Here is still more of the poison fruit of the decay and decline of American universities into indoctrination camps for the far-left. The hiring of DeRay McKesson is a stunning indictment of Yale as an academic institution, and open confirmation that Yale (like other American universities) is no longer interested in teaching students how to think and evaluate ideas on their own, but only in making sure they’re well-programmed cadres for the left.
Where are the voices of freedom teaching our children? If this were a sane world, Ibn Warraq and Wafa Sultan and Robert Spencer would be landing these teaching gigs, not an advocate of hatred and violence like DeRay McKesson.
Also, Yale is establishing a Sharia law school.
“Black Lives Matter leader lands Yale teaching gig,” Fox News, September 11, 2015:
One of the newest teachers at the vaunted Yale University burnished his Ivy League resume in the Black Lives Matter movement.
DeRay McKesson will be teaching a one-credit course this fall as a guest lecturer at Yale Divinity School, according to higher education blog Campus Reform. The outspoken activist will be joining U.S. Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., and the Rev. Nancy Taylor, whose Old South Church in Boston is located near the site of the 2013 marathon bombing, to teach a special three-section course as part of a new leadership program. The young activist will teach the first section of the course, entitled “Transformational Leadership in the #BlackLivesMatter Movement.”
McKesson is the only guest lecturer who is not an alumnus of Yale Divinity School.
A syllabus for the course describes the credentials of McKesson, 30.
“A young leader of the Black Lives Matter Movement, DeRay McKesson will present case studies about the work of organizing, public advocacy, civil disobedience, and social change, through both Leadership of Presence, and Leadership in the Social Media.”
Readings for the course includes Ta-Nehisi Coates’s book “Between the World and Me,” a Huffington Post article titled “How The Black Lives Matter Movement Changed the Church,” the book “Silent Covenants: Brown v. Board of Education and the Unfilled Hopes for Racial Reform by author Derrick Bell,” Leah Gunning Francis’ book “Ferguson & Faith: Sparking Leadership and Awakening Community,” and a New York Times article titled “Our Demand Is Simple: Stop Killing Us.”