My latest on American Thinker:
"It must have been a whirlwind last few days for Ilya Shapiro, from his reinstatement as head of the Georgetown University Law Center, on Thursday, June 2, after a more than four-month investigation launched by Georgetown Law School, to his resignation from the school, on Monday, June 6, to the news that he joined the Manhattan Institute as senior fellow and director of constitutional studies.
Ilya Shapiro |
Ilya Shapiro's "lesser black woman" tweet gained wide attention on Twitter and within the Georgetown community and led Georgetown Law dean William Treanor to send an email denouncing the tweet as "appalling" and "at odds with everything we stand for at Georgetown Law." Georgetown's Black Law Students Association also called for Shapiro to be fired, the Washington Post reported.
Shapiro deleted the tweet within hours, calling it "poorly worded" and "inartful." But, as the report submitted by Georgetown to the dean's office on June 2 shows, contrition can empower the mob rather than placate it. In fact, that apology was framed as evidence of guilt: Shapiro's "plain words not only explicitly identified the race, sex, and gender of a group of individuals," the report said, "but also categorized Black women as 'lesser.' Though [Shapiro] did not himself describe his comments as offensive or acknowledge that his comments could reasonably be interpreted to denigrate individuals, he promptly removed the tweet and apologized after others expressed their criticism." Besides, the 10-page report suggests that the university faced tremendous pressure to ostracize Shapiro. A "lot of faculty" expressed "deep concern" and "outrage" about Shapiro's tweet, as did several administrators, who said they would "not participate in any program or activity" involving him. It would be "disruptive," they told the diversity office, if Shapiro were "physically present" on campus.
Yet Georgetown reinstated Shapiro, saying university policies did not apply to him when he tweeted on Jan. 26, as his employment was to begin Feb. 1. In other words, he was cleared in the 122-day investigation only on a technicality. A bit too much to take in.[...]"
Read more: A roller-coaster ride in leftist academia hell