Male professor faces sanction for elevator joke - Calls it ‘chilling example of political correctness

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A male professor who made a joke in a crowded elevator at an academic conference is now facing disciplinary charges after a female professor who was there filed a formal complaint.

Richard Ned Lebow, professor of international political theory at King’s College in London, was in a jammed elevator when someone asked him what floor he needed to get off on, according to a Washington Post opinion piece.

“Ladies’ lingerie,” he joked.

He was attending the International Studies Association conference in San Francisco at the time. Simona Sharoni, professor or women’s and gender studies at Merrimack College in Massachusetts, also present in the elevator, took offense and several hours after the incident, she filed a complaint with the association, which found that Lebow violated the group’s code of conduct.

After Lebow was made aware of the complaint, he sent Sharoni an email telling her “I certainly had no desire to insult women or to make you feel uncomfortable.” He also suggested she may have “interpreted my remark out of context.”

“Like you, I am strongly opposed to the exploitation, coercion or humiliation of women,” Lebow wrote, according to the Post. “As such evils continue, it seems to me to make sense to direct our attention to real offenses, not those that are imagined or marginal. By making a complaint to ISA that I consider frivolous — and I expect, will be judged this way by the ethics committee — you may be directing time and effort away from the real offenses that trouble us both.”

The ISA committee found fault with Lebow characterizing Sharoni’s complaint as “frivolous.” It instructed him to issue an “unequivocal apology,” which he refused to do.

Lebow told colleagues this is “a horrifying and chilling example of political correctness” that “encourages others to censor their remarks for fear of retribution.”

"For decades, women and other marginalized groups in the academy had to put up with white men who decided what counts as a violation and what is ‘frivolous,’" Sharoni told The Chronicle. "As someone who has dedicated her life to confronting sexism (and other forms of discrimination and oppression) in academic spaces, I cannot and will not remain silent when misogyny is at play."

Lebow faces appropriate sanctions from ISA if he doesn’t write an apology by May 15.

ISA did not immediately respond to request for comment.
 
see, this is the problem: Third Wave Feminism has combined with Postmodernist Philosophy and the result is that anyone (EXCEPT the person making a statement/joke) can decide what is sexist (or racist, for that matter). This is "Critical Theory", where Feels > Reals, and if a person who becomes offended decides that a word or phrase or object is "sexist", then it IS, no matter what anyone else says (and according to the LiveJournal Autists and TumblrTards, "INTENT IS NOT MAGICAL!", meaning that Intent on the part of the person making the statement/joke/whatever is IRRELEVANT IN ALL CASES, and ONLY what the offended person thinks or feels about it matters). They get to redefine words randomly to suit them, which confuses us Normies.

This is why Postmodernist Philosophy has to be rooted out and debunked. It's poison and cancer and will ruin human interaction for all time, especially if it gets a firm foothold in Normie-Land.
 
Pictured here is a classic example of a mid 2nd wave to early 3rd wave radfem. Notice the inability to smile, as if the very act of showing happiness in any way would bring immense pain to the subject.
All those types are terfs and have been purged from academia for the most part. She's down with gender, probably.

Anyway, responding to these things is a mistake because you can't make anyone happy. You especially can't convince anyone that they are complaining frivolously.
 
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"For decades, women and other marginalized groups in the academy had to put up with white men who decided what counts as a violation and what is ‘frivolous,’"Sharoni told The Chronicle. "As someone who has dedicated her life to confronting sexism (and other forms of discrimination and oppression) in academic spaces, I cannot and will not remain silent when misogyny is at play."
As a woman I think you're being completely frivolous. You weren't being oppressed or discriminated against and you need to lolcalmdown.
 
As a woman I think you're being completely frivolous. You weren't being oppressed or discriminated against and you need to lolcalmdown.

The cultural studies entire existence requires 24/7 oppression, so the second she calms down, she admits her entire life was a lie. That's why you avoid these humorless cunts and let them die alone in a filthy nursing home after her state-mandated guardian steals all their money.
 
The cultural studies entire existence requires 24/7 oppression, so the second she calms down, she admits her entire life was a lie. That's why you avoid these humorless cunts and let them die alone in a filthy nursing home after her state-mandated guardian steals all their money.
Being a feminist of the postmodernist third wave variety, she feels she must instantly STOMP (literally or figuratively) all over male humor because she wants to be the oppressor. And in this situation, she literally is.
 
This is very good. More happenings like this and sooner the academic establishment wakes to see the monster it has created.
 
Washington Post opinion piece: said:
Simona Sharoni, professor of women’s and gender studies at Merrimack College in Massachusetts, took offense. As she recounted in a formal complaint lodged less than four hours later, Lebow “said, with a smile on his face, ‘women’s lingerie,’ and all his buddies laughed. After they walked out, the woman standing next to me turned to me and said, ‘I wonder if we should have told them that it is no longer acceptable to make these jokes!’ It took me a while to figure out that this man thought it was funny to make a reference to men shopping for lingerie while attending an academic conference. I am still trying to come to terms with the fact that we froze and didn’t confront him. . . . As a survivor of sexual harassment in the academy, I am quite shaken by this incident.”

What a bint. Men still buy lingerie for their girlfriends/wives as gifts. This is one of those situations where most would either laugh along at an old joke or just shrug it off and go on with their day. The fact that this woman took the time to complain over a situation that essentially sounds as threatening and traumatic as an old Nescafe Gold Blend commercial just shows how valuable she considers her time as a professional.

 
This is very good. More happenings like this and sooner the academic establishment wakes to see the monster it has created.

Not happening, the rot has set in so deeply only burning the entire fucking thing down and starting over will get rid of these people.
 
I am offended that people are offend of the male professor right to talk and wear women's lingerie. I want to sue the gender studies professor for offending me on the right of male crossdressing.
 
:story: Ah a classic joke so of course some broad took offense.

That is a whole lotta words to say "my vagina is full of sand and I have no sense of humor".

Pictured: what an easily offended Gender Studies professor may look like.
16581_sharoni_headshot8-16.rev.1501080935.jpg
I didnt know Richard Dawkins took to dressing like a old lady english teacher. Looks like the seppos are unable to handle any form of bants lads.
 
Being a feminist of the postmodernist third wave variety, she feels she must instantly STOMP (literally or figuratively) all over male humor because she wants to be the oppressor. And in this situation, she literally is.
Certainly someone worth caricaturing at their own expense!
 
it's too late I'm afraid, for they are already #WOKE

Not happening, the rot has set in so deeply only burning the entire fucking thing down and starting over will get rid of these people.

I would slightly disagree with you. I've personal experience from my countrys(which is not in the anglophone world) university system, and I would say that while there is a strong SJW element present, it' erroneous to say that whole academic establishment would be overrun by this new wave of communism. It's mainly the faculties of Humanities that are the main bastions of this kind of shit, with other faculties mostly doing their own thing and not caring that much about politics in general. Now, humanistic sciences are really on their death-throes, and partially(but only partially, there are other reasons for this shit also) this current climate is the end result of their desperate attempt to remain relevant in a world that increasingly doesn't give a shit about humanistic sciences - even other scientists mostly think that they're a joke. Other scientists however tolerate this shit as long as it doesn't hit their fan too much, but with every incident like this, the scientific world in itself starts to become more conscious of the problem in their midst.
 
I don't see why the joke is offensive. But this is the current year and everything is offensive. Having a sense of humor is discouraged because you might trigger someone. This joke could give a woman PTSD. Those words are LITERALLY raping her.

:story: Ah a classic joke so of course some broad took offense.

That is a whole lotta words to say "my vagina is full of sand and I have no sense of humor".

Pictured: what an easily offended Gender Studies professor may look like.
16581_sharoni_headshot8-16.rev.1501080935.jpg

Just look at that smug face. She's old enough to remember back when fancy department stores had elevator attendants and you'd tell them what you were looking for and they'd press the corresponding floor button. Surely she understands the basis for a joke like that.

She looks a lot older than 57. I figured she was about 70. I'm looking at pics of her when she was younger and damn... This woman must have been born a senior citizen.

I'm betting that the old bag isn't even really offended. She just saw this as an opportunity to earn some sweet SJW victim points to relay back to her students. She teaches gender studies. She's already wasting her students' time enough as is helping them work towards the world's most useless degree.

This is not the first time Simona Sharoni has been in the news. She's also pro-Palestine and got her undies in a knot over her insistence of an academic boycott of Israel back in 2016. Sharoni was raised in Israel and previously taught there. She's compared victim blaming in rape cases to attitudes the public has about Palestinians. There was a campaign to get her to resign from the State University of New York at Plattsburgh.

I don't think anyone likes this hag very much.

The Middle East Studies Association on Monday jumped into the debate over professors’ right to privacy vis-à-vis freedom of information laws, asking the State University of New York at Plattsburgh to affirm the academic freedom of professor it says has been targeted for backing the academic boycott of Israel.

The association “has no official position on the [Israel boycott, divestment and sanctions] movement or its demands; we believe that everyone should be free to advocate for or against BDS as they see fit, and more broadly to express their views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as on any other issue of public concern without fear of harassment, intimidation or sanction,” MESA’s president and executive director wrote in a letter to Plattsburgh’s administration. “We also believe that [the university] has a clear responsibility to defend [Simona] Sharoni and all of its other employees from threat and intimidation, in keeping with the constitutionally protected right of free speech and with the principles of academic freedom.”

Sharoni, a professor of gender and women’s studies who was raised and previously taught in Israel, is co-founder of the group Faculty Against Rape and a supporter of the BDS movement. She’s long written and spoken about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the lens of gender, but it’s comments she made earlier this year that sparked what she calls a campaign of harassment. In an interview with an online magazine, The Establishment, about why feminists should care about the conflict, Sharoni compared victim blaming in rape cases to public attitudes about Palestinians.

“This is the assumption that Palestinians basically bring the violence on themselves. It’s similar to telling the survivor that it’s what she was wearing, that she gave mixed messages,” Sharoni is quoted as saying. “For example, ‘They didn’t agree to the partition, they’ve rejected attempts to make peace, they elected for Hamas …’ There’s no responsibility and no accountability for the perpetrator of violence, even though that perpetrator is breaking international law.”

Sharoni added, “In addition to blaming the victim, Palestinians are not believed, which is the same with survivors. ‘They’re exaggerating, it’s not that bad, because Israel is a democracy.’ It’s actually very similar to saying, ‘No, he’s actually a nice guy,’ about a man accused of rape.”

The interview was later posted to Alternet and caught the attention of bloggers. They included Jay Taub, who wrote a post called “Simona Sharoni Should Resign From the State University of New York at Plattsburgh.” Critics took to Twitter, as well, and Sharoni said some sent physical threats via email.

Sharoni and the association say she contacted several university leaders to inform them about the situation in April, and to ask them to affirm Plattsburgh’s commitment to academic freedom. She says she’s received no official response.

Last week, Sharoni received an email from Sean Brian Dermody, a vice president for administration, informing her that someone had made a series of open-records requests about her hiring, continued employment and conferences attended while at Plattsburgh. He said he was reviewing the request and in the meantime asked her to gather the records in question and be prepared to turn them over. A second email from Dermody said to gather all correspondence about her hire, Sharoni said.

“It appears to us that these [open-records] requests are part of the continuing campaign to harass and intimidate Sharoni because she has expressed certain political views,” the association wrote in its letter to Plattsburgh. “We therefore call upon university officials to exercise extreme caution and responsible judgment in reviewing and approving [such] requests for records pertaining to Sharoni, so as not to be complicit in furthering the campaign of harassment being waged against her.”

The letter also calls on Plattsburgh to “publicly and vigorously affirm its commitment to the principles of free speech and academic freedom as well as its intention to defend Sharoni and other faculty members against harassment and threats by politically motivated individuals and groups based outside the university community.”

Sharoni said via email that while she was quoted accurately by The Establishment, blogs have distorted her comments to make a direct comparison between Israel and rape -- not just how people talk about the conflict. “I am on record about not using rape as a metaphor for violence,” she said. “The point of the interview and the talk that it was based on was to compare discourses about violence.”

The professor said she is so far the subject of five open-records requests from someone affiliated with group she believes to be pro-Israel (that could not immediately be confirmed). It's "clear that the main goal behind this request is to intimidate me and damage my scholarly reputation by painting me as a subversive ‘troublemaker’ on my campus and more broadly,” she said. “All the information requested should be protected. The fact that a senior scholar like myself -- a tenured full professor with international reputation -- is being subjected to such requests has a chilling effect on junior scholars.”

She added, “The first question I asked during my faculty orientation at Plattsburgh in 2007 was about academic freedom. I don't think it is too much to expect that an institution that I have contributed to, as a faculty member and department chair, would issue a statement denouncing the vile threats directed at me last spring, which included rape and death threats, and affirm their support for free speech and academic freedom.”

Ken Knelly, a spokesman for Plattsburgh, said the university “will continue to review records and make determinations of disclosure in accordance with New York State law,” which operates on the presumption of access.

As the New York State Committee on Open Government has noted, Knelly said, “there is no provision in the Freedom of Information Law that focuses specifically on personnel records. Rather, rights of access to those records are, as in the case of other records, dependent on the content of those records.”

Plattsburgh is somewhere between a rock and a hard place in weighing a scholar’s right to privacy and academic freedom against stringent state laws about access to public information -- and it’s not alone there. A number of public universities have faced either arguably onerous or invasive records requests regarding scholars involved in controversial fields in recent years. In each case, the scholars have alleged the attacks were politically motivated. Those motivations apparently fall across the political spectrum, and universities had a variety of responses.

Long History

In 2011, Michael E. Mann, then a climate scientist at the University of Virginia, was the subject of an open-records request from a conservative political organization then called the American Tradition Institute. Faculty advocates said at the time that releasing requested documents about Mann’s research would negatively affect professors’ ability to freely explore controversial topics, as well as the university’s ability to recruit top faculty. The university backed the professor, who now teaches at Pennsylvania State University, and Virginia’s Supreme Court ultimately agreed. (It previously had shut down an attempt by former state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli to compel the university to release Mann’s emails.)

Soon after that ruling, Douglas Laycock, a law professor at Virginia and a staunch supporter of individual rights who has argued both for gay marriage and against legislation that critics said would have enabled businesses to turn away gay customers, was the target of requests for emails, travel details and records of phone calls to three conservative political organizations. Several students and a California-based gay rights group that filed the query said they were concerned that Laycock’s work on Constitutional law was being used to inform anti-gay and pro-life legislation.

William J. Cronon, a pro-labor professor of history at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, was the subject of a records request, also in 2011, during battles over the future of organized labor in that state. The Republican Party of Wisconsin requested copies of Cronon’s email correspondence containing terms including the name of Governor Scott Walker, who pursued legislation cracking down on unions. Then Chancellor Carolyn Martin issued a statement saying that when faculty members “use email or any other medium to develop and share their thoughts with one another, they must be able to assume a right to the privacy of those exchanges, barring violations of state law or university policy. … Having every exchange of ideas subject to public exposure puts academic freedom in peril and threatens the processes by which knowledge is created.”

In 2015, a student group at the University of Kansas filed a hefty request, asking for emails linking Art Hall, director of the campus’s Center for Applied Economics, to the Charles and David Koch Foundation. Hall said it was a fishing expedition that sought access to a decade’s worth of emails, but the university said it chose to release them after excluding research in progress and other decidedly personal information, to “err on the side of transparency.”

Laura Wright, chair of English at Western Carolina University, earlier this year responded to what she considered to be a conservative think tank’s voluminous request for records detailing her opposition to a Koch foundation-funded center on campus by releasing them not only to the John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy but also on her personal blog. She said she thought the university should have protected her emails, but that if she had to release them, she wanted them released in context.

Yet none of these examples specifically sought information pertaining to a scholar's hire; it’s unclear what the person or group behind the Sharoni requests hopes to uncover.

Responding to what it called increasingly “frivolous” records requests that could chill academic freedom, a joint faculty-administrative body at the University of California, Los Angeles, in 2014 released a statement designed to protect the confidentiality of frank, collaborative exchanges among scholars discussing their research. It had the backing of Chancellor Gene D. Block.

“Public access laws are an important component of the democratic process in our society, and scholars themselves frequently benefit from this legal framework,” reads the UCLA Statement on the Principles of Scholarly Research and Public Records Requests. “However, faculty scholarly communications must be protected from [California Public Records Act] and [federal Freedom of Information Act] requests to guard the principle of academic freedom, the integrity of the research process and peer review, and the broader teaching and research mission of the university.”

The American Association of University Professors doesn’t have a policy on shielding professors from voluminous, invasive or politically motivated records requests, but it has advocated for certain targeted professors, including Cronon.

Sharoni said it seems that college administrators “operate under the assumption that those of us who work on what they term ‘controversial issues’ should not surprised when we become targets of violent smear campaigns.” She called that argument “appalling and very much in line with victim-blaming tendencies that I discussed in the original article.”
 
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