and
https://twitter.com/NancyMace/status/1836879227452543449
Professor Michael Eric Dyson of Vanderbilt University has earned a Molière Citation for his tasteless and inappropriate attempt to hit on U.S. Representative Nancy Mace (R-S.C).
Sucking up like the eponymous vacuum cleaner, the professor must have thought he could thread the needle between calling her a racist and expecting to have some sort of mutual relationship. For goodness sake, it’s not as if she were one of his coed students — what was he thinking?
And the coveted Molière Celebration is awarded to Rep. Nancy Mace, for her timely act of calling him out for the kind of person he really must be. Unlike some of the “Me, too” crowd of Karen’s, she didn’t wait 40 years to blow the whistle. We are proud of you Ms Mace and applaud you for your response and highlighting this situation. Furthermore adding the account into record in your Congressional address recently. Kudos!
https://twitter.com/RepNancyMace/status/1836861583944720539
Maybe in the future Prof. Dyson will think twice before denigrating a respected woman in public in advance of telling her how good they look together.
As we often hear in the movies, the question to pose to Dyson is “Has that line EVER worked for you?”
We suppose not.
Further shared by Rep Mace is the ill statement that Dyson had to jab Mace with.
https://x.com/NancyMace/status/1837175191392198926/photo/1
Let’s point out that Dyson has gotten in trouble before, having allegations against him from Georgetown University in 2020, which could be the reason Dyson moved on to Vanderbilt, mysteriously after the investigation concluded. Dyson had many prior allegations, yet none were investigated. It appears he used his role as a professor to affect his students and get some special favors from students, of course these weren’t criminally prosecuted and perhaps the students felt cornered and unable to speak out against this repeat offender.
Georgetown investigated Professor Michael Eric Dyson for student harassment allegations before his hire by Vanderbilt