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Professor removed by St. John's for asking history question files lawsuit
Attorneys for professor Richard Taylor filed a petition in a New York trial court on Thursday, asking the court to overturn the decision by St. John鈥檚 University to remove him from the classroom for allegedly violating the university鈥檚 anti-bias policy.
Taylor, an adjunct professor, was found responsible for violating St. John鈥檚 anti-harassment policy and removed from the classroom in October after a student activist group created an online form letter calling for his firing. The letter alleged that Taylor asked students in his history class to 鈥渏ustify slavery.鈥 As FIREexplained previously, what Taylor actually did was typical of what happens in any college history class:
On Sept. 7, Taylor taught the to his 鈥淓mergence of a Global Society鈥 class. As it has in earlier years, Taylor鈥檚 instruction focused on early global trade, including trade in silver and potatoes. As part of the class, he also covered the more pernicious aspects of early trade, such as slavery, the abuse of indigenous populations, and the spreading of disease. On his final slide was a discussion prompt: 鈥淒o the positives justify the negatives?鈥
Taylor is represented by . The petition argues that St. John鈥檚 violated a New York law that prohibits private colleges from making arbitrary decisions 鈥 the same law involved in the still-ongoing case involving Fordham University and its FIREfor Justice in Palestine chapter.
You can read the petition in full below:
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