POPULARITY
On this episode of the podcast, Host Amanda Head is joined by Jennifer Sey. Sey is not just a competitive gymnast who was a 7-time member of the United States women's national artistic gymnastics team and the 1986 U.S. Women's All-Around National Champion, but she went on to become a producer of the Emmy-award winning documentary film, “Athlete A”. In addition to those amazing accomplishments Sey served as the Chief Marketing Officer and then Brand President of Levi Strauss & Co. The two-time book author has now gone on to become the founder and CEO of her own company, XX-XY Athletics.Over the years, Sey has been cancelled by progressive activists for her differing viewpoints on the COVID pandemic lockdowns and most recently, as it regards her advocacy in keeping women's sports female. After an early retirement from Levi's in 2022, Sey began to really stand-up to ‘woke-ism' in order to help restore common sense and create an equitable, yet inclusive society for all.Just months ago, Sey launched her new company, XX-XY Athletics with the help of nationally known brand ambassadors like, former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines, de-transitioner Chloe Cole, DEI educator Dr. Tabia Lee, and several others. Moreover, just yesterday XX-XY Athletics released their brand new performance collection that you can shop right now! This collection consists of leggings, bike shorts, tanks, and tees. Sey tells Head on the first ever, “Furthermore with Amanda Head - Small Business Saturday” video podcast that her company is, “obsessed over fit and fabric. These are the softest leggings you're ever gonna wear and they're incredibly flattering.”Join XX-XY Athletics Founder and CEO Jennifer Sey and Furthermore Podcast Host Amanda Head for this incredible conversation where they talk all about Sey's small business operations and new merchandise, along with the ultimate hypocrisy of COVID lockdowns, the importance of protecting women in sports, and the significance of standing up to the progessive elitists who want you to fall in line without asking any questions.Please note that if you would like to shop XX-XY Athletics new performance collection you can do so by clicking here -> www.XX-XYAthletics.com/collections/performance.If you'd like to learn more about Jennifer's journey through corporate America you can purchase her latest book “Levi's Unbuttoned” by clicking here -> www.LevisUnbuttoned.com.And if you are interested in following Jennifer Sey on social media platforms such as on ‘X' you can do so by searching -> @JenniferSey.Be sure to keep up with Amanda Head's small business Saturday video podcast series that will continue to roll out every Saturday from now until the end of the year with various small business leaders from all around our great nation. You can stream the audio version on your favorite podcast service as usual, or watch the actual episode on Rumble or YouTube by following the links here:Rumble -> www.rumble.com/c/c-6349263YouTube -> www.youtube.com/@FurthermorePodSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
What happens when an inquisitive, naturally hopeful, critical-thinking civics-oriented teacher educator gets a position in an Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education? She gets fired for not being "the right kind of Black person", and then speaks out about it while developing better alternatives for schools. Dr. tabia lee joins the Dorx to discuss travel, authenticity, finding pride in America, critical Social Justice, racial affinity groups, “white oppressors,” DEI gangsters, infighting, bad journalism, calling in vs. calling out, emotional reasoning, pronouns, sparklefun, purple hair, and living in a dystopian science-fiction timeline. Listeners will also be treated to optimism, good humor, and multiple Hollywood-style false endings! Links: Tabia Lee on Twitter: https://twitter.com/11Drtlee11 DEI College Director Fired for Not Being ‘Right Kind of Black Person': https://www.newsweek.com/dei-college-director-fired-not-being-right-kind-black-person-1813481 Free Black Thought: https://freeblackthought.com/voices/dr-tabia-lee Do No Harm: https://donoharmmedicine.org/ Dr. t lee Educational Consultancy: http://www.drtlee.solutions/services.html Coalition for Empowered Education: https://empowered-ed.org/about-us/ Paolo Freire: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paulo_Freire ELIZA: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA For more information about RISE on The Land for WOMEN, email Char at riseontheland2020s@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/heterodorx/support
Welcome to The Closet podcast! For this episode, we're thrilled to feature Dr. Tabia Lee, EdD, a distinguished lifelong educator and advocate for empowered education. Dr. Lee's profound insights into pedagogical design and commitment to diversity and inclusion have shaped her career. Notably, she served as a DEI Director at De Anza College, where she fearlessly questioned prevailing DEI narratives. Join us for an enlightening conversation with Dr. Lee as we delve into DEI and a new alternative called DTALE. Make sure you subscribe to my show and rate it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever else you're listening. And make sure you follow me on social media! Sit back and get inspired. Without further ado, let's welcome Dr. Lee! Find Dr. Lee online: Twitter.com/11Drtlee11
Preorder Glenn's forthcoming memoir, Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative ... Why Glenn wrote a memoir (and why you should order it now) ... A ringing endorsement from John ... What does Martin Luther King Jr. Day mean in 2024? ... Preserving King's belief in “the content of our character” ... What would King say to Claudine Gay? ... King's radicalism ... John: Being against DEI does not make you a racist ... The Tabia Lee affair at De Anza College ... How Claudine Gay should have reacted to the plagiarism scandal ... Glenn: “The DEI movement is hoist on its own petard” ... How DEI's dominance has improved John's home media set-up ... John's upcoming cabaret show ...
Preorder Glenn's forthcoming memoir, Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative ... Why Glenn wrote a memoir (and why you should order it now) ... A ringing endorsement from John ... What does Martin Luther King Jr. Day mean in 2024? ... Preserving King's belief in “the content of our character” ... What would King say to Claudine Gay? ... King's radicalism ... John: Being against DEI does not make you a racist ... The Tabia Lee affair at De Anza College ... How Claudine Gay should have reacted to the plagiarism scandal ... Glenn: “The DEI movement is hoist on its own petard” ... How DEI's dominance has improved John's home media set-up ... John's upcoming cabaret show ...
Tabia's early career as a teacher … Tabia's “rough ride” as a DEI director … The antisemitism problem at De Anza … The inescapable BIPOC binary … From disagreement to deplatforming … Why Tabia found support among students but not faculty … How attempts to silence Tabia backfired … Tabia's broad vision of diversity … […]
Tabia's early career as a teacher ... Tabia's “rough ride” as a DEI director ... The antisemitism problem at De Anza ... The inescapable BIPOC binary ... From disagreement to deplatforming ... Why Tabia found support among students but not faculty ... How attempts to silence Tabia backfired ... Tabia's broad vision of diversity ... Learning from the medical professionals of Galilee ...
Tabia's early career as a teacher ... Tabia's “rough ride” as a DEI director ... The antisemitism problem at De Anza ... The inescapable BIPOC binary ... From disagreement to deplatforming ... Why Tabia found support among students but not faculty ... How attempts to silence Tabia backfired ... Tabia's broad vision of diversity ... Learning from the medical professionals of Galilee ...
GUEST: Dr. Tabia Lee, Director of Coalition for Empowered Education, Former Director of the Diversity Equity & Inclusion (DEI) Department at De Anza, a California Community College. Dr. Lee is currently a Plaintiff against the educational institution.Dr. Tabia Lee, is a highly accredited professor, a former Member of the Board of Education, and a highly regarded professor, until she challenged the DEI system and approach by using a science-based needs assessment which determined that, among other issues, students of Jewish faith were experiencing anti-Semitism and felt unsafe at the school. Committed to excellence, she proceeded to redefine DEI to include the Jews on campus, only to be met with outrage that she would do so and ultimately fired for her commitment to true equity.This interview is powerful and shows the degree to which our education system has been hijacked by the woke/communist strategies that seek to divide us, not unite us. Their policies and practices clearly ignore their very own tenets of inclusion. The Foundation For Intolerance & Racism (FAIR), an organization that challenges the dictates of the DEI doctrines, is funding Dr. Lee's legal actions against De Anza within the California Community College system. Click here to Donate to FAIR.BIO - Tabia Lee, EdD, is a lifelong educator, founding member of Free Black Thought, Senior Fellow for Do No Harm Medicine, and Director of the Coalition for Empowered Education. She has contributed to the design, implementation, and evaluation of numerous educational and professional development programs. Her commitment to teacher education and pedagogical design is grounded in her experience as a lifelong educator and a National Board Certified English, Civics, and Social Studies teacher in urban American public middle schools. Dr. Lee prepares K-12 and higher education faculty to work with diverse communities by focusing on better understanding ideology-in-practice and the pedagogical and curricular implications of race, gender, and other ideologies.Recent Publications DEI Colleagues: Your Anti-Semitism is Showing and it's Time for an Ideological Reckoning. Article for Journal of Free Black Thought Race Ideology-In-Practice: Racial Equity in American Learning Environments https://freeblackthought.substack.com/p/race-ideology-in-practice Stoking Hate: Toxic DEI is Driving campus antisemitism. Op-Ed for New York Post When ‘Critical Social Justice' Rules on Campus: Fight Anti-Semitism by Ditching Toxic Forms of DEI. Op-Ed for Wall Street Journal (Letter to the Editor) For more information about this case, here's an article from Newsweek.https://www.newsweek.com/dei-college-director-fired-not-being-right-kind-black-person-1813481 Be sure to check out our new online wellness boutique, offering trusted, quality nutritional products and wellness devices to help you restore yourself to optimal wellness. TotalWellFit.com Thank you to our Sponsors! TotalWellFit.com - Empowering Fitness with Wellness Sweeties on the Creek - They're scoopin' now! USFlagService.com - Fly your flag for FREEDOM! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Julie welcomes Dr. Tabia Lee, a career educator. She has made it her vocation to expose the deception and dishonesty that practiced under the banner of DEI. She is a founding member of Free Black Thought and a Senior Fellow at Do No Harm.Check out other Julie Hartman videos: https://www.youtube.com/@juliehartman Follow Julie Hartman on social media: Website: https://juliehartmanshow.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/julierhartman/ X: https://twitter.com/JulieRHartman See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
DEI vs. Diversity of ThoughtI recently read an article in the Free Black Thought substack written by my friend Dr. Tabia Lee entitled: DEI COLLEAGUES: YOUR ANTI-SEMITISM IS SHOWING. With recent events being what they are in the middle east, and the ensuing hate mongering that is taking place world-wide, the article stood out instantly. You might remember Dr. Tabia Lee from our DTH conversation back in March of this year soon after she was stripped of her position as Faculty Director for the office of Equity, Social-Justice, and Multicultural Education at De Anza College, a California community college. I'll be looking to have Dr. Lee back on the podcast in early 2024, but for now, please enjoy this replay of our conversation back in March of 2023, and check out this article in Free Black Thought.Who is Dr. Tabia Lee? Dr. Tabia Lee, EdD, a founding member of Free Black Thought, has contributed to the design, implementation, and evaluation of numerous educational and professional development programs. Her commitment to teacher education and pedagogical design is grounded in her experience as a lifelong educator and a National Board Certified English, Civics, and Social Studies teacher in urban American public middle schools. Dr. Lee prepares K-12 and higher education faculty to work with diverse students by focusing on better understanding the pedagogical and curricular implications of ideology-in-practice. Learn more about Dr. Lee by getting the full show notes at www.DerateTheHate.comWhat have you done today to make your life a better life? What have you done today to make the world a better place? The world is a better place if we are better people. That begins with each of us leading a better life. Be kind to one another. Be grateful for everything you've got. Make each and every day the day that you want it to be!Please follow The Derate The Hate podcast on:Facebook, Instagram, Twitter , TruthSocial, Parler, Rumble, YouTube Subscribe to us wherever you enjoy your audio. Please leave us a rating and feedback. Send me a message on any media platform or subscribe directly from our sites. Let us know about someone you think should be on our podcast. If we book them for a conversation, I'll send you a free gift! Not on social media? You can share your thoughts directly with me at wilk@wilksworld.comI look forward to hearing from you!
Dr. Tabia Lee was let go from her role as a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion director at a California college when she claims she tried to create an inclusive learning environment for everyone, including Jewish students. Get the facts first on Morning Wire.
News
“When I turn on my TV and I see groups of students yelling 'Gas the Jews!'—that's not freedom of speech. That's something else. That's calling for murder. That's supporting killing innocent people. How can we be supportive of that?”In this episode, we sit down with Tabia Lee, a former DEI educator at De Anza College in California. She was fired after refusing to follow the college's woke social justice orthodoxy. Today, she is trying to reform California's mandatory ethnic studies high school curriculum, which she argues is infused with extremist ideology, including antisemitism.“I never thought I would see something like that in America—the support of terrorist groups and terrorist actions from our students,” Lee says.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Everything you've heard about "Diversity, Equity, Inclusion" as well as much of the Civil Rights era is challenged in today's show by our guest who says it is long past time to break the cycle and understand the cultural hijacking that's taken place in the country. Much of it masked in race and racism. Dr. Tabia Lee sounds the alarm on the destructive, divisive, Marxist theology behind "DEI" and it should serve as a warning to anyone who sends their kids to a school district or college with a "DEI Director." You need to know what it really is, and Dr. Lee knows because she was one. Plus, actor Kevin Sorbo talks with us about his new film "Miracle in East Texas" and his passion for homeschooling their children with his wife Sam. -For more info visit the official website: https://chrisstigall.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/chrisstigallshow/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisStigallFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/chris.stigall/Listen on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/StigallPodListen on Apple Podcasts: https://bit.ly/StigallShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Glenn gives a snapshot of where we are in society regarding the ongoing war in Israel and the terrifying direction we're going. Senior fellow for Do No Harm Medicine Tabia Lee joins to discuss the anti-Semitism rooted in DEI programs. ConnectEffect creator Riaz Patel joins to discuss how social media is making Americans see the worst in each other. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Glenn gives a snapshot of where we are in society regarding the ongoing war in Israel and the terrifying direction we're going. In an effort to stand up against big tech censorship, Glenn announces the new ad-free website and subscription options for TheBlaze.com. The White House and the media are desperately trying to convince you that anti-Semitism isn't on the rise. The New York Times was forced to apologize for its coverage of Hamas and Israel. Senior fellow for Do No Harm Medicine Tabia Lee joins to discuss the anti-Semitism rooted in DEI programs. ConnectEffect creator Riaz Patel joins to discuss how social media is making Americans see the worst in each other. Glenn discusses how big tech censorship has censored him and others who refuse to fall in line. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On today's show, I first open with an explanation that even the closest loved ones in your own lives are not going to agree with you 100% of the time. We have difference and that's part of being a human being. The idea of looking for a “perfect” Speaker of the House is sophistry. That doesn't mean we don't need some basic core principles in place. For me, I want a Constitutionalist. I know I won't agree with every policy decision they hold, but if they are guided by the Constitution, that's a mighty fine start. Next we need to get back to discussing new payments made directly to Joe Biden from his brother. Rep. James Comer (R-KY) and his committee continue their due diligence and have found another troubling payment. Even Jonathon Turley had to weigh-in on the latest piece of damning evidence. And, supposedly, Comer is set to release more evidence next week. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) reveals, beyond Rob Malley, who had his security clearance revoked while investigating the possibility he is an Iranian spy in the State Department, that there are at least three others who may also be spies. Yet one still holds a clearance. Anti-Semitism has exploded in this country and it's no shock that is belongs to the Left. Our college campuses are inundated with an anti-Israel/pro-Hamas culture. Victor Davis Hanson penned a piece entitled, “The Sickness of Our Universities – and the Cure.” I follow this up with a concern that the Biden regime is going to try to find a loop-hole to bring Palestinians into our own country. We must not allow this. If the other Arab nations surrounding the Gaza Strip want nothing to do with the culture of death they hold, why should we? To go along with this, Customs and Border Patrol was just found to have released intelligence expressing concern that Islamist Jihadists, members of Hezbollah and members of Hamas may try to enter our open southern border. To add one more layer to the debate over Palestinian “culture”, I play a recording from U.S. Marine Steven Gern. It's a short moment illustrating just how dangerous it is to think we can change their culture simply by changing their surroundings. It's going to take generations to accomplish. Onto the positive stories. An X (formally Twitter) user by the name of Yael Bar tur (@yaelbt) has been sharing stories from October 7. One focuses on a hero by the name of Yigal, who is an Israeli police officer. His actions saved over 500 people. When an interviewer asked him if he was aware of how many he saved, his responded, “I understand I could have saved more.” Talk about an unassuming hero! Speaking of the hate and ills tied with DEI, a former DEI director on a college campus, Tabia Lee, penned a piece in the New York Post. The title says it all. “I was a DEI director – DEI drives campus anti-Semitism.” People are starting to wake up to the fact that these woke, virtue-signaling policies are meant to divide and stoke hatred, rather than create harmony. And, as a final element to that point, Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R-AK) just signed an Executive Order banning woke words/phrases from government. We all need to stop allowing those with serious mental health issues tell us we need to accept their demands to redefine truth to make them feel better about their own illness. That's not our responsibility and we need to challenge it every time it shows itself. Take a moment to rate and review the show and then share the episode on social media. You can find me on Facebook, X, Instagram, GETTR and TRUTH Social by searching for The Alan Sanders Show. You can also support the show by visiting my Patreon page!
Dr. Tabia Lee is a longtime educator, pedagogist, and a founding member of Free Black Thought. In 2021, Tabia was hired at DeAnza College in California as the Faculty Director for the Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education. Tabia attempted to reform the toxic campus atmosphere characterized by many faculty and staff members as “too woke.” DEI colleagues at DeAnza rejected Tabia's efforts to promote a “pro-human” approach to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives. Tabia, a black woman, was called a white supremacist, a racist, and a right-wing operative, among other accusations. In June this year, Tabia was fired. She is suing DeAnza College for violating her academic freedom and free speech rights.Find more from Tabia:Donate Free Black Thought
Sponsor special: Up to $2,500 of FREE silver AND a FREE safe on qualifying orders - Call 855-862-3377 or text “AMERICAN” to 6-5-5-3-2“I'm a black woman and I'm being called a white supremacist. That had never happened in my entire teaching career. And not only that, I'd never seen teachers calling each other names like that.”In 2021, Tabia Lee was hired to direct De Anza College's Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education and to reduce the wokeness of the institution.“I just went beyond the smaller bubble to the larger community, and said, ‘Who wants to work on actual inclusion and doing some things we've never done here before?'” says Ms. Lee.But after two years, Ms. Lee was terminated for her heterodox perspectives and inquiry-based approach to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).“I've lost everything, basically. And that's tough,” she says. “But what I've gained is so many people coming and saying, ‘Thank you for having the courage. Thank you for raising the issue.' They've said, ‘You inspired me to ask about my equity policy. You inspired me to go into my child's school and ask to see that curriculum, and to make a public records act request if needed, if people aren't being forthcoming with the information I'm seeking. You inspired me to push back when I wasn't going to, and I hadn't in the past.' And to me, that's worth everything, because that's what it's going to take to take our nation back.”We discuss Ms. Lee's heterodox approach to DEI, inquiry-based learning, the difference between classical and critical social justice, and what it means to genuinely practice inclusion.“We're making that small impact with our students, right? But the broader system is just being destroyed and dismantled right before our eyes. And we're complicit in that because we're not saying anything,” says Ms. Lee.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comDr. Tabia Lee is an educator and consultant. She was the faculty director for the Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education at De Anza College until she was fired for her heterodox views on DEI. (Her GoFundMe is here.) She's also a cofounder of Free Black Thought.For two clips of our convo — on teaching kids as individuals, and the wrong way to ask for pronouns — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Lee as a gifted-and-talented student; her mentoring kids as a kid; graduating high school in two years; critical thinking as a core value; intellectual humility and curiosity; Lee teaching public school in LA; California voters banning affirmative action in 1996; how teacher ideology clouds the classroom; humanism over identity politics; Lee as a pioneer of pronoun use in the early Internet; “inquiry-based” teaching and holistic instruction; the race of students being just one of many factors; not focusing on stereotypes; the moral certitude of DEI; the need for viewpoint diversity; the “neo-reconstructionism” of Kendi and DiAngelo; the dangers of teaching as activism; the abandonment of SAT and other standardized testing; the wasteful spending in public education; and the attacks that Lee faced as a heterodox DEI director.Browse the Dishcast archive for another conversation you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Erick Erickson on the showdown between Trump and DeSantis, Dave Weigel on all things politics, Jean Twenge on the key differences between the generations, and Matt Lewis on ruling-class elites. Send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comDavid is an extraordinary investigative reporter, a longtime staff writer for The New Yorker, and an old acquaintance. Several of his stories and books have been adapted into major motion pictures, including The Lost City of Z, Old Man and the Gun, and Killers of the Flower Moon. His new book is The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder — and the film rights have already been acquired by Scorsese and DiCaprio.For two clips of our convo — on the hell of sailing around Cape Horn, and the horrors of scurvy — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: the bygone era of analog journalism; the hacks of Grub Street; David's ability to write vividly about gore — despite his fear of blood in real life; the intricacies of sailing an 18th century ship; the crazed search for treasure and glory; the role of Lord Byron's grandfather on the HMS Wager; the racial, class and age diversity of the crew; the incompetence of the captain; the catastrophe of running aground; the drama of mutiny; the tension of feuding camps; the mix of gallantry and brutality; the all-consuming despair of starvation; the ravages of disease; the upholding of civilizational norms even at the ends of the earth; how new leaders emerge under desperate circumstances; the beneficence of the indigenous people called “savages”; the arrogance of hindsight; the court-martials faced by the broken men when they returned to England; reuniting with family members who think you're dead; and how nautical language has endured in common phrases today.Browse the Dishcast archive for another conversation you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director and Matt Lewis on ruling-class elites. Please send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comDeneen is a writer and academic. Based at the University of Notre Dame, he is Professor of Political Science and holds the David Potenziani Memorial College Chair of Constitutional Studies. His books include The Odyssey of Political Theory and Why Liberalism Failed, and his new one is Regime Change: Toward a Postliberal Future.For two clips of our convo — on his book using Marxist analysis in defense of conservatism, and whether the government should give you money to stay home with kids — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Patrick's Irish-Catholic upbringing in the oldest town in CT — “an idyllic New England town” that became a “shell of itself”; his unexpected route to academia; working-class Rutgers vs elite Princeton; how society needs meritocracy — but it's irrelevant when it comes to morality; Disraeli and noblesse oblige in the UK; migration and Brexit; “woke capitalism's patina of social commitment”; the tribal wars of the Reformation; the Hobbes/Lockean settlement; how Locke shifted property from inheritance to a set of skills; the cruelty of the growth economy; usury; the absence of any common good in Succession; the donor class of both major parties; the geographic and class sorting of Americans into separate bubbles; Michael Sandel and “thickness”; Uganda's anti-gay laws; and whether we should bring back Sabbath laws.Browse the Dishcast archive for another conversation you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, David Grann on an 18th-century mutiny that's a “parable for our own turbulent time,” and Matt Lewis on ruling-class elites. Please send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This panel explores the impacts and outcomes of critical social justice ideology on black wellbeing in k‑12 and higher ed. Starting in pre‑K and ending in the university, education that claims to empower students within a liberal arts education often seems disempowering and quite illiberal. This toxic tutelage, according to the team at Free Black Thought, does more harm than good. Hear members of Free Black Thought have a conversation on what needs to be done, what can be done, and what is already being done to combat the detriments of critical social justice pedagogy in our schools.Panelists for this webinar include Dr. Tabia Lee, a founding member of Free Black Thought, Jason Littlefield, executive director of EmpowerED Pathways, Connie Morgan, author and UX researcher, and Erec Smith, associate professor of rhetoric at York College of Pennsylvania and visiting scholar at the Cato Institute. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comBen is the editor-in-chief and co-founder of Semafor, a global news company. He was an old-school blogger at Politico and others, the first editor-in-chief of BuzzFeed News, and the media columnist for the NYT. His new book is Traffic: Genius, Rivalry, and Delusion in the Billion-Dollar Race to Go Viral. I wrote what he called a “savage and delightful” review of his book, but we remain friends and went at it cordially.For two clips of our convo — on the addictive power of blogging, and Ben's tough call over publishing the Steele dossier — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: his early career on the cop beat and in Eastern Europe; getting hooked on blogs after 9/11; his kid throwing his Blackberry in the toilet; the launch of the Daily Dish and its “mass intimacy”; the MSM (and me) “massively screwing up” the Iraq invasion; Ben covering marriage equality due to the Dish; the blog functioning as “Twitter before Twitter”; the Green Revolution in Iran; the Palin debacle and Trig; the torture program; why the Dish left the Daily Beast; the emotional turmoil of ending the blog; the “under-news” of Gawker; its indifference to to gay men's privacy; the role of Jezebel; the redemption of Nick Denton and “20 percent nicer”; Gawker killed by Hulk Hogan and Peter Thiel; Buzzfeed and sponsored content; the Shitty Media Men list; Americans' contempt for the MSM; Steve Bannon; how social media is perfect for right-wing populists and woke mobs; Substack reviving the spirit of blogging; the fall of Buzzfeed News and Vice; Semafor's embrace of dissent; and Ben's thoughts on my “savage and delightful review” of his book.Browse the Dishcast archive for another conversation you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future, and David Grann on an 18th-century mutiny that's a “parable for our own turbulent time.” Please send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comWhere are we in the war between the West and Russia in Ukraine? We asked Sam back to help us figure it out. He's a tutor in the Department of Political Science at Oxford and a member of the Royal United Services Institute in London. He's an expert on Russia's wars in Chechnya and Syria, and he's been to Russia and Ukraine many times in the course of getting his International Relations DPhil. His forthcoming book is Putin's War on Ukraine: Russia's Campaign for Global Counter-Revolution. I learned a lot in this conversation and so will you.For two clips of our convo — on whether Russia or Ukraine is winning, and the EU's surprising response to the war — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Putin's Pyrrhic victory in Bahkmut; the unexpected support for Ukraine from Meloni; the bromance between Boris and Zelensky and now Rishi; the odd airing of dissent within Russia; how Putin is spinning his failures; Lavrov's propaganda that Hitler was partly Jewish; how Ukraine is now a proxy war for the West; Russia's self-fulfilling prophecy of Ukraine joining NATO; Prigozhin bad-mouthing the Kremlin; the possibility of his Wagner Group going rogue; the Russian far right and Dugin; the prospects of a Ukrainian offensive; the chance Zelensky could take back Crimea; the dangers of the war spilling into Russia; the increased risk of nukes as the war grinds on; how Putin could save face in a ceasefire; the stretched limits of US support for Ukraine; how electing DeSantis or Trump could affect that support; Putin exploiting the culture wars; the wild card of war breaking out in Taiwan; and the election next year in Russia.Browse the Dishcast archive for another conversation you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Ben Smith on going viral, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future, and David Grann on an 18th-century mutiny that's a “parable for our own turbulent time.” Please send your guest recommendations and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comJohn is an animal advocate and social media professional (@JohnOberg). He has served as the director of new media for The Humane League and the director of communications for Vegan Outreach, but now he's an independent advocate funded by individual donations. He's also a powerlifter — not something you usually associate with vegans. In this episode he tries to convince me to give up meat.You can listen to the episode right away in the audio player above (or on the right side of the player, click “Listen On” to add the Dishcast feed to your favorite podcast app — though Spotify sadly doesn't accept the paid feed). For two clips of our convo — on whether humans are evolving into vegans, and dispelling the notion that all vegans are scrawny — pop over to our YouTube page.Other topics: the profound influence that John's mother had on his advocacy from a very young age; their lonely protest against deer culling; vegan stereotypes and gay stereotypes; the cruelty of animals to other animals in nature; the greater sentience of some creatures over others; the horrific conditions of factory farming; Ag-Gag laws; how to provide protein to people without killing animals; “the protein myth”; the Impossible Burger and other food recs from John; the proliferating types of non-dairy milk; incentivizing corporations to make vegan options; and meeting people halfway with veganism rather than demonizing them. Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Sam Ramani on Ukraine, Ben Smith on going viral, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, and Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future. Send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.A quick bit of fan mail for Chris Stirewalt:Just wanted to say your conversation with Stirewalt was f****n' great! Entertaining, funny, and really educational. Loved it.Another fan focuses on this segment:Listening to Chris talk about goat porn and golden showers on Ted Cruz almost made me pee my pants! Absolutely hilarious.A listener dissents:I had to stop listening once it became clear that you and Chris seem to be of the opinion that the legacy media share equally with the 30-year-old disinformation industry in cleaving the American voters into hateful camps. While you did recognize that Rush was a pioneer in taking advantage of the abrogation of the Fairness Doctrine to voice his BS, you also blithely acknowledged that he was “talented entertainer.” Let's face facts: Adolph was full of hateful bile that led to the eventual destruction of Germany along with millions of innocents but the guy was really entertaining. The legacy media, for all of its faults and biases, is not equivalent to the collective disinformation industry. Wokeness does not equal lies, character assassination, conspiracy mongering, calls for the overthrow of the “deep state,” civil war, summary execution of suspected drug dealers, ad nauseam. Criticize the legacy media all you want, but don't equate them with Fox and its many copycats as part of the critique. Whataboutism is tiresome and lazy.If you want my view of the different kinds of media bias at play — and why the right is worse — this piece is a good overview. I make many distinctions. From a baseball fan:Are my ears playing tricks on me or did I just hear Chris Stirewalt attribute “Hit ‘em where they ain't” to Pee Wee Reese? If I did hear this, it's the worst piece of fake news this 72-year-old guy has heard on the Dishcast. Apparently that quote by Willie Keeler is commonly misattributed to Reese. Here's one more clip from the Stirewalt pod — on why the cult of Trump is so strong:Staying on the topic of Trump, a reader dissents:I was not planning to send you a second scathing email in two weeks, but here we are. Your latest column on Trump was surreal. “Guys, a wildfire is about to burn down all these houses. This is bad! But you must admit, the fire is beautiful! Look at the gracefully leaping orange-golden flames. Such flair and energy! It speaks to something deep inside me, I remember sitting by a campfire as a kid …“But yes, the fire is bad, so we must fight it using this beat-up old fire truck. God, I hate the truck! It's ugly and rusty, the paint is peeling, the engine makes a weird grinding noise, there's a coffee stain on the driver's seat. The truck is boring, just sitting there like a lump. No entertainment value at all! In a direct contrast between the fire and the truck, there will surely be some people who simply favor the shiny and pretty over the dull and old!“Anyway, uh, we ought to stop the fire before it burns down all these houses, so let's get inside this crappy truck, which I hate, and go fight the fire… even though the fire is lovely and exciting and fun to look at…” (you gaze into the flames, their reflection dancing in your eyes)I wan to insert that gif of Cher slapping Nick Cage's face in Moonstruck and yelling, “Snap out of it!” Yes, the fire truck certainly is beat-up and rusty, and I too wish for a newer and better model. But if you value the houses, and you recognize that they will burn unless enough people act, the right thing to say is, “Guys, let's get in the truck and go put out the f**king fire!”My core political objective right now is avoiding a second Trump term. How much clearer can I get? My concern with the loony left is both substantive on the issues, but also rooted in my view that they are empowering Trump, not weakening him. Another reader quotes me:“Trump is more likely than not returning to the White House as of now.” No offense, but have you not been paying attention for the last two years?
"Whither the Looniversity?" - A Podcast on the Miserable State of the American University
Dr. Lee was a director of the Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education at De Anza College...until she started asking the wrong questions. After second-guessing the DEI and "anti-racist" policies in her department, Lee found that she had a target on her back. Although De Anza hired her to rein in the excesses of wokeness in the Office of Equity, she was ultimately fired. We talk about what happened...and whether dogmatic notions of diversity, equity, inclusion, social justice, and antiracism can be redeemed on American campuses.
"Whither the Looniversity?" - A Podcast on the Miserable State of the American University
Dr. Lee was a director of the Office of Equity, Social Justice, and Multicultural Education at De Anza College...until she started asking the wrong questions. After second-guessing the DEI and "anti-racist" policies in her department, Lee found that she had a target on her back. Although De Anza hired her to rein in the excesses of wokeness in the Office of Equity, she was ultimately fired. We talk about what happened...and whether dogmatic notions of diversity, equity, inclusion, social justice, and antiracism can be redeemed on American campuses.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comChris is a political analyst and author. He worked at Fox News for more than a decade until they fired him in the wake of the 2020 election, when he was part of the election team that accurately called Arizona for Biden. He's now the politics editor for NewsNation and a contributing editor for The Dispatch. His new book is Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back. He's also a blast.For two clips of our convo — on how the unbundling the news corrupted it, and why Trump voters can't quit him — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Chris' upbringing in West Virginia; working as a sports writer alongside “crabby profane smokers”; transitioning to local TV; my young days on Fleet Street; loud newsrooms and gossip at the pub; the benefits of news being bundled and magazines stapled; the unbundling force of the Internet; how blogs challenged and checked legacy journalists; covering the Iraq War; the demonization of the Clintons; some history of The Daily Dish (e.g. Palin); the perverse incentives of seeing stats on posts; how hatred drives the most traffic; losing readers to keep principles; the shift to social media; the loss of any gatekeeping; the roots of online tribalism; why Canadians and African-Americans are often the best comedians; Steve Kornacki's The Red and the Blue; Russiagate; Trump's rape case; Alvin Bragg's blunder; Murdoch and Ailes; Shep Smith's integrity; the social costs of political dissent; how cable news is designed for personality cults; Carlson and his firing by Fox News; Peretti and Denton; Ben Smith's new book; and the 2024 election.Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Ben Smith on going viral, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, John Oberg on veganism, and Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future. Send your guest recs and pod dissent to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
Dr. Tabia Lee joins ACTA's Michael Poliakoff and Steve McGuire to unpack her shocking story of being fired from her position as the faculty director for the Office of Equity, Social Justice and Multicultural Education at De Anza College in California. As Erec Smith (another recent guest on Higher Ed Now) stated on the Cato Institute's website, Dr. Lee's transgression was "asking questions about DEI initiatives, fighting for viewpoint diversity, and upholding classical liberal values." Smith went on to write, "For these alleged transgressions, Dr. Lee, a black female academic. . . was denied tenure and relieved of her duties. As I've similarly experienced, Dr. Lee is being punished for being 'the wrong kind of black person:' one dedicated to classical liberal understandings of equality, individualism, reason, and free speech. The fact that a black person can be accused of perpetuating white supremacy for upholding these tenets and basically abiding by the same understanding of diversity indicative of the Civil Rights Movement should be the last straw for those discouraged and disquieted by contemporary diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, and a wake up call for those encouraged to implement such initiatives."
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comNigel Biggar is an Anglican priest, academic and writer. Formerly the Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology at Oxford, he now directs the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics & Public Life and chairs the board of the UK's Free Speech Union. The author of many books on ethics, his controversial new one is Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning.For two clips of our convo — debating what makes an empire worse than others, and whether the British started or just exploited the wars in their colonies — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: writing his book as a response to revisionism; the 1619 Project; the difficulty he had getting it published; the various motives of British colonialism and its slow development; how anti-slavery stemmed from the Enlightenment and Christianity; the colonists who fled poverty and religious persecution; the Irish Famine; the contempt and fear and racism toward native peoples; the natives who welcomed trade and protection; whether plagues were intentional or unavoidable; non-European empires and human sacrifice; the ubiquity of slavery throughout history; the unique evil of the transatlantic trade; maroons who kept slaves of their own; Zionism; the colonists who prized foreign cultures; the hypocrisy of British subjects in America exploiting natives; the Indian MP in the 1890s; Indians fighting alongside the British in WWII; the decolonized who embraced the liberal institutions of the Brits; the Chinese who fled communism for the colony of Hong Kong; the diversity of Boris' cabinet; and the historic triumph of Rishi Sunak. Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Chris Stirewalt on Fox and the MSM, Ben Smith on going viral, John Oberg on veganism, and Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future. Send your guest recs and pod comments to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comMark is a journalist, political scientist, historian of ideas, and a longtime friend since my twenties, when we studied political thought together. He has taught at NYU and the University of Chicago, and he's currently a professor of humanities at Columbia. His many fine books include The Once and Future Liberal, The Reckless Mind, and The Shipwrecked Mind, and his forthcoming book is Ignorance and Bliss: On Wanting Not to Know. In this episode we focus on his essay, “On Indifference,” and the introduction he wrote for Thomas Mann's Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man. It was a fantastic conversation. For two clips of our convo — on whether political indifference is unjust, and the political consequences of the decline of novel reading — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Mark's working-class upbringing in Detroit; “falling in with Jesus freaks” as a teenager; making it to Harvard; absorbing Thomas Mann and The Magic Mountain; Isaiah Berlin; the rivalry between Sartre and Aron; Orwell's willingness to break ranks; The Lord Chandos Letter and walking away from writing; the moral hysteria after Trump's election; Mark signing the Harper's letter; the lack of perspective among young people who feel oppressed; how the most “privileged” are often the most depressed; rising levels of loneliness among teens; the dwindling of connections with extended family; the impact of the Internet and Covid on interacting with bodies; the importance of facial expressions; the need for silence and meditation; the problem of tourists using phones and drones; Johann Hari's Stolen Focus; slowing the pace of capital for the sake of community; Rod Dreher's The Benedict Option; the cultural impact of Vatican II; the reaction to wokeness in France and Italy; and my 2016 essay, “My Distraction Sickness and Yours.”Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Nigel Biggar on his qualified defense of colonialism, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Chris Stirewalt on Fox News, Ben Smith on going viral, John Oberg on veganism, and Patrick Deneen on a post-liberal future. Send your guest recs and pod comments to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comSusan is a philosopher and writer focusing on the Enlightenment, moral philosophy, metaphysics and politics. She was professor of philosophy at Yale and Tel Aviv University, and in 2000 assumed her current position as director of the Einstein Forum in Potsdam. She's the author of nine books, including Evil in Modern Thought, Moral Clarity and Learning from the Germans. Her new book is Left Is Not Woke. We hit it off from the get-go.For two clips of our convo — on why being an “ally” is misguided, and the Nazi philosopher who influenced woke thought — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: the tension between universalism and tribalism in her Jewish upbringing in Atlanta; her mom's work desegregating schools amid night calls from the Klan; Susan joining a commie commune; making it to Harvard as a high-school dropout; the legacy of Kant; Montaigne on how the West could learn from other cultures; the views of Voltaire, Rousseau, Wittgenstein and Rawls; the dialogue between Socrates and Thrasymachus on justice and power; the cynical faux-sophistication of postmodernists; the impact of Foucault and Carl Schmitt on wokeness; truth and reason as mere instruments of power; the woke impulse to deny progress; evolutionary psychology; Jesus rejecting tribalism; the Enlightenment rebuking clerical authority but respecting religion; Anthony Appiah and universalism within African and Indian cultures; anti-colonialism; the Iraq War and the hypocrisy of a liberal democracy using torture; the transition from Obama to Trump; and the Afropessimism of Ta-Nehisi Coates and others.Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety). Upcoming guests include Mark Lilla on liberalism, Nigel Biggar defending colonialism, Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Chris Stirewalt on Fox News, Ben Smith on going viral, and John Oberg on veganism.
I spoke with Dr. Tabia Lee about being fired from her position as the director of diversity because she did not follow the current DEI ideology, the differences between liberalism and critical social justice and the harm that is being done outside of the academy due to CSJ . Follow me: @obaidomer You can read more about Lee here: https://compactmag.com/article/a-black-dei-director-canceled-by-dei https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11902095/DR-TABIA-LEE-fired-diversity-chief-Woke-extremists-taking-Americas-colleges.html Check out some of her work: https://sites.google.com/view/foothill-deanzaracelessness/resources https://freeblackthought.substack.com/p/race-ideology-in-practice https://www.deanza.edu/faculty/leetabia/
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comBob is a foreign affairs and travel journalist, and a scholar of the classics. For three decades he reported for The Atlantic and wrote for many other places, including the editorial pages of the NYT and WaPo — and TNR back in my day. He holds the Robert Strausz-Hupé Chair in Geopolitics at the Foreign Policy Research Institute and is a senior adviser at Eurasia Group. He's the author of 21 books, including The Coming Anarchy, Balkan Ghosts and Asia's Cauldron. His new book is The Tragic Mind.For two clips of our convo — why anarchy is worse than tyranny, specifically in Iraq, and the question of whether Taiwan is worth going to war over — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: Bob's working-class upbringing; his global travel as a young reporter; his complex views of humanity after visiting Soviet Europe and the Balkans; Reagan's talent and good fortune; H.W.'s record of averting disaster; the optimism and hubris of the US after the Cold War; the series of US victories in the ‘90s — ending in Iraq and Afghanistan; the evil of Saddam; Obama's love of Niebuhr and his overcompensation on Russia and China; Biden's deft balancing act in Ukraine; how the Afghan exit actually benefitted the US against Russia; Greek tragedy vs. Shakespearean tragedy; Sophocles and Oedipus; the Christian understanding of tragedy; Hobbes and his Leviathan; Zionism as the lesser of two evils; Spengler's Decline of the West; American decadence and the poison of social media; and Bob's clinical depression after the Iraq invasion.Browse the Dishcast archive for another discussion you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety). Upcoming guests include Mark Lilla on liberalism, Susan Neiman on how “left is not woke,” Tabia Lee on her firing as a DEI director, Chris Stirewalt on Fox News, Nigel Biggar on colonialism, and John Oberg on veganism (recorded already but I'm sampling a variety of plant-based meats to comment on when the episode is released). As always, please send your guest recs and listener feedback to dish@andrewsullivan.com.
Recently, De Anza Community College fired Tabia Lee as its faculty director for the Office of Equity, Social Justice and Multicultural Education for taking an inclusive and dialogical approach to her job that did not align with the school's particular version of social justice. What makes this different from others who have lost their jobs for not toeing this ideological line? Lee is black, and she was accused of being a white supremacist. Erec Smith of York College of Pennsylvania has also been vilified for questioning the efficacies of contemporary anti‐racist theories and practices.In this online forum, Lee and Smith will discuss their experiences and theorizations about being black academics who embrace classical liberal values in academic spaces that seem to grow increasingly hostile to such views, especially from people of color. As cofounders of Free Black Thought, an organization that celebrates viewpoint diversity among black Americans, their perspective may provide a different and nuanced understanding of social justice and anti‐racist initiatives in higher education (and beyond). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Guest Dr. Tabia Lee, De Anza Community College, joins to discuss equity and inclusion talks. Discussion of ending identity politics, having conversations regarding race and division, and battling the social justice warriors in society. Latest Louisville shooting. Discussion of gun debate vs. mental health issues....are we getting anywhere in society? Discussion of police response and mental state of someone under stress and wanting to cause destruction.
BREAKING NEWS: Grand jury votes to indict former President Trump and Jack Riccardi takes on the rest of today's news with insightful commentary that includes interviews with local and national newsmakers. Our special guest includes Teacher, Author Dr. Tabia Lee also former Criminal District Attorney of Bexar County, Texas Attorney Nico LaHood and Jack takes your calls on the days news and hot topics.
Drew Perkins talks with Dr. Tabia Lee about a broader understanding of race ideologies and her experience of being dismissed from her role as a DEI Faculty Director for not toeing the line of contemporary anti-racist ideology. Click To View Links & Resources Mentioned In This Episode
In this episode of the FAIR News Weekly Podcast, we cover the news for the week starting Monday, 3/19/23. Read all the stories mentioned in the episode in FAIR News and FAIR Weekly Roundup, our two newsletters each emailed once a week. Sign up for our emailed newsletters at FairForAll.org/JoinUs. FAIR News 3/16: https://fairforall.substack.com/p/fair-news-standing-with-dr-tabia FAIR Weekly Roundup 3/19: https://fairforall.substack.com/p/weekly-roundup-5a7 The Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism (FAIR) is a nonpartisan organization dedicated to advancing civil rights and liberties for all Americans, and promoting a common culture based on fairness, understanding and humanity. Follow us on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/fairforall_org Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Foundation-Against-Intolerance-Racism-10417260496818 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fairforall_org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/foundation-against-intolerance-and-racism Podcast Narrated by Gabriel Ashton Brown. Music by Rebecca Nisco. Produced by Joseph (Jake) Klein.
DEI might not include diversity of thoughtI think most people by now are familiar with DEI trainings and what they are supposed to be about. Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, on their face, have an awful lot of merit. In the work I've done with this podcast though, we are seeing far too many instances where these programs are being hijacked by "woke" ideology and an almost militant "anti-racist orthodoxy". Unfortunately, many who are working for the cause of diversity, equity and inclusion, are now ostracized for not "towing the line" as it is defined by the woke and militant. It turns out, DEI might not include diversity of thought.Who is Dr. Tabia Lee? Dr. Tabia Lee, EdD, a founding member of Free Black Thought, has contributed to the design, implementation, and evaluation of numerous educational and professional development programs. Her commitment to teacher education and pedagogical design is grounded in her experience as a lifelong educator and a National Board Certified English, Civics, and Social Studies teacher in urban American public middle schools. Dr. Lee prepares K-12 and higher education faculty to work with diverse students by focusing on better understanding the pedagogical and curricular implications of ideology-in-practice. Learn more about Dr. Lee by getting the full show notes at www.DerateTheHate.comWhat have you done today to make your life a better life? What have you done today to make the world a better place? The world is a better place if we are better people. That begins with each of us leading a better life. Be kind to one another. Be grateful for everything you've got. Make each and every day the day that you want it to be!Please follow The Derate The Hate podcast on:Facebook, MeWe, Instagram, Twitter , TruthSocial, Parler, Rumble, YouTube Subscribe to us wherever you enjoy your audio. Please leave us a rating and feedback. Send me a message on any media platform or subscribe directly from our sites. Let us know about someone you think should be on our podcast. If we book them for a conversation, I'll send you a free gift! Not on social media? You can share your thoughts directly with me at wilk@wilksworld.comI look forward to hearing from you!Please check out our affiliates page by clicking HERE!
Megyn Kelly is joined by Alan Dershowitz, author of "Get Trump," to talk about New York's prosecutor going after former President Trump over the Stormy Daniels payment, if it'll be a misdemeanor or felony charge, Michael Cohen's shady past, other potential criminal charges against Trump in Georgia and D.C., whether Alec Baldwin will be found guilty in movie set shooting death, and more. Then Dr. Tabia Lee joins the show, a former DEI director who was fired by her college for not being "woke" enough, discussing "gender neutral" terms actually being "gender oppressive," being labeled a "right-wing extremist" by her opponents, and more. Finally, we turn to China with Michael Cunningham of The Heritage Foundation, to talk about Xi Jinping getting a third term, the way Jinping is revealing China's plans for the future, how China is growing in influence and power around the world, who China is targeting in theri plan for becoming a superpower, why China is buying up so much farmland in America, ramifications of the Iran-Saudi Arabia peace deal, potential conflict in Taiwan, the future of TikTok in America, the state of America's COVID investigation, and more.Dershowitz's new book: https://www.amazon.com/Get-Trump-Liberties-Process-Constitutional/dp/1510777814Dr. Lee: https://www.fair-for-all.org/dr-tabia-lee/Cunningham: https://www.heritage.org/staff/michael-cunningham Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Hour 3 of A&G includes Campus Madness (the story of Tabia Lee). Plus, the horror of the Ukrainian war and a community alert involving one of the hosts of this show! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 3 of A&G includes Campus Madness (the story of Tabia Lee). Plus, the horror of the Ukrainian war and a community alert involving one of the hosts of this show! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 3 of A&G includes Campus Madness (the story of Tabia Lee). Plus, the horror of the Ukrainian war and a community alert involving one of the hosts of this show! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.