Academic McCarthyism Threatens Democracy
Columbia University President Lee Bollinger recently took a lot of heat when he allowed Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to make a speech at the Ivy League institution. Bollinger, a First Amendment legal scholar, understands the importance of free speech in a democratic system. And these days, free speech is under attack on college campuses throughout the nation.
Professor Norman Finkelstein, son of Holocaust survivors and the most prominent critic of Israeli policy in American academia, was denied tenure by DePaul University, even though the political science department and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences recommended tenure.
Harvard law school professor Alan Dershowitz lobbied against tenure for Finkelstein, an act described by MIT professor Noam Chomsky as a "jihad" designed "simply to try to vilify and defame him, in the hope that maybe what he's writing will disappear." Finkelstein told the Democracy Now! program: "I met the standards of tenure DePaul required, but it wasn't enough to overcome the political opposition to my speaking out on the Israel-Palestine conflict." The late Raul Hilberg, dean of Holocaust historians and a Finkelstein supporter, had said: "I have a sinking feeling about the damage this will do to academic freedom."
Professor Ward Churchill was fired by the University of Colorado at Boulder, ostensibly because of research misconduct, a pretext, many believe, for his unpopular views. Churchill has written extensively on the genocide of Native Americans and the federal government's COINTELPRO program. The trouble started when Churchill characterized the 9-11 attacks as a response to years of U.S. abuses, and called the victims of 9-11 "little Eichmanns" who formed a "technocratic corps at the very heart of America's global financial empire."
Then there is Erwin Chemerinsky, constitutional scholar extraordinaire who has argued for judicial review for detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and represented Valerie Plame, the CIA agent outed by the Bush administration. He was chosen to become dean of the new University of California-Irvine law school. Then, the chancellor of Irvine rescinded the contract -- allegedly due to pressure from conservative groups -- then reinstated Chemerinsky.
Meanwhile, Andrew Meyer, a student at the University of Florida, was tasered by police during a speech by Sen. John Kerry, while he asked questions that were critical of Bush. And there are calls by the College Republicans for the resignation of David McSwane, the editor-in-chief of the Rocky Mountain Collegian, Colorado State University's student newspaper, who wrote an editorial in which he said "Taser this. F*** Bush."
Conservative pressure groups, including David Horowitz and his Students for Academic Freedom (in classic Orwellian fashion, they purport to stand for academic freedom, the opposite of that which they really advocate), are trying to muzzle free speech in academia. In their warped worldview, there is a leftwing conspiracy to control the college campuses and enforce liberal, politically-correct thinking. They are kindred spirits with those political hacks in the Bush administration who cried liberal bias in public broadcasting, and attempted to recreate PBS in the image of Fox News.
And professors are strong-armed and vilified in the process. Horowitz has compiled a list of the "101 Most Dangerous Academics in America," which includes Finkelstein; Chomsky; Kathleen Cleaver of Emory University; Howard Zinn of Boston University; Manning Marable, Eric Foner and Victor Navasky of Columbia; Angela Davis of the University of California, Santa Cruz; David Cole of Georgetown; Derrick Bell of NYU; Amiri Baraka of Rutgers; Robert McChesney of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Ron (Maulena) Karenga of the California State University, Long Beach, bell hooks and Leonard Jeffries of the City University of New York, Juan Cole of the University of Michigan, and others.
Horowitz claims most college professors are left-leaning, which is hardly the point. I am inclined to believe that free thinking, open-mindedness and flexibility are more compatible with the purpose of the university.
Ideological conservatism stands for black or white, right or wrong, friend or enemy, with no shades of gray. One is not supposed to challenge conventional wisdom, authority, the laws, the status quo or longstanding institutions. It is worth noting that in a recent study, psychologist David Amodio and others found that conservatives tend to be more rigid and closed-minded, less tolerant of ambiguity and less open to new experiences.
And as far as the Ahmadinejad speech at Columbia is concerned, certainly, those chickenhawk Americans who are beating the drums of war with Iran are dying to be provoked by the words and actions of the Iranian bogeyman. And denying the existence of the Holocaust, and presiding over a government that disregards women's and gay rights, and executes juveniles is reprehensible at the very least. Is he a petty dictator, as Bollinger suggests? Perhaps. But he is also a politician who is playing to his base. And there are many would-be petty dictators in this country who, in playing to their base, support the most outrageous and unconscionable policies, such as the criminalization of women's rights, including abortion, even in the case of rape and incest, guns for everyone, the teaching of creationism mythology in the schools, homophobia, criminalization of Latino workers, and the elimination of civil rights and civil liberties.
Our own President Bush is responsible for the deaths of 1 million Iraqis and thousands of U.S. citizens, all from a war based on lies, for the purpose of protecting his and his friends' oil interests. His administration, detested by millions, acts with a total disregard for the law, on a daily basis. Yet, he is allowed to give speeches everyday -- albeit with the aid of teleprompters displaying phonetically-spelled words -- unimpeded, and without impeachment, for that matter.
Free speech dictates a higher standard than merely giving a pass to those whose ideas are acceptable, those with whom we agree, whoever "we" are. It is better to have all of the ideas out there in the marketplace, save those which amount to yelling fire in a crowded room or inciting violence. If the Constitution is not durable or inclusive enough to protect dissident views and unpopular statements, maybe it is not worth keeping. Perhaps it is not worth the paper on which it is written, and it is time for us to find another plan.
So, enough of this academic McCarthyism. Words are powerful, as they can liberate bodies and minds, spur revolutions, and change history. Indeed, the pen is mightier than the sword. But free speech is supposed to be feared by a dictatorship such as Burma or China, not a democracy. Which one are we?
BlackCommentator.com Columnist David A. Love is a lawyer based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the Progressive Media Project and McClatchy-Tribune News Service. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International UK spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality conference as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional Rights, and served as a law clerk to two black federal judges. His blog is at davidalove.com.
© 2002-2007 www.BlackCommentator.com
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26 Comments so far
Show AllThank you, Dichterfreund. One might also mention Jeffries's characterizing of whites and blacks as "ice people" and "sun people."
As the saying goes, a stopped clock is right twice a day.
Here is a piece on the exact same wave length!: "Banning Desmond Tutu is NOT Minnesota Nice. It's Downright Icky."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/coleen-rowley/banning-desmond-tutu-is-n_b_67650.html
There is an ongoing protest taking place at St. Thomas University so there is a chance they will remedy their mistake. Please write or call your views on loss of academic freedom and/or suppression of peace and justice to the St. Thomas President:
Father Dennis Dease
President, University of St. Thomas
2115 Summit Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55105
djdease@stthomas.edu
http://www.startribune.com/462/story/1472416.html
"Most colleges and universities are controlled by the rich parents of the rich kids who go there and by other big money; progressive bias, no chance."
Currently it looks like the rich parents have confidently passed off their control of schools to taser-weilding campus security and their captains.
Most colleges and universities are controlled by the rich parents of the rich kids who go there and by other big money; progressive bias, no chance.
Moonraven
You hit it on the head! The propaganda is in the title.
The profs are there to serve the machine.
balakirev, thanks for your comments.
One thing that's funny, though. Remember when the conservatives were complaining how the college prefessors were all communist? They would make gross remarks like "the effete intellectual elite"
Anyhow, the world went crazy years ago and now we are full force into complete insanity.
Daniel Shays
There is no symmetry between a Left and a Right on college campuses.
If you read my earlier thread, you will observe that the majority of academic depts. are usually fairly conservative if not apolitical.
Anyway, I can tell you that the various "truth" squads that regularly invaded my UC,Irvine campus (and classes)during the '80s and '90s were all from various rightwing youth groups (off- and on-campus).
There were (and are) no well heeled leftwing academic attack groups like, for example, Horowitz's. Most Left-leaning profs tend to be loners and careerists.
If a prof is Left or liberal, he or she tends to vote for whatever political hack
the Democratic Party puts up for election.
Last, if a prof is too controversial (i.e., Leftist), he or she usually pays the price for rocking the boat. In other words, they don't last long in academia.
The only avowed Leftists that survive academia are those that started their careers as apolitical or conservative and later changed, or they have published worldwide tomes that almost all academics will genuflect to...and that isn't even certain.
"...was part of a much broader campaign orchestrated by a consortium of well-heeled "pro"-Israel organization and foundations to "take back" college campuses where, in recent years, a handful of dissenters have finally broken the total stranglehold by Israel's apologists over debate."
The above quote is from a fantastic book (BEYOND CHUTZPAH)by Prof. Norman G. Finkelstein who is a recent victim of "the Israeli Lobby" smear campaign. Even President Carter has been demonized because of his book:Palestine Peace Not Aparteid for daring to try to start a debate that the Israel Lobby so adamently opposes.
Please continue to engage in the debate for freedom of speech and don't be discourage by the hooliganism of these fascists.
That's about as good a polka as you'll ever hear.
Thank you, Zubsin, for this, "I may not agree with a word that you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
Exactly. Neither the left nor the right defend freedom of speech. They both hypocritically pretend to defend it, but seldom in reality do. They're both too busy stifling facts in the media, in colleges and basically everywhere. One thing that the left do that particularly pisses me off, is try to choose my words for me in case I may offend someone.
Political Correctness: that lovely little item that came directly from Stalinist Russia.
Don't you just love double standards? Don't you just love it when they try to take away our freedom of speech?
"Horowitz does have a case against Leonard Jeffreys. He is an anti-semite. He routinely refers to Jews as Sskunks. He said that Jews were behind the slave trade. His research is faulty. Columbia fired him because he was unqualified. I agree. He sued and won because the judge said that if Columbia knew that he was unqualified, why did they wait 20 years to fire him."
Jeffries teaches at City College of New York, not Columbia. Even if one of those accused by Joe McCarthy of being communist WAS communist -- and the current reactionary position is that the Venona transcripts exonerate McCarthy -- McCarthy & his supporters were still in the wrong, I'm sure you'll agree.
Some one much wiser than I once said " I may not agree with a word that you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it"!!!!! dlz
The quote from "Iron Heel" says it all. Thank you NamVet67.
For a good read on how the press began going along the right wing hype this time:
see: Thank You, Dan Rather
By Leslie Griffith
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Wednesday 03 October 2007
Thank you, Dan Rather. It's balls to the wall time, and as a fellow Texan, you sure came through.
As an investigative journalist who worked as both a reporter and anchor for the San Francisco Bay Area's highest-rated newscast for 22 years, I can only say what happened to you nationally was also happening locally. You were told to conform to a Republican agenda or shut up. When you refused to march in step, you got Bush-whacked.
I read your brief and I know the drill. The erosion was slow and many of us barely noticed the small chiseling away of who and what we once were. Anchors and reporters depend on high ratings. If ratings fall in television, people get fired. In the months following 9/11, the president's approval rating was 86 percent, and that's when many in commercial journalism lost their way. To disagree or even ask a disagreeable question regarding the president and his decisions was interpreted as disloyal by many media corporations. .................
The rest can be found at:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/100307F.shtml
I'd kill to get on Horowitz's list of my most admired American academics.
Horowitz does have a case against Leonard Jeffreys. He is an anti-semite. He routinely refers to Jews as Sskunks. He said that Jews were behind the slave trade. His research is faulty. Columbia fired him because he was unqualified. I agree. He sued and won because the judge said that if Columbia knew that he was unqualified, why did they wait 20 years to fire him.
The US, by the way, is not a democracy.
YOUR vote doesn't count for anything.
..."War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, and Ignorance is Strength." from the Ministry of Truth...ala Mr. Orwell. 1984
All education is political.
There are NO exceptions.
The problem right now is that the dominant political stancein the US is:
Pro-Israel
Pro-War
Pro-Ignorance
When radical right ("conservative")ideological activists globally label academia as a brainwashing tool of leftists and liberals, they are not being specific about who their target really is.
Usually, faculty in business administration, economics, hard sciences (esp. computer science), medicine, law, linguistics, political science, geography, geology, criminal justice, cognitive science, cultural studies, music, English, and foreign languages, do not tend to be leftist nor liberals.
Today's radical right jihadists are really focusing on the following "suspect" depts. that sometimes contain left-leaning/critical individuals: sociology, humanities, anthropology, history, middle eastern studies (orientalism), literary studies, the visual arts and dramatic arts and philosophy.
Hey, aren't those the "suspect" academic depts. Pinochet's regime cleaned out when he took power with the tacit, if not active, support of the U.S.?
I do remember that immediately after the Pinochet's coup, the depts. of sociology and philosophy were restaffed by military men.
Hey, if the radical right doesn't approve of "left-leaning/liberal" personnel (as defined by the radical right), maybe suspect individuals can be dismissed and replaced by Blackwater "contractors".
That would surpass Pinochet's academic final solution. T'ink aboud it! Private contractors employed in academia instead of public officials such as military officers.
Radical Right jihadists (and their corporate sponsers) could start privatizing the "heart" of academia.
Why hasn't this solution been advocated, earlier? Does anyone know the names of the appropriate think tanks whom I could sell my new idea to?
In fact, if my proposed idea was put into place, there would be no need for rightwing (conservative) think tanks or academic jihadists.
There would be no intellectual tension or stress in the groves of academe. The new slogan could be, "You're free if you agree."
Hey, I'm on a roll, here!
The right-wing as a movement began with the demonization of academics, in William Buckley's "God and Man at Yale", where the professors didn't teach the doctrinal religious & economic beliefs that Buckley held; and then under Nixon & Agnew all the little cons simply developed the strategy that it was "these kids, these bums" who were causing all the problems -- like protest against the war & demands for equality of blacks with whites -- and that has remained the strategy. The dogma is that good American kids, who wave the flag and gladly go to war and would be good businessmen, get kidnapped into college & brainwashed into radicalism. Reactionaries have never wanted anyone to receive education which they didn't carefully control, and so they have to suggest that academics are part of a large conspiracy against right-wingers.
I was appalled that C-SPAN gave Horowitz three hours yesterday on their "In Depth" -- having exorcized the spirits of his communist parents, Davey now channels Roy Cohn.
What's next Barn Burner, can be read in Jack London's IRON HEEL. I offer you a quote from Chapter 7. "`Not a word that he uttered will see print. You have forgotten the editors. They draw their salaries for the policy they maintain. Their policy is to print nothing that is a vital menace to the established. The Bishop's utterance was a violent assault upon the established morality. It was heresy. They led him from the platform to prevent him from uttering more heresy. The newspapers will purge his heresy in the oblivion of silence. The press of the United States? It is a parasitic growth that battens on the capitalist class. Its function is to serve the established by moulding public opinion, and right well it serves it."
Hoa binh
When radical right ("conservative")ideological activists globally label academia as a brainwashing tool of leftists and liberals, they are not being specific about who their target really is.
Usually, faculty in business administration, economics, hard sciences (esp. computer science), medicine, law, linguistics, political science, geography, geology, criminal justice, cognitive science, cultural studies, music, English, and foreign languages, do not tend to be leftist nor liberals.
Today's radical right jihadists are really focusing on the following "suspect" depts. that sometimes contain left-leaning/critical individuals: sociology, humanities, anthropology, history, middle eastern studies (orientalism), literary studies, the visual arts and dramatic arts and philosophy.
Hey, aren't those the "suspect" academic depts. Pinochet's regime cleaned out when he took power with the tacit, if not active, support of the U.S.?
I do remember that immediately after the Pinochet's coup, the depts. of sociology and philosophy were restaffed by military men.
Hey, if the radical right doesn't approve of "left-leaning/liberal personnel (as defined by the radical right), maybe such suspect individuals can be dismissed and replaced by Blackwater "contractors".
That would supass Pinochet's academic final solution. T'ink aboud it! Private contractors employed in academia instead of public officials such as military officers.
They could start privatizing the "heart" of academia.
Why hasn't this thought about before? Does anyone know the names of appropriate think tanks I could sell my new idea to!
In fact, if my proposed idea is put into effect, there would be no need for rightwing (conservative) think tanks or organized academic jihadists?
The consequences of exclusively hiring Blackwater employees would be the removal of emotional tension or stress in the groves of academe.
This is just what psyops ordered.
The new slogan on all Blackwatered campuses (and online learning) could be, "You're free if you agree."
Hey, I'm on a roll, here!
Let's not forget Desmond Tutu, whose address at University of St. Thomas was cancelled last week after consultations with the Israel lobby.
What worries me is that the Public seems to be supportive of the suppression of free speech in academia. This idea that Universities are a hotbed of liberal extremism seems to resonate with the Public. I dont hear of student protest. I see no outrage in the newspapers or any media. There was an article recently on CD that spoke to the censorship of books in libraries across the Country. Is bonfires of burning books next? Is required thought to be dictated to the Universities coming? PBS was neutered, Pacifica radio is way too radical to survive this political climate. Will a bounty be offered for turning in you liberal neighbor or parent?
The Middle East Studies Association if fighting hard for academic freedom against attacks from groups like neocon Daniel Pipes's Campus Watch. MESA is made up of such notables as Juan Cole and Rachid Khalidi. To learn how you can support freedom of speech in the field of Middle East Studies something absolutly essential in light of the enormous anti-Islam, anti-Arab anti-Iranian bias in our media and gov't click here:
http://www.mesa.arizona.edu/aff/academic_freedom.htm