Jennifer Ho is a professor of English (not the English I love and know, but a thing called “Critical Theory”) at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill’s Department of English and Comparative Literature. Yes, the appropriately named Ho teaches your kids (and you, alas, allow her to have at them).
Ho instructs young people about literature—but also about who they should and should not hold up as heroes.
And a hero, to Prof. Ho, is an individual like Christine Blasey Ford, “the college professor who accused Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her when they were in high school in the early 1980s.”
PLEASE CONSIDER SIGNING AND RE-TWEETING IF YOU ARE UNC AFFILIATED (alums/students/faculty/staff): Signatures supporting the nomination of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford for a Distinguished Alumna Award at UNC Chapel Hill.”
PLEASE CONSIDER SIGNING AND RE-TWEETING IF YOU ARE UNC AFFILIATED (alums/students/faculty/staff): Signatures supporting the nomination of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford for a Distinguished Alumna Award at UNC Chapel Hill https://t.co/1YOH9RXWWf #IBelieveSurvivors
— Jennifer Ho (@DrJenHo) October 6, 2018
Do these females even understand the meaning of heroism? Clearly not.
A self-styled victim who makes claims against others with little proof is no hero.
UPDATE (10/16/018):
Melania Trump Says She Supports Men Against #MeToo Allegations https://t.co/R8T0Rhqo1a pic.twitter.com/4ywTC6cSIH
— The Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) October 12, 2018
As Sperry observed, Blasey Ford’s own immediate family doesn’t appear to be backing her up, either. Bizarrely, those who were able to know & observe the trauma she claimed she suffered, her mother, father & two siblings,are all conspicuously absent from…https://t.co/PRBqTl0Wne
— Paul Sperry (@paulsperry_) October 7, 2018