By Douglas Ernst - The Washington Times - Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Documents obtained by an education watchdog show American racism’s inability to oppress author Ibram X. Kendi‘s bank account.
The Boston University professor who penned “How To Be An Antiracist,” “Antiracist Baby” and similar books pocketed more than $300,000 in recent years talking about the subjects at institutions across the nation.
“Multiple emailed requests for Kendi’s representatives at Boston University and Penguin House, which often represents Kendi, were not responded to in the past five months,” The College Fix reported. “Kendi does not list his email publicly and his representatives have previously ignored requests for comment from The Fix about his other endeavors. … [He] has spoken to at least 30 educational institutions in the past several years, according to a College Fix review of his Eventbrite and Fa
Ibram X Kendi s anti-racist lectures across U S net more than $300K, ed watchdog reports
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Intelligent.com Announces Best Small Business Management Degree Programs for 2021
Share Article SEATTLE, WA (PRWEB) March 11, 2021 SEATTLE, WA – Intelligent.com, a trusted resource for online degree rankings and higher education planning, has announced the Top 50 Small Business Management Degree Programs for 2021. The comprehensive research guide is based on an assessment of 210 accredited colleges and universities in the nation. Each program is evaluated based on curriculum quality, graduation rate, reputation, and post-graduate employment.
The 2021 rankings are calculated through a unique scoring system which includes student engagement, potential return on investment and leading third party evaluations. Intelligent.com analyzed 210 schools, on a scale of 0 to 100, with only 50 making it to the final list. The methodology also uses an algorithm which collects and analyzes multiple rankings into one score to
Partisan paralysis has torn Wisconsin’s safety net and left the jobless struggling to survive the pandemic
Brandon Cacek filed for unemployment insurance in mid-March last year after losing his substitute teaching job due to the pandemic. He is still waiting for that crucial aid 11 months later.
“I keep leaving out hope that I’m going to get some kind of assistance through this,” said Cacek, 40, a Marine Corps veteran and father of two in Marinette, Wisconsin. “But the longer this goes on the less hope that lingers.”
Nearly every person who has reviewed Cacek’s case has found no reason to deny him compensation, he said. That includes an administrative law judge who ruled on Dec. 28 that Cacek qualifies for benefits dating back to March 5.
10 years since the mass protests in Wisconsin
It has been 10 years since the eruption of mass protests in the US state of Wisconsin provoked by anti-worker legislation introduced by Republican Governor Scott Walker. The mass upsurge, coming after decades in which the class struggle had been suppressed in the United States by the unions, contains important lessons for today under conditions of unprecedented social polarization in the midst of a deadly, uncontained pandemic. The protests in Wisconsin that erupted in February 2011 coincided with an international upsurge in the class struggle in the midst of a deepening crisis of the world capitalist order following the 2008 global financial crash. US-backed dictators in Egypt and Tunisia were toppled, and protests against austerity and social inequality spread across a number of countries, including Spain, Greece, Portugal, Italy and Israel.
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