Student claims women-only weight class is discrimination

Article here. Excerpt:

'A controversy has surfaced at Boise State University, over a weight-lifting class targeted for only women.

One male BSU student says because Boise State is a public university, they are breaking discrimination laws by having the class.

Former Idaho Attorney General, David Leroy, says merely granting exclusive use of a public facility to one group is not discriminating against all other groups.

Leroy added that not only does he think the student accusing BSU of discrimination doesn't fully understand the law, but furthermore, that same logic used in the accusation would give us bigger issues than a women-only weight class.'

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Meet The Taxpayer-Funded Administrator Who Thinks Title IX Supersedes The US Constitution

Article here. Excerpt:

'An administrator at Michigan Technological University is laboring under the impression that Title IX takes legal precedence over the United States Constitution. He also believes students violate Title IX when they make raunchy jokes about sexual harassment.

The administrator is Les Cook, the president for student affairs at Michigan Tech, a taxpayer-funded public school with an ugly campus in the frozen tundra of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

Cook made his odd claim about the supremacy of Title IX earlier this month as he attempted to justify Michigan Tech’s decision to place The Daily Bull, a satirical student publication, on probation for two years.'

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Activists Might Be Gearing Up to Sic the Title IX Inquisition on The Hunting Ground’s Critics

Article here. Excerpt:

'Earlier this week, I warned that the activist filmmakers behind The Hunting Ground appeared to be threatening their critics among the Harvard University Law faculty:

“The Harvard Law professors’ letter is irresponsible and raises an important question about whether the very public bias these professors have shown in favor of an assailant contributes to a hostile climate at Harvard Law,” Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering wrote in a statement to The Harvard Crimson.

That sure sounded to me like the prelude to a Title IX investigation. Sure enough, Harvard Law Professor Jeannie Suk writes in the New Yorker that “I’ve been told by a high-level administrator that several people have inquired about the possibility” of a Title IX inquiry:

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UK: Woman punished for making false rape claim

Story here. Excerpt:

'The 33-year-old falsely claimed she had been sexually assaulted in Barnsley town centre last weekend and was issued with a fixed penalty notice by police.

Barnsley Command Team Chief Inspector Mark James said: “A thorough investigation was immediately carried out from the initial report received and the woman was provided support from specially trained officers.

“However, as the investigation progressed, a number of discrepancies in the claim became apparent and there was no evidence to corroborate or substantiate the woman’s claims, with CCTV footage confirming beyond doubt that an attack had not actually taken place.

“False reports of rape or any sexual assault are not only are an incredible waste of police resources and time, as well as the significant cost involved, but it is detrimental to the actual victims of this type of crime.”'

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Rape Activist Threatens to Sue Newsweek For Publishing Accused Student’s Side of the Story

Article here. Excerpt:

'When contacted for comment by Newsweek, anti-rape activist Emma Sulkowicz threatened to sue the paper if they published the story of the man she accused of rape.

Newsweek‘s front page story, titled "The Other Side of the College Sexual Assault Crisis,” examines the surge in college students being falsely accused of rape after universities began lowering their evidentiary standards to crack down on rape. The centerpiece of the article is the story of Paul Nungesser, a Columbia University student who accused of rape by Sulkowicz.'

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The growing plight of the middle-aged white man

Article here. Excerpt:

'While many – myself included – applaud the rise of women as breadwinners and business leaders, the plight of the middle-aged male can’t be ignored, specifically since recent data showa troubling spike in suicide rates for this demographic. It’s what Salon magazine recently dubbed the “Willy Loman crisis.”

The article characterizes this cohort of white, middle-class men as having once been masters of the universe – until they weren’t. Forced to face challenging economic conditions as a result of the 2008 economic meltdown, many felt there was no alternative but to end their lives.

It’s not just a U.S. problem. According to the Canadian Mental Health Association, men die by suicide at four times the rate of women and, in Ontario, over the past 10 years, more men died from suicide than car crashes.
...
It’s also hard to draw attention to the plight of middle-class white males without falling into the open arms of the men’s rights movement, a “manosphere” populated by misogynists who blame women and feminism for all of men’s woes. Let’s be clear: Feminism isn’t to blame for this issue. In fact, it may be part of the solution.

“Women, and feminists in particular, have been saying for decades that they want men to be more open with their feelings and want men to abandon masculine ideas of rugged individualism, so it makes no sense for women to somehow be blamed when men fail to seek help,” argued Cliff Leek, a Brooklyn-based doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology at Stony Brook University and the managing editor of the research journal Men and Masculinities.

Men, he observed, need to adjust to a more equal work environment and that includes addressing their own assumptions that they are more entitled to positions or promotions than their female peers.

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New UK health chief deliberately ignores men's health

Article here. In a classic it's-only-a-problem-if-it-affects-women example of nymphotropism, the UK health chief declares obesity in women to be more dangerous to the UK than terrorism while deliberately ignoring it in men, who have a worse problem with it than women. Typical. Excerpt:

'Obesity poses as big a risk to the nation as terrorism, says the Chief Medical Officer.

Dame Sally Davies wants the obesity crisis in women to be classed alongside flooding and major outbreaks of disease – as well as the threat from violent extremism. 

Her extraordinary claim comes as she warns today that being overweight affects all stages of women’s lives – including in the womb.

It may lead them to being teased as teenagers, having higher-risk pregnancies and possibly developing breast cancer or heart disease after the menopause.

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Sens. Gillibrand, McCaskill given super hero makeovers for fighting campus sexual assault

Article here. Excerpt:

'Hillary Clinton campaigned heavily this fall on the one-in-five campus rape statistic, promising to take on the “epidemic” of campus sexual assault. President Obama has cited the statistic. The White House teamed up with College Humor to create a stupid bear attack skit to make young men aware of the one-in-five statistic. However, that statistic, based on a 15-minute online survey of two Midwestern universities in 2007, is heavily disputed, and schools are reporting much lower numbers.

It is in this environment that young men in college are found guilty of sexual assault without trial, which has led both the alleged rapist of “Mattress Girl” and the fraternity falsely accused of gang rape in a debunked Rolling Stone article to file lawsuits against their accusers.

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SAVE E-lert: Fox Goes After "The Hunt"

You may have seen our previous emails denouncing The Hunting Ground, a fake documentary full of lies: http://www.saveservices.org/sexual-assault/hunting-ground/

Good news! This Saturday and Sunday, December 12-13th, Fox News is taking on The Hunting Ground. Fox will be airing a documentary on campus sexual assault.

Information to Know:
Fox News Reporting - The Truth About Sex & College
Anchored by Martha MacCullum
December 12 and 13th, 8 p.m. ET
Fox News Channel

We encourage you to watch this special report, and hope that it will bring to light the many egregious activities taking place on campus and within the federal government.

Gina Lauterio, Esq., Policy Program Director
Stop Abusive and Violent Environments   
www.saveservices.org

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India: Why freedom will mean little to this rape accused

Story here. Excerpt:

'His dreams of making a mark as a teacher were shattered mid-way. His wedding, which was just a few days away, was called off. He lost his job which was the only means o sustenance for his elderly parents. A year after being labelled a rapist and locked up in jail for 95 days, 27-year-old Nagaraj, a school attender, is likely to be absolved for lack o evidence. But, the damage has been done and it's unlikely that a court order will be able to repair the young man's spirit or restore his mental health On November 26, 2014 Nagaraj was accused of sexually assaulting a three-year-old pre-nursery girl at a reputed private school off Old Madras Road. The graduate, who had taken up the attender's job to fulfill his ambition of becoming a teacher, was arrested on November 29. 

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SAVE: Law Professors and Groups Call on Congress to Rein in OCR, Restore Free Speech and Due Process on Campus

PRESS RELEASE

Contact: Gina Lauterio
Telephone: 301-801-0608
Email: info@saveservices.org

WASHINGTON / December 9, 2015 – Today a group of law professors and leading organizations are releasing a letter that calls on Congress to require the federal Office for Civil Rights (OCR) to act in a lawful manner in its issuance of new regulations. Over the years the OCR has released numerous directives without seeking prior review and comment, as required by the federal Administrative Procedure Act.

The Department of Education’s OCR has treated its directives as mandates, threatening universities with loss of federal funding if they did not comply. These directives, known as Dear Colleague Letters, have eroded free speech and due process on college campuses, the professors say.

In one celebrated case, Northwestern University professor Laura Kipnis published an article criticizing her school’s sexual harassment policy. Ironically, Kipnis soon found herself the target of a sexual harassment complaint alleging her article could create a “chilling effect” on future complainants. Kipnis later described the college’s full-scale probe a “Title IX Inquisition:” http://chronicle.com/article/My-Title-IX-Inquisition/230489

Northwestern University’s months-long investigation of the Kipnis editorial was based on a previous OCR Agreement specifying that “the University has an obligation to consider the effects of off-campus conduct.”

The professors and organizations expressed their “profound concern regarding the alarming erosion of free speech and due process on college campuses, which has arisen in response to the policies and actions of the Office for Civil Rights.”

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Student group criticises Advocacy for Men & Boys group in open letter

Article here. Excerpt:

'The Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies student union (GSWSSU) has published an open letter criticising SFU’s Advocacy for Men & Boys (SFU AMB) club, a campus group focused on addressing men’s issues, claiming that the club is “using men’s issues as a way to attack feminism.”

The letter was published on the union’s WordPress page on Monday, and is addressed primarily in response to SFU AMB’s November 8 event, “Toxic Masculinity & Toxic FEMININITY.” The event was promoted with posters showing a biohazard sign over a venus symbol, a gesture the open letter alleges is “offensive, hostile, and aggressive.” The main speaker for the event was Karen Straughan, a self-proclaimed “anti-feminist” and men’s rights advocate. A video recording of Straughan speaking at the event can be found here.'

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Court reviews all-male draft in wake of Pentagon women-in-combat decision

Story here. Excerpt:

'A panel of federal judges in California heard arguments Tuesday on whether the courts should weigh in on the male-only military draft now that the Pentagon opened all combat roles to women.

The case of National Coalition for Men vs. the Selective Service System had initially been dismissed because not all combat positions were open to women when it was first filed in 2013. Tuesday’s hearing in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Pasadena was originally set to discuss whether the 2013 dismissal had been appropriate.

However, Secretary of Defense Ash Carter on Thursday opened all remaining combat positions to women, in a move the Pentagon acknowledged “alters the factual backdrop” to the constitutionality of a male-only draft.'

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Professors, rights groups write letter defending student due process rights

Article here. Excerpt:

'Professors from across the country, as well as several rights groups, have written a letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee condemning the evisceration of due process rights for college students.

The letter, addressed to Sens. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., and Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., describes the example of Northwestern University professor Laura Kipnis, who earlier this year faced a Title IX investigation for writing an article condemning current campus sexual assault policies. Title IX is the federal law that bans gender discrimination and has been used in recent years to justify adjudicating sexual assault as campus disciplinary matters.'

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White House petition to create office of men's health

Petition here. Excerpt:

'We are calling on all men—and those who love them—to urge the creation of a federal Office of Men’s Health. This office would join existing federal offices tasked with safeguarding the health of women, children, and minorities. Men are in need of similar attention because of critical health issues specific to their gender: a higher risk of premature death from stroke, heart disease, and diabetes; heightened odds of addiction; and a higher risk of harming themselves and others. The Office could also create messaging about the importance of nutrition and physical fitness and address social issues such as men’s access to paid family leave in the workplace. Addressing these problems will improve the lives of everyone, and the economy as a whole.'

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