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Search resuls for: "vituperation"


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The Question of Transgender Care - The New York Times
  + stars: | 2024-04-18 | by ( David Brooks | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
It is about what the health care approach should be, and how best to help the growing number of children and young people who are looking for support from the N.H.S. For reasons that are also not clear, adolescents who were assigned female at birth are driving this trend, whereas before the late 2000s, it was mostly adolescents who were assigned male at birth who sought these treatments. One is that greater social acceptance of trans people has enabled people to seek these therapies. A third is that the rise of teen mental health issues may be contributing to gender dysphoria. In her report, Cass is skeptical of broad generalizations in the absence of clear evidence; these are individual children and adolescents who take their own routes to who they are.
Persons: Hilary Cass, Cass Organizations: National Health Service, Britain’s Royal College of Pediatrics, Child Locations: England, Cass
Claudine Gay's six-month term as Harvard president ranks the shortest in the school's history. AdvertisementClaudine Gay's resignation as Harvard president makes her six-month term the shortest in the school's history, according to historical data on Harvard's website. Gay began her tenure as school president in July last year, becoming Harvard's first Black president and its second-ever female president. While Alan Garber, the school's chief academic officer, is now serving as interim president, Gay isn't leaving Harvard entirely. Liz Magill, who testified before Congress alongside Gay about antisemitism concerns while president of University of Pennsylvania, has since resigned from her post.
Persons: Claudine Gay's, Gay, , Harvard's, Alan Garber, Gay isn't, Liz Magill Organizations: Harvard, Harvard Corp, Service, University of Pennsylvania
At the risk of sounding mawkishly positive, I think I’ve discovered a cheap, simple fix for our fraying social, emotional and political health. It’s easy to bemoan our problems as intractable, blaming familiar culprits like rising wealth inequality, technology (including social media) and the corporate capture of our political system. But what if our alienation stems, at least in part, from a profound failure of our educational system to teach the habits of connection, most of which boil down to thinking of others before speaking to them? So let’s put kids together and teach them how to talk, to hear and be heard, to resolve differences and forge consensus without flameouts, rupture, vituperation. This solution is hardly new.
Persons: let’s, Locations: Greece
For Palestinian and Muslim students, the invocation of terrorism law is especially frightening. But now advocates for Palestinian rights describe a new level of repression. “That’s the difference.”No one should underestimate how awful the campus climate is for many Jewish students, who’ve experienced a surge in violence and abuse. In some social justice circles, then, support for Israel is viewed as something akin to support for the K.K.K. There is little reason to think that the pressure brought to bear by these outside institutions is making Jewish students any safer.
Persons: Louis D, Law, Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, , Donald Trump, Radhika Sainath, Columbia University’s Rashid Khalidi, , who’ve, Jewish counterprotesters, Erwin Chemerinsky, George Floyd, they’ve, Kenneth Stern, Bard College’s, ” Stern, He’s, Stern, Trump, scenesters, Joe Rogan, Elon, that’s, Khalidi Organizations: Defamation League, Brandeis Center for Human, Justice, ADL, Brandeis, Republican, Palestinian, Homeland Security, Education, Israel, Palestine, Columbia, Cornell, Jewish, Tulane, University of California, America, Peace, Bard College’s Center, National Lawyers Guild, American Jewish Committee, International Holocaust, Alliance, The, Rights, Elon Musk, West Bank Locations: Palestine, Israel, Ron DeSantis , Florida, Florida, United States of America, Berkeley, America, Gaza City, Gaza, West
UPS’s adjusted net income rose more than 70 percent between 2019 and last year, to over $11 billion. The contract talks broke down on July 5 in vituperation. The company noted that many part-timers graduated to jobs as full-time drivers, which pay $42 an hour on average after four years. In television interviews and at rallies, the Teamsters president, Sean O’Brien, has emphasized what the union calls “part-time poverty” jobs. He has frequently been joined by leaders of other unions and politicians, including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York Democrat.
Persons: Sean O’Brien, , Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez Organizations: Teamsters, UPS, New York Democrat Locations: vituperation
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