Anonymous ID: e80bb2 Sept. 3, 2020, 4:47 p.m. No.10519955   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Court Win for Professor Sued by Muslim Student, Punished by College Over Terrorism Course

 

A federal court has ruled in favor of a professor thrown under the bus by his public college after a Muslim student claimed the Islamic terrorism portion of a world politics class violated his Constitutional rights.

The course is offered at Scottsdale Community College (SCC) in Arizona, which is part of the Maricopa County Community College District. It is taught by Nicholas Damask, a veteran professor who organizes the course into six modules that cover world politics.

 

One is dedicated to defining and analyzing Islamic terrorism. Students are required to read excerpts from a book called “Future Jihad” written by a Lebanese-born Middle East expert who has worked with the U.S. departments of Justice, Defense and State.

 

https://www.judicialwatch.org/corruption-chronicles/court-win-for-professor-sued-by-muslim-student-punished-by-college-over-terrorism-course

Anonymous ID: e80bb2 Sept. 3, 2020, 5:03 p.m. No.10520145   🗄️.is 🔗kun

AG Curtis Hill continues efforts to keep oil flowing through the Dakota Access Pipeline

 

Attorney General Curtis Hill this week asked a U.S. appellate court to reverse a lower court’s order that would shut down operation of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

In response to concerns over the lack of an environmental impact study, a U.S. district court earlier this year vacated an easement that allows continued operation of the pipeline.

Shutting down the pipeline, however, would create public safety hazards, threaten the environment and deliver an economic blow to grain farmers in the Midwest, Attorney General Hill said.

“The courts should allow the pipeline to continue transporting oil while the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers prepares an environmental impact study,” Attorney General Hill said. “The order by the U.S. district court largely ignores the damage that a shutdown would cause to our economy, environment, food supply and personal safety.”

Working jointly with the State of Montana, Attorney General Hill filed an amicus brief with the appellate court on Wednesday. Nine other states also joined the brief.

The negative consequences of shutting down the pipeline far outweigh any concerns related to a procedural delay in an environmental impact study, Attorney General Hill said.

“Should the pipeline cease transporting crude oil, we all stand to suffer,” said Attorney General Hill, who also has filed two previous briefs regarding this matter.

Closing the pipeline, which for three years has carried roughly 570,000 barrels of crude oil per day from western North Dakota to southern Illinois, would force oil shipments to go by rail instead. Oil would then compete for train space with the agricultural sector, disrupting the economics of grain distribution and, in turn, threatening the food supply during a global pandemic that is already hampering food security worldwide.

“The Dakota Access Pipeline has already been constructed, the oil is flowing, and the American economy has come to rely on its benefits as an alternative to rail or truck transport,” the brief states. “The disruption that will result from vacating the easement is not merely ‘economic.’ It will affect the food security of all who rely on Midwestern grain producers to ship affordable food through rail transport.”

Transporting oil by pipeline is also safer than transporting oil by rail. Studies by the U.S. Department of Transportation show that the fatality and injury rates of pipeline transportation are, on average, significantly lower than those of rail transportation.