Posted on 09/20/2019 1:21:40 PM PDT by Steely Tom
Big dollar signs make for memorable headlines. In June, when an Ohio jury ordered Oberlin College to pay $33 million in damages to a small bakery that had been the target of a protest orchestrated by employees of the college, the figure shocked many observers. Could Oberlin officials have really been so dastardly as to merit such a mammoth legal thumping?
Apparently so.
In a lengthy essay in Commentary magazine, former Oberlin professor Abraham Socher gave a thorough account of the events that led up to the $33 million verdict. The story, in case you dont already know it, goes something like this: An underage student, Jonathan Aladin, was caught shoplifting wine at Gibsons bakery, trying to make off with two bottles under his shirt. Allyn Gibson, a member of the family that owns the bakery, chased Aladin across the street. Next, Aladin and two fellow Oberlin students turned on Gibson and began to beat him.
The Gibson family pressed charges against Aladin, but the college demanded that the family drop the case. Aladin and the two students ultimately pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges. Alleged racism became a central element of the storyAladin is African American and Gibson white. However, the students read a statement in court acknowledging their wrongdoing and affirming that Gibsons actions had not been racially motivated. Meanwhile, on Oberlins campus, an entirely different narrative had taken hold. There, the story line, unsupported by any facts, was that the shoplifters had been singled out due to their race and that they were victims of a racist attack by Gibson. In reality, as Socher explains, shoplifting was a common problem at Gibsons and in fact two white shoplifters had been arrested there earlier that same week.
Officials at the college, led by Dean of Students Meredith Raimondo, helped organize a boycott of the bakery, punctuated by two days of protests outside the business. Members of the family received threatening phone calls; employees had their tires slashed. During the protest, flyers were distributed to students, calling Gibsons bakery a Racist establishment with a LONG ACCOUNT [sic] of RACIAL PROFILING and DISCRIMINATION. Dean Raimondo personally handed out the libelous flyer at a rally outside the store, and addressed the crowd with a bullhorn. It was a mob not merely encouraged, but also coordinated, by the professional administrators of the college.
The Gibson family was greatly distressed by the accusations of racism. They not only lost business due to the boycott, but they also suffered harm to their personal reputations. Gibsons bakery had been a fixture near the Oberlin campus for more than 50 years without a whisper of racial animus ascribed to it. Now, senior college administrators seemed bent on destroying the owners reputation and livelihood.
The allegations of racism were shown to be, quite simply, made up. During the six-week civil trial, African Americans who knew the Gibson family well, including customers, friends, and one longtime employee, all publicly defended them. The jury in the case found that Oberlin officials deliberately smeared the Gibsons as racists, doing them great emotional harm and damaging their business.
Raimondo wasnt the only administrator leading the charge. Socher documents how several members of the faculty publicly defended the Gibson family, only to be shushed and ignored by Raimundo and other administrators who worked in concert to vilify the bakery owners and inflame the mob. The ringleaders included an assistant dean, the vice president of communications for the college, the director of the colleges multicultural resource center, a special assistant for community relations, and also the president of the college.
The role of administrators in this instance is not unique.
In October of 2018, Sam Abrams, a professor at Sarah Lawrence College, wrote an op-ed for the New York Times, asserting that the ever-growing ranks of administrators have the biggest influence on students and campus life across the country. The op-ed, headlined Think Professors Are Liberal? Try School Administrators, included Abrams research on the political affiliation of college administrators.
Teaching faculty across the U.S. are known to have a leftward tilt relative to the general population. Abrams reported that liberal professors outnumber conservative ones by a 6-1 margin. But among administrative staff that ratio skyrockets to 12-1. In New England, Abrams found it to be as high as 25-1. Students themselves, by way of contrast, identify as liberal rather than conservative by a more modest 2-1 ratio. As Abrams put it, It appears that a fairly liberal student body is being taught by a very liberal professoriateand socialized by an incredibly liberal group of administrators.
It might seem that professors, who are actually doing the teaching, would have the most influence over students intellectual development. But Abrams explains that, at his university, more and more of the formation of students lives and viewpoints is taking place outside the classroom at events organized by student life coordinators, diversity deans, and student affairs officers. He cites events with such names as Stay Healthy, Stay Woke, Microaggressions and Understanding White Privilege. The problem, Abrams says, is not that these events advance a liberal-progressive point of view, but that that they seldom, if ever, give voice to any alternative views. What students receive is strict left-wing, identity politics indoctrination.
It is the lack of viewpoint diversity among administrative staffs, Abrams asserts, that should concern students and parents who worry that college is more about narrow-minded ideological indoctrination than broad-minded education. One might read the $33 million disaster at Oberlin as an object lesson in what can go wrong when a group of politically motivated professional administrators runs around a college campus unchecked, with no alternative voice or perspective among them to second guess the decisions the group is making.
In addition, universities are devoting ever-increasing amounts of their budget to non-teaching staff. Education schools are producing admissions officers, diversity officers, student life officials, many of whom are paid significantly more than teaching faculty. Administrative bloat is evident across the board. While presidential pay is skyrocketing into the seven-figure range, as of 2011 adjunct and part-time faculty made up 70% of all college instructors, and these adjuncts often earn no more than $20,000 to $25,000 per year.
Over the last four decades the share of teaching faculty across the U.S. who hold full-time, tenure-track positions has fallen by 50%. Meanwhile, administrative positions drove a 28% increase in the higher-ed workforce between 2000 and 2012. Not unrelatedly, the cost of college has increased 440% over the past quarter-century. The greater investment in bureaucracy corresponds to a greater emphasis on residential and extracurricular life on campus. And this trend seems to back up Abrams claim that it is increasingly the professional administrator, not the professor, who shapes the life and mind of the student. With their deans and provosts out rallying with students at Oberlin, shouting into a bullhorn, and distributing defamatory flyers, who could argue with the notion that the administrative staff played the leading role in inciting Oberlin students to politicize, racialize, and overreact to an otherwise run-of-the-mill case of shoplifting?
If Abrams is right to say that administrators now exert the greatest influence over students, one doubts that such an ideologically one-sided situation is healthy for the intellectual life of any college. And one wonders if a little more viewpoint diversity among the senior administrative ranks of Oberlin college might have saved the college $33 million.
Still employed. Although her "In the News" feed at the bottom of the page doesn't have any recent articles. I wonder why.
Looks a little like John Goodman.
Her Oberlin website picture should show her with a sock jammed in her mouth.
It’s a shame that comments aren’t allowed on her page:)
“Still employed.”
I don’t know. I’m pretty sure, even if I was an Obama Fluffer Boy, if I’d lost $33 million for my bosses...I’d be gone.
Looks like one of their mental deranged transgenders.
IF so, it’s no wonder it’s not fired....it would be verrrry un-PC to do so.
However, IF you or I, lost $33M big ones of our company’s funds, we’d be run out on a rail.
Dean Raimondo personally handed out the libelous flyer at a rally outside the store, and addressed the crowd with a bullhorn. It was a mob not merely encouraged, but also coordinated, by the professional administrators of the college.
This is mind-numbingly stupid on several levels. Personal involvement by university officials makes it official policy, and the university officially liable. Getting recorded doing it removes the ability to spin the incident as Oberlin tried to do in court: "Oh, she was just trying to keep things peaceful and under control." No sale when the individual in question is caught red-handed whipping up a mob. Stonewalling the thing in court is a great way to get clobbered, and insulting the jury while it is still in session is/was disastrously stupid, and the fact that it was university counsel doing it raises the stupidity to stratospheric levels. They couldn't have done worse if they were deliberately trying to pooch the case, and they weren't.
Staying in office, defiant and unapologetic, and daring the court to come after them is beyond stupid, it's suicidal. If one single individual of this clutch of flat-lined geese remains in office it's because the Board has decided it's worth $33 million to have them there.
The $33 Million Dollar Domestic Terrorist
Or will they dig their heels in and fight the decision?
"The family at the center of a defamation lawsuit against Oberlin College hugged in celebration on Thursday when a jury granted them $33 million
in punitive damages on top of the $11 million compensatory award theyre already owed by the liberal arts school.The newly decided punitive damages money awarded to plaintiffs in a civil lawsuit to punish defendants and deter future bad conduct were broken down
by the jury into $17.5 million for David Gibson, $8.75 million for family patriarch Allyn Gibson, and $6.97 million for their company, Gibson Bros, Inc."https://www.toledoblade.com/local/education/2019/06/13/jury-hits-oberlin-with-31-million-punitive-damages-bakery-protests/stories/20190613148
.
Democrats are lying corrupt scum.
As dean of students, Raimondo will lead Oberlins Division of Student Life that supports students by creating more seamless connections between curricular and cocurricular experiences, advising and mentoring focused on the development of life skills and interpersonal and personal growth, and building and bridging intellectual and personal communities. She previously served as special assistant to the president for equity, inclusion, and diversity and Title IX coordinator.The Comparative American Studies program focuses on "the COMPARATIVE." I hope that's clear to you.Raimondo joined the Oberlin community in 2003, as one of the professors in the newly formed Department of Comparative American Studies. CAS focuses on the comparative, Raimondo said in 2003, how diversity affects Americans at home and abroad, and what this means when we look at the role of the United States in a global context.
She has taught courses spanning the themes of gender and sexuality, race and ethnicity studies, social justice, and HIV/AIDS.
Probably they have to keep them until the litigation is over. In Oberlin's view, they are going to win their appeal and have a retrial. They need to keep these witnesses on the team. Plus, it would look bad if Oberlin fired them.
Your comments, by the way, are spot-on.
Excellent.
In my time at the U of Dayton, we went from 1 provost & 1 Liberal Arts dean to 3 provost and 5 liberal arts deans/”assistant deans.”
(30 years)
Yeah, except if you want engineering, law, business, Hillsdale does have any of the three fastest growing schools. It is a Libetal Arts. college when most majors are going into these areas.
My three history courses at UD were always maxed out & the students were ALL Engineering or Business majors.
Doesn’t matter how good you are if you aren’t providing what students want.
Great tree decorations for one of my favorite holidays, Trumpmas...
It’s called gross arrogance and it is often responsible for causing highly educated people to do monumentally inane things.
I read that Commentary article, it was very good.
Good gravy. I cant imagine how horrible an Oberlin education would be with such people.
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