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by claytongulick
1056 days ago
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We have absolutely no idea what comments she was censured for, they aren't saying. They certainly didn't claim she was censured for factual discussion about opioid crisis, as you've implied (and the reporter, without evidence, also implied). UTMB is a prestigious institution. Issuing a statement of censure is a pretty big deal. Occam's razor would suggest that it wasn't done arbitrarily. Objectively looking at the known facts without a political bias, it seems to me that the most likely scenario is that she made some inappropriate comments, got censured, but no one wants to embarrass her further or risk liability by repeating hearsay. People make mistakes. We don't have any facts that would support the narrative that the government encouraged the censure or the investigation in any way. I'm not sure why there's so much passion around insisting that particular narrative when there are limited known facts. Of course I'd change my opinion if more information comes to light. Would you? |
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This is not an accurate characterization. The author reviewed the speaker's slides, interviewed students in the lecture, and consulted with her professional network; the reporter's investigation yielded no evidence of censure-worthy content or propensity for political rants.
> We don't have any facts that would support the narrative that the government encouraged the censure or the investigation in any way.
This is not an accurate characterization. The reporter has provided information from the university's spokespeople that Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham was the one who first contacted the university's governmental relations office as well as Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. Patrick then contacted the chair of the University of Texas System’s board.
The board responded to Patrick, within 2 hours of the end of the lecture, quote: "Joy Alonzo has been placed on administrative leave pending investigation re firing her. shud [sic] be finished by end of week."
> Of course I'd change my opinion if more information comes to light.
You're not even engaging with the facts as they stand.
Occam's razor would suggest this isn't done arbitrarily. The simplest explanation for the set of facts before us is that the one student complained to mommy, who complained to the school in conjunction with Patrick. The school immediately kowtowed to this political pressure and made motions to punish the person they complained about, without any diligence whatsoever. Now that everyone is complaining, they aren't releasing the details of their censure because there aren't any.