Ball State University Profs Bring Slate of Anti-Meat Speakers to Campus

The East Central Indiana Star Press reported in October about conservative students at Ball State University upset over a litany of vegetarian and left wing speakers, apparently in part by BSU history professor Abel Alves.

One of the amusing details of the story is that BSU is paying for Fast Food Nation author Eric Schlosser to speak at the university in November. Schlosser apparently took one look at BSU and said “supersize me” as he will earn $15,000 for four hours of speaking duties on campus. Perhaps Schlosser should write a follow-up, Outrageous Speaking Fees: The Dark Side of Paying $15K for Anti-McDonald’s Rants. Or maybe he could investigate exactly what they are putting in the water at universities that is clearly affecting the judgment of those responsible for budgeting for speakers.

According to the Star Press, students at Ball State will also be treated to “a philosopher who will argue that eating meat is immoral [Mylan Engel Jr.], organic farmers, and a representative of The Humane Society of the United States [Chris Bedford].”

One of the conservative students who objects to this litany of speakers paid for out of student’s tuition dollars, Amanda Carpenter, believes that history professor Abel Alves is behind the selection.

Alves is an animal rights activist who, along with his wife Carol Blakney, was convicted of trespassing at a pig farm in Indiana. Blakney had filed a complaint against the pig farm two months prior to the October 12, 2002 trespass. A witness and friend of the pig farmer testified that Alves entered the property, ignoring a prominently displayed “No Trespassing” sign which Alves walked past, and took photographs of the farm. The two were each fined $1.

Sources:

Hog-farm trespass conviction upheld. Seth Slabaugh, The Star Press (Indiana), October 2004.

BSU speaker promotes vegetarianism in opposition to factory farms. Seth Slalbaugh, The Star Press (Indiana), October 2004.

Conservative students uneasy, angry. Seth Slabaugh, The Star Press (Indiana), October 2004.

Warp 11

The other day I mentioned Lovecraft filker-extraordinary Terrence Chua. I ran across his site after watching Trekkies 2 several times in a row and was googling for the web site of Star Trek theme band Warp 11, which is featured in that film.

Trekkies 2 features Warp 11 performing their awesome song, Everything I Do, I Do With William Shatner (listen to MP3 clip here). This song could have been the theme to Free Enterprise,

Everything I do, I do with William Shatner
Losing all my hair while my belly’s growing fat-ner
And when I drink too much
He holds my hair in his hands
And while I’m blowing chunks
He treats me like the captain

Oh, when we get together we boldly go
Talk about our favorite episodes
I don’t want to go to work
Just want to hang with Captain Kirk
And if I had my way I’d make it so

A song from their first album, sums up Shatner’s career perfectly,

HeÂ’ll beat up Klingons
And heÂ’ll blow up Gorn
If it wasnÂ’t for Star Trek, heÂ’d be making porn
Scoring with chicks since the day he was born
The day he dies how we will mourn

Free Advice for Successful Online Advertising

Here’s a hint for people doing advertising on the Internet. Please make sure that if I click on that ad you’re paying for that I don’t receive a page with a product photo accompanied by the message, “Sorry, this product as been discontinued and is no longer available.”

Thunderbird 0.9

The good folks at Mozilla.Org released Thunderbird 0.9 earlier this week. Thunderbird 0.8 introduced an extremely annoying bug that prevented users from changing the location for storing mailboxes locally.

So that’s been fixed, and Thunderbird’s added a number of cool tools for keeping track of e-mail, including more sophisticated message grouping features and virtual search folders.

I Wish the Terrorists Were Christians (AKA F— The New York Times)

If you’re a believer don’t take this the wrong way, but some days I wish Osama bin Laden and other terrorists currently plaguing the world were Christian rather than Muslim. If it were Christians who had planned 9/11 or Christians who were beheading people in Iraq or Christians who murdered filmmakers for pointing out the absurdities in their religion, then the Leftists and the liberal media would have no problem whatsoever dwelling on the evil Christian terrorists. If they were Christians, you’d see the terrorists referred to as evil fanatics rather than as resistance fighters. If the terrorists were Christians, you’d see calls for all-out crackdowns on them instead of calls for more cultural sensitivity.

Don’t believe me? Lets just look at that piece-of-s— rag The New York Times. This week, Muslim fanatics in the Netherlands murdered filmmaker Theo Van Gogh because Van Gogh had dared make a provocative film criticizing the Koran’s and Muslims’ treatment of women. These terrorists first shot Van Gogh then cut his throat with a butcher’s knife and left a pro-Muslim, anti-Semitic five page rant pinned to his body.

Because the killers were Muslim, the New York Times view is that this is simply at best some sort of cultural misunderstanding that is the result of the Dutch government’s failure to better manage the large influx of Muslim immigrants there.

Urgent efforts are needed to better manage the cultural tensions perilously close to the surface of Dutch public life. The problem is not Muslim immigration, but a failure to plan for a smoother transition to a more diverse society. One very real danger is that the public trauma over the van Gogh murder may lead to a clamor for anti-Muslim policies that could victimize thousands of innocent refugees and immigrants.

The challenge for Dutch political leaders is to find ways to reverse this disturbing trend of politically motivated violence without making it harder to achieve cultural harmony.

A crackdown on Muslim extremists would just be wrong because it might end up affect non-extremist Muslims as well. Instead, the New York Times seems to think that what the Netherlands needs is some sort of national sensitivity training to “achieve cultural harmony.”

Now what about my thesis — what if Van Gogh’s murderers had been Christians? Thankfully the New York Times provided that answer in 1998, after the equally despicable murder of abortion provider Dr. Barnett A. Slepian by an anti-abortion terrorist.

Here’s what the New York Times had to say about how the U.S. should react to Slepian’s murder (emphasis added),

But a principled commitment to provide a constitutionally protected service could not stop the assassin’s bullet that tore through his kitchen window and into his back Friday night. His death shows again how tentative the right to abortion has become in the face of terrorism by anti-choice fanatics. Their repeated acts of terrorism must be met with the severest possible crackdown by law-enforcement authorities. If an armed police officer has to be stationed outside every abortion provider’s home and office, 24 hours a day, let it be done. This is an assault not only on individual doctors, but also on the rights and liberties of all Americans.

. . .

It is bad enough that conservatives in Congress and in state legislatures are working to dismantle reproductive rights by banning certain procedures, such as so-called partial birth abortion, and by requiring waiting periods and parental consent before an abortion can be obtained. But those restrictions are at least imposed by the normal give and take of political and judicial struggle in a democracy. What is outrageous is the attempt to shut down abortions by illegal means — by shooting the doctors or bombing the clinics or harassing the women seeking to exercise their constitutional right. Some anti-abortion groups, to their credit, have denounced the bombings and shootings, but others seem reluctant to issue the strong condemnations that are warranted. Indeed, one particularly virulent anti-abortion Web site lists the names of doctors it says perform abortions, or “crimes against humanity,” with a code indicating whether they are “working,” “wounded” or a “fatality.” Such incendiary rhetoric, and frequent accusations by some anti-abortionists that abortion providers are committing murder, can only fuel more terrorism.

The increase in anti-choice laws and ongoing campaigns of harassment by protest groups, even short of murder, have worked to make abortions harder to obtain. More than 80 percent of counties in this country have no abortion provider. In 45 states, the number of doctors who performed abortions declined between 1982 and 1992. Dr. Slepian was among those who took a stand against restricting reproductive freedom and paid with his life. Unless these brave doctors are better protected, fewer doctors in the next generation will be willing to place themselves and their families in such danger. That is what the terrorists want. They must not be allowed to succeed.

So when an anti-abortion terrorist murders a doctor, the New York Times had no problem calling for “the severest possible crackdown” and had no qualms about linking the activities of the mainstream anti-abortion movement with terrorists who murdered Slepian.

But when Muslim extremists brutally murder a filmmaker, The New York Times says any legal crackdown would be a mistake and appears to call for some sort of nationwide cultural senstivity training to achieve more cultural harmony and transitions to a diverse society.

Too bad Van Gogh wasn’t murdered by pro-life Christians — then the New York Times might have actually taken his murder seriously.

Sources:

Violence Against Abortion Doctors. Editorial, New York Times, October 26, 1998.

Deadly Hatreds in the Netherlands. Editorial, New York Times, November 5, 2004.

Apparent Corruption Results in Closing of NJ SPCA Chapter

In October the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals took the extraordinary step of ordering its Hunterdon County chapter to shut down over revelations that came about due to the manslaughter trial of former NBA star Jayson Williams.

Williams was ultimately acquitted of aggravated manslaughter charges, but convicted of attempting to cover up the fatal shooting of a limousine driver. The jury deadlocked on charges of reckless manslaughter, and Williams is scheduled to be retried on that charge in 2005.

One of the revelations that was barred from being entered into evidence was that Williams had shot and killed his dog after losing a bet with a teammate about the dog’s effectiveness as a guard dog (for more details on that incident, see this story).

That raised the question of why Williams had never been prosecuted for animal cruelty, and the evidence pointed to corruption. Two weeks after the August 2001 shooting of the rottweiler, the Hunterdon County SPCA accepted a $500 donation from Williams and no criminal charges were ever filed against him. The New Jersey SPCA has subsequently filed civil charges against Williams, which is its only option since the statute of limitations on the dog shooting has long since expired.

New Jersey SPCA president Stuart Rhodes told the Associated Press that Hunterdon SPCA executive director never replied to letters he sent asking her to explain her failure to prosecute Williams,,

I was looking for her [Carlson] to explain reasons why she didn’t prosecute Jayson Williams. She should have at least entered the charges. But by doing nothing, she allowed him to walk. And then you accept a donation?

Source:

SPCA closes chapter in ex-NBA star’s case. The Associated Press, October 11, 2004.