ing originally was to be built without a conditional use
permit — a permit that would require more public input
and clarity around issues like parking — but the Fairmount
Neighborhood Association appealed that decision, and the
UO had to apply for the permit, according to reporting by
The Daily Emerald. The arena was also originally sup-
posed to be totally privately funded, but ended up being
paid for by a $200 million bond by the state, according to
The Oregonian.
Although his name is not at the forefront, Slusher’s help
in leading Knight and Nike construction projects has af-
NEWS
fected not only the UO, but also Oregon at large.
In 2013, a few years after Matthew Knight Arena
opened, the Oregon Senate passed House Bill 2646A — “a
bill to ensure that more workers on state projects receive
the appropriate level of compensation and benefits,” ac-
cording to a news release. The bill specifically “ensures
that contractors for construction projects in the Oregon
University System use prevailing wage laws that benefit
workers and Oregon’s economy.” Knight’s Phit LLC has
leased land from the UO, built on it as a private company,
then returned it.
Even though the bill did not directly address Knight-
funded construction projects, according to The Oregonian,
a Nike lobbyist called a Democratic lawmaker to attempt
to get the bill pulled from its scheduled vote. The vote went
forward without interruption and passed.
As long as news stories about Nike and Knight keep
coming to the forefront, Slusher seems to be just below the
surface, out of view. Even attempting to find a photo of him
online proved impossible. But it seems that’s exactly how
Slusher wants it.
BY MEERAH POWELL
LCC INSTRUCTOR ACCUSED
OF ALT-RIGHT TIES
Social media screenshots from LCC’s sole philosophy instructor
include re-posted memes and quotes with alt-right ideology
O
n May 28, a Twitter thread published screenshots
some have denounced as sexist, racist and hold-
ing alt-right ideology from the public social me-
dia profiles of Lane Community College instruc-
tor Jeffrey Borrowdale.
Borrowdale is the sole instructor remaining in LCC’s
philosophy department after budget cuts last year.
He is also the faculty advisor for LCC’s chapter of
Young Americans for Liberty, a campus group mostly as-
sociated with libertarianism, “dedicated to spreading the
ideals of individual rights, personal responsibility, limited
government and a voluntary society,” according to its Org-
Sync campus engagement webpage.
The screenshots posted were of Borrowdale’s public
Twitter page and Gab page. Gab is a social networking site,
sometimes referred to as the “right-wing” or “alt-right”
Twitter. The site’s logo is a frog, stylistically similar to the
Pepe the Frog meme appropriated by alt-right groups.
The screenshots of Borrowdale’s profiles included his
Gab bio, in which he states he is “fighting for a free society
against” social justice warriors, socialists and Black Lives
Matter among other groups.
An example a meme Borrowdale re-posted reads:
“Let’s discuss what Islam offers: rape, beheadings, burn-
ing people alive …”
Borrowdale’s Twitter bio states that he is “Not a Nazi.”
The Twitter thread posted by an LCC student under the
name @cruciverberella has gained more than 300 retweets
and almost a thousand likes, as well as comments both
chastising and defending Borrowdale. The poster’s Twitter
profile also links to the Democratic Socialist Party.
This isn’t Borrowdale’s first run-in with online conflict.
In November Eugene Antifa posted a photo with Borrow-
dale standing next to Milo Yiannopoulos, former writer for
the far-right Breitbart News, before a discussion on free
speech Borrowdale was helping to facilitate.
“Let him know it’s time for him to go!” the Eugene An-
tifa post reads, directing people to go to the discussion.
Borrowdale tells EW the social media profiles are in-
deed his, and he was not attempting to hide them, as they
both have his real name and photo attached to them.
He says the reason people might think he’s “alt-right”
is because he likes President Trump and the Pepe the Frog
meme (though he says he doesn’t appreciate the appropria-
tion of the meme by hate groups — “I refuse to let a few
fringe lunatics ruin one of my favorite memes,” he says.)
“I’m not alt-right, a racist or a fascist,” Borrowdale tells
EW via email. “I’m a libertarian, which is the opposite of
a fascist. I believe in free thought, free speech and free
enterprise, along with a healthy dose of tolerance and com-
passion.”
In regard to his social media posts, Borrowdale says,
“I follow the news and politics. I share and comment on
things that interest me on social media. Just because I share
something doesn’t necessarily mean I agree with it or with
everything in the piece or clip.”
Neve Hewitt is a current student at LCC. Hewitt says
she’s never taken a class with Borrowdale; she considered
it once, only to be discouraged when she found his Twitter.
“For a while I was considering becoming a religious
studies major,” Hewitt says. “He offered a class on Abra-
hamic religions,” an area Hewitt says she’s interested in.
Hewitt signed up for the class and then Googled Bor-
rowdale; she says she Googles all of her teachers before
taking their classes.
“Near the very top of the results was his very public
Twitter feed,” Hewitt says. “I’m not opposed to having
professors who have conservative viewpoints. I’ve had
many. That’s not the problem.”
Hewitt says she came across Borrowdale’s profile be-
fore the presidential election and said his Twitter feed had
a lot of anti-Hillary Clinton memes, “including some that
were very sexist,” she says.
“He was also posting a lot of very negative things about
Black Lives Matter and some Islamophobic things, so I im-
mediately dropped the class,” Hewitt says. “I didn’t want
to learn anything from this professor.”
Hewitt says she talked to another instructor to ask if
there was anything to be done about the content Borrow-
dale was posting on his Twitter.
Hewitt was told there was nothing that could be done
“unless there was a threat of violence toward students or
faculty,” she says. But, she says, “You can’t have a profes-
sor as a role model speaking the way he does without the
threat of violence.”
Canaan Staley is the chapter president of Young Ameri-
cans for Liberty (YAL), the campus group Borrowdale ad-
vises.
Staley says Borrowdale advises the group on important
decisions and helps them with outreach. He says his initial
reaction to the Twitter thread was that there was not any
evidence of Borrowdale’s affiliation with the alt-right.
Staley says a recurring argument he’s seen online of
Borrowdale’s ties to the alt-right, specifically from Eugene
Antifa, is that photo of Borrowdale with Yiannopoulos.
“That proves nothing; that proves the exact opposite,”
Staley says. “Milo is a gay, Jewish man married to a black
man. I’m pretty sure that if Professor Borrowdale was an
alt-right racist, he wouldn’t be putting his arm around him.”
Caroline Lundquist was also a philosophy instructor
at LCC, though she was laid off during last year’s budget
cuts. She now works as a philosophy instructor at UO. She
worked with Borrowdale at LCC the five years she was at
the college.
“His political views are pretty out there,” Lunquist says
of Borrowdale. “But one of the things I love about Lane is
that all views are genuinely welcome.”
“I am of the school that professors should feel open to
express their views, but there is a line that shouldn’t be
crossed — where students are made to feel unwelcome,”
Lundquist says.
“I have had students raise concerns,” she says.
Lundquist says Borrowdale was known to express his
views openly during classes. She says during her time
teaching at LCC, some of Borrowdale’s students ap-
proached her with comments that suggested they felt “un-
safe in the learning environment.”
“I had students that were concerned about his behaviors
towards students,” she says. Lundquist says some students
complained to her about Borrowdale calling only on male
students or not calling on students of color during lectures.
Lundquist says she directed the students to talk to the
interim dean of social sciences, Phil Martinez.
EW contacted Martinez as well as LCC’s public infor-
mation officer for comment, but got no response before
press time.
“As a private citizen, I have a right to free speech, espe-
cially political speech,” Borrowdale says. “I don’t give that
up when I take a job at a public institution.”
“I also have a union contract which affords me addi-
tional job protections. I haven’t violated any college poli-
cies or procedures and should be free to speak my mind
outside of work,” he says.
“It’s tough when someone is slinging accusations at
you. Anything you say is going to look defensive,” Bor-
rowdale says. “What do I say to prove I’m not a racist?
That I was married to a Latina for three years? That we
have a black guy and two Jews involved with YAL, all of
whom love Pepe? That I use MLK’s ‘Letter from a Bir-
mingham Jail’ in my ethics class? When Milo Yiannopo-
lous, a gay Jew married to a black man advocating for free
speech on campus can be called a Nazi, I suppose anyone
can.”
eugeneweekly.com • June 7, 2018
9