Andy Dufresne
Footballguy
I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...Long time no see. Welcome back.
And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.
I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...Long time no see. Welcome back.
What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
The UVA author wrote a hit piece on the Anoka school district. We used to live in Anoka.What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
Really? What was it about?The UVA author wrote a hit piece on the Anoka school district. We used to live in Anoka.What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
Oh yeah, now I know this author's name. I think the story started out with a student at Fred MooreThe UVA author wrote a hit piece on the Anoka school district. We used to live in Anoka.What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
Gay and Lesbian bullying in local school districtI thinkReally? What was it about?The UVA author wrote a hit piece on the Anoka school district. We used to live in Anoka.What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
YepGay and Lesbian bullying in local school districtI thinkReally? What was it about?The UVA author wrote a hit piece on the Anoka school district. We used to live in Anoka.What local Blaine angle?I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.Long time no see. Welcome back.
Dude plead guilty to aggravated sexual battery. Doesn't sound like she's fabricating the story.
30 years ago, kegs and open partying at rush events were commonplace.This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
You'll be back for the mock drafts thoughI've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...Long time no see. Welcome back.
And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.
I miss your posting.I've been around. I just find the less I post here the better my attitude is. So...Long time no see. Welcome back.
And this story just touched on a local angle that I thought was interesting and relevant.
Ah, so the institutions don't really care about educating young adults. Gotcha.You mean the businesses that need mom and dad's money.After reading that article, it is amazing to me that the places that are supposed to be educating our young adults, are implementing the suggested government policies in this article.http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html
Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.
I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?
What about the majority of the faculty? Do you think they agree with the policies that are being implemented?
never said whether the faculty, president, etc. care about educating our youth. I presume they do.It reminds me also of the mandatory reporting of child abuse. I understand the premise behind it and agree with it, but holy smokes are there a lot of headaches caused by some over-anxious hand-wringing young teacher who doesn't even have kids. Suddenly bruises and a child's inability to communicate events accurately can lead to traumatizing events of separating families and uncomfortable interviews with government agencies.http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college_rape_campus_sexual_assault_is_a_serious_problem_but_the_efforts.html
Excellent article on how drunken sluts are replacing "regret" with "rape," enabled by a feminist-lesbian cabal of influential man-haters.
I'm unsure of the actual rules in this forum. It says "free for all" but is it?This is what's going on. Same kind of thing used to go on in Maoist and Stalinist area societies, basically crimes against the state had to be reported or it was treated as complicity. I know, it's not the same thing, but the state insistence on reporting is the same, bad reports and expanded standards to include meaningless, innocent activity lead to harmful identification of ordinary citizens as criminals. It also gives absurd power to those who do the accusing. It's bad enough that liberals and academics are complaining, it's really screwed up.In recent years, young activists, many of them women angry about their treatment after reporting an assault, have created new organizations and networks in an effort to reform the way colleges handle sexual violence. They recognized they had a powerful weapon in that fight: Title IX, the federal law that protects against discrimination in education. Schools are legally required by that law to address sexual harassment and violence on campus, and these activists filed complaints with the federal government about what they describe as lax enforcement by schools.
You expect a rape victim to be a great writer?pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
The woman who wrote it is a published author. But no, I don't expect her to be a great writer. Many of the details seem fabricated to me.You expect a rape victim to be a great writer?pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
Look, most brutal rapes are going to sound like bad fiction because our brains cannot fully process that such an awful event could be the reality.
All published writers are great writers?The woman who wrote it is a published author.You expect a rape victim to be a great writer?pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
Look, most brutal rapes are going to sound like bad fiction because our brains cannot fully process that such an awful event could be the reality.
I clarified in an edit. I don't know where you're getting the great writer thing.All published writers are great writers?The woman who wrote it is a published author.You expect a rape victim to be a great writer?pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
Look, most brutal rapes are going to sound like bad fiction because our brains cannot fully process that such an awful event could be the reality.
I don't completely buy this; but if it's true, a lot changed in 10 years. She makes the place sound like Animal House. They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house, all while drugging and gang raping multiple women upstairs.bigbottom said:30 years ago, kegs and open partying at rush events were commonplace.pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
Dry rush policies for fraternities weren't instituted at my university until the early 90s, and we were considered pretty progressive.I don't completely buy this; but if it's true, a lot changed in 10 years. She makes the place sound like Animal House. They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house, all while drugging and gang raping multiple women upstairs.bigbottom said:30 years ago, kegs and open partying at rush events were commonplace.pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
We had delayed rush where I went to school, meaning you had about 2 months to party at all the fraternity houses before going through formal rush in the late fall and making a decision (or having the decision made for you in many cases). Every party served booze and so long as you had your drink in a cup, nobody hassled you. It was a glorious time of my life.Dry rush policies for fraternities weren't instituted at my university until the early 90s, and we were considered pretty progressive.I don't completely buy this; but if it's true, a lot changed in 10 years. She makes the place sound like Animal House. They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house, all while drugging and gang raping multiple women upstairs.bigbottom said:30 years ago, kegs and open partying at rush events were commonplace.pantagrapher said:This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/12/16/us/uva-rape/
I bit hook, line and sinker to this but it appears the person doesn't even exist. Apparently the person had a fake phone number through an online service and sent one of her friends (who apparently she liked) a letter saying how much she liked him. This email was from the accused (who doesn't exist). Reading between the lines and speculating, it appears she fabricated a story to try and get this kids attention. Doesn't sound mentally stable but at some point, you have to be held accountable for your actions.
Certifiably insane. This chick is a shtick artist.
We had delayed rush where I went to school, meaning you had about 2 months to party at all the fraternity houses before going through formal rush in the late fall and making a decision (or having the decision made for you in many cases). Every party served booze and so long as you had your drink in a cup, nobody hassled you. It was a glorious time of my life.Dry rush policies for fraternities weren't instituted at my university until the early 90s, and we were considered pretty progressive.I don't completely buy this; but if it's true, a lot changed in 10 years. She makes the place sound like Animal House. They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house, all while drugging and gang raping multiple women upstairs.30 years ago, kegs and open partying at rush events were commonplace.This story sounds as implausible as the other one. For one thing, multiple kegs and opening partying at an official rush event for underage students? They do an organized orientation for the pledges AND their dates? A close gay friend 5 weeks into your first semester? Getting separated from all your friends and an evil bartender is magically waiting there, ready to slip you a drugged drink, which he ominously refers to as "the house special"?
That's all for starters. Any of those things could happen, but it again has that cinematic, badly written fiction quality to it.
getting alcohol at any "unofficial" frat party was too easy. We also had rush in both semesters. I'd completely support limiting Rush to the spring or disallowing any freshman rush in the fall as we were naive and plain stupid our first semester - stayed stupid for a while, but less naive. A few months to learn the reputations of the frats or sororities would help immensely.Without commenting on her story either way, what you just described was every Friday/Saturday night at my college when I was there.They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house
Mine too. And I'll throw in Thursday night as well.Without commenting on her story either way, what you just described was every Friday/Saturday night at my college when I was there.They were basically begging to get caught, throwing a loud, raucous party, serving underage strangers out in the open and letting them wander around the house
http://www.nytimes.com/1989/06/04/books/all-that-mattered-was-the-pm-news.htmlALL THAT MATTERED WAS THE P.M. NEWS
By JUDITH ADLER HENNESSEE; Judith Adler Hennessee, who often writes about the press, is the co-author, with Michael Baden, of ''Unnatural Death: Confessions of a Medical Examiner.''
Published: June 4, 1989
UNHOLY ALLIANCES Working the Tawana Brawley Story. By Mike Taibbi and Anna Sims-Phillips. Illustrated. 375 pp. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. $18.95.
By now, Tawana Brawley is practically a household name, and just about everyone is aware that the story of her four-day ordeal in November 1987 - of having been taken into the woods near Wappingers Falls, N.Y., and sexually abused by a group of white men - was a hoax. She was found in a garbage bag with feces smeared on her body and racial epithets scrawled on her torso.
The black teen-ager's tale caused tremendous outrage, and very quickly, as Mike Taibbi and Anna Sims-Phillips write in ''Unholy Alliances,'' ''a trio of cynically ambitious self-promoters'' of Dickensian caliber (or maybe Twainian; this is a very American story) insinuated themselves onto center stage, pushing Miss Brawley into the wings. Alton H. Maddox Jr., C. Vernon Mason, both lawyers, and the Rev. Al Sharpton, a hustler (in the book a former associate quotes him as saying, ''If we beat this, we will be the biggest s in New York''), became the intermediaries between the Brawley family and the rest of the world.
Neither the press nor the law could speak to the family without going through the ''advisers.'' Miss Brawley could not get justice, they said; the system was too racist, and they would not permit her or her family to cooperate with the authorities. This book is a dramatic and fascinating account, told in earthy prose and novelistic style, of how a WCBS-TV reporter (Mr. Taibbi) and producer (Ms. Sims-Phillips) covered the story and became part of it in the process. Fueled by anger, the book is as much about the press and how it functions as it is about Miss Brawley. The authors see the story as a war between good and evil, and themselves as soldiers fighting on the side of the angels.
As they tell it, their adversaries were formidable. For the better part of a year, the advisers kept the pot boiling with bombast and invective and cries of cover-up, tossing out wild accusations and destroying reputations with abandon. They had no facts, nothing; they were making it up as they went along. They dragged in Hitler and the Irish Republican Army - they didn't seem to care what they said as long as it made the evening news. Reporters covering the story were also interested in making the evening news, or the morning edition. They needed the advisers and their histrionics as much as the advisers needed them.
Mr. Taibbi and Ms. Sims-Phillips rail against this ''unholy alliance,'' this interdependence between the news media and their subjects and sources, but actually there is nothing new about it. The press has always made such alliances in order to function. In this case, however, race was all-important. Even though the authors don't come out and say so, much of the press and television news, fearful of being branded racist, abdicated editorial judgment and reported whatever the advisers said. All three had unsavory reputations (Mr. Sharpton, for one, had previously been wired by the F.B.I. to inform on his friends), and the press knew about them. Yet they were treated as if their word meant something. Ironically, the news media ended up validating Miss Brawley's story and her advisers' lies simply by repeating them. Even people who were skeptical thought that something had happened to her. (Some blacks were more tough-minded. After initially supporting Miss Brawley, they stayed away from the advisers in droves. Jesse Jackson, who was running for President, wouldn't be photographed with them. In addition, Mr. Sharpton suffered the ultimate ignominy at the Democratic National Convention - he was ignored.) When the authors tried to finesse the advisers' stranglehold on the case by tracking down their own sources, they suddenly became pariahs. Mr. Sharpton accused Mr. Taibbi of bribing a witness to place Miss Brawley at a party during the time she was supposed to be missing. Despite Mr. Sharpton's near-perfect record of deceit, Mr. Taibbi says, his colleagues turned on him like sharks. He and Ms. Sims-Phillips got the full treatment - reports of the charge were aired, and they received death threats and excrement in the mail. The story took a terrible personal toll on both of them. Ms. Sims-Phillips, who is black, says she was considered a traitor by some of her friends. Mr. Taibbi became a favorite target of the Sharpton camp, which put out a humiliating - and obviously false - story saying that he ''sleeps with [ Miss Brawley's aunt's ] dog.''
Mr. Taibbi and Ms. Sims-Phillips first reported that Miss Brawley was lying five months after she was found. It is tantalizing to imagine that the story would have quickly simmered down if the news media had immediately zeroed in on the only hard evidence there was - the medical evidence. The hospital examination showed nothing to support Miss Brawley's story. Nor was there any sign of her having been in the woods - no twigs or grass on her clothes or in her hair. Within days of finding her, the authors say, the police knew. The news media should have found out sooner too.
The latest twist on the Brawley story took place after this book was completed. Miss Brawley reportedly told a boyfriend that she hadn't been abducted, but had run away to escape a beating from her mother's companion. According to the report, her mother helped her invent the story. They thought he would feel sorry for her if he believed she had been raped. Miss Brawley, who has denied telling this version to her boyfriend, has still not told her story in her own words. After having cried wolf once she may be reluctant to go in front of the cameras again, but, as this engrossing book makes clear, the news media would lap it up.
Photo of advisers to the Brawley family: Alton H. Maddox Jr., the Rev. Al Sharpton and C. Vernon Mason speaking outside a church last year. (NYT/Chester Higgins Jr.)
I suppose, inevitably, the desire for it to be read is perhaps even higher now.bigbottom said:Rolling Stone still has the story up on its site (though prefaced by the "apology"). Unbelievable.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2014/12/22/rolling-stone-farms-out-review-of-u-va-rape-story-to-columbia-journalism-school/Rolling Stone farms out review of U-Va. rape story to Columbia Journalism School
Rolling Stone magazine has decided to enlist the Columbia Journalism School to audit its handling of a discredited Nov. 19 story about rape on the campus of the University of Virginia, according to a just-released statement from Editor and Publisher Jann S. Wenner, which reads as follows:
In RS 1223, Sabrina Rubin Erdely wrote about a brutal gang rape of a young woman named Jackie at a party in a University of Virginia frat house [“A Rape on Campus”]. Upon its publication, the article generated worldwide attention and praise for shining a light on the way the University of Virginia and many other colleges and universities across the nation have tried to sweep the issue of sexual assault on campus under the rug. Then, two weeks later, The Washington Post and other news outlets began to question Jackie’s account of the evening and the accuracy of Erdely’s reporting. Immediately, we posted a note on our website, disclosing the concerns. We have asked the Columbia Journalism School to conduct an independent review – headed by Dean Steve Coll and Dean of Academic Affairs Sheila Coronel – of the editorial process that led to the publication of this story. As soon as they are finished, we will publish their report.
...
http://www.cjr.org/darts_and_laurels/the_worst_journalism_of_2014.php#sthash.p0fhG0DA.dpufThe worst journalism of 2014A recap of this year’s most cringeworthy news blunders
News blunders tend to have short lifespans. They’re outed by watchful eyes, social media erupts, and the gears of outrage begin to turn. But after a brief flourish of snarky finger-wagging, they typically disappear, lost amid the ever-expanding sea of digital content.
This year has been one of many triumphs for journalists, who’ve told the stories of political struggle at home and violent struggle abroad, a public health crisis and airline tragedies that drew the eyes of the world, and self-examinations of American racial, domestic, and sexual norms. There have also been plenty of screw-ups, and CJR has kept track of them so you don’t have to. The additional DARTS awarded below aren’t necessarily the most impactful bloopers of the year, though several of them are among the most cringeworthy. Here’s one last salute to the year’s worst of the worst before their final burial at digital sea.
A complete unknown, like Rolling Stone
The disintegration of the magazine’s visceral campus rape story from Nov. 19 wins this year’s media-fail sweepstakes. University of Virginia student “Jackie”’s gang rape tale was heralded as the type of story only Rolling Stone was capable of telling, one that could change the national conversation around contemporary sexual culture. But within two weeks, it began to fall apart.
Reporter Sabrina Rubin Erdely didn’t contact the alleged perpetrators of Jackie’s rape, not to mention three of her friends portrayed as unsympathetic to it. It turns out, as reported in a sterling clean-up job by The Washington Post, that Jackie’s account in the story doesn’t match her friends’ recollections of the incident. A number of other key details from the piece have since been disputed or disproved. In its initial editor’s note regarding the story — since updated — Rolling Stone deflected criticism: “In the face of new information, there now appear to be discrepancies in Jackie’s account, and we have come to the conclusion that our trust in her was misplaced.” It deserves a DART for blaming its utter failure on someone else, and many more for all the lapses leading up to it.
These new rules are designed to prevent events that never happened from never happening again.Greek Life reinstated at UVA with new restrictions:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/01/07/us/uva-greek-life-reinstated/index.html
totallySo I have heard nothing about this since December. Totally made up?
One fake story doesn't mean #### never happened. I have heard many a frat guy at UVA brag about date-rape.These new rules are designed to prevent events that never happened from never happening again.Greek Life reinstated at UVA with new restrictions:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/01/07/us/uva-greek-life-reinstated/index.html
I don't pretend to know what did or did not happen. But "false rape story" isn't the right way to put this. Just because charges were not brought or he wasn't expelled didn't mean the event didn't happen.Apparently Columbia University has its own false rape story. Emma Sulkowicz carried the mattress she was "raped" on around campus all semester for her senior art thesis and to raise awareness/shame her accused rapist who was cleared of all charges by a campus disciplinary group. It is disturbing that the media and politicians play along to this nonsense. And that the university allowed this public defamation to occur.
Yesterday an article was released interviewing the accused German student who has suffered through this ordeal for years now, including facebook and email evidence destroying the credibility of Ms Sulkowicz. On the bright side, he has a new Czech girlfriend and will probably win millions in a lawsuit once he graduates.
This rape claim and the one from Lena Dunham both involve girls who admitted to consensual sex and then performed an alleged non-consensual act (anal sex and rawdog sex, respectively) with their accused, followed up with more consensual sexual acts, then parting ways. At least their stories involved actual intercourse I suppose, compared to the UVA chick who just made up a story involving no real people or events.
It is a crazy world we live in.
I love how she said pressing criminal charges would be "too draining" but had no problem carrying a mattress around campus for a year to reflect the burden she felt. Get real toots.Apparently Columbia University has its own false rape story. Emma Sulkowicz carried the mattress she was "raped" on around campus all semester for her senior art thesis and to raise awareness/shame her accused rapist who was cleared of all charges by a campus disciplinary group. It is disturbing that the media and politicians play along to this nonsense. And that the university allowed this public defamation to occur.
Yesterday an article was released interviewing the accused German student who has suffered through this ordeal for years now, including facebook and email evidence destroying the credibility of Ms Sulkowicz. On the bright side, he has a new Czech girlfriend and will probably win millions in a lawsuit once he graduates.
This rape claim and the one from Lena Dunham both involve girls who admitted to consensual sex and then performed an alleged non-consensual act (anal sex and rawdog sex, respectively) with their accused, followed up with more consensual sexual acts, then parting ways. At least their stories involved actual intercourse I suppose, compared to the UVA chick who just made up a story involving no real people or events.
It is a crazy world we live in.
how we doing here?One fake story doesn't mean #### never happened. I have heard many a frat guy at UVA brag about date-rape.These new rules are designed to prevent events that never happened from never happening again.Greek Life reinstated at UVA with new restrictions:http://www.cnn.com/2015/01/07/us/uva-greek-life-reinstated/index.html
People brag about date rape? Good god....and we have people on this forum who have listened to the bragging and not gotten stabby? Yuck.how we doing here?One fake story doesn't mean #### never happened. I have heard many a frat guy at UVA brag about date-rape.These new rules are designed to prevent events that never happened from never happening again.Greek Life reinstated at UVA with new restrictions:http://www.cnn.com/2015/01/07/us/uva-greek-life-reinstated/index.html