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John Holbo - Editor
Scott Eric Kaufman - Editor
Aaron Bady
Adam Roberts
Amardeep Singh
Andrew Seal
Bill Benzon
Daniel Green
Jonathan Goodwin
Joseph Kugelmass
Lawrence LaRiviere White
Marc Bousquet
Matt Greenfield
Miriam Burstein
Ray Davis
Rohan Maitzen
Sean McCann
Guest Authors

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Miriam Jones

Past Valve Book Events

cover of the book Theory's Empire

Event Archive

cover of the book The Literary Wittgenstein

Event Archive

cover of the book Graphs, Maps, Trees

Event Archive

cover of the book How Novels Think

Event Archive

cover of the book The Trouble With Diversity

Event Archive

cover of the book What's Liberal About the Liberal Arts?

Event Archive

cover of the book The Novel of Purpose

Event Archive

The Valve - Closed For Renovation

Happy Trails to You

What’s an Encyclopedia These Days?

Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations

Intimate Enemies: What’s Opera, Doc?

Alphonso Lingis talks of various things, cameras and photos among them

Feynmann, John von Neumann, and Mental Models

Support Michael Sporn’s Film about Edgar Allen Poe

Philosophy, Ontics or Toothpaste for the Mind

Nazi Rules for Regulating Funk ‘n Freedom

The Early History of Modern Computing: A Brief Chronology

Computing Encounters Being, an Addendum

On the Origin of Objects (towards a philosophy of computation)

Symposium on Graeber’s Debt

The Nightmare of Digital Film Preservation

Richard Petti on Occupy Wall Street: America HAS a Ruling Class

Bill Benzon on Whatwhatwhatwhatwhatwhatwhat?

Nick J. on The Valve - Closed For Renovation

Bill Benzon on Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations

Norma on Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations

Bill Benzon on What’s an Object, Metaphysically Speaking?

john balwit on What’s an Object, Metaphysically Speaking?

William Ray on That Shakespeare Thing

Bill Benzon on That Shakespeare Thing

William Ray on That Shakespeare Thing

JoseAngel on That Shakespeare Thing

Bill Benzon on Objects and Graeber's Debt

Bill Benzon on A Dirty Dozen Sneaking up on the Apocalypse

JoseAngel on A Dirty Dozen Sneaking up on the Apocalypse

JoseAngel on Objects and Graeber's Debt

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

McGill Joins the Bush League

Posted by Marc Bousquet on 04/24/08 at 02:00 PM

crossposted from howtheuniversityworks.com


McGill grad employees have been picketing since April 8

This is an era of executive license, exemplified by the Bush mob’s trampling on labor rights, habeas corpus, international law and even the remnant trappings of democracy in the U.S. and in its various client outposts across the globe.

Now the McGill administration seems determined to show its continuing alienation from the Quebec mainstream by hitching up its jeans and defying provincial labor law in a great imitation of George W. Bush’s style of executive bullying.

According to multiple sources, including an official Quebec Labor Department report, and the independent reporting of the Montreal Gazette, McGill administrators have illegally pressured faculty, including vulnerable untenured juniors, to do the work of striking grad employees as scabs. 

Additionally, they have fired striking unionized grad employees from various additional-income positions that are not covered by the union contract--including positions as exam graders and summer session instructors.  A second story on McGill’s emulation of the Bush mob in the Montreal Gazette quotes a grad employee calling these moves “retaliation,” and then rips into the faculty association, which has bleated about the plight of junior faculty forced into scabbing--asking for them to be taken off the tenure clock until they’re done helping the administration to break the spirit of the grad employees:

The McGill Association of University Teachers says it has been “very insistent that everything possible be done to help faculty members who are seriously overburdened by the consequences of the strike.” It has proposed “stopping the tenure clock” for junior faculty unable to complete projects, cancelling committee work and postponing deadlines for annual reports.

But why hasn’t MAUT risen up with a banshee’s wail, if not to decry what smacks of vindictive treatment of striking TAs who wear multiple hats, then at least to complain bitterly about the extra work that has been dumped on them?

Keep up with the story on AGSEM’s shame campaign on Facebook. And I’ll have updates and individual stories in the coming weeks.

Good show, McGill. It’s nice to know that my fellow Americans residing in gated communities have a place to call home when visiting Canada.  Maybe you can give Dick Cheney a visiting professorship in labor relations as well.


Comments

”...the Bush mob’s trampling on labor rights, habeas corpus, international law and even the remnant trappings of democracy in the U.S. and in its various client outposts across the globe.”

O regroup you tiresome one.

Get a new song and learn how to sing.

By on 04/24/08 at 07:14 PM | Permanent link to this comment

Right-o, brave pseudonymous neo-con dolt. Perhaps in four-part harmony with you, Bush and Cheney?  While Rome burns?

Not much of a singer, friend. But I am a bit of a truth-teller. I’m happy to swap some truths with you when you’re done hiding behind your mommy.

By Marc Bousquet on 04/24/08 at 10:35 PM | Permanent link to this comment

Ah, I’m informed by a friend that you are not pseudonymous but in fact the sadly untalented poet of my new home in the Santa Cruz foothills, Gerard Van Der Leun, longtime editor of the stroke mag Penthouse, and neocon blogger behind American Digest and Pajamas Media, which features such credible intellectuals as Roger Kimball--whose pathetic bitterness regarding the smart kids was apparent even to the undergrads chuckling at his inept teaching at the Yale c. 1984 of my recollection. 

Thanks for the singing lesson, Gerry. Love your work interviewing the Cheneys. Whatever will you do with yourself with the long night of reaction drawing to a close?

By Marc Bousquet on 04/25/08 at 07:06 PM | Permanent link to this comment

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