logo
Author says Naval Academy canceled his lecture over removed book reference

Author says Naval Academy canceled his lecture over removed book reference

Miami Herald20-04-2025
BALTIMORE - The Naval Academy canceled a speech by author and podcaster Ryan Holiday after he declined a request not to reference 381 books and literary works removed from its library as part of a review of diversity, equity and inclusion materials, according to an opinion piece he authored for The New York Times.
Holiday, who has hosted a series of lectures on the virtues of Stoicism to midshipmen for the past four years, was scheduled to speak to the sophomore class on the theme of wisdom on April 14.
About an hour before his scheduled talk, Holiday received a phone call, he recounted in the Times Opinion piece titled "The Naval Academy Canceled My Lecture on Wisdom." According to Holiday, Navy officials told Holiday they were worried about "reprisals" related to a portion of his speech that referenced the 381 books recently removed. They asked him to omit that topic from his remarks, he wrote.
"When I declined, my lecture - as well as a planned speech before the Navy football team, with whom my books on Stoicism are popular - was canceled," Holiday wrote.
Navy media officials could not be reached for comment Saturday.
Holiday is the author or co-author of 28 books on Stoicism and has delivered speeches to the Cleveland Browns, Nike, Google and the White House Communications Agency.
Some titles removed from the Navy's Nimitz Library include "How to Be an Antiracist" by Ibram X. Kendi, "White Evangelical Racism: The Politics of Morality in America" by Anthea Butler, "Writing/teaching: Essays Toward a Rhetoric of Pedagogy" by Paul Kameen, and "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" by Literarian Award recipient Maya Angelou.
Other titles included themes of feminism, civil rights and racism, along with books surrounding Jewish history, including "Memorializing the Holocaust: Gender, Genocide and Collective Memory" by Janet Jacobs.
The decision to remove books came after the Naval Academy announced it would no longer consider race, ethnicity or sex as a factor for admission, a response to an executive order signed by President Donald Trump, according to federal court documents.
Holiday said it was important to address the issue in his speech.
"As an author, I believe deeply in the power of books," Holiday wrote in The Times. "As a bookstore owner in Texas, I have spoken up about book banning many times already. More important was the topic of my address: the virtue of wisdom.
"As I explained repeatedly to my hosts, I had no interest in embarrassing anyone or discussing politics directly. I understand the immense pressures they are under, especially the military employees, and I did not want to cause them trouble. I did, however, feel it was essential to make the point that the pursuit of wisdom is impossible without engaging with (and challenging) uncomfortable ideas."
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats Have a Massive Voter Registration Problem
Democrats Have a Massive Voter Registration Problem

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats Have a Massive Voter Registration Problem

Fewer and fewer Americans are choosing to be Democrats. With just over a year until midterms, one of America's two main parties is hemorrhaging voters, losing registered voters in all 30 states that track registration by political party. The change has been observed in blue, red, and swing states alike. In total, some 2.1 million voters ditched the Democrats in favor of alternative politics between 2020 and 2024, The New York Times reported Wednesday. The drop has resulted in more registered independents, but it has also become a boon for the GOP, which gained 2.4 million new voters over the same period. Last year marked the first time since 2018 that more Americans checked 'Republican' on their voter registration forms instead of 'Democrat.' The downward trend has sparked serious concern among Democratic strategists, who have identified it as a 'hidden-in-plain-sight crisis' that needs a solution before the next presidential election. 'I don't want to say, 'The death cycle of the Democratic Party,' but there seems to be no end to this,' Michael Pruser, who tracks voter registration closely as the director of data science for Decision Desk HQ, told the Times. 'There is no silver lining or cavalry coming across the hill. This is month after month, year after year.' The most contentious battleground states have also experienced the liberal erosion. Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania all saw support peel away from Democrats over the last four years. 'In North Carolina, Republicans erased roughly 95 percent of the registration advantage that Democrats held in the fall of 2020, according to state records as of this summer,' reported the Times. 'In Nevada, Democrats suffered the steepest percentage-point plunge of any state but West Virginia between 2020 and 2024.' Meanwhile, Republicans are working overtime during Trump 2.0 to minimize future turnout at the voting booth. Since Inauguration Day, the administration has tried and failed to force Americans to show proof of citizenship at the voting booth and has attempted to take away the option of mail-in ballots. Donald Trump and his allies have also made a target of voting software designed to identify potential voter fraud, advanced a Homeland Security agenda that has made immigrants fearful to legitimately participate in the American electorate, and have generally undermined trust and confidence in the country's process to elect its leaders.

Maine oysterman stirring up Democrats' efforts to oust Susan Collins
Maine oysterman stirring up Democrats' efforts to oust Susan Collins

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Maine oysterman stirring up Democrats' efforts to oust Susan Collins

Sullivan resident Graham Platner, a veteran and oysterman, announced his bid for the Democratic nomination to challenge U.S. Sen. Susan Collins on Aug. 19, 2026. (Photo courtesy of Graham for Senate) A largely unknown oysterman and military veteran, Graham Platner garnered widespread attention this week when he launched a U.S. Senate campaign to try to unseat long-time Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins. Most of the candidates running against Collins so far are political newcomers like Graham, but his splashy campaign launch in the The New York Times and team of progressive strategists with records of successfully running against establishment Democrats has set him apart. While running on progressive ideas — universal healthcare, raising the minimum wage, strengthening unions — Platner is clearly trying to appeal to Maine's independent thinking, rejecting the label of liberal while embracing a working man's pitch to appeal to supporters of President Donald Trump. It's also unclear what his candidacy now means for national Democrats' efforts to convince Gov. Janet Mills to run. The governor, who is termed out next year, gained a national profile after she told Trump in February 'see you in court' over Maine's law that allows transgender athletes to compete on girls' sports teams. Now, some are hoping she'll run for federal office, but she hasn't decided yet. Earlier this month, Mills, known locally as a moderate Democrat, said she was 'assessing everything' and 'would think seriously about it.' According to CNN, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York has personally spoken with Mills about the race. Without an explicit answer, some other potential Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate are holding out on entering the race, including Speaker of the Maine House Ryan Fecteau and the owner of Maine Brewing Company, Dan Kleban. Not all Democrats are waiting. Six lesser-known names filed to run before Platner — including Jordan Wood, a progressive former congressional aide, and David Costello, who unsuccessfully tried to unseat Maine's other U.S. senator, independent Angus King, in 2024. 'All of the other higher profile Democrats have, at least so far, decided, 'Well, we're going to run for the open governor's [seat],'' said Mark Brewer, chair of the political science department at the University of Maine. The 2026 gubernatorial race has received far greater action with 18 official candidates already and others contemplating bids. 'Part of that is Mills freezing the field, so to speak,' Brewer said. 'But it's not just that.' Democrats thought they had Collins last time, Brewer pointed out. Her Democratic opponent, Sara Gideon, then-Speaker of the Maine House, far outspent Collins and polls had Gideon leading. Then Collins won by almost 9%. Brewer said he thinks the fact that prominent Maine Democrats opted for gubernatorial bids rather than Collins' seat 'speaks to the fact that she's going to be tough to take down.' Eyeing a sixth term, Collins is facing pressure from both sides Collins told Maine Morning Star in the spring she intends to run for reelection in 2026. Although she has yet to officially launch a campaign, she raised $2.4 million to close the quarter with more than $5 million on hand. When asked in the spring why she thinks she remains the best person to represent the state, Collins highlighted her record of delivering for Maine, primarily financially. That ability has been increasingly tested and upended during Trump's second term. As for a primary challenge, Maine Republicans and Trump have rejected the idea, though someone familiar with the conversation told Politico recently that the president would love to see a 'better option.' Brewer said, in his view, 'it's hard to envision another Republican winning statewide in a two-person race besides Collins.' So far, two little-known Republicans are running. One independent candidate has also thrown his hat in the ring. With 15 months until the election, Democrats in the running for Collins' seat include Platner, Wood, Costello, Tucker Favreau, Andrea LaFlamme, Natasha Alcala and Daira Rodriguez, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Platner was born in Blue Hill and raised in Ellsworth and Sullivan, where he launched his campaign on Tuesday. He enlisted in the Marine Corps after high school and served three deployments to Iraq. After attending George Washington University on the G.I. Bill, he then enrolled in the Army National Guard and served in Afghanistan. Following his service, he started working on an oyster farm on Frenchman Bay, which he now runs. He is also chair of the planning board and harbormaster in Sullivan. Platner wasted no time critiquing Collins during his campaign launch. In his video announcement, which was produced by Morris Katz, a top admaker for New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani, he said, 'I'm not afraid to name an enemy. And the enemy is the oligarchy. It's the billionaires who pay for it and the politicians who sell us out. And yeah, that means politicians like Susan Collins.' Other candidates have also made similar pitches about Collins, including Wood, who said the senator 'hasn't fixed the system — she's become part of it,' in a statement last month in which he announced his fundraising totals so far. Aside from Collins, he's raised the most — $1.6 million as of June 30. He's had the most public campaign presence so far, hosting town halls across the state. Wood, a Bristol resident, previously told Maine Morning Star his top priorities will be anti-corruption reform and getting big money out of politics. Wood spent about a decade working in politics in Washington, D.C, including as chief of staff to former Democratic U.S. Rep. Katie Porter of California. He helped lead democracyFIRST, an organization aimed to combat threats to free and fair elections, and End Citizens United, a political action committee working to reverse the U.S. Supreme Court decision that enabled corporations and other outside groups to spend unlimited money on elections. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The sole independent candidate, Rench of Waterboro, has raised the next most, just over $54,000. Rench owns Ossipee Hill Farm and Observatory. He was a former senior engineer at Elon Musk's SpaceX, though he told Maine Morning Star he now has no association with Musk or the company aside from stocks he was awarded as an employee. He returned to Maine in 2020 to raise his children and build a produce farm. He also sat on the board for the Maine Space Corporation from June 2023 until June 2025. Other candidates have raised little to no funds so far, in part because their recent announcements fell close to the end of the quarter. Costello, who announced his bid in June and has no contributions filed with the FEC so far, is a familiar face in past U.S. Senate candidate pools. He unsuccessfully ran for independent Sen Angus King's seat in 2024. He was active in state and federal government campaigns before spending several years working for the U.S. government abroad through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which Trump dismantled earlier this year. Favreau, who also filed to run in June, has raised $4,724 in contributions so far. Born in Brunswick, Favreau enlisted in the U.S. Army in 2009 after high school and eventually commissioned as an officer in the recently established cyber branch. Since moving back to Maine following the end of his service in 2021, he has continued to work in cybersecurity at Cisco Talos. LaFlamme of Bangor is the chapter president for adjunct faculty of Maine's Community Colleges with the Maine Service Employees Association, Local 1989 of the Service Employees International Union, and an adjunct professor at the University of Maine, teaching courses in Women's Studies, particularly Women's Health and the Environment and Reproductive Health. Alcala of Madawaska is a fashion designer who moved to Maine from California about four years ago. She has degrees in international relations and criminal justice and is a U.S. Navy veteran. Alcala previously filed to run against U.S. Sen. Angus King in 2024 but withdrew before the primary. Little is known about Rodriguez, who just filed with the FEC on Aug. 15 and lists an address of a Washington, D.C. PO Box. LaFlamme, Alcala and Rodriguez all have zero contributions filed with the FEC so far. That's also the case for the two Republicans who have filed to run. Calabrese of Kennebunkport moved to Maine five years ago from Florida and is a driver for Walmart and former small business owner. Smeriglio of Frenchville runs the rightwing Voice of the People USA radio and activist group. He is a U.S. Army veteran and former police officer, according to his website. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Nearly 80 Afghans, including children dead after bus crash via Iran
Nearly 80 Afghans, including children dead after bus crash via Iran

Miami Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Nearly 80 Afghans, including children dead after bus crash via Iran

Aug. 20 (UPI) -- Nearly 80 Afghan nationals, including more than a dozen children, died in a fiery bus crash on its way out of Iran to Afghanistan in Iran's ongoing push to rid millions of foreigners. The Kabul-bound bus crashed late Tuesday night during a long ride on treacherous Afghani terrain after colliding with another vehicle and a motorbike near the Iranian border in the western Afghan province of Herat. According to officials, 78 people died that included 17 children. "The car was carrying fuel and it caught fire after a head-on collision with the bus, fully loaded with passengers," according to Ahmadullah Muttaqi, a government communications official in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, told NBC and The New York Times. Muttaqi added the bus also caught fire and "the majority of people on the bus died of burn injuries." On Wednesday, the bodies were transferred to Afghanistan's capital Kabul. Video footage by Afghan news outlet Etilaatroz depicted the large bus engulfed in flames as firefighters battled the blaze and Afghans joined in to aid and its charred remain later hauled away by a larger truck. "These Afghan refugees were returning home after spending a long time in Iran, but they could not reach their destination as their bus met with a tragic accident," Muttaqi stated. The Iranian regime has cracked down on undocumented nationals. It comes as Iran has moved to expel nearly 2 million Afghan nationals from within its border, some who have lived in Iran for decades. More than 1.2 million since June have forcibly been returned to troubled Afghanistan as Iranian officials have accused Afghans of spying for Israel following its brief military conflict around spring. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store