Wednesday, July 07, 2010



Academe + Canada = BIG censorship

We read:
"After going home for Christmas to visit with friends and family, I found myself confronting my second semester of journalism school. This semester, we were expected to participate in a blogging assignment. Two posts a week on a specific topic. I was excited that I finally had a chance to stop pretending to be objective and start writing what was really on my mind.

My first post was on the war in Gaza and the problems I had with students and pundits who claimed that Israel was using a disproportionate amount of force. "If Israel sent in missiles without aiming, would that be proportional? If Israel deliberately fired upon civilian, rather than military targets, would that be proportional? Because that is exactly how Hamas has been terrorizing the innocent people living in Southern Israel.… Of course, I would not expect information such as how Israeli hospitals are treating injured Palestinians, while Palestinian hospitals are allowing Hamas agents to shoot injured prisoners in their hospital beds, to be disseminated in a lefty institution like a Canadian university," I wrote.

Before I was able to publish the piece, I was pulled into my professor's office and told that my writing was unacceptable; that I was unqualified to write on the war in Gaza because I am not a international relations expert and I've never served with the Israeli army. He also said that the piece was too opinionated and that I would have to provide proof of everything I said, including my assertion that Hamas is a terrorist organization, even though it is listed as such by both the American and Canadian governments.

I initially gave my professor the benefit of the doubt and switched my topic. After receiving feedback on my next post, I asked for examples of best practises and was sent to a blog post written by one of my classmates. She also wrote about the war in Gaza, but she was on the opposite side of the issue, claiming that Israel was using disproportionate force and that the Canadian government was wrong not to condemn it. It quickly became apparent to me that my previous post had been censored, not for any of the reasons I was given, but because my political opinions conflicted with those of my professor.

Source

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Apparently, academia is the same in Canada as it is in the US, that is, controlled by leftists.

Stories like this one should come as no surprise to anyone. Once the Marxist-in-Chief in the White House made it known to the world that he's no friend of Isreal, he created an open season on Isreal, letting the world know that it is now ok to make them a target without any interference from the US. I only hope the Isreali government, and the people of Isreal, understand they no longer have a friend in the WH.

Wanna Know said...

Why does it take so long for comments to appear after hitting the "publish" bar?

Anonymous said...

And anyone is surprised by this?

Anonymous said...

CanaDUH! and EuroPEONs both hate opinion that disagrees with the liberal viewpoint.

Anonymous said...

Wanna Know, just hit the refresh button on your browser and it will appear instantly.

Anonymous said...

Folks, it's Canada. By definition it's irrelevant. Canada is just America's hat.

Anonymous said...

"Folks, it's Canada. By definition it's irrelevant"

Please provide a reference for this "definition."

Use the Name, Luke said...

While he's at it, he can also give a definition for "troll".

Wanna Know, Blogger was having trouble with comments yesterday. I saw the some problem at another blog that uses Blogger.

Wanna Know said...

Thanks Luke, i thought it was just me.

And no, hitting the refresh key does not make it appear instantly. It often takes several tries.

Anonymous said...

"I don't want to talk to you no more, you empty headed animal food trough wiper. I fart in your general direction. Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries." -- French Soldier, Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

See! How hard was it to provide a reference?

Anonymous said...

Well said!