Dramacow Kevin Allred - Professor of Beyoncé Studies (no, seriously), arrested for threats to kill Trump voters.

I could nitpick some details but fuck that. The Ramones were literally God.

(Still I hope you're not referring to the New York Dolls as smaller.)

I was thinking more velvet underground I know they aren't small either but whatever. And it's known that the ramones trip to England in the late 70s, concerts attended by Westwood and McClaren, the two people who basically invented the Sex Pistols was a major influence to British punk. . I'm not huge in the punk scenex so my knowledge isn't to extensive. Bad religion is better then anything to come out of the genre since the ramones tho.
 
upload_2017-2-12_9-19-21.png


gun toting ex mental patient looking for teaching gigs

upload_2017-2-12_9-20-20.png

upload_2017-2-12_9-21-30.png

okay now he's starting to sound like cwc

oh here's some blog posts we missed during the hiatus
https://medium.com/@KevinAllred/day-75-pt-14-b90843cace8c#.or0qe7lvo
https://archive.is/32lnT
Day 75 (Pt. 14)
[Author’s Note: This story is part of a series documenting punitive actions taken against me by Rutgers University & various law enforcement agencies beginning November 9, 2016 — the day after Trump’s election. Start with Part 1.]

Today marks Day 75 of Rutgers’ investigation into whether I violated their policy prohibiting workplace violence. Seems like a simple determination, right?! There was no violence or threat of violence. My students are all witnesses. 75 days later and Rutgers still can’t make a determination. Huh.

Dragging out the investigation prevents me from negotiating future work at Rutgers and elsewhere since it effectively prevents anyone at Rutgers from providing me a reference. As far as I know, administration has banned everyone at Rutgers from talking to or about me in relation to the investigation and my teaching. So they are not only messsing with my future at Rutgers, but my overall professional reputation and hopes to work anywhere in the educational field in the near future.

The current Spring 2017 semester at Rutgers began on 1/17/17, so my hopes of a quick return to the classroom have been squashed for the immediate future. But that also begs the question: where is the report and determination from this investigation? What is Rutgers waiting for? They’ve successfully blocked me from immediate employment, so why not release the report? What do they gain by continuting to drag things out? There is no fathomable way they are still investigating. If they are, it speaks to a gross incompetance at the administrative level since I provided them with my own interview and names of witnesses back on 11/28/16.

If I were full-time faculty, things would be different. But I’m an adjunct lecturer. Hired semester by semester. Administrative leave does not exist in perpetuity for me. Starting tomorrow, “administrative leave” means absolutely nothing since the pay period of the semester for which I was last employed (Fall 2017, when all this happened) is over. Starting today, I consider myself to be officially terminated from the University. Their cowardly handling of the entire situation just means they don’t have to announce it as such. I just fade away into another limbo state. I’m not one to fade away though.



1*183dy1rE6N3-dzV06Fklyw.png

new Twitter bio

Representatives of the University will only state I’m not on the schedule for Spring 2017 but won’t admit that keeping me from the schedule as an adjunct, and keeping the investigtaion “active,” is tantamount to official termination. My students and the entire student body continue to fight for me though. They’ve kept the conversation going by getting this article published in the student newspaper on 1/25/17 (written by one of my former students):
http://www.dailytargum.com/article/...versity-will-not-teach-during-spring-semester

I’ve sent MANY emails to the Human Resources office. They were cordial and accomodating to begin with — I went so far as to gracioulsy take hours to help my investigator navigate and download days worth of my tweets on Twitter because I knew that I’d done nothing wrong. And she assured me a draft of the findings in the investigation was submitted nearly six weeks ago. However, my emails became less accommodating, more forthright, and even a bit accusatory as time dragged on. Which I feel is justified as fuck.

All signs point to the investigation being deliberately drawn out because it’s in the University’s best interest. They can just continue to ignore and not make any formal statements. Finally, on 1/2/17 — after more than enough waiting — I intimated I felt as if this was nonsensically being drawn out via email. Since that email, to which there were adament disavowals and claims of offense on their part (are you fucking kidding me?!), I’ve had no responses from the Human Resources office save a promise from the Director that the determination of my investigation would be released by January 6, if not sooner. I still don’t have the report today, 1/31/17.

Here is a copy of HR Boss Lady’s promise sent on 1/3/17:


1*RsqOcnOkx9rLEBrpidKzbw.png

(The complaint referenced and filed by me is a complaint I hastily made one night against the person I believe to be at the bottom of this entire campaign against me. I decided to withdraw it UNTIL the determination against me is finalized.)

So…WHERE IS THE REPORT? I need it released before I can take further action and the wait, I feel, is egregious. None of my subsequent emails has been met with any response.

Through this whole process the union has been amazingly helpful and supportive, but nothing has pushed Rutgers to move faster. The current demand to administration, issued before the holiday break, is to immediately pay my medical bills and reinstate me. We’re too late for reinstatement this semester and so I’m also seeking a monetary settlement for the 2 courses I would have been teaching this semester — the income they screwed me out of. It’s not much, but I’d be happy to receive that small amount to tide me over while I continue chasing other options. No response from the Univesrity. At all.

Because of the lack of response, I involved an outside legal firm interested in my case. They contacted Rutgers counsel during January. Immediate responses flowed. Hmmmm. However, Rutgers issued an edict that I could not have both the union and outside legal counsel fight on my behalf simultaneously because they didn’t know who to negotiate with.

OK. Now that I’d jump-started the conversation again, I decided to allow the union and it’s legal representative to continue advocating on my behalf. They know the ins and outs of the University and already have relationships with many of the people involved. It seemed like the best best. However, the minute I asked the other legal firm to back off, contact between the University and the union reverted to nonexistent status. Ignoring requests. Not responding. Dragging everything out again.

I’ve never been a patient person, but I feel like my patience in this incident has gone over and above what makes sense. Bureaucracy is one thing; outright obstruction is another (though the two may not be that far apart to begin with). I am giving the University a few final weeks to rectify the situation with the union before reinstating the big guns, who are ready and waiting for word from me.

My requests are modest: release the report determination immediately to open up contact between me and my colleagues again; pay my bills; give me a settlement in the amount I would have rightfully earned teaching the 2 courses I was set to teach this current semester before any of this occurred (and even though contracts weren’t signed, I have verbal confirmations from multiple people in the departments I would have been teaching in); and reinstate me for future semesters.

I’m also demanding the University reveal the redacted names from the RUPD report. Since the complaint that set everything in motion was based on false information and outright lies, I have a right (under HR guidelines) to respond to false accusations. I seek no retribution against any “student” or “parent” that may have been involved, but there is certainly someone at Rutgers who helped advance this false complaint to exponentially egregious levels, and I do seek to file a claim against that person. I have the right to know who it was, or…have my suspicions confirmed that the same person who has fought me tooth and nail for years is also behind this.

However, I’m not holding my breath. And if this situation isn’t resolved in the coming weeks, I will transfer representation back from the union (since the University refuses to respond to them in any kind of timely matter) to the outside legal firm with the resources and time to blow this case up. Not only will I seek damages for the small amount owed to me in preventing my teaching this semester, but damages for defamation and violation of my first amendment rights.

Rutgers would do well to settle this quickly. Unless they want the bad PR of choosing to protect — with no verification or corroboration of the veracity of the claim — one conservative white student’s feelings of discomfort related anonymously through a parent, and never recorded by said student, over protecting free speech, academic freedom, and the questioning/deconstruction of power in the classroom. Not the hill to die on, if you ask me. But Rutgers continues to surprise with how obtuse and oblivious they can be.

I’m not going anywhere. I’m not backing down. Next move is yours, Rutgers. And choosing not to make a move is also a move. I see you. And I’m ready.


http://www.kevin-allred.com/blog/terrorist-in-chief
https://archive.is/wccGC

TERRORIST-IN-CHIEF
2/7/2017



Donald Trump is a lot of things and none of them good: confirmed liar; probable pathological narcissist; admitted sex criminal; current president of the United States. He’s also a terrorist.

In an astutely observed op-ed for Teen Vogue, writer Lauren Duca outlines Trump’s strategy of questioning objective reality as synonymous with a psychological mode of manipulation and abuse known as “gas lighting.” The intended result is a victim who feels they are going crazy, dependent on the victimizer for guidance. Writ large, the gas lighting of the American people is intended to produce mass chaos and a populace dependent on a demagogue.


Now that Trump has been sworn in as president, his gas lighting feels exacerbated exponentially; it cuts much deeper. It feels more like a full-blown hostage crisis. Like each and every American has been taken hostage regardless of how resistant we are; regardless of how much truth we produce to counter his alternative facts and claims of fake news. His supporters quickly developed Stockholm Syndrome, identifying with their captor against all logic and objective truth. And he’s aiming to afflict more of us through fear — by creating fictional evils greater than his own.
Merriam-Webster’s dictionary (whose Twitter account just so happens to be a major voice of resistance in Trump’s America) defines terrorism as, “the systematic use of terror, especially as a means of coercion.” While he is gas lighting the American public, Trump is also terrorizing us and the world. He’s a terrorist of the highest order and strictest definition.

Putting aside inaccurate stereotypes linking terrorism solely to brown skin and Islam, studies show that white people are the biggest terror threat in America. White men in particular. Right-wing extremist white men. Had the actual legitimate terror threat been profiled correctly, perhaps we could have banned Donald Trump from America when we still had a chance. The country would be a lot safer. Obviously, I’m being facetious but given Trump’s vehement and vitriolic attempt to ban Muslims, he might do well to take a close, careful look in the mirror.

It’s not new for Trump to rely on the rhetoric of fear. His entire campaign was based around a fictional past where America was great (for white people); an America that we’ve drifted far from by being more open, inclusive, and equitable. But when his fear-mongering met power, terror was born. And he’s now attempting to incite as much terror as possible as a means of control. He’s spreading terror through direct threat, through Twitter, and in offices in the White House and Trump Tower. Make no mistake, casualties associated with his presidency will be exponential both in the U.S. and abroad. He’s already ordered one disaster of a military raid in Yemen where a Navy SEAL and numerous civilians were killed (including women and nine children), with many others injured.

Trump is the new face (and statistically old face, as a white man) of terrorism and we should insist on categorizing him as such. His litany of Executive Orders are terrorist actions. His Muslim ban (only targeting countries in which he has no business interests and from which no individual has committed any post-9/11 terror attacks) and repeated announcements to build a great wall between the United States and Mexico are terrorist activities. His threats to the Affordable Care Act and women’s reproductive choices will leave many dead. Moreover, he has asked a number of times why he can’t just use nuclear weapons when he disagrees with another country’s actions. Putting Iran formally “on notice,” threatening Mexico, and retreating from agreements President Obama made with Australia are all means of amping up terror around the globe; fear of him as a leader.

Firing then acting Attorney General Sally Yates served an example of dire consequence at home when you disobey Trump’s orders, even when disobedience is the legal mandate. He’s ushered a white nationalist contingent into the White House, even giving Steve Bannon unprecedented influence on the National Security Council. Stephen Miller, one of Trump’s senior advisors, has ties to noted Nazi Richard Spencer though he continues to deny them. Trump and his administration also have reported ties to Putin in Russia, the details and extent of which we still don’t know. Trump may be ideologically scattered, but his reign of terror is firmly rooted in market-driven capitalism. He cares about profit over people and that makes him an especially dangerous form of terrorist.

Every single move Trump makes is meant to instill fear in those directly affected by his orders and create terror from other marginalized groups thinking they may be next on his Executive Order chopping block. To keep groups divided. And it’s worked to an extent. Many of the protests against Trump have been single-issue oriented (and have also been critiqued for that focus). LGBTQ+ Americans are now on the defensive though Trump has promised he has no intention to curtail LGBTQ+ rights “at this time.” But maybe tomorrow. Or the next day.

And that’s a means through which Trump’s terrorism might succeed — coercing certain groups of people to play along with other atrocities in order to save themselves from a fascist leader’s ultimate wrath. To weigh their options and compromise. Sound familiar? Nazi Germany rose not that long ago. Creating intense, targeted fear among a group of people that they are not and may never be safe is a classic terrorist strategy. Now we’re all in a constant state of emergency because we don’t know what he’ll do next.

United States policy has long been “we do not negotiate with terrorists” in theory, though it’s a fiction in practice. Reality is closer to “we constantly negotiate with terrorists that can give us something we want.” But we cannot negotiate with Donald Trump from the inside or from the outside. World powers should sanction the United States; they should intervene. If anyone in Congress or the Senate still has a spine (besides Maxine Waters), they must end his reign now. And we must refuse to budge even an inch as citizens. Refuse to forget the lessons of history. Refuse to allow this to become a dire history lesson for a future generation. Never compromise with that man. There’s no working with Trump because he has no common decency. He only believes in creating terror. There’s no negotiating with a terrorist.
 
I understand what the last tweet means, but what the hell is he trying to say in the first two?
"Performative" is the latest cultural-studies buzzword (because "social construct" has become too popular with Tumblr plebs). It means roughly the same as "social construct"; the story being that what people do (including their all-important gender roles) are "performances" based on the "script" of society.
 
"Performative" is the latest cultural-studies buzzword (because "social construct" has become too popular with Tumblr plebs). It means roughly the same as "social construct"; the story being that what people do (including their all-important gender roles) are "performances" based on the "script" of society.

Do you know what's really "performative?" Saying stupid fucking buzzwords unironically to show that you know buzzwords. I am so fucking sick of this postmodern cancer. (Not directed at you.)
 
"Performative" is the latest cultural-studies buzzword (because "social construct" has become too popular with Tumblr plebs). It means roughly the same as "social construct"; the story being that what people do (including their all-important gender roles) are "performances" based on the "script" of society.
And yet no one who uses that buzzword will see its obvious applicability to virtue signalling.
 
Ah, I had forgotten about this little gem.

So he's effectively out of Rutgers, huh? Can't say I'm surprised.

And all those tweets about wanting a gun sure don't look like the ravings of a madman, no sir. Aren't these kinds of people the ones that believe all school shooters are white?
 
  • Like
Reactions: GREEDY FIREMAN
In the beginning, they were all united in the opinion that white men were the bad guys...

...soon, however, gay men were kicked out of the club...

...now white women are being told to sit down and shut up in the name of intersectionality...

...who will be next on the chopping block? Black men, Asians of both genders?

It's kind of like watching a pack of wild animals turn on the weakest of their kind, except they attack whoever they perceive to be the "most privileged"
 
In the beginning, they were all united in the opinion that white men were the bad guys...

...soon, however, gay men were kicked out of the club...

...now white women are being told to sit down and shut up in the name of intersectionality...

...who will be next on the chopping block? Black men, Asians of both genders?

It's kind of like watching a pack of wild animals turn on the weakest of their kind, except they attack whoever they perceive to be the "most privileged"

The snake has been eating it's own tail for years, this is natural progression. Next the Asians will be deemed to be speaking from a position of privilege for *spins wheel* owning businesses and the blacks will totally separate themselves from the rest of society. And then the snake will continue to eat.
 
The snake has been eating it's own tail for years, this is natural progression. Next the Asians will be deemed to be speaking from a position of privilege for *spins wheel* owning businesses and the blacks will totally separate themselves from the rest of society. And then the snake will continue to eat.
You know, in saner times people would be praising America for being a land where so many people could gain privilege so fast. But to these guys, it just means the number of shitlords is increasing.
 
Back