Topic: Oklahoma University

5 chapters across the catalog

Variant Factories
Episode 1361 1:39:13 - 1:44:18

1361: Variant Factories

Dame Brazen Bird and Portland Refugee Story

A donor from Dallas, identifying as a refugee from "Little Beirut" (Portland, Oregon), describes the challenges of relocating her family and transferring her daughters to Oklahoma State University. She notes that many college credits did not transfer, requiring an additional year of tuition for her daughters studying engineering and economics. The segment also touches on the frustrations of apartment living in Dallas, where neighbors strictly follow mask mandates but neglect basic sanitation.

Outrage Addition
Episode 955 37:18 - 41:39

955: Outrage Addition

Everett Piper, Academic Freedom, Ideological Fascism

Everett Piper, President of Oklahoma Wesleyan University, argued that modern academia has created a "monster" by teaching narcissism and victimization for decades. He characterized the current state of higher education as "ideological fascism" where students demand compliance rather than academic freedom. Piper asserts that the abandonment of objective truth in universities has led directly to the volatility seen in the public square.

Long Gun
Episode 778 2:12:41 - 2:17:47

778: Long Gun

Oklahoma Wesleyan University President's Response to Narcissism

Dr. Everett Piper, President of Oklahoma Wesleyan University, gains national attention for his response to a student who felt "victimized" by a sermon on love. Piper's letter tells students that the university is "not a daycare" and that feeling uncomfortable after a sermon is called a "conscience." He explicitly states that the school will not issue trigger warnings or coddle student narcissism.

Evil Layer Cake
Episode 653 1:21:16 - 1:22:47

653: Evil Layer Cake

Middle East Policy Conundrum, Shiites vs. Sunnis, University of Oklahoma Scholar

A scholar from the University of Oklahoma, appearing on RT's "Crosstalk," explained the contradiction in U.S. Middle East policy. The U.S. supported Shiite dominance in Iraq while simultaneously aiding Sunni rebels against a Shiite-aligned government in Syria. This "conundrum" has led to the U.S. inadvertently supporting the same groups that are undermining its goals in Iraq.