1/2 Readers ask if I was not too harsh calling Abdulhadi "racist". My answer: What would you call a guest lecturer who comes to your university saying "Muslims are terrorists, but I have nothing against Muslims who disavow Mohammad". Evidently, archaeology professors think it'shttps://twitter.com/bandlersbanter/status/1130946454350991360 …
The question of how to value identity outside of the academic context is a different one than inside. Since it matters largely when it becomes a tool of political strife and competition for resources, it may be naive to ask that everyone holds each identity in the same regard.
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Naive it may be, but it need to be aspired to, and if no one says the word "racist" students may get the idea that Adulhadi is a normal person, perhaps even an "educator", so perhaps I and my Zionist colleagues are indeed "white supremacists" . Sorry. She is just a Zionophobe.
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When two groups of people are in disagreement over whose children should live on the same spot of land, it is often difficult for each side to respect the claims of the other side, and the banners under which they fight their war. Realizing that should be part of higher education
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