The date of the symposium, by the way, is the anniversary of the signing of the Great Barrington Declaration. It’s also Rosh Hashanah, one of the High Holy Days of the Jewish calendar. Stanford says the “overlap” with the holiday is regrettable, but it hasn’t offered to reschedule.
Admittedly, I don't know much about of Judaism, but this seemed out of place. What's the significance of the signing of this declaration and start of the conference, with this holiday? That it'd be like the equivalent of hosting a conference on Christmas or Eid or something?
While I understand the needs for "academic freedom," the author is right:
No university claims to be open to the expression of any or all views, no matter how unorthodox or counterfactual; they make judgments about the propriety of viewpoints all the time; the level of discernment they practice is one way we judge them as serious educational establishments.
It's one thing to have heterodox views, perhaps because we don't yet fully understand something. But at this point in the pandemic, and what we know from past pandemics, this whole intentional widespread infection leading to herd immunity idea made no sense. It was misinformation during the height of the pandemic and it's still misinformation now.
Stanford should've said "No," and made these quacks have their conference at the local Super 8 hotel.