To the editor: Has historical past ever appeared kindly on the governments or nation states that instituted legal guidelines, obligations, laws or insurance policies particular to figuring out these of its personal residents as “Jewish” (“Decide says Penn should flip over details about Jewish staff in U.S. discrimination probe,” March 31)?
Moreover, by what measure would such a requirement immediately discern, with all consideration to the absurdity deserved, how Jewish? Non secular or secular? Orthodox or not? Assimilated, however not an excessive amount of? After all, that’s only for starters.
From a purely sensible perspective, what’s the College of Pennsylvania to do in adhering to the courtroom’s order? Are we purported to assume the college, as a matter of standard observe, maintains employment data which have a “sure” designation listed subsequent to every employee? Penn has already mentioned it doesn’t “keep worker lists by faith.”
Lacking from this text is any consideration as to why the a whole lot or 1000’s of the school who determine as Jewish ought to have their names offered to this or another authorities.
Hopefully, even a few of these readers who assist this administration would possibly suppose that sounds a minimum of a “bisl” harmful.
Ted Rosenblatt, Hancock Park
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To the editor: I’m appalled by U.S. District Decide Gerald Pappert’s ruling that the College of Pennsylvania should give out the names and private contact data of Jewish staff to the Justice Division.
My dismay just isn’t primarily based on the parallel to Nazi/fascist investigations of Jews within the Nineteen Thirties and ‘40s, nor the privateness rights of the college. It’s primarily based on primary privateness rights of any worker to forestall having his or her title and deal with given out to anybody when the one motive for the request relies on the faith of the worker.
Andrew E. Rubin, Los Angeles

