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Affiche du document DEI Exposed

DEI Exposed

PhD

11h03min00

  • Livres audio
  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
884 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 11h03min.
DEI Exposed puts the spotlight on a Big Con: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.DEI gurus siphoned funds for education into social engineering programs. They suckered and swindled some of the smartest people in the U.S., cost universities dearly in terms of funds and reputation, and ruined the livelihoods of countless faculty members.DEI has fueled antisemitism on college campuses and, ironically, robbed many students of fair treatment and freedom of speech-two things DEI advocates supposedly champion.How did the hustlers pull it off?This book documents the dubious credentials of DEI superstars, the use of cult conversion tactics on students, the cultivation of campus informants to instill fear and suspicion, and the lawsuits that reveal DEI's virulent racialism at a high cost to universities in bad publicity and legal damages.DEI Exposed maps this corruption so that we can chart a course for a restoration of higher education for years to come.Ridgley reveals the striking contradictions between DEI's stated aims and its practical effects.- Ram Mudambi, Frank M. Speakman Professor of Strategy, Fox School of Business, Temple UniversityThe DEI monster has continually sprouted new tentacles, and Ridgley has given us an account of how it came to be its lurid self.- Bruce Gilley, author of The Case for ColonialismWith razor-sharp analysis, Ridgley dissects how higher education compromised itself, abandoning merit and intellectual vigor in favor of pseudoscience and ideological conformity.- Nicholas Giordano, Professor of Political Science and host of The P.A.S. Report PodcastDr. Stanley K. Ridgley is Clinical Full Professor of Strategic Management at Drexel University. He holds a Doctorate and Master's in International Relations and Security from Duke University and an International MBA from Temple University. He is a Russian language linguist and former Military Intelligence Officer.
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Affiche du document Zora Hurston and the Strange Case of Ruby McCollum

Zora Hurston and the Strange Case of Ruby McCollum

C. Arthur Ellis

15h18min45

  • Histoire
  • Livres audio
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1225 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 15h19min.
In the timber camps of North Florida in the 1930s, Zora Neale Hurston, a famous African-American anthropologist and author, discovered the unwritten segregationist law allowing a white man to force a white woman to have his children. Dr. Ellis coined the term "paramour rights" and attributed it to Hurston's character in this novel. Twenty years later, she received an assignment from the Pittsburgh Courier to cover the murder trial of Ruby McCollum, a wealthy colored woman accused of slaying a white physician who had recently been elected to the Florida state senate--and rumored to be her lover and father of one of her children. Intrigued by what she considered a case of paramour rights, Hurston accepted the Courier assignment. What she discovered in the small town of Live Oak was a sordid tale of interracial sex, greed, drugs and murder, concealed by the guilty silence of its fearful citizens who did not want their secret involvement in the subterranean world of illegal gambling and liquor sales to be revealed. To paraphrase Hurston, she felt that the story played itself out in a conspiracy of silence, behind a curtain of secrecy. The audio version of the story contains a new Introduction and Afterword read by the author, while the novel itself is read by the talented Trei Taylor, who brings a unique depth of character to Zora Neale Hurston.
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