The faculty association believes it’s the first time professors have faced such a public threat from the university administration. Protesters and school officials are set to meet Sunday evening.
Because these people write big endowment cheques to the university, whereas faculty and students are just blood-sucking overhead.
This is interesting to watch, in sad sort of way: the universities were generally fine with protests and activism as long as it didn't cost them anything or threaten their donors' ego. LGBTQ or race issues? Fine, that's okay, no threat there, heck painting things rainbow and waving flags makes us feel good! Offend some rich donors and out comes the proverbial--if not literal--nightsticks.
I still remember being at UofT in 1995 and the only protests (on campus, not those directed at Harris) were when the administration got uppity that bands and student groups were making it hard to hear the TD Bank pavilion's marketing spiel as they tried to hook students on 25% credit cards. Normal drunken debauchery-slash-activism was fine, but don't dare get in the way of profits!
Am I the only one who thinks protesting against your employer and causing a disruption in your workplace is a FAFO scenario?
There was that woman a few years back (in the olde tymes, before the pandemic) who decided she wasn't going to do her job when LGBT couples applied for marriage licenses. Everyone with an IQ over 80 rightly called her out for her bullshit.
This isn't really any different. You can't support employees who exercise their individual freedoms to protest against an employer only when the cause is something you agree with.
Discriminating against people who haven't hurt anybody just because someone thinks they are lesser beings seems quite different from trying to get your employer to stop supporting people slaughtering an entire country and innocent people. If anything the person discriminating against LGBTQ couples is more like the Israelis who are butchering humans than the people protesting the violence.