Please sign our petition
If you are an Amherst College student, alumnus or alumna, please sign a petition to the board of trustees asking the college to dissociate itself from both the homophobic substance and the intellectual dishonesty of Professor Hadley Arkes’s writings in non-academic publications, in which he regularly chooses to identify himself with the College. (Read more.)Documents about the petition
In chronological order:
- A man walks into a bar... (Nathan email -- June 5, 2010)
- Say ‘no’ to Hadley Arkes (Craige-Mersereau communications with Martin -- April 2013)
- Reject intellectual dishonesty (Greenberg communications with Martin -- April 2013)
- Arkes's defamatory statements are deeply offensive (Patterson testimonial -- June 2013)
- Amherst won't disavow hate speech? I won't contribute (Patterson email declining participation in annual fund -- June 2013)
- Amherst College, it's time to step up (Mersereau statement of September 2013)
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Recent Posts
- Protest: Martin misstates alumni request, blocks access
- Here’s why to sign our alumni petition about Arkes
- How Amherst College blocks dissenters
- Amherst president misstates alumni petition about Arkes
- Irony: College says its silence defends free speech
- Letter: Does Arkes support college’s diversity policy?
- Letter: How Arkes could destroy LGBT protections
- 106 more alumni push back against Arkes’s views
- Q&A with college president on anti-gay professor
- New commentary by Arkes, new criticism by alumni
In his own words …
[T]he key abstraction, settling off ripples of self-deception, is that term “sexual orientation.” The term is broad enough to encompass sex with animals, pedophilia, even necrophilia....{T]he notion of “sexual orientation” [is] quite unstable: Many people shift back and forth across a spectrum that may now include the bisexual, fetishistic, transvestic, zoophiliac (sex with animals).
Remember 76+ countries where homophobia reigns
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New commentary by Arkes, new criticism by alumni
The latest commentary by Prof. Hadley Arkes of Amherst College, published in The Catholic Thing, has provoked a new round of criticism from Amherst alumni who say that Arkes continues to use his affiliation with the college to help spread distorted … Continue reading →