Gambia can’t wait to bring back FGM.
Many people … pretended to suffer from cognitive impairment to join the trial, for example by intentionally drawing a clock incorrectly. [T]he participants whose data had to be tossed out included many grandmothers who saw a chance to make thousands of dollars a year by simultaneously joining multiple trials for which they did not qualify.
You gotta figure the grandkids are monetizing la nana by priming her for multiple clinical trials — not only training her in drawing a clock with the six up and the twelve down, but in how to tremble uncontrollably, and in how to shriek psychotically. South Florida runs so many trials that the kids must have a system of charts – South Dixie Highway: Parkinson’s, Dolphin Express: Alzheimer’s – to keep track of diseases and locations. Do they deprive granny of water and meds for a few hours prior to testing, for greater symptomaticity?
Veteran UD readers know what to make of people who, like the Wizard of Oz and Harold Hill the Music Man, are always tossing around advanced degrees. They are almost invariably con men.
… AND it’s Texas A&M!
Anyone paying attention to that intellectual έρημος CANNOT be surprised that their BOT has now begun banning long stretches of Plato from classrooms because … uh… gender?
”What kind of university” does this, asks the miscreant who tried to teach a Dialogue or two.
The kind of university that tells the miscreant he either dumps transy P. pronto or he can teach Ethics and Engineering instead! UD is not making this up.
The local AAUP says
“A research university that censors Plato abandons its obligation to truth, inquiry, and the public trust — and should not be regarded as a serious institution of higher learning.”
Who da fuck ever regarded A&M as a serious anything? Have you read UD’s years of posts about that football-addled joke?
***********************
Reminds UD of Benedictine College in Kansas, where
Sometimes, people here quietly admit, it goes too far. Like the students who loudly proclaim how often they go to Mass, or the young man who quit his classics course because he refused to read the works of ancient Greek pagans.
************
UPDATE: Great title! Texas Plato Massacre
UD has zero interest in his motives, but Minnesota’s governor lazily presided over a fraud-ridden state, and he has certainly done the right thing by dropping out of the next election.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/minnesota-fraud-schemes-what-we-know
************
“A really bad thing happened, and it demonstrated a real failure of public management that has to be addressed. And the scale of it was just incredible,” said Harold Pollack, a social sciences professor at the University of Chicago and longtime defender of safety net programs. “The Trump people are going to take this thing and they’re going to run with it so aggressively, it becomes a little bit easier for us to overlook the important substance here.”
They’re way proud of their Nobel winner, but he ain’t around. Wouldn‘t live in his home country if you paid him.
Pretty much no one’s around. No one under thirty. Shitty economy, and the joint’s run by a weirdo at once hyper-puritan and heavy into fuckywucky cuz the birth rate’s pathetic plus everyone’s leaving.
All very odd. Very malsain.
Lots of countries have lousy universities, but Greece is a real scandal, given the nation’s history and cultural significance. Lately it’s been trying this and that – it’s even allowed private universities to operate!
It has also, most recently, legislated against “dormant students,” hundreds of thousands of people who’ve remained enrolled for ten, twenty years while doing absolutely nothing. Fully half of Greek university students retained this status until the government finally decided it was kind of stupid.
So they’re inching along. But it’s a fundamentally corrupt, demoralized system, so good luck.
Christopher Hitchens famously compared some forms of religious life to “celestial North Koreas,” where one is compelled to praise one’s secular or divine god unceasingly. As Rick Plasterer, an evangelical, puts it:
God is always the final authority in our lives (Acts 5:29, certainly for Christians, and really should be for everyone). We are commanded to pray without ceasing (i.e., frequently, I Thess. 5:16-18) and certainly before meals (I Tim. 4:4-5).
Now, if you’re France, or Quebec, and you regard yourself as a secular country, or province, you do not want to live an unceasingly religious civic life; you positively wish to assert as a fundamental value, as a definitional identity, freedom from clerical existence. Religious life belongs in religious institutions – churches, mosques, synagogues, parochial schools – and of course in the domestic sphere. The shared public realm visibly, in an everyday way, ought to proclaim that God (whichever God yours happens to be – final-authority Gods abound, and you can ask Lebanon what it looks like when everyone designates a different one) is a private matter, and belongs mostly out of sight.
If it is true that for many religious one is commanded to pray unceasingly, or frequently, and if, on top of this, one takes a, well, evangelizing approach to faith (“really should be for everyone”), a country’s going to have a hell of a time establishing a public life based on shared (the vast majority of French and Quebecois, when asked, confirm that they are strongly secular/anticlerical) secular values, as in the equality of the sexes, sexual freedom, free thought, individualism, and a broad contempt for the array of surviving primitive and destructive religious practices that bedevil advanced and less advanced nations. How to establish and safeguard a truly secular realm?
Legally and constitutionally. Quebec already has some forms of restraint on people who want to gather in the streets and pray, and on people who want to wear burqas; but it wants more of this, and proposes tougher legislation. Since by definition most religious people do not understand why anyone wouldn’t like their ways (they bear after all salvational truth to us), there’s a kind of impasse here. But, like France, Quebec will proceed to assert and defend its foundational values.
January 1, 2026
A cold hawklike sky scans the labyrinth
At the top of my property. What gives?
The circles are meant to yield useful hints
About what it actually means to live.
But hasn't it been hundreds of years since
Padding around little pagan... ? Forgive,
But surely you've read last century's black prince?
The Psychopathy of Everyday Life?
The title's wrong. I simply can't convince
Myself to follow ideas that don't outlive
Their own time. OTOH hellish pits
Remain impressively generative,
Though for me make nothing happen... Look, it's
Silly, okay, to turn about the glyphs
Expecting to score existential hits -
Thoughts to be cherished like the thought of heaven
To quote Stevens. My paver walk permits
At best a chance to - with passion! - relive
The lives of people I've loved. At best it
Is a chance to toast my dead convives.
This apparently is how the Swiss nightclub fire started.
I mean, I know Iowa ranks near the bottom and is desperate not to lose the few they have… but really?
https://share.google/images/kMuY0U7XEzEPEUdBQ
The brave women of Iran ditch the mandatory hijab/black robe and join everyone else out in the street protesting the pathetic theocracy in which they are forced to live. If you want to see the future of Christian nationalism, take a look at the streets of Tehran today.
The country goes post-postal.
A veteran Canadian psychiatrist argues that the irreparably mentally ill ought to be able to choose assisted suicide.
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UD REVIEWED
Dr. Bernard Carroll, known as the "conscience of psychiatry," contributed to various blogs, including Margaret Soltan's University Diaries, for which he sometimes wrote limericks under the name Adam.
New York Times
George Washington University English professor Margaret Soltan writes a blog called University Diaries, in which she decries the Twilight Zone-ish state our holy land’s institutes of higher ed find themselves in these days.
The Electron Pencil
It’s [UD's] intellectual honesty that makes her blog required reading.
Professor Mondo
There's always something delightful and thought intriguing to be found at Margaret Soltan's no-holds-barred, firebrand tinged blog about university life.
AcademicPub
You can get your RDA of academic liars, cheats, and greedy frauds at University Diaries. All disciplines, plus athletics.
truffula, commenting at Historiann
Margaret Soltan at University Diaries blogs superbly and tirelessly about [university sports] corruption.
Dagblog
University Diaries. Hosted by Margaret Soltan, professor of English at George Washington University. Boy is she pissed — mostly about athletics and funding, the usual scandals — but also about distance learning and diploma mills. She likes poems too. And she sings.
Dissent: The Blog
[UD belittles] Mrs. Palin's degree in communications from the University of Idaho...
The Wall Street Journal
Professor Margaret Soltan, blogging at University Diaries... provide[s] an important voice that challenges the status quo.
Lee Skallerup Bessette, Inside Higher Education
[University Diaries offers] the kind of attention to detail in the use of language that makes reading worthwhile.
Sean Dorrance Kelly, Harvard University
Margaret Soltan's ire is a national treasure.
Roland Greene, Stanford University
The irrepressibly to-the-point Margaret Soltan...
Carlat Psychiatry Blog
Margaret Soltan, whose blog lords it over the rest of ours like a benevolent tyrant...
Perplexed with Narrow Passages
Margaret Soltan is no fan of college sports and her diatribes on the subject can be condescending and annoying. But she makes a good point here...
Outside the Beltway
From Margaret Soltan's excellent coverage of the Bernard Madoff scandal comes this tip...
Money Law
University Diaries offers a long-running, focused, and extremely effective critique of the university as we know it.
Anthony Grafton, American Historical Association
The inimitable Margaret Soltan is, as usual, worth reading. ...
Medical Humanities Blog
I awake this morning to find that the excellent Margaret Soltan has linked here and thereby singlehandedly given [this blog] its heaviest traffic...
Ducks and Drakes
As Margaret Soltan, one of the best academic bloggers, points out, pressure is mounting ...
The Bitch Girls
Many of us bloggers worry that we don’t post enough to keep people’s interest: Margaret Soltan posts every day, and I more or less thought she was the gold standard.
Tenured Radical
University Diaries by Margaret Soltan is one of the best windows onto US university life that I know.
Mary Beard, A Don's Life
[University Diaries offers] a broad sense of what's going on in education today, framed by a passionate and knowledgeable reporter.
More magazine, Canada
If deity were an elected office, I would quit my job to get her on the ballot.
Notes of a Neophyte
