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08/09/2023

Speech First
Fellow American,

Izabella Doricko is a college student at Southern Methodist University in Texas who has seen firsthand the challenges and backlash college students face when trying to speak on political topics in the classroom.

“This censorship culture is hurting everyone,” says Izabella, a Philosophy and Communication major. “My fellow classmates are timid and afraid to say anything regarding their opinions, even just for the sake of discussion. [But] the best way to learn and refine your beliefs is to put them on the table for rigorous debate and see if they hold up.
Izabella Doricko
Above: Izabella Doricko

“Engaging with dissenting viewpoints is an opportunity to grow and try to understand each other.”

One sensitive topic Izabella sees her peers struggling to discuss is the push for trans athletes to participate in women’s sports. “This is a very sensitive issue to talk about with my peers,” says Izabella, a former student athlete herself. “Retaliation is likely considering the political climate on college campuses. Issues that have historically been associated with women’s rights are now almost exclusively trans-rights.”

“I fear that soon there will be no more women’s sports in the traditional sense, due to most people’s silence and apathy on the issue. The reason Title IX exists is to ensure that women have equal competing opportunities as men. But the very rights that women have upheld for generations are being radically redefined under our watch and could soon be obsolete in only a few years’ time.”

Izabella has also experienced firsthand what happens when professors are committed to preaching their personal political ideology in the classroom, noting that when professors do this, it shuts down potential discussion and learning.

“In a course that was supposed to be about medical anthropology, [the] professor consistently refused to entertain any views that didn’t match her own political ideology,” she says. “The only students that would speak up in these scenarios were ones who already agreed with the professor, but most people stayed quiet.”

Despite these concerns, Izabella says she has had some positive interactions when it comes to campus free speech -- and when it happens, it’s a powerful reminder of just how valuable free discourse is.

“My [Political Philosophy] professor encouraged all of us to discuss any issue which we felt strongly about and explain why,” she describes. “I was astounded that every person in my group shared their stories, while everyone else charitably listened to them.”

Ultimately, Izabella says, “College is for exploring different opinions and learning -- not being told what to think. This culture of silencing and shunning your opponents is not going to age well.”

Fellow American, experiences like Izabella’s are why our work together, protecting students’ free speech rights on campus, is so critical.

Through advocacy, litigation, and education, your support for Speech First’s urgent work is putting colleges and universities on notice that shutting down unwanted speech will no longer be tolerated.

So thank you for your continued support of Speech First. It’s making a difference in the lives of real students just like Izabella Doricko!

Cherise Trump
Executive Director
Speech First
Cherise Trump

Xinhua - Fossil found in China reveals how leaf-eating birds drove plant evolution:

http://en.people.cn/n3/2023/0802/c90000-20053168.html

#Jeholornis #Birds #Angiosperm #Diet #Fossils #Evolution #SiliconDioxide #LiaoningProvince #PlantBiology #Ecology #Anthropology #Paleontology

04/05/2023

https://davidicke.com/2023/04/05/oh-how-they-laughed-woke-university-anthropologist-professor-shows-he-knows-nothing-about-anthropology/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPjHYHtSosU

davidicke.com

Videos

06/19/2023

Throughout central downtown El Paso, immigrants have set up tent like structures on the sidewalks. Garbage and feces have filled alleyways, lined the streets, and turned the town of 800,000 into a slum. This is a very different picture than what was painted for them by the cartels and coyotes back in their country. They were told coming to America meant getting set up for life. Now with Title 42 ending will it be easier or harder for people to come into the country? In this episode of 360 View, Scottie Nell Hughes is joined by a panel of experts, a professor of Anthropology & Social Change, Adrienne Pine, and a cuban immigrant Gabriel Llanes, to discuss which countries around the world are the easiest and the hardest when it comes to gaining citizenship.

People

Sorry, no results were found.

Circles

Sorry, no results were found.

Videos

06/19/2023

Throughout central downtown El Paso, immigrants have set up tent like structures on the sidewalks. Garbage and feces have filled alleyways, lined the streets, and turned the town of 800,000 into a slum. This is a very different picture than what was painted for them by the cartels and coyotes back in their country. They were told coming to America meant getting set up for life. Now with Title 42 ending will it be easier or harder for people to come into the country? In this episode of 360 View, Scottie Nell Hughes is joined by a panel of experts, a professor of Anthropology & Social Change, Adrienne Pine, and a cuban immigrant Gabriel Llanes, to discuss which countries around the world are the easiest and the hardest when it comes to gaining citizenship.

Posts

08/09/2023

Speech First
Fellow American,

Izabella Doricko is a college student at Southern Methodist University in Texas who has seen firsthand the challenges and backlash college students face when trying to speak on political topics in the classroom.

“This censorship culture is hurting everyone,” says Izabella, a Philosophy and Communication major. “My fellow classmates are timid and afraid to say anything regarding their opinions, even just for the sake of discussion. [But] the best way to learn and refine your beliefs is to put them on the table for rigorous debate and see if they hold up.
Izabella Doricko
Above: Izabella Doricko

“Engaging with dissenting viewpoints is an opportunity to grow and try to understand each other.”

One sensitive topic Izabella sees her peers struggling to discuss is the push for trans athletes to participate in women’s sports. “This is a very sensitive issue to talk about with my peers,” says Izabella, a former student athlete herself. “Retaliation is likely considering the political climate on college campuses. Issues that have historically been associated with women’s rights are now almost exclusively trans-rights.”

“I fear that soon there will be no more women’s sports in the traditional sense, due to most people’s silence and apathy on the issue. The reason Title IX exists is to ensure that women have equal competing opportunities as men. But the very rights that women have upheld for generations are being radically redefined under our watch and could soon be obsolete in only a few years’ time.”

Izabella has also experienced firsthand what happens when professors are committed to preaching their personal political ideology in the classroom, noting that when professors do this, it shuts down potential discussion and learning.

“In a course that was supposed to be about medical anthropology, [the] professor consistently refused to entertain any views that didn’t match her own political ideology,” she says. “The only students that would speak up in these scenarios were ones who already agreed with the professor, but most people stayed quiet.”

Despite these concerns, Izabella says she has had some positive interactions when it comes to campus free speech -- and when it happens, it’s a powerful reminder of just how valuable free discourse is.

“My [Political Philosophy] professor encouraged all of us to discuss any issue which we felt strongly about and explain why,” she describes. “I was astounded that every person in my group shared their stories, while everyone else charitably listened to them.”

Ultimately, Izabella says, “College is for exploring different opinions and learning -- not being told what to think. This culture of silencing and shunning your opponents is not going to age well.”

Fellow American, experiences like Izabella’s are why our work together, protecting students’ free speech rights on campus, is so critical.

Through advocacy, litigation, and education, your support for Speech First’s urgent work is putting colleges and universities on notice that shutting down unwanted speech will no longer be tolerated.

So thank you for your continued support of Speech First. It’s making a difference in the lives of real students just like Izabella Doricko!

Cherise Trump
Executive Director
Speech First
Cherise Trump

Xinhua - Fossil found in China reveals how leaf-eating birds drove plant evolution:

http://en.people.cn/n3/2023/0802/c90000-20053168.html

#Jeholornis #Birds #Angiosperm #Diet #Fossils #Evolution #SiliconDioxide #LiaoningProvince #PlantBiology #Ecology #Anthropology #Paleontology

04/05/2023

https://davidicke.com/2023/04/05/oh-how-they-laughed-woke-university-anthropologist-professor-shows-he-knows-nothing-about-anthropology/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPjHYHtSosU

davidicke.com

07/23/2022

Mental illness on parade: Woke mob claims ancient skeletons cannot be gendered as they might have identified as trans before
https://www.naturalnews.com/2022-07-22-wokies-attack-anthropology-skeletons-men-women-transgender.html

Is it possible for the long-dead remains of a human being to be transgender? According to some left-wing academics, the answer is yes. Jennifer A. Raff, an anthropology professor from The University of Kansas, claims that there are "no neat divisions between physically or genetically 'm

www.naturalnews.com

07/23/2022

Mental illness on parade: Woke mob claims ancient skeletons cannot be gendered as they might have identified as trans before

https://newstarget.com/2022-07-22-wokies-attack-anthropology-skeletons-men-women-transgender.html

Is it possible for the long-dead remains of a human being to be transgender? According to some left-wing academics, the answer is yes. Jennifer A. Raff, an anthropology professor from The University of Kansas, claims that there are “no neat divisions between physically or genetically ‘male’ or ‘female’ individuals” – and she is not alone […]

www.newstarget.com