Friday, February 16, there is a speaker who most certainly is not 
pro-life enough to speak at Fordham University. That speaker? Peter Singer. Fr. McShane has not sent out any statement in an e-mail 
addressed to the entire school about having such a speaker. The 
president not only did that in the instance of Ann Coulter’s invite, but
 expressed his “disgust.” I am disgusted with Peter Singer, and I expect
 Fr. McShane to be as well. Yet there has been no such e-mail.
In case you are not aware, Peter Singer is an advocate for abortion, as a woman’s right and as a form of population control; bestiality; and euthanasia, and he has made the moral case for infanticide, particularly for disabled infants. Yet from the description of the event and of Peter Singer on “FORDHAM NOTES: A NEWSBLOG FROM FORDHAM UNIVERSITY’S NEWS AND MEDIA RELATIONS BUREAU,” you would not know this.
The event is titled “Panel: Christians and Other Animals” with the 
subtitle “Christians and Other Animals: Moving the Conversation 
Forward.” Peter Singer is listed as the top panelist, with his 
credentials listed as “Peter Singer, Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics, Princeton University.” There is also a brief one-sentence bio
 listed about him at the end: “Peter Singer—in addition to being the 
most influential philosopher alive today—was the intellectual heft 
behind the beginning of the animal rights movement in the 1970s.” 
Regardless of whether that bio was written by a person from Fordham, 
which it may very well have not been, by attaching it to a Fordham 
advertisement for a Fordham-held and sponsored event, it seems as if the
 university is standing by Peter Singer “being the most influential 
philosopher alive today,” and influential in not such a bad way.
Ann Coulter was invited by a student group on campus, an invitation 
which is to be approved or denied. Regardless how one feels about Fr. 
McShane’s statement or the decision by the College Republicans to 
(dis-)invite Ms. Coulter, one surely realizes that the university could 
have denied the speaker even before approving her, and that neither the 
event nor Ann Coulter’s views are endorsed by the university or Fr. 
McShane. However, not only is Fordham University displaying the panel 
with Peter Singer on a web page for the university, but the panel is 
also co-sponsored by the Department of Theology, the Center for Religion
 and Culture, the Office of the Provost, the dean of Fordham College at 
Rose Hill, and the dean of Fordham University faculty.
Link (here) to Live Action News
Link (here) to Live Action News

However, not only is Fordham School showing the board with Chris Musician on a website for the university, but the board is also co-sponsored by the Division of Theology, the Middle for Belief and Lifestyle, the Workplace of the Provost, the dean of Fordham Higher education at Increased Mountain, and the dean of Fordham School staff.
ReplyDeleteliberals are hypocritical and inconsistent because they don't have a coherent system of truth or morality. it is all emotion-based, whatever feels right or feels good or feels true, at the time, is thought to be right, good or true regardless of whether it is consistent with past or future feelings.
ReplyDeletethe one consistency among liberals, however, is their hatred for anything conservative, because conservatism stands for consistency in truth and morality, and in doing so conservatism exposes liberalisms shallowness and emptiness
Mr. 1:27 a.m. should get some sleep so he can do some clear-headed thinking.
ReplyDeleteyour all crazy
ReplyDelete