Based on the mail of the past month, a lot of people still want me fired
from my teaching position at the University of Texas for my antiwar
writings in the aftermath of Sept. 11.
Many accuse me of being "anti-American," but ironically it is their call to
limit political debate that is anti-American, for it abandons the core
commitment of a democracy to the sovereignty of the people and the role of
citizens in forming public policy.
Some of the folks writing to me -- and to the president of my university --
do not mince words: Jensen is not supporting the war effort. So, he should
be fired.
Other people, perhaps aware that such a call violates any reasonable
conception of free speech and academic freedom, take a slightly more
nuanced position: Because Jensen is so political in public, he cannot
possibly teach in a fair and objective manner (though none of them has ever
visited my classroom). They reach the same conclusion: He should be fired.
Both arguments are attacks on any meaningful conception of democracy and
higher education. Let's test the logic of those calling for my firing.
In several essays between Sept. 11 and Oct. 7 (posted at
http://www.nowarcollective.com/analysis.htm), I (along with many others in
the antiwar movement) argued against military retaliation, on moral and
practical grounds -- innocent civilians abroad likely will die, making
future terrorist attacks more likely by deepening the anger and resentment
against the United States in the Arab and Muslim world. Once the war began,
I continued to oppose the reckless Bush policy that has created a
humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan as the war blocks significant food
distribution and the civilian death toll mounts. Events in the world
suggest this analysis coming from opponents of the war has been painfully
accurate.
Throughout, I have suggested that Americans should confront the ugly
history of U.S. attacks on civilians in such places as Southeast Asia,
Latin America and the Middle East to understand why so many around the
world see us not as the defender of freedom but as a violent bully.
If I had supported the president's decisions and endorsed a military
strike, would anyone have suggested I should be fired? Clearly not; many
academics have done that without criticism.
Whatever the merits of either the prowar or antiwar position, one thing is
inescapable: Both are political. So, my correspondents' real objections
cannot be that I am political, but instead that my political ideas are
unacceptable to them. That means their actual argument is that in times of
crisis, certain analysis and ideas are not acceptable and certain views
should be purged from public universities, which sounds pretty anti-American.
It is of course dangerous to label any idea "anti-American," because the
term suggests that there can be political positions that are fixed forever.
But the foundation of the U.S. system is (or should be) an active
citizenry; being a citizen should mean more than just voting every few
years. We have the right -- maybe even the obligation -- to involve
ourselves in the formation of public policy, and in that process no one can
claim that some proposals cannot be voiced.
If that's true, then those calling for my firing are anti-American to the
bone; their patriotism is supremely unpatriotic.
In my writing and speaking since Sept. 11, I have not supported terrorism
or minimized the depth of the pain that Americans feel. I simply have
suggested that it is important to understand the reasons that terrorists
were willing to fly jets into buildings. Our president's claim that
terrorists "hate our freedoms" is embarrassingly simplistic, to the point
of being childish. It is time to face honestly the way in which U.S.
foreign policy -- so often cruel, callous and indifferent to the suffering
of innocent people -- must be understood as part of this story.
Those are political arguments. No matter what one thinks of the soundness
of the arguments, expressing them is an act of citizenship. In a democracy,
we do not surrender to leaders the right to make policy undisturbed by the
people.
If people want to eliminate spirited political discussion from the
universities, what is left of higher education?
If they want to punish the exercise of citizenship, what is left of democracy?
Robert Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas at
Austin, a member of the Nowar Collective (www.nowarcollective.com) and
author of the forthcoming book Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from
the Margins to the Mainstream. He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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