Insults, Profanity Pepper Lecture in EMU Sociology Class
Animal rights activist tells students they engage in bestiality for eating meat
WARNING: Some of the comments made by Gary Yourofsky in this story are profane and may be offensive to some.
Eastern Michigan University students who eat meat are contributing to events worse than the Holocaust, according to an activist who spoke recently in an introductory sociology class at the college.
In the speech, Gary Yourofsky compared eating meat, cheese and eggs or drinking milk to bestiality. He also linked the fate of cows and chickens to the Holocaust. The controversial animal rights activist spoke for 40 minutes and littered his speech with profanities and insults that were directed at anyone who didn't agree with his viewpoints.
"You engage in carnivorous bestiality on a daily basis,” Yourofsky told the students. “Sometimes multiple times a day. You eat things that come out of a hen's ass and shove things into a turkey's ass. … You eat breast, legs and thighs and then you pay somebody else to sexually molest a cow and squeeze their nipples for you so you can steal their milk.
"There is a Holocaust taking place right now," Yourofsky also told the class. "It is the world's largest and longest running Holocaust."
Michigan Capitol Confidential listened to the unedited audio of the comments that were recorded by a student in the public university's Sociology 101 class. Campus Reform first reported the story last week.
EMU Spokesman Geoff Larcom said Yourofsky spoke to three of part-time lecturer Luis Sfeir-Younis’ classes and that the college received two complaints from students.
"Eastern Michigan takes student complaints and concerns very seriously. Administrators spoke to Sfeir-Younis to determine the context of the speaker's appearance, the reaction of students and what happened in class," Larcom said in an email. "As at nearly any American university, EMU does not require its hundreds and hundreds of professors or instructors to gain approval for the speakers they seek to have in class. Professors follow a standard of best academic practices, where it is understood that topics of speakers who appear in class should relate to the stated class material and the course syllabus."
Larcom said Sfeir-Younis said the main point of the lecture was to promote compassion and care for animals, to end cruelty and discrimination, to reassess the relationship between humans and animals, and to offer veganism as a political action to choose if one is interested in improving the treatment of animals.
On the audio, Sfeir-Younis tells the students there would be questions on a test regarding Yourofsky's talk.
Yourofsky's single focus on trying to shame students who eat meat came from a number of angles.
"The American flag, for example, which is nothing but a piece of fabric; the Bible, which is nothing but a book comprised of ink and paper, stir up more emotions than the murder of animals," he said. "If there were a barbeque on campus today and people were cooking up steak and hamburgers, man, there'd be a party. People would actually celebrate the cow who was killed, the person who killed the cow and the chef that seasoned her dead body. But if someone poured gasoline on the flag or the Bible, struck a match and set it on fire, Lord have mercy. There'd be an angry mob ready to kill somebody. These lifeless, inanimate objects — the flag and the Bible — are more sacred than animals."
He also gave students a lesson on chicken anatomy and described the "backside of a bird."
"It's one hole but it serves many purposes," he said, before breaking into song. "(Starts to sing) It's the poop hole. It's the pee hole. It's the vaginal fluid hole (end singing).
"And it's the hole your scrambled eggs and omelets come from. Yeah. I remember back in the days I wanted my scrambled eggs with (expletive) sprinkles and urine splatter … all over it, too."
Leon Drolet, chairman of the Michigan Taxpayers Alliance, said he didn't have issues with Yourofsky speaking to a class although he disagreed with the speaker's views.
"I don't mind when students are exposed to a wide variety of unexpected perspectives," Drolet said. "The views are extreme and portrayed crassly. I don't think it is necessarily wrong for students to hear these views. If the professor is doing a good job of putting it in context, then fine."
Yourofsky spoke at the University of Michigan in 2008 as a guest of a student animal rights group called Michigan Animal Respect Society, U-M Spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said.
Yourofsky has given more than 2,300 lectures across the United States at 178 schools, according to Animals Deserve Absolute Protection Today, the organization Yourofsky founded in 1996.
Yourofsky has been arrested 13 times and his website says he has been banned from Canada and the United Kingdom.
This is the second time this semester that students have been targeted during lectures or speeches in class. Professor William Penn went on an anti-Republican rant and threatened students in his creative writing class at Michigan State University.
Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.
Exemptions, Navigators and New Members
Big Labor's payback from Obamacare
(Editor’s note: This commentary was originally published by The American Spectator on Nov. 8, 2013.)
In a "good enough for thee but not for me" display of pure hutzpah, the AFL-CIO is demanding ever increasing exemptions from Obamacare, a law they championed and helped pass.
Kaiser Health News reported Nov. 6 that the Obama administration may finally be granting one of the demands of its union benefactors. According to Kaiser, "buried in rules issued last week is the disclosure that the administration will propose exempting 'certain self-insured, self-administered plans' from the law's temporary reinsurance fee in 2015 and 2016."
What are these "self-insured, self-administered plans?" Many are union health care plans, of course.
The reinsurance program was created as a way to smooth the transition of insurance companies required to insure everyone, including the very sick. If an insurance plan got an influx of too many sick people, its costs would go up. If a company took on too many sick (expensive) vs. healthy (cheaper) people without assistance it could possibly go out of business.
The reinsurance plan is a $10 billion system designed to redistribute money from health plans with enough healthy beneficiaries to plans that will struggle due to Obamacare's mandates. Health plans are charged $63 per enrollee every year to fund the program.
In September the AFL-CIO passed a resolution that among other things demanded that union health care plans be exempt from reinsurance fees. The resolution noted that "the ACA Excise Tax, Reinsurance Fee and other fees will drive the costs of collectively bargained, union administered plans, and other plans that cover unionized workers, to unsupportable levels, resulting in pressure to shift costs to workers, cut wages, and to agree to unacceptable high deductible plans."
Despite calling Obamacare "highly disruptive," however, the resolution still noted the AFL-CIO's support for the health care law.
In other words, the AFL-CIO loves the law as long as everyone else has to do the heavy lifting and they are exempt from the costs. But the AFL-CIO exemption is just the tip of the iceberg of why unions are continuing to support Obamacare.
Some unions could see large increases in membership as more health care jobs come under the government rubric, possibly making unionizing them easier.
In 2012, former Department of Labor official Don Loos, now a senior adviser to the president at the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, was quoted in the bestselling book, "Shadow Bosses," that "Obamacare is an SEIU and AFSCME membership 'net,' … designed to eventually capture 21 million forced-dues paying government workers."
Labor does not need to wait for the full rollout of Obamacare to start seeing its investment pay off. As the Obama administration attempts to sell the health care law to an increasingly skeptical public, both unions and the union front organizations called worker centers stand to gain large sums of federal money by acting as "navigators."
Officially navigators are: "An individual or organization that's trained and able to help consumers, small businesses, and their employees as they look for health coverage options through the Marketplace, including completing eligibility and enrollment forms. These individuals and organizations are required to be unbiased."
However some navigators are acting more as salesmen to lobby the public to support the new health care law.
SEIU President Mary Kay Henry told the Reuters Summit in October: "We're running phone banks, much as we do in a political election, driving people to community centers. We're doing sort of group orientation because it's the way around the website."
Unions are not the only ones in the labor movement to get in on the $67 million action allocated to the program. Navigators can earn $58 per new enrollee and $25 per renewal in states like California.
On Nov. 1, the House Committee on Education and Workforce announced it would investigate the role worker centers are playing in this scheme.
Committee Chairman Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., and Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., chairman of the House Subcommittee on Help, Employment, Labor, and Pensions, wrote to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius pointing to news articles identifying, "at least two worker centers, the Restaurant Opportunities Center (ROC) and the Retail Action Project (RAP), have received PPACA [Obamacare] grants to serve as navigators."
Reps. Kline and Roe voiced concerns over privacy and if the navigators would use the sensitive information they receive for union organizing campaigns. "Right now navigators with strong ties to labor unions are collecting sensitive information with questionable safeguards. Congress has a responsibility to ensure individuals' privacy is protected and contact with an Obamacare navigator doesn't lead to a phone call from union organizers," they said in a press release.
On Nov. 6 in response to a question from Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, at a Senate hearing on Obamacare, Sebelius admitted there is no federal requirement that navigators undergo a criminal background check and that a convicted felon could become a navigator and receive sensitive personal information. After saying there could be state law protections, Sebelius added, "We have contracts with the organizations and they have taken the responsibility to screen their individual navigators and make sure they are sufficiently trained for the job."
As union get their exemptions, pine for new members, and receive grants from HHS, they act as foot soldiers of the Obamacare PR machine while their current members are hurting.
Many rank-and-file union members are seeing their hours cut to below 30 a week as employers try to avoid the employer mandate.
Some union leaders are voicing concerns. Teamsters President James P. Hoffa, UFCW President Joseph Hansen, and UNITE-HERE President D. Taylor in July wrote to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., stating: "The law as it stands will hurt millions of Americans including the members of our respective unions."
Asking for exemptions and writing letters does not change the health care law that is increasingly being seen as a train wreck. In the end union leaders have more to gain from the law than they have to loose. Their rank-and-file members are different and will be hurting like the many other Americans because of Obamacare.
If union leaders were truly concerned about their members and wanted to change the law, they would support its repeal instead of issuing toothless resolutions and asking for special carve outs.
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F. Vincent Vernuccio is labor policy director at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute headquartered in Midland, Mich.
Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.
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