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Ponce
8th May 2011, 10:02 AM
What's happening today is the same as in Germany back in the 1920's where the German people said "NO MORE" in regards to the Zionist "Jews" controlling everything......but I have no hope for Americans to do something about this.
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Tony Kushner row deepens as supporters renounce honorary degrees.

Tony Kushner row deepens as supporters renounce honorary degreesPulitzer-winner playwright was removed from honour list for his critical views on Israel after CUNY trustee lobbied against him.


Share692 Paul Harris in New York guardian.co.uk, Friday 6 May 2011 23.30 BST Article history
Tony Kushner was set to get an honorary degree but his name was removed form the list, apparently because of his critical views on Israel. Photograph: Dario Cantatore/Getty Images
A row over the decision by a leading New York university to refuse playwright Tony Kushner an honorary degree due to accusations he was too critical of Israel has deepened as several high profile honorary degree holders renounced their own awards.

Kushner, who wrote the Pulitzer prize-winning Paul Angels in America, was set to get an honorary degree from John Jay College, a campus of City University of New York. But his name was removed from a list of other intended recipients after a CUNY trustee, pro-Israel activist Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, spoke out against it.

Wiesenfeld accused Kushner of being critical of the Israeli army, supportive of a boycott of the country and of saying that Israel had been founded partly as a result of ethnic cleansing. In an open letter to CUNY Kushner responded angrily, denying the allegations, accusing Wiesenfeld of slander and saying he was "proud to be Jewish".

Now, in the wake of Kushner's letter, at least three prominent previous recipients have declared they no longer want their honorary degrees from the university. Barbara Ehrenreich, an acclaimed activist journalist, issued a statement saying she had renounced her 2004 award. "Please expunge me from your record of past honorees," she said. She was joined by Michael Cunningham, who also has won a Pulitzer, for his book The Hours, and was given an honorary degree in 2009. "I was shocked and dismayed to hear about the treatment Tony Kushner received at the hands of the CUNY board of trustees," he said in a statement.

He criticised the university's decision. "To deny him an honorary degree because certain members of the board disagree with some of his political views is a chilling indictment of the freedom of expression CUNY has always championed."

Yeshiva University historian Ellen Schrecker also wrote to CUNY to protest and to ask how she could return her own honorary degree.

So far the university has issued little detailed public comment on the growing row and Kushner has said in interviews that he would no longer accept the degree if the decision were reversed.

A CUNY statement said that the university's board operated independently in making decisions and offered no apology. "The board's actions, however, should not be interpreted as reflecting on Mr Kushner's accomplishments and we regret any such misunderstanding," it added.

Meanwhile, the decision was condemned even by CUNY's own faculty union. Union president Dr Barbara Bowen said the vote to not give Kushner an award was "perverse" and aimed at cutting off genuine political and intellectual debate at the university. "The trustees' craven decision is an offence against open intellectual discussion and freedom of thought. It dishonors our university, and the values for which we ought to stand," she said.

The controversy is not the first of its kind to involve Wiesenfeld. In February Brooklyn College, another CUNY campus, fired Kristopher Petersen-Overton from a one semester teaching post after objections were raised by Wiesenfeld and others about his views on Israel and the Middle East. In that case Wiesenfeld directly lobbied chancellor, Matthew Goldstein, along with local Brooklyn politician Dov Hikind, to get the academic removed from his post.

But after a furious row in the media Petersen-Overton was reappointed. For the time being Wiesenfeld is sticking to his guns. On a blog post at the Jewish news website the Algemeiner he called Kushner an "extremist".

"The denial of the honorary degree to Mr Kushner, despite his protestations was a reflection of his long-held radical sentiments," he said.

Kushner, whose latest play is currently playing on Broadway, is one of the most famous and acclaimed names in modern American theatre. Angels in America, which is his best known piece, dealt with the Aids crisis in 1980s America.

Ironically, people being persecuted for their political views figures in the play and is also a re-occurring theme elsewhere in his work.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2011/may/06/tony-kushner-supporters-renounce-degrees

mrnhtbr2232
8th May 2011, 11:00 AM
Ponce - you have no hope it will happen here for good reason - Americans are by and large completely pussy-whipped by Israel into believing they are our "strongest democratic ally" and "strategic partner in the war on terror" - when in reality they are the destroyers at our door. Jews pissing in the cornflakes of other Jews about things like honorary degrees are a laugh - first because the awards are not earned, and second because academia is infested with the Weisenfelds of the world who intentionally cause trouble for their own gain. I am comfortable to say Israel is America's enemy, not its friend. You keep busting our chops saying it's the Zionists, not the Jews. Well, to me one is the cancer, the other is the enabler. But both are guilty of the same end despite different means. Saying Israel was founded on ethnic cleansing is bound to elicit cries from its champions who would prefer we don't focus on the truth - especially if another Jew wrote it. Tension ensues when they can't control the message and the defenders of the indefensible come out of the woodwork for damage control. It's as predictable as the sun rising.