Brandeis During Passover

Editor’s Note: We’re clearing out the Innermost Parts vaults, posting several articles that were completed a while ago but got overlooked and were never published.  Here’s another, from Scott, written during Passover break.

Pesach break is only in its nascent stages, but Brandeis is already pretty empty. Don’t be mad but it is. Or perhaps I was just in the wrong place. I walked from the quad called East to the dining hall called Sherman and it was a little eerie. I did not encounter a soul until I arrived in the room for dining. On my way out the whole top floor of the building was abandoned and all the lights were off. It was as dark as a darkroom, even though it was in fact a dark lobby.

Walking through Shapiro: the Campus Center, I encounter a vast emptiness that reminded me of my life. All I could see on the horizon were empty chairs and empty Shapiro Campus Center Libraries and empty Great Lawns. It was quite emblematic of how Brandeis fills me with joy, but when it is gone that filling will leave me wandering and empty.

Brandeis is not a place or professors, it is actually the people, and the students. We Brandeisians of this time period have each other all in one place right now. We can come back and stuff but there will be all these new jacks fucking up all our stuffz. There would be buildings but it would not be the same. One time in the movie Annie Hall, someone mentions Brandeis University. Well now I go there, and I also feel things there too, you know? And it is wild. Sometimes people read about Brandeis in a college catalog, and they read the name and stuff. It is weird that there are thousands of people at this college, but people are don’t understand the vast complexity of relationships and experiences there. There are a lot of us at Brandeis and each one of us is precious.

Demonstration Against Oren – Today! 3PM! Bernstein-Marcus!

Hey Everyone,

Come to Bernstein-Marcus TODAY at 3 pm to take part of a demonstration against the choice of Michael Oren as commencement speaker.

In collectively voicing our frustration, we can let the administration know that commencement is no place for divisive politics. We will be encouraging discussion, expression, and intend on presenting our concerns to President Reinharz during his office hours.

Come for fun! Conviviality! Discussion and dissension! Fun and frivolity! And kicking some buckets!

And if you have not already done so, please sign the online petition:

http://bit.ly/AntiOrenPetition

Anti-Obama Ad Merits a Response

We Will Remember from Republican Governors Association on Vimeo.

If you have not seen this video yet, watch it. The other day, when Rick Pearlstein met with a bunch of us “activists” in Sahar’s suite, he talked a bunch about the strategies the Republican Party has been employing, quite effectively, to attack the Democratic Party. This is a time when the Democratic Party should be at the height of its career, but somehow it is falling prey to many of the Republican’s attacks, and not doing a good job of fighting back.

Perhaps it is because of ads like the one above, in which the Republican Governors Association call Obama a fraud, accuse him of ruining the nation and fooling the people, and uses Obama’s “Yes we can…” catchphrase against him, filling in the blank after the ellipse with a series of negative phrases, culminating in “Yes we can…end the American Dream.”

I believe the Obama Administration should respond to these negative messages because if they simply ignore them, they are giving credence to the conservative, right-wing campaign against them. Similar to Howard Dean’s 50 State Campaign (he gave a highly inspiring speech here on campus 2 weeks ago), if the Democrats do not reach out to people and defend themselves, they will not hold onto their political power for long. I am not a fan of mud-slinging but I do think more efforts should be taken to address these radical ads.

(Thanks famous political theorists for coming to Brandeis and inspiring me!)

SAVE KALMAN AND FRIEDLAND

Friedland and Kalman were perfectly viable and beautiful buildings that I love. It is very environmentally intensive to build a building. I don’t know why we did not keep them. So much could have been put into them. They were beautiful and sturdy buildings, and they were destroyed without anyone’s consent. Talk about a Rose Art Museum. Who’s with me?

We could have put so many things in there that are worth while. Now there is nothing, a costly demolition that wastes time. Let’s put in a zine library, and a gender center, and a music venue. STOP THE DEMOLITION NOW. Do you see, all caps.

Livebloggin’ the Social Panel for Autism Awareness

I’m in the Alumni Lounge, waiting for SPECTRUM’s Social Panel on Autism Awareness to begin, and if you’re reading right now, you should definitely try to show up — there are all of 11 people right now waiting to hear from the panelists, and the event ostensibly began five minutes ago.  However, if you can’t make it, I’ll be doing a liveblog to give you all the key points.

3:40 pm:  Still waiting on the start, but the panelists are ready to begin.  Our guests today are Jody Steinhilber, a special education teacher from the Wellesley Public School system and Joe Vedora, the vice president of BEACON Services, a Massachusetts organization of special education professionals.

3:47 pm:  We’re underway, about 15 minutes late.  Unfortunately, the hoped-for wave of stragglers never materialized, but it’s nice to have an intimate setting.

3:53 pm:  Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder that affects every aspect of cognition — communication, learning, etc. — and its effects start showing up by the age of 2 or 3.  However, autism is a spectrum disorder, meaning that diagnosing it is more complex than simply “You have it” or “You don’t”.

3:57 pm:  Autism is NOT a form of mental retardation; however, having autism dramatically increases an individual’s chance of being diagnosed with mental retardation as well.

4:02 pm:  In 1994, autism only occurred in about 2 to 5 out of every 10,000 births.  However, by 2006, that number had increased to 1 in 150.  The reason for the increase are improvement of diagnostic criteria and an increased acceptance of individuals with Asperger’s syndrome as being on the autistic spectrum.  Environmental variables could have an impact as well.

4:10 pm:  Teaching students with autism is difficult, because it is much more difficult for them to pick up on social or environmental cues.  While most people can pick up new information by observing other people, children with autism have to be told or shown explicitly how to follow instructions as simple as “come here” or “touch your nose”.  This is why early diagnosis is so important; if a child with autism doesn’t begin receiving special education as quickly as possible, they could fall into a developmental hole that they may never be able to climb out of.

4:24 pm:  To teach kids with autism, it’s important to break down every concept to its smallest parts, because links that seem obvious to most people aren’t necessarily apparent to them.  As an example, to teach kids to wash their hands, it is first necessary to teach them how to simply turn on the faucet.  Repetition is very important, and providing immediate positive reinforcement for simple acts helps immensely.

4:31 pm:  Observation: Joe Vedora’s presentation style is very similar in form to the teaching methods he promotes for autism education.  He uses a lot of illustrative examples and builds concepts up from a very simple basis.  He’s a very good presenter.

4:32 pm:  However, he’s also a Yankees fan.  BOOO!!!

4:42 pm:  One of the biggest problems with modern day care for adults with autism is that care is focused too much on management and not enough on education.  For funding reasons, most people are cut off from education when they turn 22, and their care turns into a kind of “adult day care”.  Not only are autistic individuals still able to learn at that age, but it may be even more important to continue their education because they tend to learn on a delayed timeline because teaching simple concepts takes so much longer.

4:49 pm:  There’s a lot of conversation in psychological circles about officially removing Asperger’s syndrome from the autism spectrum.  Asperger’s support groups are pushing back strongly against it, because they fear that it would limit the amount of services available to students.  Asperger’s syndrome is now considered a high-functioning form of autism.  People who suffer from it can function for themselves, but they still have particular difficultly recognizing social cues.

4:59 pm:  They’re showing a video of an special education instructor working with a toddler with autism to show the teaching methods that SPECTRUM uses.  Lots of repetition, lots of active stimuli for the kid, and lots of physical direction and interaction.  The kid’s having a ball, and, as the presenters and audience members have noted, he’s very cute.

5:05 pm:  An audience member asked if SPECTRUM offers internships for people who are interested in the field, and Joe Vedora affirmed that they do.  If you’re interested, e-mail him at jvedora@beaconservices.org for more information.

5:08 pm:  All done.  Thank you, Joe and Jody, for an interesting and informative presentation.

Write-Ins

Editor’s Note: Please give a warm welcome to Jake, our newest contributor.

When I took a look at the elections results from the past week, I was struck by some of the write-ins.  Students, Brandeis professors, religious figures and totalitarian dictators were tabulated along with the declared candidates for each race. I am the first to admit that some of the ballots cast are amusing; the idea that Hitler, Big Bird, and former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka all tied for Associate Justice of the Student Judiciary shows a certain degree of creativity on the part of three individual voters. However, not all of the votes were as innocent or childish. In one race, while a student – let’s call him Joe Bloggs – was elected to another term on the Union, three voters wrote in “Not Joe A. Bloggs,” “Not Joe ever,” and “Too Much Joe,” respectively.

In addition to the fact that this sort of joke would be hurtful to anyone, this brings about questions of purpose and overall value to the campus’ political dialogue: why take the time to come up with a write-in which you might find funny? First, voter turnout is incredibly low.  With the exception of the Senator for the Class of 2013 election, which yielded a 47.8 percent turnout of freshmen, all of the elections from the most recent cycle ranked in between 21 and 34 percent. This means that roughly one fourth of the students eligible to vote in each election care enough to log onto the union website and take three minutes out of their day.

Because of this, and because the official voting data is not widely released, the portion of the student body who takes the time to notice the outrageous write-ins is even smaller.  Combined with the fact that all votes are anonymous, it seems pointless to make a joke which very few people will read, find amusing, and credit you with a good joke. If nothing else, why not abstain in any election where there is no standout candidate or candidates?  In some cases, the Abstain category can win an election over an unopposed candidate. This makes an actual statement about disapproval of the Brandeis candidates and the overall electoral process without the sarcasm of a fake write-in.

This Must Be the Place

Must it be the place? It must be. And it is called Brandeis. Gosh I love everyone around me right now.  This place is Brandeis.  It appeals to me, but I am thinking most people do. This same thing would happen if I had gone to my dream school UMass-Lowell. You see all people everywhere are pretty chill/cool. It is not because I go to Brandeis or UMass-Lowell, or to a school in New Jersey or the Congo. People on the whole are pretty nice. Sometimes they are on drugs and stuff, but they are still really nice.

So like I guess that begs the question who is doing all the rape, war genocide, etc? IDK my bff Jill. We are all kind, we are all nice, and we do bad things sometimes, but it is because we are passionate.

However I think that society’s greatest trial is turning that passion to good, not bad.  This is entirely general and therefor not true.  But what is wrong with typing things?  What is the deal with censoring yourself just because it is not interesting?  You are stifling your inner spirit to please others.  It is good to navigate into what is good socially for other people, but always remember your inner spirit.

Posthumous Advice from Howard Zinn

Editor’s Note: We’re clearing out the Innermost Parts vaults, posting several articles that were completed a while ago but got overlooked and were never published.  Here’s the first, from Amy Bea, written in early February in the wake of Howard Zinn’s death.

As I sat at the recovery table after donating blood the other day, I decided to open the most recent issue of The Nation. Inside I discovered an article about Obama’s first presidential year. Many contributors wrote short reflections on his presidency thus far, including the late Howard Zinn.

He states, “I think people are dazzled by Obama’s rhetoric, and that people ought to begin to understand that Obama is going to be a mediocre president–which means, in our time, a dangerous president–unless there is some national movement to push him in a better direction.”

Not only does that call for action apply to our nation, but to Brandeis as well. As students, we must unite if we want to push Brandeis in a positive direction. Go to Jehuda’s office hours. Email Andy Hogan and tell him what you think. Come to the potluck in the Castle Commons this Sunday, 5-8, to discuss what students can do about budget cuts. Attend the Constitutional Review town hall meetings. Buy a megaphone and yell out a window. Protest. Talk with people.

DO SOMETHING. But for Brandeis’ sake, don’t just sit there and watch this institution go down the drain.

Bernstein Festival, Day Two (And Some Bonus Events!)

So the Brandeis Early Music Ensemble concert was pretty awesome; watch for my review of it coming out in tomorrow’s Hoot.  But that’s only day one of the Bernstein Festival, and we’ve got plenty more artsy goodness coming our way today.  I’m a sucker for music, so I’ll be at the Brandeis-Wellesley Orchestra’s Theme and Variations concert, featuring Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s wonderful “Scheherazade” suite, selections from Aaron Copland’s score for Our Town and Alan Menken’s score for Aladdin (yep, the Disney movie), and selections from our own Leonard Bernstein’s operetta Candide.  Join me at 8pm in the Slosberg Music Center (it’s free!).  Check below the fold for the complete schedule of the day’s events.

But wait, there’s more!  Three more worthwhile things are happening today that you should try to check out.  First, our own Abbie K promises great fun outside the library at 12 noon; look here for more information.  Next, SPECTRUM is hosting a Social Panel for Autism Awareness at 3:30 pm in the alumni lounge in Usdan.  There are a couple of interesting panelists, and if you’re at all interested in psychology, it should be worth attending; I’ll try to do a liveblog for those who can’t make it.  Finally, the Innermost Parts community got a personal invitation in the comments to attend the Student Events open forum at 6:00 pm in the Art Gallery in the Shapiro Campus Center.  If you’ve got questions or comments on this year’s Spring Fest or on anything else relating to how Student Events spends their $135,000 budget (that’s YOUR money), come on down and ask away.

Continue reading “Bernstein Festival, Day Two (And Some Bonus Events!)”

Anarchist Activist Art-fulness

So tomorrow, from 12-1, in front of the library, I hear there may be noise.  And by noise, I mean chalk, meditation, high fives, and drum circles.  Possibly a reading of books and other participatory performances.  Do you like getting involved in experiencing and being art?  You should. In front of the library. From 12-1. It may or may not be a secret society meeting, in which you should bring your own drum and/or one of those bronze buckets.

SPRINGFEST — You Heard It Here First!

Back in January 2009, Innermost Parts was the first news outlet to report that the Board of Trustees had decided to close the Rose Art Museum.  Last September, we were the first to announce that President Reinharz was going to resign.  Both times, we were accused of irresponsibly publishing false rumors, but both times, we ended up being correct.

So when Emily posted on March 13th that the Spring Fest music committee had booked Passion Pit to headline Spring Fest 2010, I feel that our track record should have been good enough that we should have at least gotten the benefit of the doubt.  However, we were again attacked in the comments, being called a “trash rumour site” and told we should “recheck our sources”.  And when the Spring Fest line-up was revealed on April 19th, the headline act was — surprise! — Passion Pit.  Imagine that.

I don’t know why our commentators thought it was appropriate to accuse us of rumor-mongering while they were doing that very thing, trying to spread confusion by claiming that it was actually Owl City who was coming.  And I don’t know why they thought it was appropriate to lie in a public forum about how Student Events’ money — money that comes from all of us — was going to be spent.  While I definitely appreciate the hard work that goes into planning events like Spring Fest, that doesn’t give anyone the right to be dishonest to students about student money.

My policy for handling confidential information is simple.  If someone tells me something with the understanding that it remains confidential, I won’t say or publish a word about it.  However, if someone with inside information shares important news with me because they want it to be publicized, I’ll write about it as long as 1) I’m confident that the source is trustworthy on the issue and 2) I think the information is interesting to the Innermost Parts community.  I may have further reservations on a case-by-case basis, but for the most part, I think my responsibility as an activist blogger demands that I’m transparent as possible with what I know about campus events.  I can only speak for myself, but I’m pretty sure that most Innermost Parts authors would agree with me.

By the way, Passion Pit alone cost us $40,000 dollars, and the newly-created Brandeis Sustainability Fund costs around $50,000 dollars.  Why hasn’t there been a push against holding Spring Fest from the people who are complaining about spending so much money?

The Past Didn’t Go Anywhere – A Left-Wing Approach to Anti-Semitism

I want to share here with the Brandeis community one of my favorite pieces written on the matter of anti-Semitism within left-wing movements. Unlike most commentaries on this matter, it actually comes from the left.

It’s a pamphlet entitled: The Past Didn’t Go Anywhere: Making Resistance to Antisemitism Part of All of Our Movements by April Rosenblum. The pamphlet is 32 pages long, but it’s an easy and fast read that I really think is worth it. Myself I am a left-wing student of Jewish History and have found this pamphlet highly informative, interesting and useful.

Continue reading “The Past Didn’t Go Anywhere – A Left-Wing Approach to Anti-Semitism”

Another articulation of the division Oren causes our community

Many people unfamiliar with the Brandeis community view us as a strictly Jewish institution, when in fact we are a very diverse community.  We have members from a wide spectrum of Jewish backgrounds, from the many faiths of the world, and from no faith.  For a great number of our students, faculty, and staff, the issues surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict bring out very passionate, and sometimes personal, opinions and experiences.  Michael Oren, as a spokesperson for just one view of the many on this extremely contentious issue, causes the members of our community to divide themselves in relation to their deep-seeded feelings on the views he espouses.  Instead of uniting our community around the principles of peace, justice, and coexistence we seek to uphold during our time here and after we graduate, the selection of Oren divides us emotionally and ideologically.  The selection of Oren brings the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the most sensitive topic at Brandeis University, into our most sacred ceremony–commencement.  We believe that commencement should be a time of culminating unity, when the members of our graduating class prepare to set off into the world in solidarity.  The selection of Michael Oren as commencement speaker instead tears our graduating class and campus community apart.

In peace,
Phil LaCombe (’10)

Paul Simon playing at commencement!

Here’s the e-mail:

From: “Jehuda Reinharz” <jreinhar@brandeis.edu>
To: “undergrads graduating in May” <broadcast-email@lists.brandeis.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 10:33:55 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Paul Simon

Dear Seniors,

I have great news to share with you.  Thanks to your enthusiastic
advocacy, Honorary Degree Recipient Paul Simon has agreed to perform
a song at your commencement.  The decision came after we reached out
to Mr. Simon’s management and conveyed the excitement of your
“Facebook” campaign requesting that he sing.  This will certainly
contribute to making commencement a memorable moment for you and your
families.

Additionally, Mr. Simon has agreed to speak at the School of Creative
Arts commencement at one o’clock in the Spingold Theater Center.  All
members of the Brandeis community are welcome to attend.

Sincerely,

Jehuda Reinharz

Livebloggin’ the Right-Wing Radicalism Conference

I’m in the International Lounge right now, waiting for Right-Wing Radicalism: A Transatlantic Perspective to begin.  The national attention on the conference has caused campus interest to skyrocket, and I know that many people who want to be here can’t, whether because of class or a general lack of space.  So I’ll be liveblogging the entire thing, sharing any particularly interesting or provocative points and adding my own commentary where it exists.  Enjoy!

2:23 pm:  The conference is scheduled to begin at 2:30, so just a few more minutes now.  Here is the complete agenda for the conference, along with some brief background info and a statement from the university about the controversy their logo caused.

2:35 pm:  Nothing’s started yet, but we’ve hit the big time.  Look here to hear Glenn Beck’s perspective on the conference!

2:43 pm:  And away we go!

2:46 pm:  The woman doing the introduction (UPDATE: she’s Professor Sabine von Mering) is addressing the swastika controversy.  She says that the decision to include it was inappropriate and wrong and that none of the moderators or panelists had any knowledge of the posters.  I’ve heard rumors that participants in the conference have received death threats over this issue, so hopefully that’s enough to satisfy everyone here.

2:52 pm:  Professor Mingus Mapps is introducing the first panel, which focuses on the European perspective of right-wing radicalism.  There will be time for questions at the end, so if you leave a good one in the comments, I’ll try to ask it and report back on the answer.

2:58 pm:  Dr. Othmar Ploeckinger is talking about Mein Kampf, which he describes as a very famous book that is very seldom read.  However, it was very popular during Hitler’s reign in Germany, and even before Hitler took power, it was widely read among a broad range of politicians and intellectuals.

3:04 pm:  In the modern right-wing movement, Mein Kampf has  remained popular among German radical groups.  The book is now illegal to publish in Germany, but 74 of the 80 copies owned by the Munich library have been stolen in recent years (probably the easiest way to acquire it in the country).

3:12 pm:  Professor Hans-Gerd Jaschke is discussing the history of right-wing extremism in post-Nazi Germany.  The National Democratic Party, which was founded in 1964, is the most prominent extremist group in the country.  It was forced to distance itself from the Nazi Party, which had been banned, but it retained many of the citizens that supported the Nazis.  Now, it opens itself to neo-Nazis while employing a lot of the populist rhetoric that characterizes the far right in the United States.  It currently holds seats in two German state parliaments.

3:16 pm:  There’s also a separate, explicitly neo-Nazi counterculture movement that has been gaining traction among German youth.  It’s characterized by a tendency towards violence and criminal activity.  Over 19,000 criminal offenses from right-wing extremist sources were reported in 2008 alone, including 2 homicides and 4 attempted homicides (most are comparatively minor crimes such as inciting hatred, which can mean as little as publicly displaying the swastika).

3:23 pm:  Professor Joachim Kersten is discussing right-wing extremism in Eastern Europe and Russia.  Russia has seen 71 people killed in hate crimes in 2009 alone according to estimates by NGOs.  Non-Slavic individuals are the the main targets.  Poland has seen a rise in anti-Semitic sentiment, both traditional (“Jews killed Jesus!”) and modern (“Jews have too much power!”).

3:29 pm:  Apparently, the decline of the Soviet empire has inspired a backlash of national chauvinism that has led to a lot of the hate.  In Poland, the blame falls mostly on a particularly fundamentalist form of Roman Catholicism that has grown in popularity.

3:31 pm:  Professor Peter Niesen is discussing legal restrictions on right-wing extremism.  European nations are far more willing to ban extremist political parties or hateful speech, symbols, or assembly than the United States is.  That pesky First Amendment!

3:38 pm:  The German National Democratic Party (see above) faced ban attempts in the early 2000s, which were unsuccessful in large part because no one actually considered them a serious threat.  In contrast, Italy, Germany, Austria, and Portugal have all banned former ruling parties who installed fascist regimes.  In recent years, Rwanda and Iraq (Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath Party) have taken similar steps.  The civil rights consequences of banning political parties are obvious, but it does help to protect young democracies from immediate subversion.

3:44 pm:  Professor David Art is discussing anti-immigrant political parties in Europe.  These parties are democratic and non-violent, and they’ve grown pervasive throughout Europe.  Their economic policies tend to be leftist, and their rhetoric is populist.  Some of them are very minor, but some have gained parliament seats (receiving up to 27% of the vote) and even become part of coalition governments.

3:46 pm:  Why do some nativist parties succeed while others fail?  It boils down to organization rather than cultural or electoral differences among nations.  The voter demand exists throughout Europe, but most of the parties become “one-hit wonders” that implode due to leadership failures or fractions.

3:50 pm:  The demographic profile of these parties is sometimes from blue-collar, under-educated voters (sound familiar?), but some parties draw heavily from university graduates as well (think Ron Paul voters).  Professor Art emphasizes the fact that this movement isn’t a single group of the same people that cuts across national boundaries.

3:54 pm:  Full panel discussion now.  One panelist (I’m not sure who) challenges David Art’s point that it’s all about organization, saying he believes there needs to be a “populist moment” that serves as a spark.  Unfortunately, Art didn’t get an immediate chance to respond.

4:01 pm:  And he responds now!  Apparently, broad social attitudes toward immigration are not actually a good predictor about the success of nativist parties.  There’s a base, whether it’s large or small, in every European nation, and the real key is whether a well-organized party can form to exploit it.  As for the “populist moment”, Art believes that any number of moments over the course of several decades can be interpreted as a populist moment, and it’s mostly in hindsight that a particular moment can be seen as the spark that lights the gunpowder.

4:04 pm:  The panel is open to questions.  One audience member asks how anti-Israel sentiment contributes to the rise of the right-wing in Europe.  Apparently, some far-right parties have been surprisingly friendly towards Israel, possibly only to inoculate themselves against allegations of neo-Nazism.

4:18 pm:  Break time!  I’m getting some coffee.

4:33 pm:  The second panel is about to get underway, and we have a special guest joining us!  Right-wing radio personality and Boston Globe Boston Herald columnist Michael Graham is here, and though he sat out the first half of the talk, I’m excited to see what trouble he’s bound to make to defend the honor of the almighty Tea Party!!!!

4:39 pm:  Professor Kathleen Blee is discussing racism among the far right-wing in the United States.  Most people in racist movements are developed, not born; there are very few inter-generational racists, even among groups like the Ku Klux Klan that pride themselves on their long heritage.

4:44 pm:  Usually, racist ideas are learned after joining racist groups.  People are attracted by musical or cultural elements of a group and only then come to accept the racist ideology.  This is particularly prevalent among anti-Semitic groups.

4:54 pm:  Professor Pete Simi is talking about cycles of right-wing terror.  In the 1980s, the death of right-wing extremist Gordon Kahl at the hands of law enforcement officers spawned the idea that the government was at war with the right wing, and several groups formed in order to fight back.  This contrasts to the current rise of right-wing terrorism, which is viewed as more influences by larger national events, like the depressed economy and the election of Barack Obama.

4:57 pm:  The most prominent events of the 1990s were the Ruby Ridge and Waco stand-offs, which both ended in the deaths of the targeted extremists.  Again, the perception that “the government is against us” gave birth to a cycle of terrorism, which culminated in the Oklahoma City bombing.  The 1990s had much more leaderless, unfocused resistance than the 80s.

5:00 pm:  Modern right-wing terrorism is even more unfocused for a variety of reasons, most prominently the lack of a single galvanizing incident and the rise of the internet as a grassroots organizing tool.

5:03 pm:  Chip Berlet, described on the website as a Senior Analyst for Political Research Associates in Boston, is talking about the Tea Party movement and the continuum to armed militias.  He sees the Tea Party as being very demographically similar to the communities its members come from, except for their overwhelming conservatism.

5:12 pm:  Though the Tea Party movement is often described as being libertarian in nature, a huge percentage of its members are anti-abortion and very religious.  Berlet believes that the “movement” is actually a coalition of many smaller causes that haven’t yet gelled into a single coherent message.  Consequently, it is impossible to predict the future of the Tea Party, because it’s a chimera that has never existed before.

5:15 pm:  Notably, he says that “there is not a single shred of sociological evidence” that members of right-wing extremist groups are any less intelligent or “crazier” than the general population.  He’s very explicit that he never conflated the Tea Party movement with Nazism, and that it is deeply offensive that members of the media have forsworn research in order to exploit that idea for political gain.

5:19 pm:  Question time.  Mr. Berlet mentions that most hate crimes don’t come from actual organized groups but instead from lone actors who could be neighbors or co-workers.

5:27 pm:  A member of the Tea Party asks Chip Berlet about one of his articles, taking objection to his use of the term “teabag”.  He says that the term comes from the movement himself and that he apologizes if she took any offense at his words.  However, he also tells her that a simple Google search would have revealed that he is far more fair to the Tea Party movement than she is giving him credit for.  Another Tea Partier is attacking him, trying to play “gotcha” with a quote from 1995.  Berlet’s getting mad, with very good reason.

5:32 pm:  The Tea Party parade continues.  Some random woman is insisting that the guy behind Ruby Ridge wasn’t actually from the right wing.  She’s talking about the “Waco bombing”, and the panelists are quick to point out that there was no actual bombing at Waco.  It’s a shame how this has descended from a very fair, intellectual conference into a political attack from non-Brandeis audience members.

5:39 pm:  Finally, a question from an “avowed socialist and leftist”.  She teaches at UMass-Boston, and she’s decrying the turn that the conference has taken.  She thinks that Berlet is being too forgiving to the Tea Party movement, pointing out the more unsavory elements of the Tea Party “doctrine”.  Berlet says that in his experience, even the most extreme members of the right-wing movement are very respectful if they are approached respectfully.

5:40 pm:  And we’re done.  Poor Michael Graham never got the chance to ask his question.  Boo-hoo.

Let’s Take A Step Back

I’m just going to talk about a few things regarding this whole Oren debacle that have been bothering me.

I am sick of being treated like (and assumed to be with no real basis) an uninformed, protest-happy, activist.  Instead of dismissively demeaning my intelligence because of the position I hold in opposition to this decision, I wish we could have a conversation more focused on addressing the reality of the divides that have been underlined in our class community.  (I say that to you especially, Jehuda)

I am also sick of being blamed for creating the divisiveness that I am speaking out in protest of.  My statement of opposition to Oren being chosen as our commencement speaker* is not what created this divide.  The reality is, even if everyone who felt offended/upset/ostracized by the choice didn’t speak out, didn’t say anything, didn’t protest– the divide would still be real.  Real and invisible to those who are supportive or apathetic about him speaking.  The divide is real and an obvious result of this choice. Continue reading “Let’s Take A Step Back”

Did anyone else see this e-mail from Jean Eddy?

Yesterday afternoon Brandeis students received a strange e-mail from Senior Vice President for Students and Enrollment Jean Eddy about the return of Vice President for Enrollment Keenyn MacFarlane. It began,

“It is my pleasure to inform you, that effective April 5, 2010, Keenyn MacFarlane returned to the Brandeis campus to serve as Vice President for Enrollment.”

Why are they just informing us now, almost a month later?

“Nearly three years ago Keenyn left Brandeis to serve as the Deputy Chief Financial Officer for the Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Washington, D.C….”

There just seems something wrong with that. Please tell me I am not the only one who sees something wrong with that.

And then she just goes on with miscellaneous biographical information and an explanation of the position of Vice President for Enrollment. Such a weird e-mail.

Continue reading “Did anyone else see this e-mail from Jean Eddy?”

Bernstein Festival, Day One

Today is the first day of the Leonard Bernstein Festival of the Creative Arts, Brandeis’ premier celebration of all that is creative and artistic.  We have access to a incredibly wide range of talent over the next five days, and I encourage everyone to take advantage of it by looking over the festival schedule and checking out anything that seems interesting.  I myself will be attending Mixed Blessings: Beatitudes and Benedictions from Another Age, put on by the Brandeis Early Music Ensemble, and it’d be awesome to see some of you there.  Today’s full Bernstein Festival schedule, including event times, locations, and descriptions, is below the fold.

Also, let me quickly mention two unrelated events occurring today as well.  The now-infamous Right-Wing Radicalism: A Transatlantic Perspective conference is from 2:30 to 5:30 in the International Lounge in Usdan.  If you plan to attend, e-mail cges@brandeis.edu to reserve a seat.  If you can’t make it, I’ll try to do a liveblog here on Innermost Parts.  Also, for those opposed to Michael Oren’s selection as commencement speaker, there will be a demonstration at 4:45 in the space between Spingold and the Rose; Phil has more info about it here.

Continue reading “Bernstein Festival, Day One”

Demonstrate

To the Brandeis Community:

The Brandeis administration’s choice of Michael Oren as this year’s commencement speaker has brought division to what should be a unifying event.  If you are upset about this choice and would like an opportunity to voice your opinion, come to a demonstration against campus division tomorrow beginning at 4:45 p.m between Spingold and the Rose near Pollack.  The demonstration will coincide with the opening ceremony of the Festival of the Arts, but is not intended to disrupt the event.

The Source/ReSource project was created by artist in residence Michael Dowling in order to speak to “the continuing cycle of generations who come to Brandeis– the source– and return to the world as a resource for vision, justice, creativity, and social change.”  Dowling realizes the unity of the Brandeis community and its beauty.  Unfortunately, our administration has chosen to divide our community through its selection of Michael Oren as the speaker for our most sacred ceremony–commencement.

This demonstration is not against Michael Oren as a speaker or individual; it is against the administration’s choice to bring him to commencement and fuel the deep political divisions of the community.

In the event of rain, we will be meeting at the same time in the atrium of Shapiro Campus Center.

Another petition

As you already know, there’s an open letter of students and other Brandeis-affiliated people who are thinking about skipping commencement circling around. To quote one signer:

With as rich a selection of potential candidates as we have right now, it is a shame that the school has chosen such a politically loaded commencement speaker. There is a time and place for (much welcome) debate, but by choosing this speaker the school gives the impression that it officially supports a singular position on what is a very emotionally charged topic for both sides of the discussion.

It’s a day later, and the “other side” has their response: “a letter of support for President Reinharz and Ambassador Michael Oren” An excerpt:

We look forward to hearing Ambassador Oren address the Brandeis community at commencement based on his achievements and contributions to academia as a former professor at several prestigious universities in America and his work in Israel to promote the creation of the country’s first liberal arts college. Your selection of Ambassador Oren to address this year’s Commencement reflects Brandeis University’s historic ties to the American Jewish community and timeless dedication to academic excellence as well as Justice Louis Brandeis’ own commitment to Zionism and Social Justice, a legacy on which this university was founded.

Editorial note: and here we see the inevitable fracturing of campus. Battle lines are being drawn, divisiveness is increasing, etc. This is why I think choosing Michael Oren as commencement speaker was a bad choice. Especially when we’re this close to getting Paul Farmer! Paul Farmer! Why couldn’t it have been him?

Win

We have a Brandeis Sustainability Fund.

68.2% to 29.6%.

I didn’t think it would happen, but it did.

Big Kudos to SEA and the Justice League for putting in the hours of dormstorming to make this happening.

What is the Justice League, you ask? Stay tuned.

The full results (and the results of the Hillel Election): results here
Note: These are not the full and open elections results. They have been modified from their original form to exclude 0- and 1-vote candidates. This was done to appease the current Hillel Board, which doesn’t want “offensive” write-in reusults to become public. If you want the full results for curiousities sake you can email myself or Diana Aronin.
Usman is the rep to the UCC and Andrea Wexler is the new head of Hillel, btw.

Rick Perlstein! Here! Today!

Rick Perlstein! Here! Today!

But you already knew that. (Right?)

What you didn’t know: Charles Pierce from the Boston Globe will be interviewing Rick for the first part of the 8pm event.

There will be 2 events today in which you can come listen/speak with Rick:
Noon – 1:00 PM, Schwartz Hall 106. Come for a lecture!
8:00-10:00pm, International Lounge, Usdan. Come for an intimate Q&A

NEWS:
If you’ve read this far, I have good news for you. Rick has graciously expressed interest in meeting and hanging out with students today from lunchtime till before the panel.

If you want to jump on that opportunity give me a text at 585-313-6649 and I’ll let you know where he is/ you should be at any particular time.

Confused? Maybe this will help:
Rick Perlstein! Here! Today! This is a BFD

A Compromise

I’ve heard from a lot of people offering to compromise on the Brandeis Sustainability Fund by saying that they’d support it as long as they could opt out of paying.  That still seems a little unfair to me, so let me offer a compromise of my own:

Anyone can opt out of paying the BSF.  However, anyone who opts out is no longer allowed to use campus resources that produce carbon emissions.  That’s fair, right?

No?

Then join me in voting YES on the Brandeis Sustainability Fund: https://sys.brandeis.edu/voting/menu/9655.

Voting is now open

Here’s the link to the voting on the Brandeis Sustainability Fund amendment:

https://sys.brandeis.edu/voting/menu/9655

There is also an unopposed election for UCC rep on there.

I encourage everyone to vote on this very important decision. I’ve said my piece against the amendment, so I will not spew my views further. But you really ought to vote on this, no matter which way you lean.

Take Action: Oppose Michael Oren as Commencement Speaker!

Commencement was supposed to be about us.

However, with the selection of Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren, commencement has been hijacked to serve as part of a debate about Middle Eastern politics. Whether this was the intention is not important: in our eyes and the eyes of the world, Brandeis commencement is a stage for partisan politics, not a celebration of graduating seniors.

We, students, faculty, staff, friends and family of Brandeis University, respectfully believe that the choice of Ambassador Michael Oren as commencement speaker is inappropriate. His far-right views are divisive and do not reflect the diversity of opinion on campus, and moreover politicize what should be an uncontroversial, inclusive role.

Read the rest, and sign the petition!

EDIT: You should also join our Facebook group, Commencement Was Supposed to Be About Us: Against Michael Oren as Speaker.

Why You Ought to Vote AGAINST the “Brandeis Sustainability Fund”

So the SEA kids are trying to get us to subsidize their cause by giving $50,000 a year to a new “sustainability” board. Here is a summary of what the proposed $7.50 per semester fee would do. The Facebook event lists such worthy proposals as a “Green themed Pachanga,” “shower minders,” and “energy efficient exercise equipment,” whatever that means (It also lists improving DeisBikes twice, as if the writers were running out of ideas). Of course, these are only suggestions. The actual project has no specifics whatsoever, and depends on whatever students come up with after the fee has been passed. We don’t actually know whether this enormous pile of money we’re giving would have any real benefit, because there are no actual concrete plans.

I don’t like this at all. Firstly, I think it’s morally reprehensible to prioritize the sort of small improvements suggested on the Facebook over the livelihoods of Brandeis workers. Our university is in the midst of a particularly precarious financial time, and the administration has gotten rid of staff in addition to announcing a reduction of faculty by 10%. This money could save a job. I think it would be utterly despicable to spend more money on bicycles and Pachanga (which are already very well funded), when we could rally to save the livelihood of a Brandeis worker. Shame on SEA for prioritizing politics over people.

I also think this is an unfair way of pushing an agenda. All clubs have the same pool of resources to draw from, yet SEA is greedily attempting to squeeze more money out of students. Yes, I know, I know, Mr. Waizer, they’re not the ones on the board, and it’s independent. But it’s their proposal. In fact, the official summary linked to above bears ONLY the names of SEA members. And we all know what club’s members will have the best qualifications for a seat on the new board. It’s independent on paper, sure, but the entire proposal is being created and lobbied for by SEA, and serves their club’s purposes.

$7.50 may not seem like a vast amount, but it’s hardly negligible, and if other factions pick up on this method (as they should, if it works!), we might see a deluge of new fee plans. And why should the Environmentalists get money and the Labor people not? Why shouldn’t we have a special fund for the anti-genocide people or the AIDS groups or the Zionists? We can’t allow proponents of various causes to start levying their own fees on students, else we will erode the entire purpose of a communal fund. We really must get everyone out in force to vote NO on Monday. The fee should be optional or should not exist at all.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

Brandeis is a school committed to many things, one of which is social justice. A good way to get thinking about social justice is through art and satire.

This evening and tomorrow afternoon the Brandeis Official Readers’ Guild will be presenting a rendition of Douglas Adams’s radio play The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. It is at 9PM in the Schwartz Auditorium on Saturday and at 2 PM on Sunday. It is free to attend.

This play investigates the environmentally unsustainable practice of blowing up the planet earth with a laser, as well as the long term economic impact of constructing planets in a vast tract of hyperspace. Also it explores at alternate transport and energy ideas, like that of a spaceship that passes through every point in the universe at the same time.

Those paragraphs were a little bit tongue in cheek, and so is the play. However the play is still vastly interesting. It should be checked out just like other campus events such as Relay for Life, Culture X, and the Super Mario Bros. Musical. Now in the interest of journalistic integrity, I would like to say that I am in this play, and this fact contributed widely to my decision to write about it for innermost parts. Also in the interest of self promotion, you could probably sneak in after Culture X if you really want to.

Do you think innermost parts should be a snapshot of student life at Brandeis? Or should it be politically active and advocating things a lot? I think a bit of both, and I think this blog entry shows that people are involved in a lot of things. I love this play, I love my cast mates, I love Brandeis. I want the world to know we do cool things here.

Under Pressure

As noted in the earlier post “Party Time,” Brandeis has been recieving a fair beat of heat for graphic design. The logo for a conference on right-wing radicalism featured a swastika, which some conservative media figures interpreted as demonizing the Tea Party.

Despite the fact that the pressure was coming from a very small (if vocal) segment of the population and has only been in the public eye for a few days, Brandeis has already caved. The press release notes that the logo has been removed from the conference’s event page, and assures us that “Brandeis regrets the unintended association and pain this caused.”

Keep this in mind as the campaign against Michael Oren as a commencement speaker grows: when confronted with a minimal amount of outside pressure, the university jumps to rectify the problem. What will be their response when our own community expresses much greater concerns about a campus ceremony?

Irresponsible Journalism

I was shocked today when I opened my copy of the Hoot to see the article “Irresponsible Fees” by Alex Schneider.  Let’s consider the term “irresponsible.” Princeton wordnet defines it as “showing a lack of care for consequences.” Oxford English Dictionary defines it as “not answerable for conduct or actions; not liable to be called to account.” I scoured the article for a single warranted argument as to why this fee could be viewed as “irresponsible,” yet failed to find a single one.

The fee certainly shows a concern for consequences; in fact its purpose is to remedy the negative environmental consequences of our life at Brandeis. Student housing is responsible for a significant amount of carbon emissions, and failure to implement this fee shows a lack of care for those consequences, and places the entire burden of offsetting them and achieving carbon neutrality by 2050 (a goal the University has pledged to meet) on the University. It would be irresponsible to ourselves and to our planet not to contribute towards this effort.

Continue reading “Irresponsible Journalism”

Election Results

Here you go:

Senator at Large:
Abdul Aziz Sohail
Beneva Davies

Senator for the Class of 2011:
Michael D. Newborn
Abraham Berin

Senator for the Class of 2012:
Abby L. Kulawitz
Liya Kahan

Senator for the Class 2013:
Jessica P. Christian
David J. Fisch

Racial Minority Senator:
Leslyn M. Hayes

Finance Board Member:
Julia B. Blanter

F-board Racial Minority Representative:
Gabriela A. Castellanos

Associate Justice for the Student Judiciary:
Matthew Kriegsman
Judah A. Marans
Rasheedat M. Azeez
Jean V. Souffrant II*
Jessica Granville
Alex C. Norris*

*Jean Souffrant withdrew from the election after the voting had started. The ballot could not be updated after the voting had started. The Elections Commission has ruled that because Jean Souffrant withdrew, Alex Norris has won the final Student Judiciary spot.

Sincerely,
The Elections Commission

Perlstein

Let me tell you about a Big Fucking Deal.

Rick Perlstein is coming to campus this Monday. Rick is a historian, a journalist, a thinker, and an activist. He’s most famous for writing books on the rise of the conservative movement in post-WWII America. We’ve worked for the last semester and a half to bring him, and now it’s gonna happen! The problem is, we forgot to advertise. Whoops.

Let me explain with a kickass ad we bought in today’s the Hoot:

PERLSTEIN HE IS COMING. http://bit.ly/BIGFUCKINGDEAL
Campus Progress also paid for his housing I forgot about that.

Yeah so you should go. Info here: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=113168485382903&ref=nf

Party Time

We’re on TheFoxNation.com, infowars, and freeRepublic.com – high-fives all around.  We were also on Fox TV, but, I haven’t found the link yet.

What’s the reason?  Have you seen the posters decrying the rise of new right-wing radicalism with crossed-out swastikas?

Stupid Racists
Yeah, that’s it. I love to see ragging on fascists. Hot.

Well, apparently someone brought this to the attention of the right-wing blogorama, specifically 96.9FM radio host Michael Garahm.  You may remember him from the Bill Ayers controversy when he claimed that Ayers was connected with the actions of Katherine Power and Susan Saxe and the murder of Boston cop.  He spends 15 minutes on his talk show about how needs more xanax because someone sent him an email about these posters and browsing the links on the event website.  Apparently he spoke at the Tea Party Express rally and was offended.

Anyway, this blag-rant ended up on TheFoxNation.com: a news site hosted by Fox.  The contention is with this statement involving the tea-party by the conference:

“An interdisciplinary conference featuring transatlantic scholars from the US and Europe. Topics include the rise of the tea-party and the resurgence of right-wing militias in the US as well as the evolving right-wing radical landscape in Europe.”

… it appears that they don’t like being mentioned on posters also decrying neo-Nazis.   But, if the tea-parties were simply a political movement as agitating for “limited government” as is professed, then I would support their contention.  However, the tea-party isn’t just that.

Last Wednesday, the 14th, I went with a group of friends to check out the Tea Party Express rally on the Boston Commons – the one with Sarah Palin.  I went there to make some observations on a movement that like all other political movements in this country has been variously demonized and vilified by the media.  I simply wanted to understand the character of the tea-party.

I talked to many people, and found that there were probably about a quarter there that had some honest and decent political grievances – whether they were states’ rights folks, libertarians, constitutionalists, etc. – and seemed to me to be reasonably versed in the issues at hand.   They seemed to be more ‘original flavor’ tea-party, were suspicious of the two-party system, worried about being hijacked by the Republican Party, and were more anti-militaristic.

I would say that there was another quarter there that protested against the tea-party and Sarah Palin.  People were there from United for Peace and Justice who had an anti-war banner and rally contingent.  There were people there from Bail Out the People Movement.  There was a picket line with union members who eventually marched through the crowed to disrupt the event – more on that later.  There was a Real Tea Party with actual tea, which was full of deliciousness and polite conversation.  And, there were the ‘trolls’ – people who brought signs to make the tea-party look crazier and to mock the tea-party stereotypes.   Such as “MIT Nucular Engineers for Palin!!1!”, and “Sarah Palin for 2010.”

Another quarter seemed to be scared and frustrated people who were worried.  They seemed to me to be the kind that whole-heartedly supported Bush, listen to Beck and his crowd, and were only with the tea-party because they were rallied by their Republican affiliation into the nearest opposition movement.  They seemed like the neo-con base; they were ‘new-flavor’ tea-partiers and a little too saccharine for my taste.

Finally, there were the detestable reactionaries which composed the last quarter.  They were anti-immigration folks (there are anti-immigrations positions which are not inherently racist but these folks were holding signs like “I speak English” etc.), hardline-christian folks who were vocally homophobic, skinheads (presumably not the anti-racist kind), and “white-unity” idiots.  There were also people with gun imagery and banners, though I don’t know what their politics were since I stayed away from them, but that’s an escalation of rhetoric/action which I would place in this more dangerous section.

In all, I was surprised at the degree to which the image of the racial and age make-up of the tea-party was reflected in reality: it was an older and white affair.  Spelling mistakes weren’t as prevalent as in the news-coverage.

A friend of mine was told to go back to China.  When the protest-march disrupted the crowd with a chant of “Sexist, Racist, Anti-Gay; Sarah Palin Go Away” a tea-partier said “hell yes we are.”  Two individuals carrying a banner saying “Green Gay Loggers for Jesus” were accosted by a man who asked “what happens when you die?” and “why do you have to put your pornography in my face?”

In summation, the tea-party is a rather large tent of trends that are discernible but unorganized in association with strange bedfellows (e.g. libertarians say that they are against racists, reactionaries, and militarism).  It seemed to be held together by occupying a common space of simple opposition to the currently dominant party – a sentiment which has been exploited and amplified without meaningful content by the Republican Party and affiliated megaphones.  This opposition seems to be united in discourse by a call for limited government, invocations of militarism and sacrifice for freedoms, flag-waving beyond meaning, and a poor taste in music.  The previous analysis of the failings of the two-party system was gone and so too were the sentiments against the influence of unions and corporations in politics.  A concern is that the demands of these folks will likely not be successful through electoral politics or other official channels (because they have no coherent demands and exploitation by the Republican Party) and that the more reactionary elements will resort to extra legal means.

When those most-likely to engage in extra-legal means are racists, the issue becomes more severe – the target of racists vehemence is people, not buildings, profits, institutions, or social relations.  Though I know that they have done so elsewhere, I didn’t see any tea-party supporters denouncing the reactionaries.

Some gems from the comments at TheFoxNation.com which are now over 200.

“Here’s proof that Jews are also stupid in their own special way………” –Puddlejumper

“Money to this University should stop!!!!” – ar547 (this one’s just included for the lulz, if only they knew!)

“What more would you expect out of a liberal (just say left-wing), jewish university located in Waltham, MA. just outside of Boston. Just sayin.” – mad maximus (Oath Keeper)

“Brandeis = Brown Shirts” – Kini

“Jews just hate traditional white Americans, it’s part of their folk-culture…….” – Puddlejumper

The tea-partiers are not Nazis.  That is correct.  Yet, the tea-partier counter-argument is that the left are Nazis.  That is not correct.  Neither are Nazis (except for y’know, the neo-Nazis which find harbor in the tea-party).  Nazism was a syncretism.

However, the reason that Nazis have been so vilified was due to their territorial-expansionist policies, the establishment of dictatorship, their racial policies of genocide, among other things.  Nazis were not demonized for their social programs, of which the purported similitude with the Obama administration serves as the basis for accusations of the Left as Nazi.  Furthermore, neo-Nazi groups in the US are organized on the basis of reactionary racial politics, not future social programs, hence their position on the right.

When the tea-party is a breeding ground for organizing white-supremacy, is it a question why it is lumped in with other rising right-wing movements including neo-Nazis?

Update: Miranda N. found the link to the Fox New TV spot on it, here.

My favorite part: It’s extremism for Brandeis (coded as a Jewish University) to put an anti-swastika logo on an event dealing with right wing radicalism.

Also, I feel that I must say, that I think that there is there is plenty of space for the left and the tea-party movement to work together, particularly on issues such as campaign finance reform, fighting corporate bank bailouts, restoring civil and privacy rights, and so on.  There are good elements to the tea-party.  However, the point remains that the tea-party serves as a breeding ground for white-supremacy, militias, and other reactionary politics by being such a large tent on the right and for not denouncing and distancing itself from those elements.

Update II: The hosts of the conference responded to pressure and removed the swastika logo from their website.  Brandeis issued a statement here, where they state:

The logo created for the conference showed a swastika inside the international symbol of negation, reflecting the legitimate concern people feel over the activities, often violent, of neo-Nazi extremists.

Unfortunately, this logo created an impression that Brandeis and the conference organizers equated a range of organizations, including the Tea Party in the United States, with extremist groups on both continents.

I’m voting for this guy

Check out what came into my facebook inbox last night:

My dear friends,
I would first like to thank you for joining this group. It means a lot to me, almost as if you had liked a status of mine, or poked me.

Unfortunately, I will be unable to message you at midnight when voting starts. I will be working, at Einsteins, like a real American. But let me tell you what you should do tomorrow.

Between 8 am and 9 am, you should wake up (unless you don’t have class) and shower. If you are a night showerer, just stick to your regular schedule. During your energizing breakfast, consider voting for me.
Alex Norris
Go to class. Try and interact with what your professors say on a deep level. Really consider the implications of all you learn. If you use a laptop to take notes, you may find yourself on the internet during a lull in the intellectual discussion. This would be a great time to pop over to union.brandeis.edu and vote for me.

At some point you should have lunch in one of our many exciting cafeterii. If you have friends, they would be the ideal people to have lunch with. If, at some point, the conversation turns to your favorite Student Judiciary candidates, you might make mention of me as a possible contender.

In the afternoon, you should get outside. You’ve earned it, you’ve been hard at work in class all day. While you’re playing disc golf out on the quad, maybe you should take a break and run around madly shouting at the top of your lungs, “ALEX NORRIS FOR STUDENT JUDICIARY! I RANK HIM NUMBER ONE IN THE INSTANT RUNOFF OF MY HEART” This is obviously only if you have time.

In the evening, you will no doubt eat dinner. Maybe, if you are with your special someone, you could make subtle mention of how much you wish they were me. You could express that if they voted for me, they would be ten times more likely to get some that night. If your usual sexual preferences would hinder this, I urge you to ignore them.

Finally, if you haven’t voted yet after all this, do it. It’s more important than your homework, even if that isn’t true. And then do what I’ll do, and eagerly await the results.

Bone-crunchingly yours,
Alex Norris

I’m voting for this guy.
Continue reading “I’m voting for this guy”

Commencement should unite us; Oren tears us apart

Mariel Gruszko is a student at Brandeis and a friend. She wanted to share her thoughts with the community, so this is a “guest post” of hers. Do you want to write for/on Innermost Parts? Email us at

I can’t even begin to convey the stunned disappointment I felt when Brandeis University announced its selection of Michael Oren as Commencement speaker for the 2010 graduation ceremony.  I was angry, too; but anger doesn’t cover the half of it.

Michael Oren, the current Israeli Ambassador to the United States, previously served as a spokesman for the IDF during Israel’s 2006 invasion of Lebanon and as an IDF media relations officer during Israel’s 2008-09 strikes on Gaza. He famously declared that the Goldstone report was more dangerous for Jews than either Ahmadinejad or Holocaust deniers.

Regardless of your feelings for Israel, the 2006 Lebanon War, Operation Cast Lead, or the Goldstone Report, Ambassador Oren is undeniably a controversial figure.  Commencement is meant to be an opportunity to celebrate the achievements of the entire Brandeis community; for graduating seniors, it represents a final coming-together as one.  Ambassador Oren’s presence as Commencement’s keynote speaker does not bind our community together.  As should have already become evident, it tears us apart.

For some Jews, Oren is a model of statesmanship.  For others, he represents a paranoid style in Israeli politics.  For most outside the Jewish community, Oren is a figure of little note.  For Palestinians, he is the apologist and gatekeeper for a government that has denied them basic rights and humanitarian assistance and made them vulnerable to deportation.  Oren is a painful reminder of the divisions we face as a community.

We deserve better than this.  Commencement should be a time to celebrate as we move onto the next phase of our lives, not a time for recriminations and ostracizations.  Commencement speakers traditionally give graduating students boring but sage advice on how to conduct oneself in the world.  But many of us would rather not take advice from Oren.  Many more of us are confused about how Oren fits into Brandeis’ commitment to social justice.

I hope that we can once again unite as a community to celebrate diversity rather than embracing a one-sided and exclusionary view of what it means to be a Brandeisian.  It’s a shame that students are likely to learn more from each other as they navigate yet another perfectly-timed Brandeis crisis than they will from this year’s commencement speaker.

My name is Aziz. Vote for me.

Aziz Sohail is running for Senator at Large. We’re giving him and his opponents an opportunity to post one post each making the case to be elected. Are you running for election? Wanna make a quick case for your candidacy? Email us at

Creating Change. Inspired by YOU! This is the campaign that I am running on.

So why am I running. I have been inspired by everyone at Brandeis to delve into the campus life. As an international student from Pakistan, I couldn’t have even dreamt of some of the things that the university has to offer. A friend, Zohar Fuller ’10, created her own major called Theater and Social Change and inspired me to join Playback Theater and use Arts for Coexistence. BADASS invited me to Debate regardless of my experience. Sangha, the MSA and Hillel showed me a pluralistic and open view of religion and made me a much more educated person. Sangha preached Coexistence. Triskelion showed the possibility of acceptance. On this campus, inspiration never ends.

I am in love with Brandeis, but let us be honest. As they say ‘Nothing’s perfect’. A large majority (literally) says that the ‘Union sucks’ or that it is not in touch with the Student Body; the food sucks; the library hours can be inconvenient; the contrast between the  badly renovated old buildings and the new buildings is massive. Because of all this that I have been hearing I have decided to run for elections. In effect, YOU have inspired me to run!

Brandeis and everything else on this campus has been so inspirational, so friendly and so helpful! I hope I can inspire you along the way to listen to my ideas and to let me create a change for the first time. Your inspiration and your hope will let me work on issues and bring the voice of the student union to you! It will inspire me to make this campus a much more integrated place and a place where the Union is seen in touch with people rather than not.

Thank you for giving me the chance to have a voice and bring this voice to you. If I win, I will work hardest to let your voice be heard and for you to be inspired and inspire. If I  don’t win, rest assured that I will be working for what I believe in and I will always be grateful for the chance to run.

I look forward to your comments and advice as well as concerns.

Aziz

My name is Beneva. Vote for me!

Beneva Davies is running for Senator at Large. We’re giving her and her opponents an opportunity to post one post each making the case to be elected. Are you running for election? Wanna make a quick case for your candidacy? Email us at

This is my story and my vision. If by the end of this you believe in my vision and what we can do and who we can be, join me. But most of all, even if not for me, get out there and VOTE!! Have your voice be heard. As a current member of senate/student union, I know it is not a perfect institution and I have identified the pitfalls. I’m ready to WORK towards the CHANGE I seek and to work for the change you seek. I believe in GOALS and ACTION– but I understand that to get from one to the other is not always easy. I’m invested in student union because I’m invested in the students. Over the past year I have worked to open up the line of COMMUNICATION between students and student union. I have worked to bring all students together to solve the issues that involve our community and form bridges between different groups on campus because we really are ALL IN THIS TOGETHER. I’ve worked hard over the past year, and I will continue to work hard.

If I can leave you with one thing, it’s that as a student of Brandeis University, an institution that was created to seek, serve, and enforce Social Justice, you have the opportunity of a lifetime. you can truly MAKE A DIFFERENCE. What YOU think MATTERs. The goals and dreams you have can be MANIFESTed through ACTION. If you vote for me, I guarantee I will always FIGHT FOR THAT RIGHT.

Thank you.
~Beneva Davies.