The Utility of a Socially Responsible Endowment

So, due to the efforts of Brandeis students who came before, a fraction of the University Endowment is mandated to be set aside for investing in Socially Responsible Investment. I think there’s a Union Committee or something kicking around that gets to take a look at it.

Why do we care? What is the utility of Brandeis investing in ethical companies?

Of course, there’s the psychic satisfaction of knowing that we’re not part owners of Raytheon or Halliburton, or suchlike. There’s the symbolic value of taking a stand. There’s the boost in stock price / market cap we might be bringing to small ethical companies that could use the boost.

Is that all we’re fighting for? Symbolism, feeling good about ourselves, and maybe boosting the stock price of a company by pennies?

There should be a utliity to investment that goes beyond our dollars. In fact, that’s the whole point.

Years ago, ther was a movement to ban Kraft foods from the shelves of the C-Store. No more Easy Mac. Why? Kraft was owned by Altria, the parent company/name name of Phillip Morris, the Tobacco Company. Now, cigarettes are inherently bad in that they kill people, but I think Phillip Morris was using really unethical practices to push cigs to children or something abroad. Really sick stuff that we thankfully outlawed in the US. In any case, the motion to ban Easy Mac came to a campus referendum. It lost by 17 votes or something tiny like that.

Turns out that the whole process was being closely watched by Kraft foods themselves! They were very worried about Brandeis – what if other colleges took up the cause, bringing attention to the company, maybe the media would pick it up, maybe it would turn into a cause celebre, whatever. Point is, they were scared of our potential. We have power here because Brandeis, like other Universities, functions as a sort of shining beacon on the hill of a better world. We have the potential for being famous, due to being on the campus of a (relatively) famous university. Fame is power.

The same principle applies here. The point of ethical investment is not the investment itselof. Rather, the point is to leverage the investment into power. Power to cajole/compete/compel others to do the same. We should be trumpeting our ethical endowment, not hiding it.

Now, endowment-wise, we’re no where where we should be. Even the function of CEER is circumscribed – they have to specifically ask Jean Eddy (?) about every possible firm, one at a time, complete with reports and so on. It’s not a very efficient system. And, of course, we don’t have endowment transparency.

But for the part of the endowment that’s already invested well (ie for “goodness sake”) – why are we not publicizing this more? That’s the whole point, after all.

xbox

So I’m trying to set up my xbox as an ftp server, but it turns out that I have the wrong kind (too new). If anyone has an (original) xbox that they want to trade with me, I’d be very grateful.

There’s nothing wrong with mine, (it’s probably newer and better than yours!) just that its much harder to install webserver software on the newer ones.

Or if anyone wants to donate an old used computer, that’d work too. 😉
Is there a way to get/buy old crappy computers from the school?

We now return you to our regularly scheduled programming…

Money Matters

So we already knew that our endowment returns have been in the negative teens. We knew that Brandeis was facing a 10 Million Dollar Shortfall.

It seems that other elements of the Brandeis financial pantheon are doing even worse.

The Shapiro’s foundation lost half its value. No one knows how much the Shapiros themselves lost. Tom Friedman, member of the board, once owned a part of a 3.6 billion dollar family trust through his wife. That trust now holds less than $25 million.

Just something to keep in mind – compared to some other schools and institutions, a drop of just “in the teens” of endowment value makes our financial management seem to be a model of prudence.

And, this is just me saying, ok, that maybe if we had invested in socially responsible mutual funds we’d have done even better, or maybe not. Maybe we didn’t do so bad because we were already invested in socially responsible companies. The point is, we have no way of knowing.

Hopefully CEER will try and take care of that.

He’s Coming, He’s Coming, He’s Coming.

Sue me if I go to fast, but Lawrence Fucking Lessig is coming at last.

He’s heading to Harvard, to run the ethics center. Of course he’ll teach law, but the center’s the game-changer.

Let me lay on the line, this news is so divine! He’ll be that much closer and will stay for a time.
Opponent beware, Opponents beware, he’s coming, he’s coming, he’s coming.

News

Blago can’t touch this

The buzz in Washington? Scandal! Unaccountable expenditures of vast amounts of money! Inspired appointments to executive positions!

The buzz on campus? Ethics! Overseeing* vast amounts of endowment money. Inspired appointments to a Student Union Committee.

I’m speaking, of course, about the Committee on Endowment Ethics and Responsibility. The results are in the the appointees:

Chair: Union Vice-President Adam T. Hughes
Other Members: Alex Melman, Carly Greenberg, Daniel Millenson, Liza Behrendt, Nery Joubert-Rivera, Sahar Massachi, Stefan Nikolic, and Toni Schwarzenbach.

The mission of CEER will be to advice the Board of Trustees on how to best utilize its financial resources to serve the call for Social Justice enshrined in the very bedrock of this University, and to make sure that all action is of maximum effectiveness. So far it seems that, in practical terms, CEER will try to promote ethical proxy voting, investing in promising options, steering clear of other options, and targeted divestment, all with a healthy media/comm. strategy to leverage the impact of any such move.

Word on the street is that the committee features both graduate and undergraduate students. Anyone know the truth in that?

update: Carrie nails it 6 minutes after posting – Toni Schwarzenbach and Nery Joubert-Rivera are grad students.

Continue reading “Blago can’t touch this”

Stress

We’re all under a lot of stress lately. For example, my paper on Hayek was eaten by the interwebs, which means I have to rewrite a complex essay on very little sleep. Therefore, I decided to let off a bit of steam by replying to Tim’s post. (Sorry for procrastinating, Professor Gaskins, Professor Pollack, and Professor Hickey! I’ll get right back to doing all those essays and things due yesterday.) It got a bit too long for a comment, so here it is:

So, when it comes to course evaluations, I really don’t mind. Course evaluations are a meaningful social service. That said, if people are forced to fill them out, the chances of bad data significantly increases and the value of the whole enterprise goes to the crapper. And yet, relying on a purely voluntary system results in a 25% response rate, also not pretty. Therefore, we seem to have arrived at a situation where I get many emails (which costs me nothing) as well as the possibility of prizes (which possibly nets me an ipod). All in the purpose of more helpful student evaluations.

Tim, I’m thankful that the Provost’s Office is taking charge of this initiative. Course evaluations materially improve my life, and the fact is that MaryPat Lohse is:
a. Not an exhausted student cramming for a final
b. Offering me delicious yet vague hints of free ipod. 
c. Doing me favor. 

We’re all under stress, and thus likelier to get upset at “The Administration”, and goodness knows there’s been a lot to be upset about, especially lately. (much more on that later!) Honestly, I almost think they plan to unveil the controversial stuff for breaks and finals. Yet, I think in this case we should be happy that “the adults” are taking care of this for us.

Remember – 1/2000 chance of free ipod > 100% chance of no ipod.

Do it in the Dark

Results:

Congrats to North Quad, Reinfield, Gordon, Rosenthal, The Village, Ziv
130, and Charles River Apartments: 178 E-1, 178 E-10, 110 G-2, 110 F-2,
164 D-8, and 150 E-4 for winning your respective challenges. Look out
for information from your Eco-Rep about your prize/party coming up
soon!

Don’t forget to keep windows shut and unplug appliances before you go
away on winter break. More info about energy savings and challenge
results at www.brandeis.edu/energy
Contact: Janna Cohen-Rosenthal

Why isn’t Do It In the Dark year-round?

It’s my impression that the information on energy consumption per quad is not publicly available except during the 2-week window of the competition. If at least the energy consumption stats (or the percent change per month) were publicly available, I bet we’d see some changes on campus.

On a related note, I’ve been working in the Castle Commons for the past few nights. It is COLD! I bet if we insulated the windows here we’d save money (insulating windows is cheap and easy!) and also I’d be warmer. Win / Win!

IPTV Poll

Quick procrastination from writing my HIstory of the Progressive Era paper:

IPTV. The election for deciding which 7 channels we get is almost over. The current top 7:

1 71 Comedy Central
2 90 Israeli Network
3 7 WHDH-7 (NBC)
4 42 CNN
5 13 WFXT-25 (Fox)
6 39 Discovery Channel
7 4 WBZ-4 (CBS)

Call me an old fogey if you wish, but I always thought that college was the sort of place where you watch CSPAN2 late at night to titter at British Parliamentary Question Hour. College is the sort of place where you stay up brewing coffee and arguing about Ethical Hedonism, and analyzing the(lack of a) Utilitarian movement in the United States.

Where the hell is PBS on this list?

My picks:
1 PBS
2 Telemundo
3 MSNBC
4 CSPAN1
5 CSPAN2
6 Israel Channel
7 International Channel

What did you pick? (Vote here)

Budget Cut News Roundup

Merit Based scholarships to be cut, but not need-based.

4 professors laid off.

11 of 15 11 searches for new faculty canceled. update – This is a bit confusing. I think I got it right this time.

No academic cuts yet.

Athletics is the largest portion of the budget right now.

USEMs now optional

Language classes have max students per class pushed to 25 from 18.

“both Political Theory offerings for the 08-09 year [will be] taught by Timothy McCarty, a Politics Department graduate student.”

got any other news or tips? email us.

Continue reading “Budget Cut News Roundup”

Locked in Battle

We are locked in battle. Carnegie Mellon, Emory, NYU: all three have been crushed by the rapacious forces of Case Western.

Allied with a weak and feeble University of Rochester, we stand strong against the looming shadow of the insidiuos Case Westernites and the mysterious Chicago’ans.

Will you join us in the Go CrossCampus Tournament : UAA edition?

Continue reading “Locked in Battle”

Toys for Tots

So, Toys for Tots. It’s happening again this year. What exactly does it entail?

Well, I got a nice email from Michael Newmark spelling it out.

Synopsis:
Name: Toys for Tots
What: Buy toys with points in C-Pod and give them to charity.
When: Dec 1 – 18
Where: That table in Usdan.

P.S. – We’ve donated tons of toys through this in the past. Cool.
Continue reading “Toys for Tots”

Social Justice Summit

Went to a Social Justice Social Policy Summit today.

It was really interesting. Some ideas expressed were oldies but still unanswered, and some insights made me pause and think:

– In what ways can we foster a culture of Social Justice on campus?
– Many people at the summit talked about a need for mentorship – it’s rather sad that there is such a need at a college, of all places.
– In the past, the “social justice inclined” students were concentrated in a few departments and took the same classes, so that they were able to interact at a high level. Example – this lead to the Click Drive in the era of Ben Brandzel (and Andrew Slack)
– We need institutional memory . Why don’t alums who are working for Social Justice today come back and talk to us?
– During the heroic era of the civil rights movement, Brandeis had a sort of fellowship program where people in the movement came to Brandeis for a year and mingled as graduate students. That worked really well.

I’ve often talked about my idea of Brandeis as an experiment in social entrepreneurship. We successfully destroyed the institution of quotas in college admissions through establishing the University. With that done, we have and will and should serve as an academy for the next wave of leaders for Social Justice and Social Change.

We’re not really doing that well at preparing the next generation to carry the torch forward. There’s a lot of demand for that – witness all the Social Justice organizations on campus. Yet we can do so much more than lumping together a bunch of likeminded students at a University and expecting them to emerge ready to act from the crucible. We can correct the isolation and balkanization of clubs, sure. We can create the sort of classes that all of the like-minded people can take at once so that they interact in the classroom – the Social Justice Social Policy minor is trying to do that. Yet, we must go further than working with Brandeis-only students for just four years.

To become a true center for Social Justice, Brandies must look inward. At the summit, people proposed classes to examine incidents on campus – Hindley, Palestinian art, etc – and both how they related to Social Justice and how they were handled. Others spoke of a leadership training course, or one focusing on organizations, movements, and how they were handled. Jamie Ansorge, Director of Communications for the Student Union, used the example of Jason Gray, the current Student Union President. Jason studied the institutional workings, pressures, power centers, veto points, and power relations of the Student Union for a Heller School class. He’s used that knowledge to run a very impressive Student Union Government this year.

Yet, even more importantly, Brandeis must reach outward. We’ve already spoken of setting up mentorships and relationships with alums, or even just retaining institutional memory. Professor Cunningham (apparently the chair of SJSP) talked about his work in Mississippi, and how everyone connected to the civil rights movement knew aof Brandeis – either they had been to a summit there, or been trained there, or fellows there, or met someone from Brandeis, etc. We need to re-engage the outside world. We need to both learn from those who have come before and support the SNCC’s of our day.

As you may know, I’m a Computer Science Major (prospective). Over the last summer, I put some thought into startups. Why does MIT have a culture of creating small businesses? What fosters that culture? Is it the examples of people who have done it before? Professors encouraging that sort of work? Is there a “how to make a startup” class or office? I don’t really know, but I wish I did.

Brandeis should create a culture of community organizing and “activist startups”/social entrepreneurship. We have the examples of prominent students who’ve done that already. Justin Kang and the crew at LiveCampus, Allyson Goldsmith and ELEVEate, Ben Brandzel and the Collegiate Click Drive, Aaron Voldman and the Student Peace Alliance, the list goes on. We have a few institutions dedicated to social justice, such as the ethics center, or the SJSP program, but as far as I can tell they focus more on the atomistic student rather than a networked group. We should find that “special sauce” and bring it back here.

There were a lot of ideas at the meeting and I hope more comes of out it. For now, you’ll all be pleased to know that the SJSP program is going to give out grants for events that promote a fusion of social justice action and academics. Due date for submissions in mid-late January. With the Ethics Center funding and BPA funding as well, there seems to be the financial room, at least, for an expanded presence for these sorts of events in the future.

Quick Thoughts

– This is hell week for me, so don’t expect much writing until tuesday, at the very least.

– Isn’t weird how ever hardcore lefties are endorsing a very “hayek-ian” or “conservative” approach to global warming – carbon tax / cap and trade? Some are starting to focus more on infrastructure and so on but it’s weird how, for example, Chris Dodd’s claim to progressive fame (for a while) was that he was the only candidate to endorse a carbox tax.

– I love the “Coalition for Change“. Sure, their name is a bit grandiose. Then again, now it’s easier to find people to chill with – the people tabling are almost guarenteed to be people I know and like.

– Got an email from Jehuda about the budget gap. The situation doesn’t sound too great. He says that students are being represented:

The Student Advisory Committee, led by Senior Vice President for Students and Enrollment Jean Eddy and Student Union President Jason Gray, is assessing the effects of proposed changes on student life and the quality of the Brandeis student experience.

Does this “student advisory committee” have much power? Doesn’t sound like it. And I haven’t heard much of anything from this committee either: does anyone know what’s going on? Rumor has it that they’re all sworn to secrecy. I don’t much like the sound of that.

So again, what’s going on? I ask all this in the spirit of inquiry, not pique.

– Last minute ticket offer:

The Arts at Brandeis E-List is offered two free tickets to the opening night performance of

AURÉLIA’S ORATORIO
Written and directed by Victoria Thierrée Chaplin
Starring Aurélia Thierrée

Wednesday, December 3, 7:30pm
American Repertory Theatre

RSVP here.

It’s Back!

Hello Brandeis!

It is with great pleasure that I present to you Communiversity! Communiversity is a program that gives the community an opportunity to share in the diversified talents and interests of all its members. This program saw great success in the 70’s and 80’s and began again in Spring 2005.  It is a program in which Brandeis teaches Brandeis- faculty, staff, and students teach and attend classes that are a bit different from your everyday classes. Last year we had over 300 participants taking more than 20 classes!

Communiversity needs your talents and participation!  If you have a special interest or hobby, you may want to consider teaching a course.  In past years, Communiversity has offered courses in topics such as ethnic cooking, doll making, Scrabble 101, modern music, web design, knitting, juggling, Sign Language, Tango, Kashrut, and sketch comedy.

Communiversity ’09 courses will meet once or twice a week for five weeks between Monday, Feburary 23 and Friday, March 28, 2009. If you are interesting in teaching a class please fill out the application linked to http://my.brandeis.edu/survsimp/one?survey_id=4090 by 11:59 pm on Monday, December 8th.
Thank you for your interest. Feel free to contact me with any questions.

Woot!

On a side note – notice all the new events on the activist calendar?

Interesting new campaign

Over the past two weeks or so, SPA, SEA, and PF have been working on something pretty cool.

Long story short, it’s a postcard to Obama sort of thing, where you advocate a peace, environmental, and poverty policy.

The real innovation is the tight integrate of three different activist groups. A member from each group will table at all times and there are weekly coordination meetings between the three.

This has the potential to create structures of fruitful collaboration (rather than empty “cosponsorship”) for social justice groups on campus, which is great. Though I am kind of miffed on DFA’s behalf that they weren’t included. 😉

What Exactly is a Hate Campaign?

By Scott, a student at Brandeis -Sahar

An email that I received from the AFA today describes a “hate-campaign” launched by “homosexual activists” against the “Mormons” (which is not the same thing as the Mormon Church). The email, accurately states that the Church played pivotal role in the passage of California’s Proposition 8, which took away constitutionally-provided marriage rights for same gender couples.

The reader is provided three examples of this “hate-campaign”, which include a lawsuit against the Church (referred to in the email as “Mormons”) for violating election laws, a forced-resignation by a film festival coordinator that contributed to Prop8, and a call for the revocation of the Church’s tax-exempt status.

Of these three examples, two of them are actions predicated upon the Church violating the law. It is hard for me to buy an argument that people (activists or not) using their resources to ensure that an institution remains within the boundaries of legally-established acceptable behavior, are engaged in a hate campaign.

Continue reading “What Exactly is a Hate Campaign?”

The Lie We Love

From the great folks at Schuster –Sahar

Brandeis’ SCHUSTER INSTITUTE FOR INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM, the nation’s first and only investigative reporting center based at a university, is pleased to announce the results of our year-long investigation into corruption in international adoption. These troubling findings have profound implications for private lives and public policy.

The story of abandoned orphans in developing countries who need to be whisked away to adoring moms and dads in faraway lands is largely fiction. So writes E.J. Graff, associate director and senior researcher at the Schuster Institute in her new investigative article “The Lie We Love,” published in Foreign Policy’s Nov./Dec. 2008 issue. The article exposes the myth of a world orphan crisis—and reveals that the large amounts of Western money offered for healthy “adoptable” infants and toddlers are inducing baby-trafficking in poor and corrupt countries.

 

Where Do Babies Come From?

Over the past two decades, serious irregularities in international adoption—buying, defrauding, coercing, and kidnapping children away from their families—have been documented around the world. Until now, these individual reports and stories have never been pulled together so that prospective parents, adoption industry experts, opinion leaders, and policymakers can look at them in a systematic way.

By clicking on our interactive map, you can find in-depth documentation of adoption abuses in a number of countries, including links to original news reports and academic research.

Over the coming weeks, the Schuster Institute will be adding more of the extensive documentation and in-depth research that led us to publish our findings in “The Lie We Love.” In the weeks and months to come, the Schuster Institute will be publishing related articles elsewhere, and will participate in public forums to discuss our findings. In November and December, this website will be adding other resources as well, including:

  • How to tell when a country’s adoption practices may be corrupt
  • Suggestions for talking with a child about potentially troubling adoption practices in that child’s birth country
  • A list of blogs, news outlets, talk shows, and other outlets where this work is being discussed
  • A comments and discussion page

 
Click here for more information about the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism.  

To join the Schuster Institute’s listserv, please email us at schusterinstitute@brandeis.edu 

Are you an undergraduate student with a commitment to social justice and with experience in legal or journalistic research? Are you interested in a PAID part-time position as a Research Assistant?Apply here!

Pitchfork

I sympathize with Max’s criticisms of and frustration with Pitchfork media. These sentiments are shared by many.

Then again, I think we should remember that Pitchfork thrives in challenging the “indie consensus” regarding the merits of famous bands and albums. The problem is, they’ve come to be regarded as a voice for the “indie consensus”. In other words, many people use Pitchfork as their only source of music, and regard it as a trusted elite/establishment source of taste. When Pitchfork’s whole shtick encompasses a healthy dose of reviews that buck the most everyone else’s taste, a problem arises.

Don’t use Pitchfork for rating albums you’ve not heard yet. I recommend Delusions of Adequacy, and Metacritic instead. Think of Pitchfork as that loud annoying friend that occasionally says something profound, and other times just mouths off to remind everyone that he’s there.

For a very interesting article on Pitchfork as Art Mafia, read Crooked Timber. Or read Crooked Timber in any case. They’re a great blog.

Being Black at Brandeis

I think that we members of the Brandeis community should make a special effort to understand people that are different from ourselves. Therefore I think this event has the potential for greatness:

Hey BBSO Members,

Tonight is the last night of Black Is…  There will be a movie screening of “Black: Definition of a Color” a film by Jerry Saunders in the ICC lounge from 7-9pm.  There are interviews with Brandeis students about what black means to them along with many other intriguing questions.  Come take a study break and watch the film.

There will also be a variety of delicious culture food cooked by your very own e-board.  So, have some food, relax, and enjoy the video!

The home-cooked food kind of seals the deal.

When I’m all grown up…

This is written in the spirit of me trying to figure out my feelings out loud, and soliticiting the advice, guidance, and response of the Brandeis community. The following is written in a genuine “stream of thought” manner, and please read it in the spirit of personal and academic searching, not a rant, screed, or attack. I’d very much appreciate everyone’s viewpoint and response on this one – sahar

Via Matthew Yglesias, who, by the way, is as genuine in person as he is brilliant online, I found a really interesting article dealing with the financial crisis, written by the perspective of a former insider who left the industry in disgust around the mini-crisis of the late 1980’s/early 90’s.

There’s a lot to chew on in there. An admonition to stay far away from the financial services industry. An explanation of the mess that is neither opaque nor patronizing. He places blame on the perverse incentives placed on Wall Street when firms became publicly traded rather than partnerships.

I want to focus on his interactions with college students, however, since that’s more of my area of expertise.

I had no great agenda, apart from telling what I took to be a remarkable tale, but if you got a few drinks in me and then asked what effect I thought my book would have on the world, I might have said something like, “I hope that college students trying to figure out what to do with their lives will read it and decide that it’s silly to phony it up and abandon their passions to become financiers.” I hoped that some bright kid at, say, Ohio State University who really wanted to be an oceanographer would read my book, spurn the offer from Morgan Stanley, and set out to sea. Continue reading “When I’m all grown up…”

International Education Week

My email tells me that Its international education week this week.Here’s the info:

International Education Week (Nov. 17 – 21) is a joint initiative of the U.S. Department of Education and Department of State designed to celebrate the benefits of global exchange and understanding. Brandeis will help celebrate by hosting events highlighting the following three themes: global citizenship and cosmopolitanism, benefits of the international experience, and “preserving stories, retracing roots.” Continue reading “International Education Week”

State of the Union – Disorganized First Thoughts

Student Union President Jason Gray wants every student club to include a community service component.

For example, the debate team could teach public speaking at a local school. An a capella group could sing at a local shelter. Your club can play chess or knit at a nursing home, shoot hoops at the Boys and Girls Club, cook a holiday meal for those in need, or organize a talent show at the YMCA. The opportunities are endless.

This is huge. Imagine if we pull this off. What a way to actualize our ideals.

Jason talked about the budget crisis at the University – said that the Brandeis community should be able to give input to the budget. I think he was implicitly saying something along the lines of “Hey University? Remember the Guns decision? Remember how you cut us out of that process? Well we demand to be at the table when you make budget decisions that affect us.”

Jason has the credibility with the administration to pull this off, I think.

Jason also put a big focus on Rights and Responsibilities. The impetus for the Student Bill of Rights may have been the struggle between the Student body and the Administration, but Jason ran with the concept after SODA disbanded, and he’s still very cognizant of the fact that Student Rights and Responsibilities is “heavy on the responsibilities, light on the rights…”

Here’s an interesting tidbit:

we hope to revamp club collaboration by creating an online forum for club leaders to easily communicate with each other in the idea-generating, strategizing, and event-planning processes.

Online, you say? A place where an online place where brandeis activists and club leaders could bounce ideas off each other and strategize… Sounds like us, actually. Or what Innermost Parts would like to be.

Here’s a big deal: “Revitalizing old rooms in Castle and Usdan.”
Thank you!

The biggest news was still the call for every club to have a community service component. Awesome.

State of the Union Tonight

Student Union president Jason Gray is going to give a speech on the state of the union (and Brandeis) tonigth.

Sources say it’ll shock and amaze, that it blows previous SOTU speeches out of the water.

I’m not quite sure about that, but we’ll see. Hopefully we’ll set up a liveblog here at 7pm.  Hm…

edit: 7pm at Rapaporte, if you want to go yourself.

The age of networked protests

You know that Join the Impact event this Saturday? TechPresident asks, Once a Local Legal Battle, Is Prop 8 On Its Way to ‘Net-Fueled Cultural Moment? It’s fascinating to read how this event that Jourdan, a student here, is organizing fits into a larger story of online activism and organizing.

In the days after the vote, Seattle activist Amy Balliett put up a website calling for others to Join the Impact against Prop 8. She told 365gay.com that she was amazed to soon find it pulling in some 50,000 hits per hour, crashing its server. The Join the Impact mission is to make communion with Prop 8 supporters, “to encourage our community to engage our opposition in a conversation about full equality and to do this with respect, dignity, and an attitude of outreach and education.” Its success is reminiscent of Columbia’s anti-FARC movement launched on Facebook that spawned protests all over the world.

Food

Turns out that Hannaford‘s is the 5th healthiest line of supermarkets in the country. Cool!

5. Hannaford

165-plus stores in the Northeast

This chain is relatively small, but Whole Foods should look out — Hannaford is the largest certified-organic supermarket in the region, and in the past two years it has boosted its produce selection to provide more than 50 local and organic products from 200 farms close by. “It’s an impressive amount of local produce, which is not that easy in temperate New England,” Geagan notes.

But Hannaford’s commitment to healthy foods doesn’t stop there. Its Guiding Stars nutrition-label program makes it a snap to pick out the healthiest fresh and packaged fare: You’ll find one, two, or three stars — with three stars indicating the highest nutritional value — on nearly every item in the store. That means you don’t have to pore over the labels to decide which loaf of bread to buy.

Ethical Responsibility, not Fiduciary Mastery

Wow, so I just got around to reading The Justice today. I haven’t done it in a while.

They have an editorial up about the creation of the Committee for Endowment Ethics and Responsibility.
Never mind that this is a significant win for the Brandeis student body.
They seem to have no idea what the purpose of the Committee actually is.

Let me be brief – The Committee for Endowment Ethics and Responsibility exists to make sure that we’re not abusing our endowment, by, for example, investing in Sudan. Or maybe it’ll push the University to actually use its shares for Proxy Voting.

The Justice Editorial Board seems to think that CEER is going to try and advise the Board of Trustees on which hedge fund will give the best ROI. That’s simply wrong.

Look, Brandeis has a shameful history regarding its endowment . Students got the University to divest from South Africa, only to find out later that the Brandeis just re-invested right after.

We can’t depend on leaks from outraged faculty and staff. We need an independent panel conducting a review of the ethical implications of our endowment. CEER is the first step to that goal.

Facebook … Stalking?

So my good friend Matt wrote an opinion piece about Facebook in the Justice yesterday.
Matt, you makea variety of good points. But I think you’re missing two important pieces of data.

There is a reason people feel that their privacy is invaded. They weren’t the ones taking those pictures of themselves at parties or defacing towns, or whatever. Someone else did, often without their permission. Secondly those pictures have security settings so that only members of “the Network”, aka Brandeis Students, for example, can see them. When the University infiltrates the network and bypasses those security settings, it’s acting in bad faith, and co-opting a fraternal bonding experience into a spying extravaganza.

There was a “counterpoint” article, however. As far I understand, it argued that the contextual advertising for Facebook don’t give us no respect. Well, that’s novel.

Then again, maybe those ads really are an insult to our intelligence. I wouldn’t know.

Forbidden Fruit

Dear Rebecca Blady,

In response to your recent article in The Justice, I’d like to highlight a particular sentence that, for your sake, I hope your editor inserted.

It’s important to question whether our First Amendment rights should trump our morality.

Um, what? Let’s put aside the fact that the first amendment refers to the power of state and local governments to censor speech.

Do you realize that you’re saying that a core American value should be superseded due to the presence of some third-rate glorified message board? I could create a less-fancy version of this website in the space of one hour. Should we ditch our first amendment rights for that site too? How about we get Brandeis to ban all pornography? People say that both porn and violent video games compromise our morality. It’s important to question whether our Fourth Amendment rights should trump our morality. I say we start searching through everyone’s dorm and confiscating their porn and Wiis.

Look, what are you proposing, exactly?

In a society in which [free speech] is considered an absolute, we must consider its limitations. We are obliged to curb free speech for the sake of our classmates’ emotional well-being.

Oh. So you’re going to try to get Brandeis to block the IP address of some shitty website? You know else hurts people’s well being? Facebook. There are pictures of so many underage teenagers drinking beer at parties. As you so eloquently put it, Real jobs and real reputations are at stake. Let’s ban Facebook too. After we search everyone’s dorm for porn and violent video games. I’ll be happy to offer my dorm room as a place to store any contraband we find.

Skip your classes

Tuesday, the day of the election, a bunch of us are going to skip class and take a bus to Raymond, New Hampshire, to get out the vote.

Interested, here’s the info:

I hope that you’re all planning to take a day off of class for the most important election of our lives (so far)!

Here is the schedule: show up to catch the bus in front of Spingold at 7:15 AM (Early, I know, but you can sleep on the bus!)
We’ll be spending the day getting out the vote in Raymond, NH, and heading back to the campus for the DFA election-watch party right before polls close at eight.

The Obama campaign will provide lots of food, excitement, and Obama-mania!

More questions? Email liza behrent

Five for Eric

Eric Massa is running for congress in NY-29, my home district.

NY-29 is the most conservative in the state, and he’s running on a platform of single-payer healthcare, among other things.

Eric takes no money from corporations. Eric has “the fire in the belly”.

Eric Massa is the candidate that inspired me to become a Democrat.

Can’t you please chip in 5 dollars? He needs it right now. I’m trying to get at least 20 college students to chip in $5 each.

Donate here.
Continue reading “Five for Eric”