
Suzanne Nossel
Contributor at Freelance
CEO @PENAmerica, background diverse; opinions my own. Author of Dare to Speak: Defending Free Speech in Our Time (HarperCollins, 2020)
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
timesfreepress.com | Suzanne Nossel
Opinion: Remember when it was the right that got outraged over ‘banned words’? 5 minutes ago by Suzanne Nossel / The Los Angeles Times (TNS) Getty Images
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2 weeks ago |
usnews.com | Suzanne Nossel
President Donald Trump vowed retribution in a second term, and he has more than delivered on that promise. Among the many in the president’s crosshairs is “Big Law.” Targeting one leading firm after another, the president is punishing law firms that handle high-profile government and corporate business, several of which have represented causes and individuals that Trump regards as hostile to him or his political agenda.
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2 weeks ago |
pressdemocrat.com | Suzanne Nossel
Some of the fiercest blowback in recent years against “diversity, equity and inclusion” greeted Stanford University in 2022 when it launched the website of its Elimination of Harmful Language initiative. Back then, it was the right that was appalled by the efforts to limit language. Developed by campus experts in technology and inclusion, the site labeled hundreds of words and phrases “harmful,” urging the use of alternatives.
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3 weeks ago |
twincities.com | Suzanne Nossel
Some of the fiercest blowback in recent years against “diversity, equity and inclusion” greeted Stanford University in 2022 when it launched the website of its Elimination of Harmful Language initiative. Back then, it was the right that was appalled by the efforts to limit language. Developed by campus experts in technology and inclusion, the site labeled hundreds of words and phrases “harmful,” urging the use of alternatives.
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3 weeks ago |
union-bulletin.com | Suzanne Nossel
Some of the fiercest blowback in recent years against “diversity, equity and inclusion” greeted Stanford University in 2022 when it launched the website of its Elimination of Harmful Language initiative. Back then, it was the right that was appalled by the efforts to limit language. Developed by campus experts in technology and inclusion, the site labeled hundreds of words and phrases “harmful,” urging the use of alternatives.
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"Sir, where do I sign? ... Time will tell if @paulweissLLP and @SkaddenArps and others have saved their firms. But we already know they haven’t saved their profession or their nation. https://t.co/8d8QaZ7W7q

RT @CFR_org: 📅 TODAY | 3:45 pm ET Heather Conley, @IvoHDaalder, and @SuzanneNossel discuss how increased cooperation between China, Russia…

Remember the uproar over Stanford's "Harmful Language" list of "offensive" terms like "grandfather," "immigrant" and "American" ? Now some of the very same words and ideas are now essentially banned by the Trump Administration. My latest in @latimes https://t.co/CdgKs5TEsz