HIGHER ED HAS CHOSEN SIDES. AND IT CHOSE . . . POORLY.

A University of Virginia alumnus blasted his alma mater for promoting a “partisan” political agenda.

  • A University of Virginia alumnus blasted his alma mater for promoting a “partisan” political agenda.

  • The alumnus shared an email he received from the university’s Miller Center CEO, which he says is evidence of this.

A University of Virginia alumnus is calling out his alma mater after a college official inadvertently sent him an email that he says highlights the school’s political bias.

Stan Gordon shared with Campus Reform the email he received from UVA Miller Center Director and CEO William Antholis on December 10. In the message, addressed to “Slade,” Antholis presents the idea of hosting a “nonpartisan” discussion on impeachment. The email was sent just days before President Donald Trump was formally impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives.

“As an alumnus, it just is not acceptable in terms of what the university stands for…”    

During an exclusive interview with Campus Reform, Gordon said that upon conducting some research, he believes the email was intended for former U.S. Republican Sen. Slade Gorton of Washington State.

 

 

HIGHER EDUCATION UPDATE: This public college blocked a student from sharing his faith. Only the Supreme Court can give him justice.

We are primarily funded by readers. Please subscribe and donate to support us!

Public officials ‘know how to game the legal system’

If you live in Alabama, Florida or Georgia, your public officials can violate your constitutional rights with no legal repercussions as long as they change those unconstitutional policies after you sue them.

That’s because the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals threw out a lawsuit against Georgia Gwinnett College for twice blocking a Christian student from sharing his faith on public grounds – even when he relocated to its tiny “free speech zone.”

 

 

h/t GR

Views:

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.