Tiny Adventures in Tappania: An Oberlin Dungeons and Dragons Campaign

2024-04-08T00:00:00.000Z

By Cal Ransom, Hazel Feldstein, Shaye Frankel

Four real Oberlin College students pretend to be four fictional Oberlin College students on an adventure through the Kingdom of Tappania (Tappan Square) after being shrunk down to the size of ladybugs.

Image for Tiny Adventures in Tappania: An Oberlin Dungeons and Dragons Campaign

The Trump administration is directing employees at the U.S. Department of Agriculture to investigate foreign scientists who collaborate with the agency on research papers for evidence of “subversive or criminal activity.”

The new directive, part of a broader effort to increase scrutiny of research done with foreign partners, asks workers in the agency’s research arm to use Google to check the backgrounds of all foreign nationals collaborating with its scientists. The names of flagged scientists are being sent to national security experts at the agency, according to records reviewed by ProPublica.

At a meeting last month, USDA supervisors pushed back against the instructions, with one calling it “dystopic” and others expressing shock and confusion, according to an audio recording reviewed by ProPublica.

The USDA frequently collaborates with scientists based at universities in the U.S. and abroad. Some agency workers told ProPublica they were uncomfortable with the new requirement because they felt it could put those scientists in the crosshairs of the administration. Students and postdocs are particularly vulnerable as many are in the U.S. on temporary visas and green cards, the employees said.

Jennifer Jones, director for the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, called the directive a “throwback to McCarthyism” that could encourage scientists to avoid working with the “best and brightest” researchers from around the world.

“Asking scientists to spy on and report on their fellow co-authors” is a “classic hallmark of authoritarianism,” Jones said. The Union of Concerned Scientists is an organization that advocates for scientific integrity.

Jones, who hadn’t heard of the instructions until contacted by ProPublica, said she had never witnessed policies so extreme during prior administrations or in her former career as an academic scien

Tiny Adventures in Tappania: An Oberlin Dungeons and Dragons Campaign

0:00/0:00

Cal Ransom, Hazel Feldstein, Shaye Frankel

15

15