Monday, February 23, 2026

British Medical Journal Publishes Article Defending Female Genital Mutilation.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: A group of 25 academics has argued that laws banning female genital mutilation (FGM) are harmful and perpetuate stigma towards migrant communities.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Scholars from the University of Cambridge, University of Bristol, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, and others contributed to the essay published in the Journal of Medical Ethics.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The essay was published in the British Medical Journal‘s Journal of Medical Ethics; FGM has been outlawed in Britain since 1985.

💬KEY QUOTE: “The British Medical Journal has published a ‘puff piece’ promoting FGC, [s]aying it’s perfectly fine for the community (not the individual) to control her body.” – Stanford Visiting Associate Professor Alice Evans

🎯IMPACT: The essay has sparked fierce criticism, with experts warning it downplays the severe physical harm caused by FGM and undermines efforts to combat the practice.

IN FULL

A group of 25 academics from top British universities has drawn criticism for arguing that laws prohibiting female genital mutilation (FGM) fuel stigma against migrant communities. In an article appearing in the British Medical Journal‘s Journal of Medical Ethics, they assert that resistance to FGM draws on “sensationalist” narratives and “racialised stereotypes.”

The authors, including researchers from the University of Cambridge, University of Bristol, and Brighton and Sussex Medical School, maintain that Western anti-FGM laws “can objectify girls and women as passive victims” while alienating immigrant groups and widening societal rifts. They also suggest swapping the term FGM for “female genital practices” to “account for cultural complexity and avoid the reductive and stigmatising force of the term ‘mutilation’.”

“Despite the laudable ideal for journalists to look at all sides of any story, mainstream media coverage of female genital practices in Africa has been heavily reliant on sources from within a well-organised opposition movement… In North America, Australia, and European countries like the UK and Sweden, such coverage has frequently fallen short of journalistic standards of impartiality, often using stigmatising and denigrating language that fuels suspicion and surveillance of migrant communities,” the writers complain.

FGM—the partial or total removal of external female genitalia for non-medical reasons, sometimes referred to as female circumcision—has been illegal in Britain since 1985. Bodies like the United Nations (UN) view it as a human rights abuse due to the intense pain and long-term health risks involved. Still, the article compares FGM to simple labiaplasty, a cosmetic surgery popular in the West, and questions why male circumcision doesn’t face the same level of scrutiny.

Stanford Visiting Associate Professor Alice Evans denounced the article as an example of “academia digging its own grave,” writing on X (formerly Twitter), “The article blames Western media for causing harm by wanting to tackle FGC. No where does it mention that this is intended to reduce pleasure and maintain patriarchal control”.

The BMJ Group is standing by its decision to publish the academics’ defense of FGM, arguing that the Journal of Medical Ethics features provocative opinions and does not necessarily support the views expressed. Groups fighting FGM stress that it inflicts severe, permanent damage, typically on young girls without consent. Somalia has the world’s highest rate, affecting 98 percent of women.

Image by Amnon s (Amnon Shavit).

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Ivy League College Warns White Students to Stay Away from Minority-Only Events.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Cornell University warned “non-marginalized” business students, largely white students, not to attend diversity-focused recruiting events intended to bestow advantages on minority students.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management’s student council and Cornell University MBA students.

📍WHEN & WHERE: E-mail circulated on Friday, ahead of next week’s Reaching Out MBA conference in New Orleans, Louisiana.

💬KEY QUOTE: “True equality should not equate to carving out exclusive zones that sideline most MBA students and potentially skirt equal opportunity laws,” said one anonymous student.

🎯IMPACT: The e-mail has sparked criticism for encouraging racial discrimination and raises concerns about equal opportunity compliance.

IN FULL

Cornell University’s Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management has come under scrutiny after a student council e-mail advised so-called “non-marginalized” business students, referring mainly to white, male, and heterosexual students, not to attend diversity-focused recruiting events intended for ethnic minority peers. The message, circulated by the student council’s “Allyship in Action” initiative, warned that attending such events could negatively impact students’ job prospects and Cornell’s relationships with partner organizations.

The e-mail stated that “students who do not identify with the specific marginalized or underrepresented group” should refrain from attending diversity conferences. “Students who do not belong to the group that the diversity conference is designed for should respect that space and should not attend,” it read.

The message was sent ahead of the Reaching Out MBA conference in New Orleans, a prominent event focused on LGBT business students and alumni. Other diversity-centered events promoted by Cornell include the National Black MBA Conference, AfroTech, the Women in Investing Conference, and Prospanica, which targets Hispanic professionals.

One anonymous student criticized the e-mail as exclusionary. “True equality should not equate to carving out exclusive zones that sideline most MBA students and potentially skirt equal opportunity laws,” the student said.

Cornell University insisted that the message represented “student-to-student conversations” and reaffirmed that the events in question remain officially open to all students. However, the Allyship in Action e-mail threatens, “[W]e want to stress the negative impact your presence may have on your own recruiting outcomes, as well as Cornell’s relationship with these organizations.”

The situation comes amid heightened federal scrutiny of university diversity programs under the Trump administration. More than 50 colleges and universities are currently under investigation for discriminatory practices against white, Asian, or Christian students, particularly in cases involving race-specific scholarships, internships, or recruitment programs. Federal officials argue that such programs violate civil rights laws by excluding students on the basis of race, gender, or religion.

Image by Claude-Étienne Armingaud.

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Chinese UMich Scholar Caught Smuggling Bioweapon Into U.S.

PULSE POINTS:

What Happened: A Chinese academic at the University of Michigan has been charged with smuggling a dangerous biological pathogen into the United States, one that federal prosecutors describe as a potential agroterrorism weapon targeting food crops.

👤Who’s Involved: Chinese national Yunqing Jian, her boyfriend Zunyong Liu, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Detroit.

🧾Key Quote: “These two aliens have been charged with smuggling a fungus that has been described as a ‘potential agroterrorism weapon’ into the heartland of America,” said interim U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon.

⚠️Fallout: The pathogen, Fusarium graminearum, can devastate wheat, barley, maize, and rice, and produces toxins harmful to livestock and humans; Liu supposedly intended to research it at Jian’s university lab.

📌Significance: The case highlights growing national security concerns over Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked academic infiltration, as this marks the second case in a week involving Chinese nationals with ties to the University of Michigan facing federal charges.

IN FULL:

Federal prosecutors have charged a Chinese postdoctoral scholar at the University of Michigan with attempting to smuggle a biological pathogen into the United States that is classified as a potential agricultural terrorism weapon. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) alleges that 33-year-old Yunqing Jian and her boyfriend, 34-year-old Zunyong Liu, conspired to bring multiple strains of Fusarium graminearum—a fungus known to destroy food crops—into the country for unauthorized research.

According to a criminal complaint unsealed Tuesday in federal court in Detroit, Liu arrived at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in July 2024 on a B2 tourist visa. During inspection, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers found hidden plant samples in his bag. Liu initially lied about the materials, claiming someone else had placed them in his belongings. He later admitted the samples were strains of the crop-destroying fungus and that he had smuggled them into the U.S., supposedly to conduct research in Jian’s lab at the University of Michigan.

The complaint describes the pathogen as responsible for billions of dollars in global agricultural damage annually. The toxin it produces is also known to cause vomiting, liver damage, and reproductive defects in livestock and humans.

Jian, a Chinese citizen with a doctorate in plant pathogens from Zhejiang University, allegedly received financial support from a government-funded Chinese foundation and maintains ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). She is now charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States, smuggling, making false statements, and visa fraud.

Interim U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon called the allegations “of the gravest national security concerns,” citing the deliberate concealment of the biological material. Liu reportedly admitted to intentionally hiding the samples in tissues to evade detection and indicated plans to clone them if initial experiments failed.

The case follows another incident last week in which a former University of Michigan student from China was charged with illegally voting in the 2024 U.S. election and fleeing the country to avoid prosecution. The Trump administration is currently moving to revoke the visas of Chinese students in the U.S., focusing on those with CCP links.

Jian is expected to appear in federal court Tuesday afternoon. Liu has since returned to China. Authorities continue to investigate the scope of the scheme.

Image by Tony Webster.

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Scientists Sue After Publisher Retracts Papers on Abortion Pill Dangers.

A group of researchers has initiated a legal case against a publisher that retracted several studies on abortion pill risks, claiming the studies were removed due to political motivations.

Ten researchers from the pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute initiated legal proceedings against Sage Publishing, alleging that Sage violated contract laws in California when the journal withdrew three studies, including two regarding abortion pill risks, earlier this year.

The lawsuit aims to prompt Sage to enter arbitration regarding these retractions, which were implemented in February. Dr. James Studnicki, vice president and director of data analytics at the institute, asserted that the retractions damaged the authors’ reputations and contravened scientific publication ethics.

Sage’s official retraction notice mentioned that an independent review was triggered by a reader’s complaint alleging misleading data and authors’ affiliations with the pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute.

Dr. Studnicki, who was also removed from the editorial board of Sage’s Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology journal months before the retractions, criticized Sage’s actions as politically motivated.

One of the challenged studies, published on November 9, 2021, cited a 500% increase in emergency room visits linked to chemical abortions from 2002-2015, based on Medicaid data.

Another study from May 2022 examined repeated ER visits among women who did not inform their physicians of undergoing chemical abortions. These studies were referenced in federal court decisions about mifepristone’s FDA approval suspension.

Abortion pill dangers were highlighted last month when Democrat presidential candidate Kamala Harris falsely claimed a woman in Georgia died due to an abortion ban but was actually killed as a result of using mifepristone.

Despite the dangers, pharmaceutical retailers like CVS and Walgreens announced earlier this year they would be dispensing the drug.

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A group of researchers has initiated a legal case against a publisher that retracted several studies on abortion pill risks, claiming the studies were removed due to political motivations. show more

This College Just Got an Anonymous $100 Million for Defending Free Speech.

A whopping $100 million donation from an anonymous benefactor found its way into the coffers of the University of Chicago this week, intended to help the university bolster free speech on campus following a case in which a student claims an academic tried to get him expelled over controversial remarks.

This gift is intended to support the ongoing work of the University of Chicago Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression. The forum, which was inaugurated a year ago, is spearheaded by Tom Ginsburg, the Leo Spitz Distinguished Service Professor of International Law.

He stated, “We want the Chicago Forum to build on the University’s traditions as the place for cutting-edge thinking to address today’s challenges. We also want every student to have the experience of speaking their mind and the possibility of changing it in conversation with others. This transformative gift will allow us to build upon what we’ve started and have a much larger impact.”

David Rubenstein, the chair of the University of Chicago Board of Trustees and a 1973 alumnus, echoed Ginsburg’s sentiments.

During its first year, the Chicago Forum actively engaged with contentious subjects, hosting over a dozen events, including those on the conflict between Israel and Gaza and the ramifications of significant Supreme Court decisions.

The gift comes after a high-profile case involving student Daniel Schmidt, who stated last year that a professor at the University of Chicago was trying to get him expelled for highlighting an anti-white class called “the problem of whiteness.” The professor claimed the student, who has tens of thousands of social media followers, was bullying her.

Earlier this week, the president of the university said Schmidt was free to talk about controversial topics like race and IQ, as Schmidt has previously claimed low IQs are the reason ” black people are murdering and mugging my classmates.”

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A whopping $100 million donation from an anonymous benefactor found its way into the coffers of the University of Chicago this week, intended to help the university bolster free speech on campus following a case in which a student claims an academic tried to get him expelled over controversial remarks. show more

University Removes ‘Anglo-Saxon’ from Course To Decolonize… England.

An English university has announced it will ” decolonize ” a master’s course in early medieval history by scrapping the term “Anglo-Saxon” and replacing it with “Early Medieval English.” The University of Nottingham’s Viking and Anglo-Saxon Studies program claims the term Anglo-Saxon is linked to “nationalist narratives,” including those who use it as a distinct form of English identity.

Staff at the university say they are concerned about beliefs that English identity is somehow distinct as an ethnic group. Additionally, the university says that in the future, it will tackle the use of “Viking”—an old Scandinavian term that loosely translates as pirate or raider.

The move by the University of Nottingham follows other erasures of English heritage in education. One of the UK’s most prestigious universities, the University of Cambridge, changed its materials to teach that Anglo-Saxons did not exist as a distinct ethnic group.

Since the 2020 Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests and riots in both the United States and parts of Europe, there have been moves within various universities to “decolonize” subjects they deem as being “too white.” In one case, a University of Cambridge professor named Priyamvada Gopal took to X (formerly Twitter) in 2020 to state, “White Lives Don’t Matter,” and called to “abolish whiteness.”

The Indian-born Marxist academic later claimed that Britain’s World War II era Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill, was a “racist,” taking part in a discussion of the legacy of his racial views.

In the United States, some academics have claimed universities are not woke enough, with one Florida academic announcing his resignation from the New College of Florida and threatening to burn it to the ground over conservative trustees appointing a new president last year.

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An English university has announced it will " decolonize " a master's course in early medieval history by scrapping the term "Anglo-Saxon" and replacing it with "Early Medieval English." The University of Nottingham's Viking and Anglo-Saxon Studies program claims the term Anglo-Saxon is linked to "nationalist narratives," including those who use it as a distinct form of English identity. show more

Govt Funding of DEI Banned in This State…

On Tuesday, the Alabama state legislature passed a bill that defunds Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities.

Now awaiting Republican Governor Kay Ivey’s signature, the bill could go into effect by October 1. Alongside public universities, it would strip funding from school boards and other government agencies pushing DEI initiatives.

The legislation also requires students to use restrooms associated with the biological sex rather than their gender identity and bans the dissemination of “divisive concepts” rooted in Critical Race Theory (CRT) and related ideologies, suggesting certain groups — principally white people — are “inherently responsible for actions committed in the past” or should “accept, acknowledge, affirm or assent to a sense of guilt, complicity or a need to apologize.”

Republican state Rep. Ed Oliver, one of the bill’s primary sponsors, said DEI initiatives “deepen divisions, set up race-exclusionary programs and indoctrinate students into a far-left political ideology.”

The Alabama legislation advances as the University of Florida is firing all DEI staff.

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On Tuesday, the Alabama state legislature passed a bill that defunds Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs at public universities. show more
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Trust the Science? Academics Are Churning Out Papers Via ‘Questionable Research and Fraud’.

Stanford University has detected a suspicious rise in “extremely productive” academics pumping out 60 research papers a year. The Stanford study raises concerns about the quality and reliability of the science being produced.

According to the Standford data, high-yield authors in Thailand jumped from just one in 2016 to 19 in 2022. High-yield authors also rose dramatically in Saudi Arabia, increasing from six to 69 over the same period.

“I suspect that questionable research practices and fraud may underlie some of the most extreme behaviors,” said study co-author John Ioannidis. “Our data provide a starting point for discussing these issues across all science.”

There is evidence science is becoming increasingly unreliable, and may even be mostly false. Study retractions have risen by 13,650 percent in the last two decades, and now number in the thousands per year. Science is also undergoing a replication or reproducibility crisis. This means most experiments cannot be successfully repeated when attempted by other researchers.

This affects not only “soft” sciences like psychology, where over 60 percent of research cannot be repeated, but also cancer research.

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Stanford University has detected a suspicious rise in "extremely productive" academics pumping out 60 research papers a year. The Stanford study raises concerns about the quality and reliability of the science being produced. show more