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re: WTF is going on with Vandy?: Dean of Admissions pottymouthing about vax on Twitter

Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:03 pm to
Posted by Alley
Smashville
Member since Sep 2005
3242 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:03 pm to
Is that tweet from 11/3/21?

Nashville is open as can be as far as I know nowadays. Not sure about Vandy though.

Certain groups and spaces were on vaccine kicks about that time last year.

Posted by Revelator
Member since Nov 2008
60888 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:04 pm to
Seems to be very Holy and spiritual!
Posted by imjustafatkid
Alabama
Member since Dec 2011
57852 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:05 pm to
quote:

She's an ordained minister


Nope. That entire statement is an oxymoron.
This post was edited on 9/26/22 at 12:06 pm
Posted by DingLeeBerry
Member since Oct 2014
11489 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:13 pm to
Didn’t know Vandy had a divinity school. Looks interesting to say the least.

quote:

Do the hard and necessary work A reflection from our dean, Emilie M. Townes, for July 2022:

With the early release of the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the landmark Roe v. Wade decision written by Justice Alito in May, we knew what the opinion would be. The finality of the end to the constitutional right to abortion, upheld for nearly 50 years, no longer existing was still striking to those on all sides of the issue. Some celebrated while others mourned, and a wide range of other emotions has flooded our airways and dominated public and private conversations. And these conversations and the organizing they will spark have just begun as SCOTUS has returned the decision-making regarding abortion back to the states.

For me, it struck a frightening chord as this move to states’ rights harkens to an era that saw some states craft laws that legally permitted the stripping away of the rights of some of their citizens—darker-skinned, poor, immigrant. The appeal to states’ rights was devastating for newly freed Black folk in the 1800s and its echoes continue today as we are far from a colorblind society or a welcoming society for those who are among the poor and working poor or those who are immigrants. The landscape that the court’s reversal landed in was already troubled.

The legal right to abortion under Roe v. Wade was never enough to guarantee actual access for the poor and people of color. The Hyde Amendment, other budget riders, and funding restrictions created at the state level made coverage of abortion care limited—even for those who have insurance. There were and remain in force medically unnecessary and politically motivated state laws that restrict access. For example, TRAP laws (targeted restrictions on abortion providers) and multiple-visit requirements made access to abortion difficult to impossible for many. Around the country, there were multiple states with only one abortion clinic and 27 cities with populations of over 100,000 that are without a clinic within 100 miles. The court’s reversal will exacerbate an already difficult reality for those seeking access to abortion as it will put abortion out of reach for those who cannot afford to travel for their care.

As troubling as I personally find the SCOTUS opinion, it is Justice Clarence Thomas’ separate, concurring opinion that sent shivers up my spine. To my mind, it was an extreme view as he opined that the high court should revisit all cases built on similar legal footing as Roe—cases that guarantee the right to contraception, same-sex consensual sexual relations, and same-sex marriage. It may well be that the court’s majority is just beginning to roll back many hard-fought rights. If this is the world that we have entered into, it will be imperative that those of us who are guided by faith traditions do the hard and necessary work of understanding the wide scope that forms the foundation of any of these issues and to provide forums that represent the wide diversity of opinions on topics that will undoubtedly move all of us out of our comfort zones, but may well help us live into the hard work of creating and maintaining democracy.
Posted by TigerIron
Member since Feb 2021
3644 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:18 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 11/9/22 at 9:16 pm
Posted by Lsut81
Member since Jun 2005
82776 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:18 pm to
So do they have a vax mandate?

Seems pretty straightforward...
Posted by Wtodd
Tampa, FL
Member since Oct 2013
68122 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:19 pm to
quote:

She's

Are you sure?
Posted by Tigers2010a
Member since Jul 2021
3627 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:22 pm to
quote:

She's the Assistant Dean of Admissions & an ordained minister at Vanderbilt Divinity School.


She is clearly not a Christian minister. I am guessing a minister of Satan.
Posted by Flats
Member since Jul 2019
25231 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:23 pm to
quote:

If this is the world that we have entered into, it will be imperative that those of us who are guided by faith traditions do the hard and necessary work of understanding the wide scope that forms the foundation of any of these issues and to provide forums that represent the wide diversity of opinions on topics that will undoubtedly move all of us out of our comfort zones, but may well help us live into the hard work of creating and maintaining democracy.


Nice word salad. What is a "faith tradition"? And what "hard work" has she(?) ever done to create or maintain democracy?
Posted by Ag Zwin
Member since Mar 2016
22887 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:23 pm to
quote:

So do they have a vax mandate?

Seems pretty straightforward...

I’ll say the same to you that I would say to others pointing out the age of the tweet or the actual policy at hand.

None of that is my point. I think it’s HIGHLY unprofessional and toxic that someone in her position (both at the school and, ostensibly, in spiritual matters) would think this way, much less post it for all the world to see.
Posted by fisherscatfan
Indianapolis
Member since Sep 2020
668 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:23 pm to
quote:

That tweet is almost a year old.


And that makes it ok?
Posted by PollyDawg
Member since Jul 2021
1103 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:37 pm to
She's right up there with the Wal-Mart screamer.

On second thought, she's worse.
Posted by crimsonuatide
Member since Jul 2017
2008 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:41 pm to
Wolf in very thinly veiled sheep skin.
Posted by omegaman66
greenwell springs
Member since Oct 2007
24838 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:46 pm to
Wait, I thought they didn't like mean tweets???
Posted by ynlvr
Rocket City
Member since Feb 2009
5040 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:48 pm to
Laura is multiracial Asian American of Japanese and white Jewish descent. She was the fourth generation of her family to be born in California, and grew up in eastern Oregon and western Washington.
Are there no schools out west to accept this cute little cherub? Start with CAL Berkeley FTW!
Posted by TGFN57
Telluride
Member since Jan 2010
6975 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:49 pm to
Good for her. And frick you.
Posted by Flats
Member since Jul 2019
25231 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:50 pm to
quote:

TGFN57


You're an angry old fart, aren't you.
Posted by PollyDawg
Member since Jul 2021
1103 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:50 pm to
quote:

ordained minister


In the cult of satan.
Posted by dcbl
Good guys wear white hats.
Member since Sep 2013
30995 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:50 pm to
quote:

That tweet is almost a year old.


So?

This was a stupid comment a year ago, and would be stupid today

This woman is a piece of garbage
Posted by teke184
Zachary, LA
Member since Jan 2007
101677 posts
Posted on 9/26/22 at 12:52 pm to
… standards at Divinity schools have clearly gone downhill.

And I say this as someone who grew up a stone’s throw from Jimmy freaking Swaggart’s campus.
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