Nothing can be seen here: This is what Colombia President Katrina Armstrong told that about 75 faculty members who gathered in a upcoming call on Saturday morning to hear about the memo that she sent to the Trump administration and agreed to a series of reforms. None of them raised concerns about the treatment of Jewish students, although many of them expressed their concerns about politics changes.
“During the conversation,” the editor of the Free Manarat Al -Hurian Johnson wrote, “Armstrong and (Provember Angela at the University of Colombia) reduced or refused that the change was underway.” Olento was particularly explicit when he faced the Trump administration request to place the Middle East in Colombia, South Asia and Africa under the academic judicial guard: “This is not judicial guard,” Olinto said. “He will not write Provost or control anything,” is called “completely independent”.
Armstrong assured faculty members that there will be no “changes” on the rules surrounding convincing protests, and Trump's other request. Later, one of her colleagues expressed concern that the Trump administration would scan the fact that “there were no big changes” and asked Armstrong how to respond to it. “Catch-22” that the school had already made changes, but now it seems that it is doing it at the request of the administration. She also made herself because of the “naivety” regarding the media storm around Colombia.
These quotes come from a copy of the meeting, which was obtained by the free lighthouse, “it appears that it has been created because Colombia's departments seem unable to disable the zoom function that generates an audio version. The same text takes the officials who are struggling to prevent the program from creating a copy and then moving forward without success.”
Read more: What the President of Columbia University Katrina Armstrong has already told faculty members about the changes in the school
We are from the government, and we are here to harm you: About six months ago, the Consumer Protection Office in Joe Biden fined a small company in Chicago Real Estate Mortgage, Townston Financial, more than $ 100,000 of data, Barry Storener, which was made about the crime in the city. The Trump administration is about to return money after reviewing a set of agency's records related to the case. The reports of these records, as not reported, “have not been reported previously and a noticeable window in partisanship on federal bureaucrats.”
They show that CFPB job staff “did not make any effort to hide the fact that he was interested in Townstone's speech.” They monitored the social media posts in Sturner closely as part of its achievement, which they said would “provide an opportunity” to clarify “Townstone's opinions about race and racism.” They pointed out that Sturner was “often strongly criticizing the office.” They also offered a settlement agreement that forced Townstone to provide racist targeted loans and recruit black loan employees.
The new records, which are defined by the Vice -Director of OMB DAN Bishop in the proposal of a court on Wednesday, are “a case study on how federal bureaucrats can bully in small companies for a protected speech, using Penumbra of the Civil Rights Law to circumvent the first amendment,” writes Sibarium. “The settlements with CFPB often reach the seven numbers-the agency initially suggested a $ 1 million penalty for TownsTone for” its small size “, according to the documents mentioned in the movement-and does not include the six law fees that the defendants usually pay throughout the litigation.”
Read more: With the Trump administration moved to the settlement of emptiness with small businesses, the documents shed light on a nightmare of nightmare.
Something to hide: After the Trump administration deported a professor at the University of Brown, which joined the former Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, and was later arrested with materials supporting the phone, and lawyers with the Council in the American Islamic Relations held on the Internet to direct foreign pagans on how to avoid spread. The attendees did not advise to refrain from traveling to terrorist funerals and sharing sympathetic videos with Hezbollah leaders. Instead, we wore them by getting a stove.
“Delete some applications, and some pictures that you have on your phone,” said Spoji Nasiri, the immigration lawyer who sits in the National Council of the Council. “Perhaps buying a fireplace phone, or you may have a backup phone.”
Another lawyer in the Quba Armed Forces, Jadir Abbas, “advised non -citizens to expand their participation in the activity,” said Jessica Costsco, who attended the symposium via the Internet. “I think one thing you should consider is … it is better for Palestine if it remains in the country,” he said. “If you are on the F-1 visa, do not wave a sign in front of the protest. This is what they are looking for, and it is not easy for them to come after you.”
Read more: After Nasrallah was expelled from us, he tells other citizens: Traveling with fireplace phones to avoid deportation
Away from the lighthouse:
The rare opposition against Hamas in Gaza continued for the second day, with hundreds of civilians, most of them in the north of the war torn, and moved to the streets to protest against their terrorist leaders. The former editor -in -chief of the Los Angeles Times, Mariel Jarza, resigned after Patrick Sun Syong prevented an editorial article suffering from Kamala Harris. On Wednesday, I published an article from the New York Times telling Chuck Schumer that, too, “should be seen in the benefits of active initial resignation.” More than two months have passed since the Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass released what its office called “a sweeping executive thing to clarify the way for Los Angeles residents to rebuild the homes they quickly lost in a continuous fire storm.” Since then, the city has issued four permits for home owners to rebuild, according to ABC.