In bid to oppose racism, USC School of Social Work nixes use of the word 'field'



The University of Southern California's School of Social Work is dropping use of the word "field" in an effort to oppose racism.

"As we enter 2023, we would like to share a change we are making at the Suzanne-Dworak-Peck School of Social Work to ensure our use of inclusive language and practice. Specifically, we have decided to remove the term 'field' from our curriculum and practice and replace it with 'practicum.' This change supports anti-racist social work practice by replacing language that could be considered anti-Black or anti-immigrant in favor of inclusive language," a notice about the change states.

"Language can be powerful, and phrases such as 'going into the field' or 'field work' may have connotations for descendants of slavery and immigrant workers that are not benign," the notice claims. The notice indicates that it is from the "Practicum Education Department" and to the "USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck Practicum Education Community, Faculty, Staff, and Students."

\u201cToday, @uscsocialwork sent out this letter announcing that they will no longer use the word \u201cfield\u201d (as in \u201cconducting field work\u201d) because it\u2019s perceived as racist. Is this with merit or empty virtue signaling? @elonmusk @IngrahamAngle\u201d
— Houman David Hemmati, MD, PhD (@Houman David Hemmati, MD, PhD) 1673317259

"In solidarity with universities across the nation, our goal is not just to change language but to honor and acknowledge inclusion and reject white supremacy, anti-immigrant and anti-blackness ideologies," the notice states. "We are committing to further align our actions, behaviors, and practices with anti-racism and anti-oppression, which requires taking a close and critical look at our profession — our history, our biases, and our complicity in past and current injustices. It also means continuing to work together to train social work students today who understand and embody social and racial justice."

The notice said that altering terminology can be difficult and fully making the switch will require time.

USC's School of Social Work has a land acknowledgment posted online.

"The Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work at the University of Southern California acknowledges our presence on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the Gabrielino-Tongva peoples. We recognize that these Peoples were forcibly removed from their homelands," the acknowledgment states in part. "With humility, we recognize and respect all Indigenous peoples, their histories, and their ties to the land."

Florida Gov. DeSantis says he will sign 'Fairness in Women's Sports' bill banning trans athletes from competing against females



Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) on Thursday pledged to sign his state's version of a bill to protect fairness in women's sports by prohibiting transgender athletes who were born males from competing against females.

In a surprise move this week, Florida Republicans in the state House revived the "Fairness in Women's Sports Act" after it died in Senate committee by attaching it as an amendment to SB 1028, a charter school bill. The legislation would ban males from competing on women's sports teams at the public secondary and collegiate level.

The House passed the bill Wednesday in a vote of 79-37, mostly along party lines. The state Senate passed the bill 23-16 later that evening. If DeSantis signs the bill into law, Florida would be the seventh state to adopt a form of the "Fairness in Women's Sports" bill though 30 states are considering similar legislation.

At a Fox News town hall Thursday evening with other Republican governors, Gov. DeSantis said he was eager to sign the bill.

"Oh yeah, we're going to protect our girls. I have a 4-year-old daughter and a 1-year-old daughter and they're both very athletic. And we want to have opportunities for our girls," DeSantis told host Laura Ingraham. "They deserve an even playing field and that's what we're doing with what Mississippi did, with what Florida did, and I know with what other states are going to do."

"So I look forward to being able to sign that into law," he said.

DeSantis vows to sign bill barring transgender females from girls' sports. https://t.co/poRJBkleuH

— Laura Ingraham (@IngrahamAngle) 1619789945.0

Critics including state Democrats and LGBTQ activists have assailed the bill as "cruel" and discriminatory against transgender youth.

"It's horrific," Gina Duncan, the director of transgender equality at Equality Florida, said. "This bill shows not only their lack of humanity but their astounding ignorance about the transgender community, not understanding that trans girls are girls and transgender women are women.

"Despite impassioned pleas by legislators who have gay and transgender kids and grandkids imploring supporters of this bill to understand the harm that it will do, Republicans followed their marching orders to implement this orchestrated culture war and move this bill forward."

"If they want to play, let them play, there's nothing to stop them," said state Sen. Victor Torres (D), who's grandchild is transgender and identifies as female. "We thought it was dead, but obviously some don't care."

Republican supporters of the legislation countered that it's unfair that athletes who were born with male DNA, male skeletal structures, and have male muscle development are allowed to compete with girls.

"I thought it was common knowledge that men are stronger than women," Sen. Kelli Stargel (R) said. "We're just trying to protect them."

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R), who participated in the town hall with DeSantis and was the first Republican governor to sign a fairness in women's sports bill into law this year, said Thursday that biological males should not be able to compete with girls for scholarships and other opportunities.

"This is an issue I'm passionate about and the reason I'm passionate about it is because I have a 16-year-old daughter, a 14-year-old daughter, and a 9-year-old daughter and they play basketball and they play soccer and they play every sport they can possible play," Reeves said. "And the reality is biological males should not be allowed to compete with them for athletic scholarships. They should not be allowed to be able to compete with them for opportunities."

Adding to the controversy over these bills is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's stated opposition to legislation it claims discriminates against transgender athletes. The NCAA has threatened to pull championship games from states that pass laws barring biological males from playing on girls sports teams, leading some Republican lawmakers and governors to hesitate over enacting laws that apply to collegiate sports.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) outraged social conservatives by vetoing her state's version of the "Fairness in Women's Sports" bill, saying the portion of the bill that applies to colleges and universities was "unrealistic in the context of collegiate athletics."

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum (R) likewise vetoed a similar bill, claiming that there was no evidence that girls sports were in "immediate danger" of becoming unfair and deferring to the state athletic association to determine the rules governing high school and collegiate sports.

But social conservative activists are making clear that Republicans who want their support must stand up to protect women's sports.

"Women's sports has been a breakthrough issue showing how to win on cultural issues," American Principles Project President Terry Schilling said.

"This is now the status quo for the Republican Party," he added. "You must support protecting women's sports to be a contender in the party."

Trump says media lobbed 'softball' questions to Biden at first news conference: 'Very sad to watch'



Former President Donald Trump criticized the media for lobbing "softball" questions to President Joe Biden during his first news conference.

"They were strange questions and they were asked in a very interesting way. It was like softballs, like you're throwing softballs up. And it's just a different world, nobody's seen anything like it," Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham on Thursday night. "It's very sad to watch, actually. They're feeding him questions, they're easy questions."

While appearing on "The Ingraham Angle," Trump pointed out that Fox News White House reporter Peter Doocy was not called on to ask a question during the presser. Trump noted, "I noticed Peter Doocy didn't get to ask a question today."

There were 25 reporters in attendance for Biden's first news conference, but no conservative-leaning media outlets were selected to ask questions. Meanwhile, PBS White House reporter Yamiche Alcindor asked a question that was very complimentary of President Biden, which was slammed by commentators for being too "partisan."

"And there could be no difficult questions, and they're ready to rip the microphone away if somebody did get a little bit testy," Trump continued. "Look, the whole thing is ridiculous. You know it and so do I."

Trump tells Fox’s @IngrahamAngle that Biden's “softball” news conference was “very sad to watch.. they feed him que… https://t.co/o5jzTDNCnE
— TV News HQ (@TV News HQ)1616746170.0

Earlier this week, Trump previewed Biden's first news conference and predicted the media, which he often labeled "fake news," would treat the current president with kid gloves.

"I guess you're supposed to have a press conference on Thursday ... It's ridiculous the questions that are asked," Trump said Monday during an interview on Fox News' "The Faulkner Focus." "What did you have for dinner? What kind of ice cream do you have, as he walks out? They never talked to me that way. That's OK.

"It's the only way to get an honest word out because the press is really not a free press," Trump added. "The way you get the press out is with press conferences. He doesn't need them because the press protects him totally. If that were me that hasn't had a press conference for as long, with all the things going on, especially at the border, but really you have things as big as the border, we're not going to be energy independent within three months."

During an appearance on "The Truth with Lisa Boothe" podcast this week, Trump declared that "this is not a free press."

"This is a press that we have to be very, very smart to get around, but they don't cover bad things if it happens to be bad for Democrats," Trump said Monday. "It's pretty amazing. You take a look at some of the coverage and some of the travesty that's taking place at the border, and the coverage is not commensurate."

"If you look at NBC, ABC, CBS, and of course, CNN and MSNBC, and see — if you look at some of those networks — it's just not covered. It's covered so little," Trump said of the media's coverage of the border crisis. "It's amazing. And it's a massive story because it's going to destroy — it's going to destroy our country."

During Thursday's "The Ingraham Angle" interview, Trump also blasted the Biden's administration's handling of the immigration crisis and its relationship with China.

"What you're seeing now is inhumane," Trump said of the migrant facilities that are being overwhelmed by the surge of illegal immigrants at the border. "These children, these people … they're living on top of each other in squalor. This is squalor. That's why they won't allow the press to come in. We let the press come go in and we had much smaller numbers, frankly, because people couldn't come up.

"They're living in very dangerous conditions," Trump continued. "There's no testing for COVID-19. What's going on is just absolutely insane. It's a horrible situation. And everyone that's seen it, nobody's seen worse.

"If you get cameras inside some of those facilities, you would see children on top of children and you'd see filth," Trump said of migrant facilities, many of which are packed beyond capacity. "And you'd see things that you would not believe possible."

Trump advised the Biden administration to finish the border wall, which President Biden stopped construction on his first day in office.

Ingraham also asked about the tense summit last week in Alaska, where a Chinese official told U.S. Secretary of State Tony Blinken, "Let me say here that in front of the Chinese side, the United States does not have the qualification to say that it wants to speak to China from a position of strength."

"That was an embarrassment," Trump said about Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi lecturing U.S. officials. "That was an absolute embarrassment to our country.

"China respected us. They never spoke to us the way they spoke to [the Biden] administration," Trump said.

"Nobody ever talked to my group that way. Nobody ever talked to me that way. I can tell you that," Trump stated. "And if they did, I would have doubled up the tariffs, which frankly, were something we probably should have done anyway."

Trump gives exclusive reaction to Biden's first press conference www.youtube.com

Two Trump supporters shot in drive-by pellet gun attack at a corner rally in Florida



Police say someone drove by a street corner rally for President Donald Trump in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and fired into the crowd with a pellet gun, striking two supporters of the president.

Fort Lauderdale police said the two adult victims were treated at the scene for minor injuries and released.

Witnesses said that they saw a black Porsche SUV round the corner they have called "Freedom Corner" before the shots rang out.

Trump supporter Celeste Ellich told the South Florida Sun Sentinel that they had experienced drivers throwing water bottles at them but this was the first time someone shot at them with a pellet gun.

"You still should be able to stand there and peacefully protest," said Ellich. "I was waiting for something like this to potentially happen."

One of the victims spoke to WSVN-TV about the attack.

"I didn't come out here looking for trouble, I came out here with a flag to support my president!" said an emotional Evelyn Alvarez.

She showed the wound where she had been shot in the temple, very close to her eye.

"We were having a peaceful rally to show support for our president, just out here flag waving and with our signs," said Alvarez.

She said that they heard the occupants of the car shouting obscenities during the attack. Another woman was hit in the shoulder.

One Trump supporter posted video reportedly showing the aftermath of the shooting with the police response.

@seanhannity @FoxNews @IngrahamAngle @TuckerCarlson @newsmax @BreitbartNews 🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨 #BREAKINGNEWS 2 Trump… https://t.co/C3Cp56GGPj
— DL Obrian (@DL Obrian)1604705554.0

A similar incident was documented in the nearby neighborhood of Wilton Manors where two pedestrians were shot with paintball pellets by people driving by in a truck. No political motivation was reported in that attack.

Ellich, who is the director of the Republican Liberty Caucus of Florida, said that they would make sure future events ended before dark.

Here's a local news video about the attack:

2 injured after shooter fires pellets into crowd of Trump supporters in Fort Lauderdalewww.youtube.com