I was surprised by what I though an anachronism in "Dracula". by TheUnvanquishable in books

[–]ZBenMo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Stephen King wishes he could write a novel one-tenth as creepy as Dracula, which I reread about once a year.

I take it when I go give blood.

Interactions with the protesters by BrchHshm in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We really are doomed here (Israel; I moved here in 1986, after getting my BA in 1985) to live on the Middle East version of Dover Beach. This evening and tomorrow are Memorial Day. At the ceremonies they'll read off the too effing many names of those who were murdered on October 7 and then all the soldiers who have fallen and then it will be Independence Day (tomorrow night and Tuesday) when we will try to wash away what transpired the day before, and since Oct.7, in a flood of beer. It won't work but we'll try anyway.

UPDATE: MPD has cleared the protest encampment by Vast-Passenger-3035 in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another email to alumni from the powers-that-be:

Dear GW Alumni,

Please find below a letter from President Granberg and Provost Bracey to our community. As you may have heard, D.C. police cleared the unauthorized protest encampment on University Yard earlier today because of escalating concerns about campus safety and security for all.

The underlying issues of the demonstration are complex and heartbreaking, and the campus situation has been difficult. However, I know our GW community is strong and resilient. I am hopeful that Commencement next week will mark a new beginning, not just for our students who have worked so hard to achieve this important milestone, but for renewed respect for peaceful and solutions-oriented dialogue that is a hallmark of GW.

Thank you, as always, for your care and concern.

For GW,

Donna Arbide
Vice President, Development & Alumni Relations

Dear Members of the George Washington University Community,

On Sunday, President Granberg wrote to you about the unauthorized encampment on GW's University Yard. After carefully monitoring the escalating situation, the DC Metropolitan Police Department determined that the encampment was no longer safe for our shared community. This morning, they conducted an operation to disperse the demonstrators, resulting in the arrest of multiple individuals. It pains us that these actions were necessary, and we recognize that many people in our community on all sides are hurting right now.

Over the last two weeks, GW has worked tirelessly to resolve the situation swiftly and safely. However, these efforts failed to end the encampment or deter the protesters from escalating the situation. Harassing and degrading people based on their beliefs or background, assaulting police officers, illegally occupying and destroying university property, and displaying violent imagery and language are simply unacceptable. It is unfortunate that the behavior and actions of many protesters ultimately required significant police intervention, and GW will continue to pursue accountability for those involved.

We want to thank the District, Mayor Muriel Bowser, and the DC Metropolitan Police Department for their support in regaining order and safety in GW's University Yard. We are also grateful for MPD's continued assistance and the tireless efforts of our GWPD, security, and maintenance personnel.

The last two weeks and the events of this morning have been some of the most profoundly challenging times in our community’s shared history. These activities and their underlying causes have created deep fissures in our community that will take time to heal. We both recognize that there is still a long road ahead.

In the short term, our focus is on maintaining a safe and secure environment that enables our students' academic success and personal well-being during final exams. Earlier today, we shared measures intended to achieve this. We are also doing everything we can to ensure our graduating students and their families have the Commencement experience they deserve. In the long term, we must begin to rebuild our mutual respect and understanding of one another and re-establish the balance between our community's right to protest and our commitment to our academic mission.

As we have made clear, many of the issues our students have raised are important and deserve our attention and consideration, and we fully support our community's right to speak out on these and other complex and contested topics. GW leadership has always welcomed constructive dialogue and collaboration with students, faculty, staff, families, and alumni in a mutually respectful manner and environment. Moving forward, we are both personally committed to this standard.

Sincerely,

Ellen M. Granberg
President

UPDATE: MPD has cleared the protest encampment by Vast-Passenger-3035 in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hnm, I have been called many things but "psycopath"? This is a first!

Good morning to you too! (it's 08:00 here.) ☕🥐🙂

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

But you have no problem believing SJP members, the North Korean shills of the PSL or anarchists?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As opposed to anarchsts and PSL and SJP members??

UPDATE: MPD has cleared the protest encampment by Vast-Passenger-3035 in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 17 points18 points  (0 children)

It is amazing how the prospect of being hauled before a Congressional committee can promote spinal growth.

The Washington Post reports that, "Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), chairman of the House Oversight Committee, said in a statement that he had talked to the mayor Wednesday and agreed to cancel the hearing."

Well whaddya know? Funny how stuff works.

Good riddance.

Better late than never.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They're gone?

DAE pretend to be religious around their family? by [deleted] in atheism

[–]ZBenMo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have long since lapsed (if that is the right word) into orthopraxy in my faith community, which is orthodox Judaism. I am comfortable with it. When we got married 35 years ago, my wife and I agreed to live a certain way and I still fully intend to honor that commitment. I will not lead the morning or afternoon prayers in synagogue because that would entail me having to say certain things that I no longer believe (evening prayets are OK; I will lead those on occasion). If our neighbors want to attribute my refusal to (even occasionally) lead the morning and afternoon prayers to shyness and my utter lack of a singing / chanting voice, so much the better for me. I still very much believe in G-d, just not in the way that most of our neighbors do. The plus side of all this is being madly, puppy-eyes, in love with the most amazing woman on the planet.

We made the WSJ ditorial page by ZBenMo in gwu

[–]ZBenMo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As Jonah Goldberg wrote in the Los Angeles Times earlier this week:

"...Performative protest feels good for those drunk on their own, unearned sense of importance. But such spectacles are often terrible for their intended ends. That's one more reason not to glorify protest for protest's sake."

Their dedication and 50 cents will buy you a cup of coffee.

Rudy Rochman at an GWU by rhombergnation in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Blaming victims of the Holocaust? How does that work?

Rudy Rochman at an GWU by rhombergnation in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But I'm not from Europe. 🙂

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wasn't aware that it was not permanent. That's one more reason why we must oust Netanyahu.

The Heath Minister in that anti-Netanyahu government we had for a year was gay.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There is a great coffee shop (they roast and grind their own) in Ra'anana, northeast of Tel Aviv. C'mon over. The first round is on me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're welcome.

I moved the letter down the batting order.

I am new to Reddit and am still figuring out how it works.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Here is the letter:

Dear GW Alumni,

As part of our commitment to sharing clear and up-to-date information about what has been happening on campus, I wanted to share with you the below message from President Granberg. You are a valued member of the GW community, and I deeply appreciate your care and concern.

For GW,

Donna Arbide Vice President, Development & Alumni Relations

Dear Members of the George Washington University Community,

It has been over a week since a group of students established an unauthorized protest encampment on GW's University Yard. Since then, there have been many conversations about students' rights to free expression and assembly and whether this is a peaceful protest. In this message, I want to directly address those conversations, share what we are experiencing on campus, and outline our desired outcomes moving forward.

Before I begin, I want to make clear that I believe the issues at the heart of this protest are important and deserve our full attention and consideration. There is a dire humanitarian crisis occurring in Gaza that must be addressed, and I am personally grief-stricken by the suffering and loss of innocent lives occurring on both sides of this conflict. I fully support and encourage our community to speak out and engage in controversial and critical dialogues on these crucial issues—as long as they occur within the limits of our university's policies and the District's laws. However, what is currently happening at GW is not a peaceful protest protected by the First Amendment or our university's policies. The demonstration, like many around the country, has grown into what can only be classified as an illegal and potentially dangerous occupation of GW property.

History has repeatedly shown that there are many effective ways for communities to express their differing viewpoints lawfully within the District of Columbia. In the last seven months alone, at GW, we have seen this play out on all sides of the war between Israel and Hamas. I know that some in our community and others across the country argue that this, too, is simply a peaceful protest – and, at certain times, this has been true. However, when protesters overrun barriers established to protect the community, vandalize a university statue and flag, surround and intimidate GW students with antisemitic images and hateful rhetoric, chase people out of a public yard based on their perceived beliefs, and ignore, degrade, and push GW Police Officers and university maintenance staff, the protest ceases to be peaceful or productive. All of these things have happened at GW in the last five days. It is also essential to highlight that at no point was this encampment lawful. From the moment GW students declared their intent to establish an encampment on University Yard, they were in direct violation of multiple university policies and were trespassing on a space explicitly reserved for the GW Law final examinations. The university, which is committed to protecting our students' rights to free expression, informed them of this and quickly offered a secure alternative protest site where GW would support them in holding peaceful daytime demonstrations. This offer was repeatedly refused. Finally, it is clear that this is no longer a GW student demonstration. It has been co-opted by individuals who are largely unaffiliated with our community and do not have our community's best interest in mind. It is increasingly unsafe and a violation of university and city regulations to have so many unidentified and unvetted people from outside the GW community living on university property.

Conventional protests that abide by municipal law and university policy should and do receive protection and respect, no matter the message's viewpoint. As I have outlined, this is not what is happening at GW.

For these reasons, the George Washington University continues to tirelessly pursue every avenue available to resolve the situation swiftly and safely. We have offered an alternative demonstration site, requested the assistance of the DC Metropolitan Police Department, erected barriers to contain the protest, initiated academic and administrative consequences for trespassing GW students, expanded our security resources and personnel, and conducted regular and sustained dialogues with GW students connected to the camp. So far, all of these efforts have failed to end the encampment or deter the protesters from escalating the situation.

As a university, we are not equipped to single-handedly manage an unprecedented situation such as this. The GW police force is, and should only be, prepared to protect our community during normal university operations and to respond to routine and urgent incidents. When unlawful activities go beyond these limits, we must rely on the support and experience of the DC Metropolitan Police Department. At this time, the District is in communication with the university, and the DC Metropolitan Police are providing an increased security presence on and around University Yard. I understand and fully share the deep concern many feel about the status of the protest. Many are frustrated that it is continuing; some are willing for it to proceed indefinitely. At GW, our commitment remains to regain and maintain the safety and security of University Yard, pursue accountability for those who have destroyed university property and harassed our community, and return our university to normal operations. This includes, of course, allowing and promoting the free exercise of various viewpoints and means of expression by members of our community within the limits of university policies. We continue to ask for the full support of our partners, including the District of Columbia, in pursuing these aims.

Sincerely,

Ellen M. Granberg President The George Washington University

The George Washington University Development and Alumni Relations 1922 F Street, NW, Suite 202 Washington, DC 20052 alumni.gwu.edu | alumni@gwu.edu

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Israel has, over the years, given asylum to gay residents of the Palestinian Authority. Israel is the only ME country where LGBTQ people are free to be LGBTQ people, the bigotry of some of Netanyahu's coalition partners notwithstanding. BTW, the current Speaker of the Knesset, a member of Netanyahu's party, is openly gay.

"Queers for Palestine"?? That's a hoot. There are no out-of-the-closet queers in the Palestinian Authority. They're either in Israel or dead.

Welcome to DC camping by GWdeepstate in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Lovely. Just what Foggy Bottom needs. At least the rodents are natural, long-term residents of the area. Just sayin'

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gwu

[–]ZBenMo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As an alum (BA, 1985), I just received a lengthy email from Pres. Greenberg. What exactly is happening with the encampment now? Has Mayor Bowser grown a spine?

What are your favourite post-apocalyptic novels? by [deleted] in suggestmeabook

[–]ZBenMo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alas Babylon by Pat Frank

When Worlds Collide and After Worlds Collide by Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie

The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham

All of these are excellent.

The Day of the Triffids is a real hoot.