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Colleges rethinking minority orientation (Anti-White Racism Alive and Well in Massachusetts)
Boston Globe ^
| 9-8-03
| Marcella Bombardieri
Posted on 09/08/2003 6:26:54 AM PDT by Lance Romance
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:10:43 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
SOUTH HADLEY -- When Naeema Hernandez arrived for her first year at Mount Holyoke College, she was welcomed by a campus that, for two days, had no white American students at all.
"You're scared when you first come in, and you have questions like, `Is there a lot of racism here?' " said Hernandez, now a sophomore, who is from New York and identifies herself as African-American.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: discrimination; diversity; educrats; highereducation; mountholyoke; multiculturalism; preferences; racism; schools; segregation; separatism
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"My roommate was a Republican from the South and believed in the Confederate flag. It was good to feel like I had someone to go talk to." Give me a break.
sophomore Julia Martinez Koch, from Newton, the child of one white parent and one Cuban-American. "I don't feel badly that the white people get excluded once in a while."
The program seems to be working very well. Congratulations Holyoke.
To: Lance Romance; mhking; Trueblackman; L.N. Smithee; goldstategop; Khepera
Ain't it wonderful?
2
posted on
09/08/2003 6:31:19 AM PDT
by
sauropod
("How do you know Sheila Jackson Lee's a queen?" "Because she doesn't sit with the little people")
To: Lance Romance
"There's some thought that pre-orientation programs might actually be a force toward rigidifying racial boundaries rather than opening them up," Jeez, it only took them 16 years to figure it out. On can only imagine what these "brilliant" liberal minds will figure out in the future.</ sarcasm>
3
posted on
09/08/2003 6:34:18 AM PDT
by
Fzob
(Why does this tag line keep showing up?)
To: Lance Romance
"Once we as people of color begin to interact with our white sisters, we need to come to that space with a real sense of who we are, in order to really listen and communicate," she told the new students at a Passages meeting last week. That is a truly bizarre statement. Of course I am sure the speaker would be willing to teach/brainwash the listeners into a more enlightened state....
4
posted on
09/08/2003 6:34:53 AM PDT
by
alnitak
("That kid's about as sharp as a pound of wet liver" - Foghorn Leghorn)
To: sauropod
Whites should not be permitted to attend college at all!
No more white imperialism.
/sarcasm
5
posted on
09/08/2003 6:37:42 AM PDT
by
Happy2BMe
(LIBERTY has arrived in Iraq - Now we can concentrate on HOLLYWEED!)
To: Lance Romance
"There's some thought that pre-orientation programs might actually be a force toward rigidifying racial boundaries rather than opening them up," said Lee Bowie, dean of Mount Holyoke.
Really, ya think so?
a Latina woman described feeling cut off from her heritage because she doesn't speak Spanish
Enroll in a frickin' Spanish class and stop whining.
My roommate was a Republican from the South and believed in the Confederate flag
What the hell does that mean?
a controversy erupted when the group that put together "African Caribbean Day" would not allow non-African or non-Caribbean groups to perform
How inclusive and tolerant. </sarcasm>
To: Fzob
"There's some thought that pre-orientation programs might actually be a force toward rigidifying racial boundaries rather than opening them up," said Lee Bowie, dean of Mount Holyoke."
Gee, ya think??? Good ole Dean Bowie...not much gets by him.
7
posted on
09/08/2003 6:52:09 AM PDT
by
Adder
To: FroedrickVonFreepenstein
a controversy erupted when the group that put together "African Caribbean Day" would not allow non-African or non-Caribbean groups to perform.How inclusive and tolerant.
Actually, I have to wonder just what kind of controversy there was for this. I mean, if I was organizing a St. Patrick's Day party, I wouldn't sign a salsa band.
8
posted on
09/08/2003 6:53:38 AM PDT
by
RonF
To: PistolPaknMama; SC partisan; l8pilot; Gianni; azhenfud; annyokie; SCDogPapa; thatdewd; ...
My roommate was a Republican from the South and believed in the Confederate flag.You decide.
To: Lance Romance
No one has questioned why white parents would send their child to a school who is openly biased against them. These elite schools would change their policies fast if white money started to dry up.
Liberal academicians are a hypocritical bunch who rely on the stupidy of white parents to send them children to indoctrinate into liberal causes. Take away the white kids and you take away a large part of the school's budget.
The fault of these openly hostile, racist, programs can be traced back to the parents who send their children to these universities. Any one who knows such white parents
should be asking them why they would put their children in a place where they are treated as second class citizens.
10
posted on
09/08/2003 6:58:11 AM PDT
by
Noachian
(Legislation Without Representation Is Tyranny)
To: Lance Romance
Next thing you know, they'll start asking for separate minority-only drinking fountains in the student union.
And how does one "believe in the Confederate flag" anyway? Light candles to it? Pray to it?
}:-)4
11
posted on
09/08/2003 7:02:10 AM PDT
by
Moose4
(These are my antlers. There are many like them, but these two are mine.)
To: stainlessbanner
How did she ever survive that kind of persecution? I mean, her roommate might just as well have tried to sell her into slavery.
To: Lance Romance
This is a disconnected, rambling article and it comes from a major daily paper, The Boston Globe. For a thumbnail biography on the writer go to this link
(biography of Marcella Bombardieri)
Once you have read the biography, you should be able to predict anything she writes.
To: stainlessbanner
My black college roommate was invited to a "Third World Orientation" for Harvard Medical School, to help the poor savages determine whether they could survive at Harvard. (I told her, "See, they know Houston is in the Third World!")
She told them to stuff it and went UC San Francisco on a full scholarship, only out of state student accepted that year.
My point? Republicans from the South, and black people with sense, should go to school somewhere that offers education instead of therapy.
14
posted on
09/08/2003 7:08:45 AM PDT
by
Tax-chick
(Pray for Terri Schiavo - hearing on 9-11 to schedule the execution!)
To: Lance Romance
"My roommate was a Republican from the South and believed in the Confederate flag. Do you not believe that there is this thing called a Confederate flag? Great education.
To: Lance Romance
Was it Shakespeare or some other genius who wrote:
"Oh, what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practice to deceive."
Regardless, it perfectly describes liberal programs. Some call it unintended consequences but I suspect most are intended.
16
posted on
09/08/2003 7:32:29 AM PDT
by
Mind-numbed Robot
(Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
To: Lance Romance
sophomore Julia Martinez Koch, from Newton, the child of one white parent and one Cuban-American. "I don't feel badly that the white people get excluded once in a while."
Title 18, United States Code, U.S. Criminal Code, Section 241; - Conspiracy against rights : If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person in any State, Territory, Commonwealth, Possession, or District in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or because of his having so exercised the same; or
If two or more persons go in disguise on the highway, or on the premises of another, with intent to prevent or hinder his free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege so secured -
They shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; and if death results from the acts committed in violation of this section or if such acts include kidnapping or an attempt to kidnap, aggravated sexual abuse or an attempt to commit aggravated sexual abuse, or an attempt to kill, they shall be fined under this title or imprisoned for any term of years or for life, or both, or may be sentenced to death.
17
posted on
09/08/2003 7:52:22 AM PDT
by
archy
(Keep in mind that the milk of human kindness comes from a beast that is both cannibal and a vampire.)
To: Mind-numbed Robot
Sir Walter Scott
18
posted on
09/08/2003 8:09:02 AM PDT
by
SAJ
(Write LBX puts, $40-50 out of the money, until the forest fires burn out.)
To: Lance Romance
I went off to college at barely 17, from a tiny, rural mountain town of 1500 people, to a liberal university with a student body of 16,000. "Orientation" was a joke--the only positive thing that helped out was meeting my soon-to-be-best-friend Cesar (from Panama), an ultra-conservative foreign national who had been trying to get all his citizenship paperwork routed correctly since he was fifteen. The lecture I had from him when I neglected to vote just after my 18th birthday ensured I never neglected to again.
My point, though--A student should already "know who they are" before coming to college. That they do not is a failure of their family, and nothing else. Don't speak Spanish? Take a course, dummy! Can't deal with Republicans? Guess the Repub isn't the one with the problem. Funny, as a conservative kid from a predominantly white rural area, I had no problem relating to the "ethnic" students at school--except for that one instance when a friend and I wanted to go catch a movie, and his friends said if he went somewhere with a "white girl", he might as well not come home to North East Portland. I found their racism amusing, but nothing more.
As the poster above said: Education, not therapy.
Regards
19
posted on
09/08/2003 8:09:40 AM PDT
by
Missus
(We're not trying to overpopulate the world, we're just trying to outnumber the idiots.)
To: Lance Romance
There aren't words strong enough to describe how completely sick I am of the subjects of racism and sexual orientation.
20
posted on
09/08/2003 8:09:40 AM PDT
by
skeeter
(Fac ut vivas)
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