Duke Uni – a Cult, Dangerous to Men?

2009-09-02
By

Back in 1957 a young Leon Festinger published the results of his studies and brought us the phrase, ‘Cognitive Dissonance’.  His study focused on Cults, such as those strange folk who await the arrival of Aliens, with high hopes. What happens to their beliefs, he asked, when the Great Space-ship DOESN’T land on One Tree Hill as signposted – Aliens, this way’ –  or their nearest accessible skyscraper alternative landing strip and carry them off to ‘real’ life, and wipe out the rest of unbelieving  humanity?

What he found was that they believe even more deeply and attribute the delay to themselves and their own lack of Faith.  Or in some cases an overabundance of Faith which has reprieved all of humanity for a while so that they too have a chance of becomingbelievers.

They paint new and bigger signs.

The realization that they were wrong – or stupid - never enters their tiny but highly focused minds. Their answer was simply to redouble their belief efforts. ‘If at first you don’t get elevated to a higher form of existence via warp-drive, try, try again’.

And paint better signs.

Poor, deranged souls, you might say, if you are a compassionate chap. But what Leon didn’t imagine is that they would move en masse to Duke University.

Lawyer Pierce Harlan takes up the story where we left off after the Three Duke boys were saved at the last moment from being hauled off to crucifixion by lunatics lead by pointy-head Chrystal Magnum and her Professorial hordes.

Incredible: Duke University has just increased the likelihood of false rape claims

By False Rape Society | Tue, Sep 01 2009, 04:23 PM

Yep, you read that headline right. Duke University, apparently, has learned nothing.

Prof. KC Johnson’s landmark blog, Durham in Wonderland, chronicles how Duke has just instituted a policy for handling rape claims that is not only manifestly unfair to the accused, but actually increases the likelihood of false rape claims – excerpt from his blog post is found beneath this comment.

In light of Duke’s new policy, Clarice Feldman urges,  ”Mothers Don’t Let Your Sons Grow Up To Be Blue Devils.”

She writes: “At this point when even the opprobrium it received and the reportedly large sums of money the university was forced to pay out to settle claims against it for its conduct in the lynching of its own students isn’t enough to get the university to weigh fair play [above] political correctness, it’s time for male students to abandon the institution and alumni to withhold their contributions. Repeated violations of male students’ right to due process merits such responses.”

The fact is, and I know this from my (Pierce’s) personal experience practicing law, American universities have become inhospitable to male students.

Putting aside Women’s Studies courses, and Women’s Centers, if your son is accused of sexual misconduct — no matter how false the charge — he will be put through the terror of what attorney Barbara Johnson calls a “Kangaroo Court.”

Duke, of all places, should know better. When will the Duke alumni wake up and realize the Lacrosse case wasn’t an aberration? The Lacrosse case was a manifestation of how Duke does business, and it’s not male-friendly.

Here are excerpts from Prof. Johnson’s blog post:

Simply Extraordinary

In addition to sexual assault, Duke defines sexual misconduct as “as any physical act of a sexual nature perpetrated against an individual without consent or when an individual is unable to freely give consent,” including “sexual exploitation, defined as taking nonconsensual, unjust sexual advantage of another for one’s benefit or the benefit of another party . . .

The university’s definition of sexual misconduct mandates that each participant obtains and gives consent in each instance of sexual activity. Consent is an affirmative decision to engage in mutually acceptable sexual activity given by clear actions or words . . . consent to one form of sexual activity does not imply consent to other forms of sexual activity . . . Conduct will be considered ‘without consent’ if no clear consent, verbal or nonverbal, is given.”

Duke’s policy does not explain what constitutes “nonverbal” consent, nor does it guide students who participate in sexual activity how they need to record their consent (verbal or nonverbal) to defend themselves against future false charges.

As reflected in [Women's Center Director, Ada] Gregory’s comments, the policy is concerned with the possibility of sexual misconduct through coercion. A “fundamental principle” of the sexual misconduct policy is the following: “Real or perceived power differentials between individuals may create an unintentional atmosphere of coercion.” [emphases added]

How, precisely, should a Duke student be held liable for “perceived” power differentials creating an “unintentional” atmosphere of coercion?

Duke’s policy does not explain.

The accused student does not have a right to an attorney. Instead, he can select a “member of the university community” to serve as an advisor. That advisor can attend the disciplinary hearing, but cannot ask any questions, nor even speak (except to the accused student).

The accused student does not have a right to confront his accuser. Instead, he has only the right to ask questions “directed through the hearing panel,” with the panel retaining sole discretion as to whether or not to present the witness with the question. And, of course, such a cumbersome process vitiates any right of effective cross-examination.
. . . .
The accuser in a sexual misconduct case, moreover, receives three rights denied to the accused student. Each of these special rights tilts the process in the accuser’s favor.

First, Duke guidelines state that the sexual misconduct accuser “will be treated with respect and sensitivity, before, during, and after the disciplinary process.” The accused student, on the other hand, only must “be treated with respect throughout the process.”

How is a promise to treat the accuser but not the accused with “sensitivity” consistent with the “presumption of innocence” for the accused?

Duke doesn’t say.

Second, Duke guidelines state that sexual misconduct “complainants will be given the opportunity to make opening and closing statements to a hearing panel.”

The accused student, on the other hand, is promised no such opportunity.

How is giving a right to make opening and closing statements only to the accuser consistent with the “presumption of innocence” for the accused?

Duke doesn’t say.

Third, Duke guidelines state that sexual misconduct “complainants have the right to receive—within the parameters of FERPA—a copy of the written information given to a hearing panel.”

The accused student, on the other hand, is promised no such right.

This is particularly ominous given Duke’s new ability to hire an outside investigator to look into sexual misconduct allegations. Yet while the accused student has no right to receive any of the “written information” that the investigator produces (what in a criminal case would essentially be the discovery file), his accuser can get all of the documents, except for those covered by FERPA.

How is giving a right to receive written material only to the accuser consistent with the “presumption of innocence” for the accused?

Duke doesn’t say.
. . . .
In her interview with the Chronicle, [Ada] Gregory [Director of Duke's Women's Center] conceded that even Duke administrators—who, as we all have come to know, are not terribly sensitive to the possibilities of fraudulent rape claims—expressed fears that the new policy (coupled, of course, with a judicial process whose procedures overwhelmingly favor the accuser) would result in an increased filing of false claims of sexual misconduct.

Gregory had no such concerns: “We’re creating an environment that says, ‘This is not tolerated in our community,’ and when you create that environment, victims are more likely to come forward and seek help.” How creating an environment that says sexual assault isn’t tolerated (as if any elite university currently HAS a campus environment that “tolerates” sexual assault) guards against the filing of false sexual assault claims Gregory didn’t say.

Instead, Gregory sees the new Duke policy as an example for other universities to follow.

That’s even though the one researcher she cited, David Lisak, has argued against the very type of procedure Duke has now set up.

Last year, he wrote, “The less benign reality of sexual violence in the university setting also carries implications for university judicial processes. A judicial board would hardly seem the appropriate venue to deal with a sexual predator. Further, cases of non-stranger rape are extremely difficult to properly investigate and prosecute – they are in fact far more complex than the majority of stranger rapes. A proper investigation requires skilled and specially-trained investigators working closely with specially-trained prosecutors.”

In short, according to Lisak, Duke’s new “ad hoc” investigatory policy is exactly what universities should not be doing.
———————–
You might think that a university that witnessed the highest-profile rape hoax in modern American history would go out of its way to protect its students from future such hoaxes. At the very least, you might think that such a university wouldn’t design a procedure—motivated by many of the same politically correct impulses that fueled the rush to judgment in 2006—that even its own administrators worried could produce more false sexual misconduct claims.

Duke, instead, has gone in the opposite direction, adopting a policy that Women’s Center Director Gregory concedes is far more extreme than that at most universities in the country. Simply extraordinary.

…………………..

Not to Leon.

680 views

  • L. Steven Beene II

    They’re not going to change anything because to do so questions an ideology that is written as holy writ in every academic PC feminist heart: ”

    Except for in infintessimally small percentage of cases women NEVER lie about rape – and even when it does it’s more important to understand her as to why she did it.”

    Were they to, I dunno, REASON that seeing an example of knee jerk “justice” means a need to address the injustice means finding out how to prevent this.

    When I was falsely accused of rape, in the mid-90′s – in college, those same rules were in place for me. Here are the effects:

    1) “First, Duke guidelines state that the sexual misconduct accuser “will be treated with respect and sensitivity, before, during, and after the disciplinary process.”

    I, being rather traumatized, went to the mental health unit on campus to get some counseling for my ordeal. They told me that since they MIGHT treat the accuser that it would be a “conflict of interest”

    2) The questions I wanted to ask my accuser – I had to listen to her voice on a tape. She and the board spoke for 2-3 hours. She was allowed to have 2 friends in with her – I brought 1 friend to speak on my behalf and he was denied even the ability to speak. I had ONLY 2-3 hours to listen to the tape (you have to stop a tape, write down what was said, discuss the questions you want to ask etc) or be penalized.

    Then, when they asked her my questions they did so in a sympathetic way. Her “answers” were 5-10 minute monologues. Asked a direct yes/no questions, she’d huff and say “no” and then launch into this accusing monologue.

    **I** was asked hard questions (totally fair), had my story tested (totally fair), was made to go back over it for inconsistantcies (totally fair) etc. She was asked soft-ball open ended questions, contradicted herself on several MAJOR items, her friends, in the room, would correct her, and she’d move on – the hearing board never batted an eye.

    3) “The accused student does not have a right to an attorney. Instead, he can select a “member of the university community” to serve as an advisor. That advisor can attend the disciplinary hearing, but cannot ask any questions, nor even speak (except to the accused student).

    I wasn’t even allowed to have my attorney, who I brought, to ask my accuser questions.

    I asked the police officers who served me with the R.O. to show up so I could question them about what I said the night they questioned me. None showed.

    Oh, wait, one did show up. I found out later that she sat there and HELD MY ACCUSERS HAND THE ENTIRE TIME SHE TESTIFIED. Literally held her hand. She held her hand while SHE testified.

    Wrap your noodle around that for a few minutes. The university told me they “could not compel the officers to show up to be questioned by me”. Anyone buy that?

    —————–

    Point being, this was the mid-90′s. It was worse at BRIDGEWATER STATE COLLEGE (now University) in Massachusetts where I went than it is a Duke until now.

    Hope what I have added helps.

    Steven

  • Mashed

    L Steven Beene: I’m almost afraid to ask, but how did that situation work out? I have to figure it doesn’t end well, it’s not designed to end well. Not for the wrongfully accused at any rate.

  • L. Steven Beene II

    Yea, you guessed it.

    The way the system was designed I never had a chance.

    The “victim” was only questioned in the most soft-ball, open-ended, and supportive way.

    I had no problem with them questioning me in a pointed and trying to trip me up. I really don’t. It’s how you get the facts from the fiction, and even separating perceptions from know facts.

    I just have this silly idea that the accuser should be subjected to the same scrutiny.

    Since you asked, let me tell you a few tid bits:

    1) My story was so consistant it was used against me. Yea, you read that right. From the night the campus police showed up at my door, and I waived my rights (chastise me later – it’s the past) I told the same story. I told the same story to the attorney I hired. I told the same story to the hearing board. They had the police notes there and kept testing me.

    Since my story was so darn consistant, they HAD to find out how I could have fabricated it. I mean, (sarcasm) it HAD to be a lie, so how did I do it.

    The fact the girl I was dating was a front desk clerk at the dorm she lived in was a factor. See, she was at the front desk, earning money. Each night, almost every night, many times for hours a campus police officer was hanging out at the front desk. This being college it was to keep the peace, keep out non-residents, spot intoxicated students, etc.

    One day, a few weeks after I broke up with her (the reason I was falsely accused apparently) I walked from the dining facility in the dorm, saw my former paramour and an officer at the desk, and my rapist mind realized “holy sh*t, she must be telling. I must devise a story.”

    Which strikes me as weird. Being the smart calculating predatory I was, I choose a girl who regularly hung out with police. And further, in the weeks that followed I somehow identified the ONE night she must have been telling the police officer.

    When the hearing board used this logic to find that my story was “so consistant it had to be fabricated” (not an exact quote, but pretty close) they decided they had found out how I had time to plan and memorize a story that could be verified (dates we had, moods we were in, times we were seen together dating) by a dozen other people.

    Yes, my story was “too consistant to be true”. And her story, that changed from the first report, to the one she told her friends, to the one she told the rape advocate, and the one she told the hearing board ? It was different every time. But, that was surely and soley due to her “truama” and not due to the idea she was LYING.

    Fun huh?

    And, the best part was that 2 of the hearing board members were Resident Directors. Why is that relevant? Well the campus had a program called “adopt a cop” wherein the same police officer would hang out in the same dorm lobby each night to get to know the goings on of the dorm.

    They, the ones judging me, knew that. But, when guessing as to how I had concocted such an elaborate and consistant story, they guessed that one night, I saw my former GF talking to a cop, and decided to make one up. None of them ever mentioned the “adopt a cop program”

    The police chief told me. He had known me on campus and saw I was getting railroaded and confided this to me.

    2) After this was done to me – the one shining beacon of goodness I got was from a female ADA who gave ME legal advice.

    I called her, after being found, of course, “responsible” for this crime. I offered to come in, to bring my accuser’s (HOLLY LAFAVE of Worcester Massachusetts) typed affidavit, all materials from the hearing board, including the tapes, and present myself to be questioned by her detectives at a time and place of her choosing, for as long as she wanted, without an attorney.

    She was stunned. I had just offered up myself on a silver platter. I told her that I wanted to be arrested. That, no, no crime had been reported to the police, but that I was accused of rape, by a former GF ini college. I asked her to have me taken and questioned by her detectives for as long as she wanted, in any way she wanted, and that I would waive counsel.

    She asked me to submit my “victim’s” statement, the tapes, and my own statement to police. I did so that afternoon.

    She told me to give her a couple of days. I did. She and I talked a few days later and she told me that, in her professional opinion, no rape occured, that my accuser’s statement was obviously, and ham-handedly coached (lucky me on that account) by some novice but zealous feminist advocate from the college.

    She then offered ME legal advice and told me that no charges would be filed on me from her office. And, further, should the victim try to do so, in another county, she’d call on my behalf and recommend against charges.

    For an ADA, that’s a pretty big statement. Her name was/in Karen Wells. A veteren sex prosecutor. I hope if she ever Googles her name she sees this.

    And, with all sagas, this is only a short part, some small details of what happened to me.

    From there I could tell you how I spent few weeks at a homeless shelter because, since the college was my home (I was not rich and did not have a separate residence) I had no where to go.

    I lived there, among the chronic addicts to crack, the lifelong alcoholics who loved their welfare, and the mentally ill (those guys I feel for – not the previously two).

    Sure, I picked up my life. It took years. I’ll just finished paying back my college loans LAST year – as they sure rack up interest, but I did not have a college degree with which to get a proper job to pay them off.

    I was going to be the first person in my family to have a college degree.

    My accuser went on to graduate, and probably to this day, due to affirmation from the school feminists, and her complete lack of humanity probably still thinks of herself as a “victim” and blames me for all her failures in life.

    And, yes, I was damn lucky in how it turned out. I could be a parolee on the sex offender registry.

    Such is the college system of today.

    Steven

  • Mashed

    Words fail me man. This sort of thing is exactly why I became interested in mens rights. Reminds me of the time a colleague realized I was active in the mens rights community and stated that he found it disturbing that anyone could regard men as having anything to be “activist” about. Yeah. No injustice here. No sirrreeee!

    When I hear of things such as you describe I have to wonder if feminists even regard the victims of such blatant injustice as having even the most basic of human rights. If they even regard men as human for that matter.

  • Amfortas

    “SAY not the struggle naught availeth,
    The labour and the wounds are vain,
    The enemy faints not, nor faileth,
    And as things have been they remain. ”

    Only now they have bigger signs.

  • Chavez

    ” I offered to come in, to bring my accuser’s (HOLLY LAFAVE of Worcester Massachusetts) typed affidavit, all materials from the hearing board, including the tapes, and present myself to be questioned by her detectives at a time and place of her choosing, for as long as she wanted, without an attorney.”

    I can’t help noting that when the attorneys for the accused in the Duke case offered to present everything they had to Nifong, Nifong refused to look at it. (So did the University President, Brodhead, and the NAACP attorney, McSurely). IOW, they weren’t looking for the truth, they didn’t want to find out that the accused couldn’t have committed the crime, they just wanted to get on with the prosecution.

  • L. Steven Beene II

    I heard, and I can’t remember who said it but it’s a truism:

    “If you go looking for guilt in a situation, you’ll likely find it, but if you go looking for truth, the task is far harder and the outcome far more uncertain.”

    They already had their verdict, and barring a video tape from God Himself, I was to be found guilty – my attorney, who did this kind of case all the time (civil, college, criminal). He said that sometmes people are just dead to rights guilty, and he’s just there to gaurd their rights. But in my case it was frustrating for him, because he could see how I was probably innocent (in his view), but had no chance from the word go.

    Don’t feel bad for me – let’s use our energy to expose this happening to others. That’ll be a better use of our time.

    Isaiah 6:8

    Steven

  • http://toysoldier.wordpress.com Toy Soldier

    It would appear that Duke University is hankering for a lawsuit. That is really all the new approach suggests. If disciplinary action can be taken against a male student without that student being allowed to mount any defense, the only real recourse that student will have is to file a legal complaint. What is really curious about this policy is that it is broader than any law in that state regarding sex offenses. If a female student filed a complaint with the school and then attempted to use that as proof an assault happened, Duke is opening itself up to a serious legal problem.

    Chances are, however, that the reason this policy was suggested is because of the false Duke case. There have probably been a series of complaints from feminists and other groups on campus about how those young men “got away with rape.” So the policy is likely an attempt to punish those accused even when the evidence demonstrates they are innocent just to maintain the nonsense position that women do not lie about rape.

    I have a feeling that the policy will probably be changed if a male student accuses a female student of sexual assault.

  • paul

    Steven’s ordeal was truly harrowing. I am surprised he is able to be so calm about it.

    Reading it does make certain thoughts come into my head. Here and in other places I see accounts of these terrible things occurring with regularity. I read them and yes I do get angry. But I am left dissatisfied by this. Expressing a problem, and me reading it, does not in the end make any change. It brings no reparation nor does it stop it happening again.

    It seems THEY have all the power whilst I (and indeed the rest of us) have none. So things go on as before, though as Amfortas says ‘with bigger signs’.

    I read sort of predictions of hope which are summed up in the expression ‘once men realize what is happening then ….’. I have been reading such sentiments for nearly 20 years. I fear it is like with the old style socialist who thought that once the working class understood their predicament then the revolution would come. But it never happened and I am fearing it will be the same with us.

    So here’s the rub. I don’t know what I can do to effect any change. There is no use any of you telling me to do this or that. In all probability I have done them all. I have marched, written and organised. But I must tell you this was all to no effect. I have even travelled 2000 miles and gone my own way.

    But still it is not enough just to complain.

  • L. Steven Beene II

    Toy Soldier,

    I agree with what you’re saying, but here’s the thing – WE are RATIONAL and looking at it from a standpoint of equality (granted with an eye to MRA issues).

    They have an idoelogy. They honestly believe it, and even the ones who don’t know better than to stick their head up.

    With PCism, academic feminists, and academic leftys (although there are many reasonable left leaning people in the U.S. – not demonizing) there belief system is this:

    1) They are interested in the theoretical macro. Meaning in simple terms “Men have the power”. They’ll point to how most CEOs are men as proof. They ignore the myriad “joe lunchboxes” out there because it doesn’t fit. To compensate for “power differentials” they must make the playing field uneven – for, to them, that is the only way it is FAIR.

    Insane I know, but there it is. Same applies to race, sexual orientation, or religion.

    2) Their ideas of outcomes fitting the theory actaully makes sense to them. In their belief system only 2% of women lie about rape. It’s a truism to them. Since (picking a number from the air) 42% are found to be false – to them the system MUST be set up unfairly against the accuser.

    In their minds until the outcomes match the predetermined ideological #’s the playing field is not level.

    You, nor I, can reason with them – it’s like a religious belief. To be honest, IMO, it IS a religious belief system, in all but name.

    I hope that adds to the discussion.

    Steven

  • Robert Stevens

    Toy soldier is correct Duke University is headed for a serious legal problem, even a federal problem. What the “egg headed Liberals” and the “man hating feminazi’s” do not understand is the our legal system when it is coerced to abide by the rule of law can not allow the “star chamber” inquistion that the man haters want. I have beaten the state and my exwife by using such tactics. They( Duke Unversity officials) get to beleiving they can just disreguard the civil rights of anyone, they will have the feds all over their asses, It is a little thing called Title 7. They are going to find out , you do HAVE to produce evidence, you do have to allow the accused due process and yes Political Correctness has no place in such matters. So I say let the stupid bastards go right ahead and try this little “kangaroo court” and it see what it will get them.






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