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Straightening Out The Guardian

© Peter Zohrab 2011

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Tom Martin, who is taking legal action against the London School of Economics for anti-male discrimination, has been attacked by the Guardian. First, let me say something about academics, universities, the London School of Economics and The Guardian:

  1. Academics have no noticeable ethics or legal responsibilities that are ever enforced;

  2. Universities have no noticeable ethics or legal responsibilities that are ever enforced;

  3. When studying Linguistics at the University of York (UK) in the early 1970's, I found that Nancy Woo's rules for Hokkien tone-sandhi did not work. My lecturer, Steve Harlow, suggested that I write and tell Geoffrey Sampson, a lecturer at the London School of Economics, about that. I did so. A few years later, I happened to notice a footnote in an article by Sampson in the journal Language which stated that Nancy Woo's rules for Hokkien tone-sandhi did not work, but the footnote did not say who had worked that out. That is typical of academic ethics, and I could give other examples;

  4. The Guardian never likes the facts get in the way of a good emotion. I remember, many years ago, reading a two-column news article in The Guardian Weekly about a right-wing party that had become part of Austria's coalition government, and its views on immigration. The first half of the article was an emotional rant about how evil right-wing parties and restrictions on immigration were, and only after that was the reader treated to any factual information whatsoever, on the basis of which he might be able to form an opinion of his own. I am particularly interested in that party, because it ceated the Austrian Ministry of Men's Affairs, which -- last I heard -- was still in existence.

    The Guardian article is full of lies and distortions:

 

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31 July 2015

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