To: Bonaparte
You wrote:
"There is nothing to suggest he let his personal beliefs intrude on his teaching. They were only publicized after his dismissal."
...yet another characteristic. You've been through the article enough by now to know better than that.
From the article:
"The professor speculated that he was dismissed because of his work with the National Socialist Movement on the internet, adding that the university "followed the typical Jewish, lawyerly, Hebrew line." He suggested that a "watchdog group" may have alerted FDU about his activities beyond the classroom."
97 posted on
04/02/2005 11:45:00 PM PST by
familyop
("Let us try" sounds better, don't you think? "Essayons" is so...Roman.)
To: familyop
"You've been through the article enough by now to know better than that."You quote speculations by Pluss as proof that his political beliefs were publicized before he was dismissed? If so, then why did none of his students hear about it? Why were they so surprised by these revelations only after his dismissal? Even Pluss speculates only that some shadowy "watchdog group" may have alerted the university, ie. the administration.
There is no evidence presented in the article that Pluss injected his personal politics into his classroom teaching.
101 posted on
04/03/2005 12:02:46 AM PST by
Bonaparte
(Of course, it must look like an accident...)
To: familyop
Exactly -- the Nazional Socialists are NOT conservatives.
109 posted on
04/03/2005 12:53:58 AM PST by
Cronos
(Never forget 9/11)
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