speaking out about the CCP as a whole.

I don't pretend to be as knowledgeable as you on our education system, especially "institutions of alleged higher learning", but I can see the big picture. Yes, it is noble that these people would speak out against the institution that funds them. If it ends like everything else in this country where people try and fight the corrupt institution, I have to wonder if result is going to be worth the cost.

As far as I'm concerned, China shouldn't be allowed to have any influence in anything in this country. But there's no money in that.