Social Justice Summits and Social Justice Degree Programs: Cult Recruitment and Indoctrination Across America. Part 2
By Alexandria Jane.
We see that there is a pattern of homegrown terrorism across the United States that seems to coincidentally be choc full of college students and “liberal” professors. Hmmm. What is the connection?
Social Justice Summits.
You know, there are even Social Justice Summits for the tech industry? [20 , 21]
Let us start with Social Justice in academia, the mentally ilLiberal military industrial complex. Social Justice is like the looking glass that you go through to leave the world of science, philosophy, and freedom to enter a totalitarian world drunk with indoctrination instead of education.
And schools that don’t prioritize indoctrination are bad for the world.
‘So social justice is untidy, exhausting, discouraging, even dangerous work—which may be the reason why it’s not on the top ten list of social studies projects in many schools. Better to have kids build a model of a rancho (a group of huts for housing ranch workers) or recreate a potlatch (a festival ceremony practiced by the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest) and be done with it. [1]’
‘In the best-case scenarios, the adults encourage rather than avoid authentic conversations about our collective dilemmas—human rights, environmental protection, economic justice, violence. They embrace the inevitable question, What can we do about it? and teach students to act.
Younger students may not be able to define social justice, but they can list the attributes that we value in human relationships: friendship, responsibility, equality, fairness, mutual support, collaboration, and caring. With a little prompting, older students enlarge their sphere of concern, zeroing in on injustice related to socioeconomic status, exploitation, and the abuses of power. They probably won’t use those words, but they’ll recognize the issues.
They’ll notice for example, that certain ethnicities seem to be overrepresented on the homeless rolls in their own town and underrepresented in the local power structure or that hotel workers risk their jobs to demonstrate for a living wage, but the subject is aggressively ignored at city council meetings. And now that classrooms have Internet access, it won’t take long for students to discover sweatshops, child labor, hazardous waste, discrimination, and the devastation of the natural environment on a global scale. [1]’
‘I’ve used Hoose’s book dozens of times, with adults and children, and the reaction is always the same—awe and discontent. Students recognize that these kids are doing something real and important. That’s the awe factor. But they’re filled with questions: Could I do that? Would I? Are there problems like that in my community? How could I find them? Do I have the courage to act? A new standard of behavior replaces the status quo, and kids wonder whether they can measure up. That’s what causes the discontent, and it’s a perfect platform for action. [1]’
‘As educators, we hold the next generation of voters, politicians, and corporate leaders in our hands. Teaching students about interdependence and responsibility through social action is a lesson that can stick.
Active, inquisitive citizenship can begin when kids are very young. They should act out early and often, until championing worthy causes becomes a habit they can’t break. You won’t regret a minute you spend guiding your students to discover their roles as stewards of the environment and champions of human rights. [1]’
Changing the behavior of kids is a tool to change their thinking; indoctrination.
So, if you have kids, you might want to think about homeschooling. If that’s impossible, know what your kids are reading and doing in school. Maybe offer supplemental activities to offset the mind fuck that is the business-model style of edumacation. Ideally, the Department of Edumacation would be abolished. That bill will be dead at 12:00 am, 01/01/2019. Good try, though.
This basic structure of Social Justice edumacation is present across the United States at Social Justice Summits.
Briefly, Social Justice Summits are sometimes week long events with a variety of workshops and outings that fall along the theme of cultural Marxism disguised as addressing racism, sexism, feminism, transphobia, Islamophobia, disability, mass incarceration, the environment, borders, hate, intersectionality, and Palestine. There are even Social Justice Summits at religious schools. Jesus was a Marxist.
So, let’s go through a small list of some events:
Social Justice Summit: Emotional Journey toward movement and belonging. The University of St. Thomas, Minnesota.
Division of Student Affairs; Student Diversity and inclusion services. Social Justice Summit; emotional journey toward movement and belonging. Facilitated by: Filmmaker and Racial Equity Educator Dr. Shakti Butler. University of St. Thomas.
Theme: Emotional Journey toward Movement and Belonging. While human beings function both rational and emotional levels, emotions are the heart of our energy, commitment, and motivations. As we live in a culture in which racism and privilege are universal, how do we then manage our emotional response and be understood through these multiple dimensions.
Overarching Learning outcomes, after attending the social justice retreat, participants will:
Deepen their understanding of the dynamics of oppression and historically marginalized groups, cultures and systems
Reflect and develop problem solving and critical thinking skills within a social justice framework
Increase intercultural intelligence and develop confidence in their ability to have deeper conversations about diversity
Deepen their empathy for themselves and others [2]
Social Justice Summit. CSUSM. Cal State University of San Marcos.
Participants will explore and challenge personal perceptions and social norms through experiential activities, individual reflections, and group dialogues.
Through the experience and learning of SJS, students will:
Become aware of cycles of socialization and oppression.
Increase their awareness of personal identity within the context of multiple types of cultures.
Recognize their personal connection with systems of power and privilege.
Gain knowledge of the distinct difference between equality and equity.
Form relationships and support networks with other individuals committed to social justice.
Develop skills to become socially conscious leaders and community members. Mission:
In the spirit of community, the Social Justice Summit will set the foundation for individuals to explore diversity, become aware of the existence and impact of oppression, and initiate sustainable change, both in self and society. Participants will engage in work that creates a paradigm shift in thought and action to attain an equitable society free of oppression. [3]
And if registration is full, you can always follow the links on the registration page to the Cross-Cultural Center, the Black Student Center, the Gender Equity Center, the Latin@ Center because the O represents the oppressive cis-gendered patriarchy and we’re all victims and oppressors, and the LGBTQA Pride Center. Cross-Cultural Centers, that will have to be a story for later. Cross-Cultural Centers are like the witch’s house made of cookies and candies to lure children in and throw them in the oven to made into Marxist pie. Any student in any major can become mentally ill without having to study Sociology, Gender Studies, or Marxist philosophy and communist ethics. With any luck, they’ll change their majors or add a minor in cult insanity.
“Will there be gender neutral restrooms?
“Gender neutral restrooms are available in the private rooms.” [4]
At the Social Justice Summit at the University of Florida:
Social justice refers to identifying and understanding social power dynamics and social inequalities that result in some social groups having privilege, power, and access; and others being disadvantaged, oppressed, and denied access. Social justice promotes cross-cultural interactions and demands that all people; regardless of their race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, social class, gender identity and expression, language, national origin, worldview (religion, spirituality, and other values), physical or mental (dis)ability, or education; have a right to basic human dignity and have their basic needs met. It involves social actors who have a sense of their own agency to make an impact, as well as a sense of social responsibility toward and with others and to society as a whole through engaging in allyship.
We envision a long term look at issues of justice, with this year’s theme, Allyship: Identify, Interact, & Impact. Allyship entails using power and privilege to leverage resources and access for underrepresented groups, consciously breaking down barriers, and actively challenging the status quo of structural oppression to promote social justice.
Our tagline, For the Gator Good, is congruent with our gator culture that supports social justice, encourages accountability for all to be invested, and acknowledges that social advocacy is the responsibility of all Gators. Together we can make a change; together For the Gator Good.
At Kalamazoo College:
On January 17-19, 2013, the Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership hosted a summit that brought together social justice scholars, thought leaders, activists, and program directors from the United States, Kenya, and South Africa to examine the integration of social justice into higher education.
Two “Summit” events, a documentary film screening and a luncheon, were open to the public.
“Numerous colleges and universities have established social justice centers, institutes, offices, programs, schools, and prizes,” said Lisa Brock, academic director for Kalamazoo College’s Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership (ACSJL), and a “Summit” organizer.
“Some have missions focused on social transformation and curricular infusion, while others concentrate on community involvement, solution-based research, and/or global engagement. Most are dedicated to some combination of these practices, and all work in some ways on progressive social change,” she said. “Although there have been many conferences to discuss social justice and public engagement, this is the first time these topics will be discussed by directors and leaders in the field of social justice.”
The documentary film Mountains That Take Wing—Angela Davis & Yuri Kochiyama was screened in the Recital Hall Theatre, Light Fine Arts Building, on Jan. 17 at 7:00 p.m. “Mountains” chronicles 13 years in the lives of two women who share a passion for social justice: scholar-activist Angela Davis, and grassroots community activist and 2005 Nobel Peace Prize nominee Yuri Kochiyama. A conversation with filmmakers C.A. Griffith and H.L.T Quan follows the screening.
“Beyond Heroes and Holidays: Social Justice Leaders Reflect on the Civil Rights Movement,” was the theme of a luncheon discussion on Friday Jan. 18, 12:00 to 2:30 p.m. in the Hicks Student Center banquet room. Summit members examined the values and work of three very different leaders of the Civil Rights movement—Martin Luther King, Jr., Ella Baker and Bayard Rustin—and discussed what inspirations and cautions others should take from them on building and sustaining movements today.
“Summit” invitees were: Lisa Brock; Dara Cooper, ACSJL Fellow and Founding Program Director, Freshmoves, Chicago; Kenyon Farrow, Communications Director, The Praxis Project New Orleans; Jaime Grant, Executive Director, ACSJL; Crystal Griffin, Social Justice Filmmaker, Arizona State University; Donte Hillard, Assistant Dean of Students and Director Multicultural Student Center and Institute for Justice Education and Transformation, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Amber Hollibaugh, Executive Director, Queers for Economic Justice, New York City; Janet Jakobson, Director, Barnard Center for Research on Women, Barnard College; Joseph Jones, Director, Office of the Social Justice Initiative, Philander Smith College; Godwin Morunga, Associate Director, African Leadership Center, University of Nairobi and Kings College-London; H. L. T. Quan, School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University; Barbara Ransby, Vice Provost, Social Justice Initiative, University of Illinois-Chicago; Gail Smith, Communications Director, Institute for Strategic Reflection, Mapungubwe, Johannesburg, South Africa; Rhonda Williams, Director of the Institute for Social Justice, Case Western University. [6]
Did you read the titles of the summit invitees? Cancer.
These summits are held on private college campuses as well. Poor USC. They held a pro-censorship to shield the activities of radical Wahhabi Islamists event called, “Summit of (De)Institutionalizing Islamophobia on College Campuses.” A report can be found here: http://online.anyflip.com/hrhd/kbnu/mobile/index.html#p=1
On September 8th, 2017, the Center for Education, Identity and Social Justice hosted the Summit on (De)Institutionalizing Islamophobia on College Campuses. Over 90 registered attendees, representing 20 different institutions or organizations, came together at USC to learn and discuss laws and policies that affect Muslim college students and the intersectionality and diversity with the Muslim community. The Summit opened with Karen Symms Gallagher PhD, the Emery Stoops and Joyce King Stoops Dean of the USC Rossier School of Education, welcoming attendees and setting up the context and importance of the Summit.
The event was moderated by the Center’s Co-Directors Shafiqa Ahmadi JD and Darnell Cole PhD, with the overall question in mind of how higher education and student affairs professionals, scholars and student leaders can better serve Muslim college students. There were two panels during the event which featured five female Muslim women professionals. The law and policy panel featured Parwana Anwar JD: Trial and Criminal Defense Attorney; Zulaikha Aziz JD: Human Rights Attorney and Assistant Professor of the Practice, School of International Relations at USC; and Marwa Rifahie JD: Civil Rights Attorney at CAIR-LA. The intersectionality and diversity panel featured Shabana Mir PhD: Assistant Professor and Coordinator, General Education at American Islamic College and Najeeba Syeed JD: Associate Professor of Interreligious Education at Claremont School of Theology.
The Summit concluded with a workshop, facilitated by Professors Ahmadi and Cole, where attendees worked together at their tables to reflect and brainstorm on actions they could take at their respective campuses to disrupt Islamophobia. Each attendee made an on-campus commitment action plan, which included creating a timeline and list of resources to utilize.
At Farmingdale College in New York:
The Social Science Research Institute’s Center for Social Justice
Saturday, April 23, 2016, 9:00 am – 3:30 pm
Farmingdale State College Campus Center Ballroom
The Summit brought awareness of social justice issues through participation in educational roundtables led by local community experts. Engaging conversation was held with the following discussion groups: Environmental Justice, Food Justice (and Food Security), Health Disparities, Homelessness, Immigration, LGBTQ, Race, Housing Discrimination, Educational Disparities, Mental Health, Criminal Justice, and many others. This exciting day began with guest speakers who inspired us all to action! Participants left with tangible resources and opportunities to create change in their own communities.
[11]
This outstanding event was covered by FIOS1, MyLITV.
[11]
Additionally, this event was featured in the SUNY Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion newsletter, “Diversity Counts.”
[11]
[“/academics/centers-institutes/social-science-research-institute/pdf/diversitycountsmay2016.pdf”][8]
A focal point of the event will be inspiring Long Islanders to lobby for equal access to vital resources regardless of race, ethnicity, class, age, religion, gender, disability, and sexual orientation. [11]
Oh yea, these events are to get people to lobby. Don’t take lobbying lightly. The left has figured out a way to get taxpayers to fund lobbying campaigns that support one political party, even on federally funded college campuses. Pure evil.
The latest event at Farmingdale State College was this:
The Four Pillars of Activism
Learning How to Become a Globally Engaged, Ethical Leader
Leadership
Community engagement
Advocacy
Activism through social movement
The afternoon session continues our leadership training in the four pillars with participants selecting their social justice area of interest and working in roundtables led by experts in the field. Among these many roundtables we hope to include are: Immigration, Environmental Justice, Food Justice (and Food Security), LGBTQIA+, Housing Discrimination, Criminal Justice/Police Reform, Mental Health, Native American Issues, Health Disparities, Homelessness, Voting and Constitutional Change, and many others. Participants will leave with tangible resources and opportunities to create change in their own communities.
I’ll be honest. I agree with a lot of what is said at these summits. My problem is with the agendas that real issues are being used to push. I’ve been homeless. I don’t want homelessness eradicated. We conservatives who don’t want to be used by socialist thieves to steal taxpayer money to profit psychopaths should have the freedom to choose homelessness. Just like there should be resources for disabled homeless veterans who get shoo’d out of VA hospital waiting rooms because they want a warm place to sleep. My God, if we could only make homelessness stop being so fucking profitable. If only there was virtue in California and our state stopped using vulnerable people as excuses for theft while not even helping them. Socialism is so evil. Let there be homelessness until socialism is dead. Schools will push the idea of more government and more laws as the solution. My solutions is always less government and fewer laws. This is where I am at odds with what these Summits pursue; totalitarianism.
They never speak of repealing and amending the 13th amendment to remove the exception clause to actually end slavery. Read the 13th amendment for yourself.
“Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” [9]
Slavery was never abolished. And the fact that no Social Justice Warriors address this, as they dance around the truth with talks of mass incarceration and private prisons, proves to me that they are being used as Social Cult members as gatekeepers of information to ensure that no one learns that slavery was never abolished, thus enabling the social issues that we both see; they blame capitalism and I blame the 13th amendment. Slavery exists in all types of societies, not exclusively capitalist societies. Capitalism is not the problem and socialism is not the solution. Prisons should be where we hold people too dangerous for the general public and the globe, like Hillary Clinton. Much of what I see is wrong in America is right when you look at these wrongs through the lens of keeping prisons full of young, able-bodied men who can dig pipelines in the middle of the night in Arizona for $00.20 an hour. It’s against the law for a single parent to share a room with a child of the opposite sex. There are more single moms than single dads. There’s money to take these boys and put them into foster care and not help the mom in housing. Knowing attachment theory and how devastating this is to the development of any child, this disgusting federally funded crime makes sense when you know the odd of this child ending up in prison because of being put in foster care instead of staying with his mother. By the way, Child Support Services only go after the fathers who work. Less than 1% of deadbeat parents are prosecuted. I’d received child support checks for $1.36. All you pro-lifers out there, get off your fucking high horse and stand up for these women. They had babies and these moms have been abandoned by everyone, including you. And some are having their babies stolen from them because they can’t afford two rooms to rent while you do nothing. I’m so lucky I had a girl.
You won’t hear that at these summits, or how social workers are called “baby snatchers”. Or how moms in some neighborhoods are afraid of anyone who looks like a social worker and will hide their kids. Or how moms will lie and say they don’t have kids if they get arrested. Don’t get arrested, you say? I doubt you’ve ever felt hunted before. When officers go out looking for arrests and they pull you over because a light is out over your license plate, it’s scary. These officers have so much power when they choose to be slave catchers instead of peace officers. I would walk around my car before driving at night to save myself from the humiliation of being treated by a criminal, saving myself from the stress that doesn’t help my stress disorder, and to save myself from God knows what else.
This is what Social Justice enables while they ignite class warfare and push for socialism.
I digress, even though this is relevant to why I call bullshit on each and every Social Justice Summit. And no, the fact that slavery was never abolished isn’t a fairy tale to make Republicans seem less benevolent. Slavery was never abolished. Democrats are still fighting for state ownership of slaves while establishment Republicans fight for private ownership of slave, why Republicans are really against abortions; each unwanted child that is aborted is a financial loss to them. That’s a sick way to be pro-life if you ask me. Remember Nazi Sander and Killary Clinton talking about prisons during their 2016 presidential campaigns? They only attacked private prisons while trying to dupe their audience into believing that that they weren’t cannibalistic monsters, financially feeding off of lives they destroyed through their policies. Honestly, this will have to be a story of its own. There’s so much.
Back to the Cult of Social Justice. Make people feel bad. Offer activities to help remedy their uneasiness. Get them to change their behavior in order to change their thinking. Offer lots of activities, trainings, workshops, dogma, and create “us versus them” thinking. Try to isolate them. Identity politics is ideal for isolating people. Make people feel oppressed and train them on how to be activists. Make the oppressors feel like shit because of their skin color or genitals that they didn’t ask to be born with and convince them to change their behavior to right the wrongs of evil white European males. Remember the chant at UCI? “Go back to Europe!” You think I’m being funny? That I’m exaggerating. Compare what these Social Justice Summits teach to Social Justice “activism” on college campuses. Listen to the rhetoric. Listen to the dogma. They all say the same thing.
But wait, there’s more .
2017, Georgetown, South Carolina, Beyond the Bridge held a Social Justice Summit. You want to organize your own event? A phone number is provided on the page so you can hold your own even to make your neighbors insane. And it’s open to the public as long as they preregister. Check out the “schedule” by hitting the schedule tab. Looks familiar? It should. This is Social Justice cult recruiting. “Graduates” will all screech the same things at events organized by their leadership. Funny thing about activism is that it doesn’t debate. It’s the perfect pathway to cult indoctrination. [12]
At Truman University in Missouri:
Students, faculty, staff, and professionals are invited to join the Truman State University Multicultural Affairs Center in exploring the different facets of social justice in our communities and world. The summit will focus on the knowledge and skills needed to effectively lead social change efforts in the institutions we occupy.
The theme “Equity and Justice NOW” was created to convey the urgency of change related efforts within the United States. In the year 2015, over 1,100 people were victims of police related death. 21 transgender women were also killed in 2015, most of them being women of color. Popular movements such as #BlackLivesMatter, #SayHerName,#HerNameWas, #BlackOnCampus and even #OscarsSoWhite highlight a dire need for representation, equity, and justice among marginalized communities.
This two-day summit will take place on Truman State University’s campus on Friday, April 15, 2016 at 4:30 pm and Saturday, April 16, 2016 at 9:15 a.m. and will consist of several opportunities for unpacking the intricacies and complexities of social justice advocacy. Through three workshop blocks, performances, and reflection our hope is that we can create authentic and brave dialogue that fosters self-awareness, identity development, coalition building, and a commitment to change. [13]
I remember 2017. At UCI, we had our ASUCI presidential debate. The Social Justice Cult members in EVP were shouting “Say her name!” in reference to an MTF transwoman who died by cop. You were an awful person if you didn’t know any names of black MTF trans women, creating an oppressed “us” versus the oppressor “them” in the election debate to get students to vote for Social Justice cult members. Anyone outside of the cult was baffled. Who knew the names of the three girls who died while evading arrest after having stolen a car by driving into a deep pond at night? Their deaths were somehow the fault of the police as media showed condensed versions of the dash cam footage to try to make it seem like the officers didn’t try to save these kids. And then students on college campuses are saying, “Say her name,” as though police killed these three kids. The police didn’t put them behind the wheel of a stolen vehicle at night and then tell them to drive into a pond at night. It’s not like cops keep scuba gear and heat-retaining wetsuits in the trunks of their cars. Do we expect cops to commit suicide to try to save people they can’t save? And can you think of any worse feeling than being helpless as children die right in front of you and you can’t save them? Nope. Gotta bash the cops and call them racist. How about “Say the officers names”. Nope. This will never happen at any Social Justice Summit. All cops are white supremacists, after all. And no one likes racists. Because making everyone more afraid of the police in order to protect the lie that slavery wasn’t abolished won’t cause more police shootings or anything. Social Justice Warriors got my back. [14, 15]
Nope.
I don’t mean to belittle the deaths of anyone. I don’t see a hierarchy of value placed on lives by identity politics, although I do agree that it’s important to demonstrate patterns that exist that put particular groups at greater risk of senseless brutality and murder. I do know that MTF trans women have a high murder rate. I do wonder how many of these women may have PTSD from abuse that could also be the root of their gender dysphoria, if it’s not biological, that leads them to engage in risky behavior that could increase their odds of being murdered. And I wonder if by treating gender as a social construct if we’re enabling this destructive behavior that would otherwise be treated if it was recognized as a disorder, enabling their tragic deaths. I just want everyone to be happy, safe, to love, and to be loved.
Not Social Justice Warriors. Jesus is a Social Justice Warrior at this Adventist church:
Lament is the disruption we require, continued Rah. Lament appears frequently in the Bible; 40% of the Psalms are laments. But we, as Christians, want to jump to celebration without first focusing on suffering. In a typical Christian hymnal, 80-85% are celebratory hymns. In contemporary Christian music, only 5-10% are about lament.
Because we’re missing lament in our story, we have the inability to recognize injustice and to bring God’s justice to our society, said Rah.
“It was legal to kill Jesus, but it was not just…We’ve got laws in America that are laws, but they are not just,” added Kowlessar.
“We have to stand for right regardless of what people will say. The Bible was written in the context of oppression and liberation. That’s the whole thing,” concluded Kowlessar.
He concluded by discussing the importance of reconciliation, confession, and forgiveness. “There can be no reconciliation without confession,” said Vanderhorst. The oppressor needs to do three things for confession to be authentic: repent (admit wrongs and not repeat them), restitution (restore what was denied or taken, and make adequate and just compensation), and rehabilitation (get intervention or make proof of real change in one’s life). Then, real reconciliation is possible.
She continued saying, “The body of Christ today has got to flip some tables.” Jesus got in the Pharisees’ faces. If He had just stuck to healing, they wouldn’t have cared. But He messed with their system, He messed with their money, He called out the problems in His day – and they killed Him for it.
She went on to discuss two topics standing in the way of racial reconciliation in America: the police and the church.
“Policing is not a change agent. The police are not about change. The job of the police is to maintain the will of those who are in political power and maintain the status quo of the dominant class,” said Fisher-Stewart.
“Policing as it is today negates the humanity of God’s people; it destroys God’s image.” Because of this, “the process of reconciliation needs to come from the church.” But, that process needs to start with White Christians, those who benefit from the systemic racism in today’s justice system that has its roots in the slavery established in the 16th century. [16]
There’s a lot that sounds familiar, doesn’t it? White Christians are bad. Shame on you. Change your behavior to change your thinking. Go to sleep. Become one of us.
Cal State Fullerton has a handy PDF available online for their social justice summit. Here’s an idea, why don’t you guess what the topics for the workshop will be, write them down, and read the PDF. See how many you got right. I bet you’ll do well. [17]
So much fun training for Social Justice Warriors. Ever heard of Unitarian Universalism Association? It’s just another racketeering scam disguised as a religion. They tell you how to invest and divest your money and how to change your behavior for Social Justice. Oil is the Devil. Drive a Prius. Be hysterical.
Each UU congregation operates independently as part of the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations. The UUA provides services and resources that individual congregations cannot develop independently. Also, the UUA has the strength in numbers to be a force for social justice issues and other causes that reflect members’ shared values. [18]
UU Faith Action N.J. offers protestor training:
Have you ever given thought to how *best* to prepare for taking part in public protest? Wondered what you could possibly do to help someone being harassed? Ever considered taking part in an act of civil disobedience?
Knowledge = Power. Come to find answers to these questions and more at our FREE two-part workshop on how to become a (better) social activist.
Part 1 10-12: How to go from being a “bystander” to an UPSTANDER!
What do you do if you see hate-based harassment? Learn to better predict incidents *before* they happen; how to align with potential targets; de-escalation; safe escape, and much more.
Part 2: 12-2 (Working Lunch, see details above) Veteran activists and newly involved neighbors are invited to participate in an interactive training on how to be an effective and safe person of conscience in today’s political environment. Topics include: Safety, safety, safety!; Rules of engagement; Finding the types of actions that are right for you; All the what-ifs; and yes, How to get arrested. (Also, how NOT to get arrested!)
Hosted by UU FaithAction NJ, Central Unitarian Church in Paramus, Hudson Civic Action and American Friends Service Committee. Facilitated by Elena Waldman of Artemis Defense (www.artemisdefense.org) . Free will donations taken at the event. [19]
These workshops are open to the public, faculty, and students. Each college campus that hosts these Social Justice Summits and training events has some kind of department with Diversity and Inclusion in the title. This is not a coincidence. This is the United Nations infiltrating our schools to undermine our republic.
The next story will be about the bullshit degree programs that are being offered on college campuses to make students insane. I may go back to describe how student government affects what degree programs are allowed or not allowed on college campuses.
Eventually I will write about departments with “diversity” and “inclusion” as well as the advisory councils that tell these fascist departments what to do. Discuss G-20 and how they address education as an element of the economy for them to control. Discuss Betsy De Vos and G-20. How G-20 is connected to the UN. Do I want to write about how the UN works for the World Bank? Slippery slope. I’ll write about it later, when I have time to go full conspiracy theorist. It’s unbelievable what’s going on right now around the world and how schools are being used as weapons of covert warfare.
Social Justice Summits.
Once the student or citizen gets indoctrinated and decides to pursue social justice as a career goal, they enroll in classes that offer credits and degrees, even PhD’s. This is where the next story will continue.
[1] Schmidt, L., (2009). Teaching Social Responsibility: Stirring up justice. ASCD.org. Retrieved from: http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/may09/vol66/num08/Stirring-Up-Justice.aspx
[2] Division of Student Affairs; Student Diversity and inclusion services, (2018). University of St. Thomas. Retrieved from: https://www.stthomas.edu/studentdiversity/socialjusticesummit/
[3] CSUSM, (2018). Social Justice Summit. Cal State University of San Marcos. Retrieved from: https://www.csusm.edu/sjs/about/index.html
[4] CSUSM, (2018). Social Justice Summit. Cal State University of San Marcos. Retrieved from: https://www.csusm.edu/sjs/about/faq.html
[5] UF College of education, (2018). Social Justice Summit: for the Gator Good. University of Florida. Retrieved from: https://education.ufl.edu/socialjusticesummit/
[6] Arcus Center, (2013). Social Justice Summit. Kalamazoo College. Retrieved from: https://reason.kzoo.edu/csjl/events/convenings/summit/
[7] Center for Education, Identity, and Social Justice. Summit on (De)Institutionalizing Islamophobia on College Campuses. USC. Retrieved from: https://socialjustice.usc.edu/summitrecap/
[8] Farmingdale State College https://www.farmingdale.edu/academics/centers-institutes/social-science-research-institute/2015_social_justice_diversity_summit.shtml
[9] The House Joint Resolution proposing the 13th amendment to the Constitution, January 31, 1865; Enrolled Acts and Resolutions of Congress, 1789-1999; General Records of the United States Government; Record Group 11; National Archives. Retrieved from: 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: Abolition of Slavery (1865) https://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=false&doc=40
[10] Farmingdale State College, (2018). The Four Pillars of Activism. Farmingdale State College. Retrieved from: https://www.farmingdale.edu/academics/centers-institutes/social-science-research-institute/registration.shtml
[11] Farmingdale State College, (2016). Social Justice/Diversity Summit Coming to Farmingdale State College April 23. Farmingdale State College. Retrieved from: https://www.farmingdale.edu/news/news-2016/social.justice.summit.2016.shtml
[12] Beyond the Bridge, (2017). Social Justice Summit. Beyond the Bridge. Retrieved from: https://www.beyondthebridgessummit.org/
[13] Center for Diversity and Inclusion, (2016). Social Justice Leadership Summit. Truman State University. Retrieved from: http://diversity.truman.edu/events/social-justice-leadership-summit/
[14] Rao, S., (2016). Florida Sheriff Rejects Claims That Officers Didn’t Help Drowning Girls. Video surfaced earlier this week that appeared to show Pinellas County, Florida, police officers ignoring three Black girls as they drowned in a pond. The sheriff says it is misleading. Colorlines. Retrieved from: https://www.colorlines.com/articles/florida-sheriff-rejects-claims-officers-didnt-help-drowning-girls
[15] Rao, S., (2016). Activists Gather Around The Country To #SayHerName. The national day of action reinforced calls for accountability in cases of police and White supremacist violence against Black women. Colorlines. Retrieved from: https://www.colorlines.com/articles/activists-gather-around-country-sayhername-1
[16] Alisa Williams, (2017). Crossing the Divide: the: 2nd annual social justice summit. SpectrumMagazine.org. Retrieved from: https://spectrummagazine.org/article/2017/11/08/crossing-divide-2nd-annual-social-justice-summit
[17] Cal State Fullerton, (2018). Social Justice Summit. Cal State Fullerton. Retrieved from: http://www.fullerton.edu/sll/events/2018.SJS.Program.pdf
Also check out: http://www.fullerton.edu/msi/#top, a program allegedly to retain male students who aren’t white. http://www.fullerton.edu/msi/_resources/pdf/MSI_SuccessScholar_18flyer.pdf because only white people can be racist. http://www.fullerton.edu/msi/programs/b2bretreat.php to recruit more Social Justice cult members.
[18] Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Somerset Hills, (2018). What is Unitarian Universalism? Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Somerset Hills. https://uucsh.org/learning/what-is-uu/
[19] Gregson, R., (2017). Registration Open for *Free* Public Protest/Upstander Training Nov. 18. UU Faith Action N.J. Retrieved from: https://uufaithaction.org/2017/10/23/registration-open-for-free-public-protestupstander-training-nov-18/
[20] BBSJ, (2018). Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council 9th Annual Broadband and Social Justice Summit. Broadband and Social Justice Summit. Retrieved from: https://files.constantcontact.com/eb2d1f30101/1e546270-ffe2-4b80-8fac-726ca2f1cb9d.pdf?ver=1517443727000
[21] Minority Media & Telecom Council, (2013). The MMTC Broadband and Social Justice Summit. Minority Media and Telecommunications Council. Retrieved from: http://mmtconline.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/2013BBSJ-SummitProgram.pdf