Anonymous ID: 2f55c7 Jan. 29, 2021, 6:22 p.m. No.50668   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0670

>>50658

not this time, it the same ole playbook

they have already decided what they are going to do to him

best thing in the past, to do, is not play

let the license be cancelled'

NOW

he should fight them like the evil creatures they are

I want to see him fight them at their own game

Lin Wood has this, he's got this.

Anonymous ID: 2f55c7 Jan. 29, 2021, 6:38 p.m. No.50680   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0718 >>0721

>>50670

>Don't ever fight a man willing to lose everything, you'll always regret it.

true

[they] are terrified of him, that's why they are taking this action, stupid because now he has them running scared

good for him

holding those responsible for there actions takes tenacity and guidance from a consciousness bigger than self

Godspeed Lin Wood

WRWY

Anonymous ID: 2f55c7 Jan. 29, 2021, 7:59 p.m. No.50726   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0730

>>50721

Look at what they did to John Mack PhD, a Harvard University tenured professor , Daniel Sheehan fought for him… Its different because it is one of their own, I hope he has friends in higher places.

 

Daniel P. Sheehan

 

Daniel Sheehan is a Harvard College, Harvard Law School and Harvard Divinity School–trained Constitutional Litigation and Appellate Attorney. For close to five decades, Danny’s work as a Federal Civil Rights Attorney, Author, Public Speaker and College and Law School Professor has helped expose the structural sources of injustice in our country and around the world.

Daniel has protected the fundamental and inalienable rights of our world’s citizens and has elucidated a compelling and inspiring vision for the future direction of our human family. Dan’s dedication to this vision and his work have placed him at the center of many of the most important legal cases and social movements of our generation.

 

https://danielpsheehan.com

Anonymous ID: 2f55c7 Jan. 29, 2021, 7:59 p.m. No.50727   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0730

Harvard Investigates a Professor Who Wrote of Space Aliens

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In a rather bizarre example of peer review, a committee at the Harvard Medical School has examined the work of a tenured psychiatry professor who wrote a best-selling book about people who say they were abducted by diminutive, large-eyed, gray-colored creatures from outer space and forced to have sex with them.

The committee, three participants say, is about to present the dean of the school a report sharply critical of the professor, Dr. John Mack, who wrote "Abduction: Human Encounters With Aliens," published last year and featured on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," "Larry King Live" and other talk shows.

The book is a sympathetic portrait of the experiences that Dr. Mack's subjects related to him, accepting those accounts as truth.

The review by his peers has divided the academic community. Some denounce the investigation as an assault on the academic freedom that tenure is supposed to protect, while others back it as a legitimate inquiry by the university into the scientific quality of research that Harvard supports.

The committee was established a year ago by Daniel Tosteson, dean of the Harvard Medical School, said the three participants, who all spoke on condition of anonymity, citing their pledge to keep the proceedings confidential. The members were asked to examine whether Dr. Mack was conducting his research in accordance with Harvard's standards of scholarly investigation and whether he was exploiting his subjects or exposing them to harm.

The dean, one committee member said, was concerned not only about Harvard's reputation but also that the cases Dr. Mack had described might have been a result of hallucinations for which his discussions with the subjects amounted to treatment that was not appropriate.

A strong sexual theme runs through Dr. Mack's book, published by Charles Scribner's Sons. Several of his subjects provided him accounts of being snatched out of their beds and whisked into outer space, then returned to earth after their sperm or eggs had been taken.

 

One of the 13 cases he describes is that of Ed, a technician in his mid-40's who says he was seduced by a "female being" who had "long, silvery hair with large, black eyes without pupils or irises" and who explained to him that she needed his sperm to "create special babies." She extracted the sperm by means of a tube placed over his penis, Ed tells Dr. Mack, recalling a rubbing sensation before he climaxed.

The Harvard committee is headed by Dr. Arnold Relman, an emeritus professor of the medical school and former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine, and includes two lawyers from the Harvard counsel's office. The members held more than 30 closed hearings over the last 12 months, some with Dr. Mack.

A faculty member who has seen the committee's draft report said that it vigorously defended Dr. Mack's right to pursue any subject he finds of interest but that it deplored his scholarship methods.

Among the Harvard committee's concerns, two participants said, was that Dr. Mack had not published his findings in a refereed academic journal before writing his book. And the members questioned why he had not sought a neutral psychiatrist to examine the people he wrote about, some of whom he had met through an artist in New York interested in U.F.O.'s and reports of alien abductions.

One participant said the committee had been told that Dr. Mack had tried to publish his research in a major journal but that it had not been accepted. But the committee was also told, according to this account, that Dr. Mack had invited a number of scholars to sit in on his interviews, and some later wrote letters of support to the investigating committee.

Dean Tosteson has several options once he receives the committee's report. They range from initiating procedures to cancel Dr. Mack's tenure and remove him from the faculty, to congratulating him for his bravery in following his inclinations in a line of exploration sure to invite ridicule.

Anonymous ID: 2f55c7 Jan. 29, 2021, 7:59 p.m. No.50728   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0730

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At this point, however, "this is not a disciplinary or tenure matter," a member of the medical school faculty said.

"The dean asked the ad hoc committee to gather information about what Dr. Mack is doing, how he has been proceeding as a scholar and a clinician," this faculty member said. "It is simply a matter of the committee asking, 'John, tell us what you're doing.' "

But after initially cooperating with the inquiry, Dr. Mack has retained a Boston lawyer, Roderick MacLeish Jr., who says the review is far from benign. "It's an issue of academic freedom," Mr. MacLeish said. "History has not been kind to individuals and entities that tried to suppress controversial or unorthodox viewpoints, and this is that kind of case."

Mr. MacLeish and a second lawyer retained by Dr. Mack Daniel Sheehan, a West coast public-interest attorney associated with liberal causes helped prepare a defense of more than 100 pages.

Reached by telephone at his office, Dr. Mack was not willing to discuss his dialogue with the committee, citing a pledge of strict confidentiality made by all participants.

Dr. Mack has strong financial support. In addition to the earnings of his best seller and lecture fees, for the last three years his nonprofit research organization, the Center for Psychology and Social Change, has received $250,000 a year, about two-thirds of its annual budget, fromLaurance S. Rockefeller.

And a number of scientists are intrigued by the issues raised. Some are dubious about the accounts of those who told him that they had been abducted but nonetheless believe that his work should not be dismissed out of hand.

David J. Hufford of the Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pa., who specializes in the social and cultural aspects of health, said: "I think John has given up prematurely on the classic methodology of science, but he's on to something much more complex than the people who dismiss him allow. He is treading on ground where a lot of puzzling things are going on."

https://www.nytimes.com/1995/05/04/us/harvard-investigates-a-professor-who-wrote-of-space-aliens.html