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Columbia University Leaders Grilled Over Antisemitism
Boeing whistleblower says he was told to "shut up"; 3 hour Senate impeachment trial
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š CONGRESS LOOKS AT CAMPUS ANTISEMITISM CONCERNS

Protests on Columbia University as its president testifies before Congress.
Yesterday, it was Columbia University President Minouche Shafikās turn to take questions from Congress about the schoolās response to antisemitism on campus. Sheās faced significant criticism for both not doing enough to protect Jewish students and combat Islamophobia since the Hamas terror attack on October 7th.
Notably, two professors at the college have openly praised multiple terror groups, including Hamas for the October 7th attack.
One professor, Mohamed Abdou, said he supports Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah and Hamas. He was hired AFTER October 7th. Shafik says he has been terminated once he finishes grading papers this semester.
Thereās also a professor, Joseph Massad, who described the massacre of Israelis on October 7th as āawesome.ā He happens to have tenure, and officials wouldnāt say what his exact status at the school currently is. Shafik says he has been āspoken to.ā
She added: āOn my watch, for faculty who make remarks that cross the line in terms of antisemitism, there will be consequences.ā
SO HOWāD THE HEARING GO?
Columbiaās president had over five months to prep for the question the presidents of MIT, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania couldnāt seem to get right back in December: Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate the code of conduct on campus?
The presidents at Harvard and Penn said it would depend on the ācontext.ā Both have since resigned, although Harvardās Claudine Gay stepped down because of plagiarism accusations.
Shafikās answer was much more direct: Yes, it violates campus policy.
Claire Shipman, the school's Board of Trustee co-chair, testified, āI donāt like that any student on our campus does not feel safe. But I think what we see most routinely now is political speech crossing the line into antisemitism.ā
Shafik and others claimed that the schoolās existing policies, systems and enforcement mechanisms were ādesigned for a very different worldā and ānot up to the scale of this challenge.ā
ON THE GROUND
During the hearing, hundreds of students occupied part of Columbiaās campus calling for the university to divest from Israel, violating University policies. The school says there are designated areas for protests and instituted a new policy toward unsanctioned demonstrations.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, the University of Southern California is under fire after it canceled the valedictorianās speech at next monthās commencement, citing security concerns.
Shortly after USC announced Asna Tabassum, a Muslim student who majored in biomedical engineering and minored in resistance to genocide, was selected for the honor, there were protests calling on the school to reconsider. At issue, she linked to a website on her social media page calling for the abolishment of Israel.
However, the University has not addressed her political views, instead saying they are concerned about security for the more than 65,000 expected attendees at commencement next month. Andrew Guzman, USCās provost, said, āThe intensity of feelings, fueled by both social media and conflict in the Middle East, has grown to include many voices outside of USC and has escalated to the point of creating substantial risks relating to security and disruption at commencement.ā
Tabassum says she was not informed of any specific threats and āby canceling my speech, USC is only caving to fear and rewarding hatred.ā In a CNN interview, she also stood by her political views as she was asked three times about calling for an end to Israelās existence.
There are now several petitions circulating to reinstate her as a speaker.
āļø BOEING WHISTLEBLOWER SAYS PLANE COULD FALL APART MID FLIGHT

via The Hill
Another rough day for Boeing. One of its engineers, Sam Salehpour, says the 787 aircraft is unsafe to fly, and unless safety concerns are fixed he warns that they could ādrop to the groundā mid-flight.
The whistleblower says he spoke with his manager about misalignment issues for three years, and faced threats: āI was ignored. I was told not to create delays. I was told, frankly, to shut up.ā He says Boeing culture dissuades employees from raising issues.
THE ALLEGATIONS
Boeing used āunmeasured and unlimitedā amounts of force to correct misalignment between sections of jets, given that parts come from different manufacturers. Salehpour says he "literally saw people jumping on pieces of the airplane to get them to align."
Boeingās standards allow misalignment of 5/1000th of an inch (width of a human hair), and Salehpour says planes were produced with larger gaps than that.
āBoeing adopted these shortcuts in its production processes based on faulty engineering and faulty evaluation of available data, which has allowed potentially defective parts and defective installations in 787 fleets," he told the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
Ed Pierson, a former Boeing manager and the executive director of the Foundation for Aviation Safety, accused the company of a ācriminal cover-upā in the National Transportation Safety Board investigation after a door plug blew out of a Boeing 737 Max flight by Alaska Airlines in January.
OVER TO BOEING
Lawmakers are saying they want Boeing to succeed, but that these concerns are alarming. The company defended its safety record, claims it has a culture where employees can speak out, and is cooperating with government investigators. Hereās their statement:
Information on 787 quality: boeing.com/787QualityInfo
ā Boeing Airplanes (@BoeingAirplanes)
8:07 PM ⢠Apr 17, 2024
š³ļø SENATE KILLS MAYORKAS IMPEACHMENT ARTICLES
After a less than three hour trial, Senate Democrats voted to kill the two impeachment charges against Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas yesterday.
Heās the second Cabinet secretary in US history to be impeached. In February, the House charged him with āwillful and systemic refusal to comply with the lawā and a ābreach of public trustā over his handling of an influx of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Senators voted 51-48 that the first impeachment article was unconstitutional, with Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) voting present. Then, senators voted 51-49 dismissing the second article.
THE VOTE
The 51 Democrats said the charges are unconstitutional, and are policy disagreements that donāt meet the threshold for impeachment. The votes came before any evidence was presented. Republicans tried to stop or delay the vote, but failed.
The House sent the articles on Tuesday, and senators were sworn in as jurors Wednesday afternoon.
The Senate holds impeachment trials under the Constitution, and determines if impeached officials should be removed from office.
Some Senate Republicans who expressed skepticism about the charges still felt that the body should have held the full trial.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY): āWeāve set a very unfortunate precedent here which means that the Senate can ignore, in effect, the Houseās impeachment.ā
āļø Mo News Reality Check: Surprising Senate rule during impeachment proceedings⦠only milk, water, and candy are allowed in the chamber. Coffee and snacks are prohibited. No phones either.
Rules limiting food and most drinks first started when Vice President Thomas Jefferson presided over the chamber. The rule was also in effect during Trump's impeachment hearings in 2020.
Sen. Markwayne Mullinās (R-OK) desk was covered in candy, while Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) handed some out to colleagues.
ā³ SPEED READ
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š ON THIS DAY: APRIL 18
1775: Paul Revere began his famous ride from Charlestown to Lexington, Massachusetts, warning colonists that British troops were coming.
1938: Superman made his debut on the first issue of Action Comics.
1984: Michael Jackson underwent 80 minutes of laser surgery to repair his scalp, burned in the filming of a Pepsi-Cola commercial earlier that year.
2008: āForgetting Sarah Marshallā premiered in theaters.
Giving us one of our favorite movie quotes: āThe weather outside is weather.ā
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