It's Not Just Students: Meet the Professors Leading the Academic Embrace of Hamas

An Ohio State University student group last week held a "day of resistance" rally that saw organizers defend Hamas terrorism and condemn Israel's "apartheid system." Behind that group is a socialist English professor who has long supported Palestinian terrorists and advocated for the end of the Jewish state.

The post It's Not Just Students: Meet the Professors Leading the Academic Embrace of Hamas appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Dozens injured after porch roof collapses near Ohio State University

Dozens injured after porch roof collapses near Ohio State University



Dozens of people were injured Saturday when a porch roof of a home near The Ohio State University in Columbus collapsed, WBNS and other outlets reported.

"It appears that the roof was overloaded with students. We've heard numbers between 15 and 45 students on a rooftop that was not designed to have anybody on it, and it gave way" Columbus Fire Battalion Chief Steve Martin told reporters.

Nearly three dozen people were injured in the collapse at East 113th Avenue around 7:40 p.m., local NBC affiliate WCMH reported.

People were partying at the home just a few blocks from campus when the collapse occurred, according to the New York Post.

"We sent a large number of fire companies to the scene. When we got here, what we found was the front porch roof had collapsed," Chief Martin said.

"The few people that were trapped, I believe were probably unpinned," Chief Martin also said, explaining that students were helping peers by lifting and moving debris off their bodies to free them.

Chief Martin said they initially estimated ten people had been injured, but that number of confirmed injured quickly grew.

Emergency workers transported 14 people with "various stages of injuries" to local hospitals, including OSU Wexner Medical Center, Grant Medical Center and OSU East Hospital. All were stable, according to Chief Martin. No injuries were considered "serious" or "critical."

"We saw the aftermath. The roof was totally collapsed. I would say there were several hundred people outside. I saw a lot of panic happening. I saw people covered in black soot almost. They looked like they were heavily impacted by the accident" an unnamed OSU student told reporters on the scene.

\u201c\u201cA lot of panic\u201d Hearing from OSU students @wsyx6 \nAnother student told me he\u2019s supposed to live in the house next year - more at 10/11\u201d
— Stephanie Duprey (@Stephanie Duprey) 1682814276

WSYX reporter Myles Harris shared photos of the home Sunday morning. The photos show the roof completely collapsed, part of it pancaked onto the ground. Police tape and what appears to be a plastic swimming pool is seen in the grass. A wheelchair is shown leaned up against the roof debris, partially obscuring what appears to be a vinyl banner or sign.

\u201cStudents waking up and seeing the aftermath of the roof collapse near OSU\u2019s campus. 14 people were sent to the hospital last night. We have more from what we\u2019re learning on Good Day Columbus this morning. Tune in. @wsyx6\u201d
— Myles Harris (@Myles Harris) 1682851225

"We are monitoring this serious situation closely and assisting first responders in any way possible. Our thoughts are with those present and their friends and family," The Ohio State University told the New York Post in a statement.

Watch WBNS' coverage below of the roof collapse near The Ohio State University that sent 14 young people to the hospital.


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New Study Says Maybe You’re Not Depressed, You’re Just Narcissistic

The fact that the effects of kindness on depression even needed to be studied is telling.

Ohio's Republican governor will sign a bill allowing school employees to carry guns



Public schools in the state of Ohio will be able to begin arming employees as soon as this upcoming fall under legislation recently passed by the state legislature that will soon be signed by the state’s Republican Governor Mike DeWine.

The Associated Press reported that Ohio Democrats opposed the legislation despite it being optional for schools. Ohio Democrats argued that passing and signing the bill into law sends the wrong message in the wake of the Uvalde, Texas massacre in which a lone gunman killed 19 school children and two teachers.

Despite Democratic opposition, the Republican majority in the state’s legislature insisted that the measure could prevent future tragedies like the one in Uvalde. State lawmakers subsequently fast-tracked the legislation to counter the impact of a court ruling that said, under current state law, armed school workers would need hundreds of hours of training to be permitted to carry a firearm while on the clock.

The Statehouse News Bureau, a regional Ohio-based media outlet, reported that the new legislation reduces the amount of training for school personnel to 24 hours from 700.

Gov. DeWine insisted that the bill will, in fact, protect children by ensuring that the firearm training that school employees will now receive will be specific to respective schools and school systems and will include “significant” scenario-based training.

DeWine said, “Ultimately, each school will make its own decision. So we’re not telling any school district – we have over 600 school districts in the state – the school board of that school will decide whether they want to arm teachers or not.”

He continued, “We will also be giving schools the choice of providing additional training, that we will stake out [and] provide for if they decide that they want more than 24 hours for a teacher.”

Reportedly, major law enforcement groups, gun control advocates, and the state’s teachers’ unions oppose the legislation and requested that DeWine veto it. It is not clear whether they provided alternative policy proposals.

Notably, local police departments and certain school districts within the state expressed support for the legislation.

In the latest version of the legislation, school employees who carry guns will need eight hours of requalification training annually in order to recertify their ability to carry while on school grounds.

DeWine is expected to sign the bill into law later this month. He also recently announced that the state’s construction budget will provide $100 million for school security upgrades and $5 million for security upgrades at colleges across the state.

Ohio State Researcher Sentenced to Prison for Concealing Ties to Chinese Spy Program

A U.S. district court sentenced a former Ohio State medical researcher to prison for concealing his connections to a Chinese spy program from federal authorities.

The post Ohio State Researcher Sentenced to Prison for Concealing Ties to Chinese Spy Program appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Ohio State University students stage sit-in protest, demand school sever ties with Columbus police for shooting of knife-wielding teen



Students at Ohio State University staged a sit-in protest Wednesday over the fatal police shooting of a teen girl wielding a knife who attempted to stab two people. The protesters demanded that the university sever ties with the Columbus Division of Police, the Ohio law enforcement department whose officer shot and killed 16-year-old Ma'Khia Bryant at the exact moment she lunged with a knife at another girl.

Several hundred protesters gathered at the Ohio Union, which serves as a student activity center and dining area for students of Ohio State University. Students held signs that called for the city of Columbus to abolish its police department, support for Black Lives Matter, another sign that demanded "CPD out of OSU," and one that reads "ACAB," an acronym for "All Cops Are Bastards." The crowd of Ohio State students held a 16-minute moment of silence for Bryant.

A spokesperson for the university issued a statement on the protests: "Ohio State supports the right of our students, faculty and staff to peacefully express their views and to speak out about issues that are important to them. Freedom of speech and civic engagement are central to our values as an institution of higher education."

Ohio State University students hold a sit-in at the Ohio Union to demand that OSU sever ties with Columbus Police D… https://t.co/0B9FyBUquF
— corinne_perkins (@corinne_perkins)1619040545.0

There were more than 500 Ohio State University students who marched in the streets to the Ohio Statehouse, where they demanded that university leadership cut ties to the Columbus Division of Police, according to the Columbus Dispatch.

Students now taking to the streets. They’re marching in Ma’Khai’s name. @nbc4i https://t.co/ojdbVZXZk8
— Karina Cheung (@Karina Cheung)1619033218.0
Huge crowd of @OhioState students now taking the streets to demand OSU cut ties with @ColumbusPolice after the kill… https://t.co/fhLRZGEfqP
— Benjamin McKean (@Benjamin McKean)1619033393.0
HAPPENING NOW: Several hundred Ohio State students marching on High Street protesting the shooting death of Ma'khia… https://t.co/Jt1Wd4Avjw
— Stacia Naquin (@Stacia Naquin)1619036240.0

The demonstrators issued a list of five demands, which was the same list that was written by three Ohio State student governments in June 2020 as a reaction to the police-involved death of George Floyd.

  • Ohio State University Police Division immediately cease contracts with the Columbus Division of Police for any and all on-campus investigations, services and events;
  • OSUPD immediately cease mutual aid service contracts with Columbus police and reevaluate joint patrols to limit the presence of and the frequency of calls to CPD officers and resources in off-campus areas;
  • Ohio State no longer accept federal, military-grade resources and reduce OSUPD's budget for expenditures that may be used for further militarization, but rather reallocate the funds to further invest in student support units;
  • Ohio State's Department of Public Safety release an action plan, created with student input, that affirms the commitment to Black student safety and overall university safety through disarmed, anti-force and culturally competent practices, and;
  • Ohio State acknowledge and condemn the anti-Black violence the Columbus police committed against Ohio State students and the greater Columbus community.

On Wednesday, the school responded to the demand of cutting ties with the Columbus Division of Police, "The Ohio State University Police Division (OSUPD) is the primary law enforcement agency on all of our campuses. In Columbus, we contract with the Columbus Division of Police (CPD) for specific services, largely traffic control for athletics events. We also have a mutual-aid agreement in place that allows our OSUPD to assist CPD off campus."

Last June, an Ohio State University spokesperson issued a statement on the list of demands:

As President Drake wrote on Saturday, George Floyd suffered a horrendous and completely unnecessary death. His killing, and those that have come before, demand that we create a different future. We know our students are hurting, we are here to support them, and we are inspired by their commitment to this cause. We must all work together to end abuse, discrimination, bigotry, and hatred. We will be in dialogue with our student government leaders about the specific concerns they have raised.

Ohio State University students rage after officials declare black-on-white crime a 'hate crime': Report based on 'false narrative of black-on-white crime'



Some students at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, are furious after school officials dared refer to a black-on-white crime as a "hate crime."

According to a Sunday report from Campus Reform, a horde of students protested and took their gripes to social media in an attempt to shame the university for its apparently controversial stance.

What are the details?

Earlier in September, Ohio State University sent out public safety notices to all of its students, initially advising them of a "hate crime" perpetrated by two African-American suspects near the school's Columbus campus.

At the time, the Lantern, Ohio State's student newspaper, reported that the race of the victims was not divulged, but added that authorities charged the two suspects with "felonius assault and assault" in connection with the incident.

Days after the school initially reported the crime, the Department of Public Safety revealed "that the [three] victims of the crime where white Ohio State students and that the suspects were in custody."

"One suspect allegedly yelled a racial slur at a student and punched him the face," Campus Reform reported of the communication.

According to University Police Chief Kimberly Spears-McNatt, federal law requires the school report hate crimes under 1990's federal Jeanne Clery Act, which "requires colleges and universities that receive federal funding to disseminate a public annual security report" in addition to mandating the campus report certain crimes that reportedly take place on and near campus.

Spears-McNatt said that the race of the victims was initially — and mistakenly — omitted in the initial campus-wide notice.

"We apologize for this omission and any questions or concerns it may have caused," Spears-McNatt said in an email to the Lantern.

University spokesperson Dan Hedman also told the Lantern that "because the suspects were of a different race than the victims, the racial slur used in [the] incident fell under the Clery Act's definition of a hate crime, and the university was legally obligated to report it as such."

The two suspects, however, were not arrested under charges of a hate crime, according to the outlet.

What else?

The outlet reported that in addition to the blowback of announcing the crime, "roughly 100 students" gathered outside of the school's administrative offices to demand change to the handling of public safety notices.

The Lantern noted that flyers for the protest read, "Why Does OSU Only Uphold the Safety of White Students?"

In response, social media user and purported OSU student Deja Geddings took to Twitter, writing, "OSU is mocking their entire black student body right now. They're blatantly making campus more uncomfortable and dangerous for us and POC."

OSU is mocking their entire Black student body right now. They’re blatantly making campus more uncomfortable and dangerous for us and POC.
— Deja Janay 🤍 (@Deja Janay 🤍)1599315731.0

Devon Stith, a third-year student at the university, told the Lantern, "Even if, say, all Black people are afraid, scared, think white people are horrible people and are raising all their children to not speak to white people, avoid white people, everything like that, that's not going to affect the white community's success in life in this country. They're not going to be hurt by our rhetoric. But, on the flip side, we have been and will continue to be hurt as long as their rhetoric is destructive."

Further, a campus-based group, Student Solidarity at OSU, insisted that the crime was not a hate crime, because such attacks "are not based on a history of violence & oppression towards white people."

In a Twitter statement, the group wrote, "Last Thursday, @OhioState sent out an irresponsible 'public safety notice' that claimed OSU students were the victims of a 'hate crime.' The email identified the alleged attackers as black, while failing to mention that the victims were white. This is unacceptable."

Last Thursday, @OhioState sent out an irresponsible “public safety notice” that claimed OSU students were the victi… https://t.co/WSt3HgBNN9
— Student Solidarity at OSU (@Student Solidarity at OSU)1599518147.0

The group added, "The details of this incident that were shared in OSU's public safety notice do not meet the legal definition of a hate crime. To refer to it as such solely because the alleged perpetrators used a 'racial slur' is illogical."

The group added, "'Racial slurs' referring to white people are not based on a history of violence & oppression towards white people. Using this 'slur' does not have the same violent, racist implications as a white person saying the n-word, for example, nor does it make this incident a hate crime."

“Racial slurs” referring to White people are not based on a history of violence & oppression towards White people.… https://t.co/ntloyy1ikI
— Student Solidarity at OSU (@Student Solidarity at OSU)1599518149.0

The group pointed out that it was the very first time the school considered a black-on-white crime a "hate crime."

"We all know about the many, many acts of racially-motivated discrimination and violence towards BIPOC students that have taken place throughout OSU's past and present. Yet, this appears to be the first time that OSU has issued a public safety notice about a 'hate crime,'" the group insisted.

Further, the group insisted, "The fact that OSU chose THIS incident as its first reported 'hate crime' is telling."

"It is rooted in the false narrative of 'black-on-white' crime that white supremacists use to vilify the black community and justify their racism," the group's tweet added.

The fact that OSU chose THIS incident as its first reported “hate crime” is telling. It is rooted in the false narr… https://t.co/z2E5HfJI8r
— Student Solidarity at OSU (@Student Solidarity at OSU)1599518149.0