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Sunday, April 28, 2024

Professor Fired for Faking Data to Spread Anti-White Message

'I do not see how you can teach our students to be ethical researchers or how the results of future research projects conducted by you could be deemed as trustworthy...'

(Dmytro “Henry” AleksandrovHeadline USA) Florida State University criminology professor Eric Stewart was fired from his job after it was revealed that he’s been fabricating the data of his studies for over 20 years to present white people as oppressors of black people.

Stewart’s studies that were retracted were a 2019 study that suggested historical lynchings make white people today perceive black people as threats, a 2018 study that stated a similar thing and a 2015 study that said white Americans wanted tougher sentences for Latinos because their community was getting bigger and economically successful.

The professor was fired from his job four years after his former graduate student Justin Pickett revealed the truth about his extremely biased research, the New York Post reported.

In 2011, they both were researching together whether the public was demanding longer sentences for black and Hispanic criminals as those minority populations grew. However, Stewart fiddled with the sample size because the actual results of the study didn’t fit into the leftist perspective of the professor, Pickett said.

As expected, Stewart claimed when the investigation began in 2020 that he was the victim and that Pickett “essentially lynched me and my academic character.”

On July 13 of this year, FSU’s Provost James Clark formally notified Stewart he was being terminated, even though Stewart has been absent from his role since March.

“I do not see how you can teach our students to be ethical researchers or how the results of future research projects conducted by you could be deemed as trustworthy,” Clark wrote.

While he was still a respected professor, major organizations and taxpayer-funded entities donated north of $3.5 million to Stewart to spread the leftist, anti-white propaganda, his resume indicated.

Among the organizations that gave money to Stewart were the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Justice’s National Institute of Justice and the National Institute of Mental Health — a branch of the National Institutes of Health.

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