DEI class at UCLA's medical school sets up future doctors to fight the patriarchy and accept 'weight loss is useless'



After the death of George Floyd, the University of California's David Geffen School of Medicine mandated that all first-year students take a DEI course titled "Structural Racism and Health Equity."

The course does not provide students with insights into better suturing techniques, healing methods, disease detection, biochemistry, or other conventionally useful medical skills. Rather, its stated purpose is to endow prospective physicians with a "structurally competent, anti-racist lens for viewing and treating health and illness."

The course recently made headlines after a guest lecturer who celebrated the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks led students in chanting, "Free, Free Palestine," as well as in pagan earth worship. It appears its contents are similarly provocative.

According to a course syllabus and corresponding documents obtained by the Washington Free Beacon, students will learn about

  • how Western societies and the medical profession are supposedly racist;
  • how morbid obesity "came to be pathologized and medicalized in racialized terms";
  • the apparent connection between "ableism" and "heteropatriarchy, white supremacy, colonialism and capitalism";
  • the supposed positives of sex-change mutilation;
  • the apparent value in abolishing prisons;
  • "how race and class contributes to a patient's ability to access and receive gender-affirming care"; and
  • the "role of healthcare workers within community organizing and protest."

Jeffrey Flier, the former dean of Harvard Medical School, told the Beacon the mandatory course "promotes extensive and dangerous misinformation.

The university "has centered this required course on a socialist/Marxist ideology that is totally inappropriate," continued Flier. "As a longstanding medical educator, I found this course truly shocking."

Slides from the first session make clear that the aim is to transform future doctors into progressive activists.

A section entitled "Our Hxstories" reportedly adds that "[h]ealth and medical practice are deeply impacted by racism and other intersectional structures of power, hierarchy, and oppression — all of which require humility, space and patience to understand, deconstruct, and eventually rectify."

Another reading provides potential doctors with a list of demands to echo, including calls for a cancellation of Third World debt; state-controlled agricultural policies responding "to people's needs and not to the demands of the market"; state control and taxation of speculative international capital flows; gender, equity, and environmental impact assessments for all economic polices; and an end to "growth-centered economic theories."

Last month, Ben Shapiro noted that students in the course "are told to read about wars of 'Indigenous resistance' — in which Native Americans killed thousands of white people — to 'imagine what liberation could look like.'"

South African billionaire Elon Musk said of the course documents, "This is messed up."

Students at the medical school whose DEI czar was just outed as a likely plagiarist are also given a heavy reading from the self-described "fat liberationist" Marquisele Mercedes that claims that "weight loss is a useless, hopeless endeavor" and that the "relationship between weight and health is also muddy."

Mercedes, a grad student based in New York City, intimates in her quasi-autobiographical rant that an aversion to morbid obesity — a term she partially censors — is rooted in racism.

"This is a profoundly misguided view of obesity, a complex medical disorder with major adverse health consequences for all racial and ethnic groups," said Flier. "Promotion of these ignorant ideas to medical students without counterbalancing input from medical experts in the area is nothing less than pedagogical malpractice."

The former Harvard Medical School dean stressed that whoever signed off on the curriculum was unfit to make such decisions.

"There are areas where medicine and public health intersect with politics, and these require discussion and debate of conflicting viewpoints," Flier told the Beacon. "That is distinct from education designed to ideologically indoctrinate physician-activists."

Nationally syndicated radio host and co-founder of Blaze Media Glenn Beck recently highlighted how the medical profession watchdog Do No Harm has revealed "23 of America's top 25 medical schools now have anti-racism instruction as the core part of their curriculum."

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Philadelphia holding first-ever FATCON



Temple University in Philadelphia is set to host the first ever "FatCon," which is described as a judgment-free, fat-centered event — and Lauren Chen couldn’t be more amused.

“Did you know that in the year of our internet 2023, there are actually conventions for fat people?” Chen asks.

The Philly “FatCon” aims to be a judgment-free event focused on creating community for fat people, by fat people.

According to one of the organizers, the idea is to help others navigate a fatphobic world and society in a different way and provide clothing for people who need it.

“Despite how terrible I think the obesity epidemic is for this country, if FatCon were simply a place where plus-size people could find clothing that actually fits them as well as participate in fat-friendly fitness class in the hopes of getting into better shape, then this is something that I wouldn’t have a problem with,” Chen says.

However, that’s not what FatCon is.

“The problem I have with FatCon is it’s far-left intersectional leanings. Because, would you believe it, turns out that the people are behind this FatCon, this fat convention, they are just, by the sounds of it, radical leftists.”

One of the event’s keynote speakers is Sonalee Rashatwar, who calls himself a “fat sex therapist” and uses he/they pronouns.

“Now, whether she is a sex therapist who is fat or a therapist for fat sex, I do not know,” Chen jokes.

While the fat positivity movement focuses on overweight and obese people as if they are a minority group, Chen is here to point out that they are not minorities.

“For some reason, they view themselves as this like minority or protected group even though in America, officially now, most people are overweight. The average American is overweight,” Chen explains.

“So, they like to claim we’re in a fatphobic society, but I don’t know, it looks like we’re just living in a fat (period) society where the average person is like a good 30 pounds too heavy,” she adds.


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Lizzo's ENTITLEMENT: I AM the beauty standard!



Has the fat-acceptance movement gone too far? After what Lizzo recently tweeted, Lauren Chen of "Pseudo-Intellectual" definitely thinks so.

The tweet in question was a video of herself “glamor modeling” accompanied by the message “Introducing…. THE BEAUTY STANDARD. If you mad, stay mad hoes.”

“I don’t care who you are or what you look like. Declaring that you are the beauty standard — it’s a bold move. But I think it is especially bold if you weigh, gosh, I gotta say at least 300 pounds like Lizzo does.”

However, this isn’t the first time Lizzo has declared herself “the beauty standard.”

She has also already posted a selfie video to her millions of Instagram followers saying, “I am f***in' gorgeous, I am the beauty standard.”

Chen realizes that many people will see this as Lizzo “just practicing self-love and acceptance,” but Chen doesn’t think that’s a good thing.

“We don’t need more self-love and self-acceptance. In fact, I would say we have way too much of it, and you know what we need to bring back? We actually need to bring back a little bit of shame and, for goodness sakes, some humility.”

This isn’t just an issue of self-image, Chen alleges, but rather one of health.

“Obesity is not healthy, and I think at a certain point, our acceptance of obesity — trying to normalize obesity — it has ultimately hurt the American public when it comes to their health.”

Chen says that “around 70% of Americans are overweight.”

“Most of the leading causes of death in America have to do with obesity. This is an epidemic. This is a health crisis. And honestly, people, like Lizzo, who are trying to glamorize and normalize clinical, morbid obesity, they are not helping the issue.”


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To enjoy more of Lauren’s pro-liberty, pro-logic, and pro-market commentary on social and political issues, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.