Posted in Free Speech, Politics

An Open Letter to MIT

Professor van der Hilst of MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences cancelled this year’s Carlson Lecture and disinvited Dr. Dorian Abbot in response to a Twitter mob that objected to Dr. Abbot’s completely mainstream views on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs. This is the letter I sent to MIT’s leadership regarding this pathetic lack of academic integrity.

President Reif, Provost Schmidt, and Professor van der Hilst,

I am writing in response to President Reif’s October 18th email to the MIT community and Provost Schmidt’s October 7th post supporting Professor van Der Hilst’s unjustifiable decision to cancel Dr. Dorian Abbot’s invitation to give this year’s Carlson Lecture.

Both President Reif and Provost Schmidt speak of MIT’s commitment to freedom of expression and both immediately show themselves to be hypocrites by backing Professor van der Hilst’s craven response to the mob seeking to silence Dr. Abbot.  I have always been proud to call MIT my alma mater, until now.  I am deeply ashamed of the lack of courage and integrity demonstrated by MIT’s leadership — you all should be as well.

The Academic Freedom Alliance, in their second letter to you, put it well:  “Once a university has extended an invitation to a speaker to speak to members of the campus community, the university must not rescind that invitation because some object that the speaker or ideas that the speaker has expressed are unacceptable.”

I urge you in the strongest terms to reverse this cowardly act, apologize to Dr. Abbot, and reinstate the lecture.  John Chisholm, former Alumni Association president and member of the MIT Corporation, provided three steps that you should take immediately to start undoing the damage to MIT’s reputation:

1) Admit you made a mistake and apologize for it.

2) Affirm MIT’s commitment to free speech and open scientific inquiry.

3) Review your internal processes and practices to identify opportunities to be more welcoming and inclusive of diverse viewpoints.

Doubling down on your refusal to live up to MIT’s principles is unacceptable.  Until MIT again becomes an institution worthy of respect, I will refrain from donating to the school and I will encourage all alumni I know to do the same.

Sincerely,

Patrick May

Posted in Facebook

How To (Partially) Escape Facebook

Another day, another story of why everyone should leave Facebook. A woman who hasn’t used the site since 2013 found that, while she forgot about Facebook, Facebook didn’t forget about her. Zuckerberg and company keep tabs on nearly everyone’s online activity through the use of tracking cookies and arrangements with advertisers.

You can opt out of some of this tracking. First, visit this page to see what “off Facebook” activity they know about. To eliminate that, click on the “Clear History” link. Read or ignore the ominous warnings about how your ads will be less interesting and click the “Clear History” button to remove what’s listed. (If you think Facebook actually removes what they know about you, I have a bridge for sale in Brooklyn that I’d like to discuss with you.)

But wait, there’s more! This only eliminates what Facebook knows so far. Because they think that business ethics are something that happens to other people, they require another, hidden step to stop them from tracking you in the future. Click the “More Options” link, then “Manage Future Activity”, then the “Manage Future Activity” button in the dialog box that pops up, then finally turn off the toggle switch next to “Future Off-Facebook Activity”. Now they’ll stop tracking you (yeah, right) until they decide to do so again.

Even if you still use Facebook for some reason, you should follow these steps to deny them a small measure of the massive amounts of personal information they are collecting.

“I’m getting sick and tired of hearing about morality, our moral obligation. The U.S. has no obligation to evacuate 1 — or 100,001 — South Vietnamese.”

— Sen. Joe Biden, 1975

This Aged Well

Posted in Politics

What a Waste

Over 6,000 American lives, hundreds of thousands of Afghani lives, and trillions of dollars wasted on “nation building” that was doomed from the start.

My heart goes out especially to the women who will now be subjected to the barbarity of the Taliban.