April 3, 2006

The Silencing Expands

Since 9/11/01, there has been a patriotic drum beat to silence voices of dissent in the United States. Actually, we have moved from uber-patriotism to a more aware dialogue. However, the lag has created the opportunity for the far right and neo-cons to organize. That organization is now focused on higher education (which lies close to the heart of Lynn Cheney - Mrs. VP).

As a sociology professor, I am in a discipline at the top of the "hit list" of the right. The pressure to constrain speech - particularly my own - is increasing. The following article from the Guardian, details the progrom against higher education in general, and the social sciences and humanities in particular. Such pressures must be resisted.

Republished from 4/04/06 Gary Younge, Guardian, Silence in class

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

After the screenwriter Walter Bernstein was placed on the blacklist during the McCarthyite era he said his life "seemed to move in ever-decreasing circles". "Few of my friends dropped away but the list of acquaintances diminished," he wrote in Inside Out, a memoir of the blacklist. "I appeared contaminated and they did not want to risk infection. They avoided me, not calling as they had in the past, not responding to my calls, being nervously distant if we met in public places."

As chair of African American studies in Yale, Paul Gilroy had a similar experience recently after he spoke at a university-sponsored teach-in on the Iraq war. "I think the morality of cluster bombs, of uranium-tipped bombs, [of] daisy cutters are shaped by an imperial double standard that values American lives more," he said. "[The war seems motivated by] a desire to enact revenge for the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon ... [It's important] to speculate about the relation between this war and the geopolitical interests of Israel."
"I thought I was being extremely mealy-mouthed, but I was accused of advocating conspiracy theories," says Gilroy, who is now the Anthony Giddens professor of Social Theory at the London School of Economics.

Scot Silverstein, who was once on the faculty at Yale, saw a piece in the student paper about Gilroy's contribution. He wrote to the Wall Street Journal comparing Gilroy to Hitler and claiming his words illustrated the "moral psychosis and perhaps psychological sadism that appears to have infected leftist academia". The Journal published the letter. Gilroy found himself posted on Discoverthenetworks.org, a website dedicated to exposing radical professors. The principle accusation was that he "believes the US fabricated the threat posed by Saddam Hussein".

Then the emails started coming to him and his colleagues, denouncing him. "Only one person said anything," says Gilroy. "Otherwise, nobody looked me in the eye. There was something about the way it never came up that made me realise how nervous and apprehensive they were."

Few would argue there are direct parallels between the current assaults on liberals in academe and McCarthyism. Unlike the McCarthy era, most threats to academic freedom - real or perceived - do not, yet, involve the state. Nor are they buttressed by widespread popular support, as anticommunism was during the 50s. But in other ways, argues Ellen Schrecker, author of Many Are the Crimes - McCarthyism in America, comparisons are apt.

"In some respects it's more dangerous," she says. "McCarthyism dealt mainly with off-campus political activities. Now they focus on what is going on in the classroom. It's very dangerous because it's reaching into the core academic functions of the university, particularly in Middle-Eastern studies."

Either way, a growing number of apparently isolated incidents suggests a mood which is, if nothing else, determined, relentless and aimed openly at progressives in academe.

Earlier this year, Fox news commentator Sean Hannity urged students to record "leftwing propaganda" by professors so he could broadcast it on his show. On the web there is Campus Watch, "monitoring Middle East studies on campus"; Edwatch, "Education for a free nation"; and Parents Against Bad Books in School.

In mid January, the Bruin Alumni association offered students $100 to tape leftwing professors at the University of California Los Angeles. The association effectively had one dedicated member, 24-year-old Republican Andrew Jones. It also had one dedicated aim: "Exposing UCLA's most radical professors" who "[proselytise] their extreme views in the classroom".

Shortly after the $100 offer was made, Jones mounted a website, uclaprofs.com, which compiled the Dirty 30 - a hit list of those he considered the most egregious, leftwing offenders. Top of the list was Peter McLaren, a professor at the UCLA's graduate school of education. Jones branded McLaren a "monster". "Everything that flows from Peter McLaren's mouth and pen is deeply, inextricably radical," wrote Jones. "In keeping with the left's identity politics he has been a friend to the gay community."

McLaren was shocked. "I was away when the story broke and when I came back there were 87 messages waiting for me. I was surprised a list like that could be created in these times. I thought, 'Wow, somebody's out there reading my work fairly carefully.'" The main impact, he says, was to try to insulate those close to him from the fallout. "I had to take down lots of things from my website - family pictures and contacts with other people. I didn't want other people to pay the price."

Also among the Dirty 30 was history professor Ellen DuBois. She was described as, "in every way the modern female academic: militant, impatient, accusatory and radical - very radical". DuBois told the Los Angeles Times, "This is a totally abhorrent invitation to students to participate in a witch hunt against their professors."

McLaren, who describes himself as a marxist-humanist, agrees. He believes the list was a McCarthyite attack on academe, with the aim of softening up public hostility for a more propitious moment: "This is a low-intensity campaign that can be ratcheted up at a time of crisis. When there is another crisis in this country and this country is in an ontological hysteria, an administration could use that to up the ante. I think it represents a tendency towards fascism."

Six weeks after Jones released his list, two Los Angeles county sheriffs arrived unannounced at Professor Miguel Tinker-Salas's office at Pomona College and started asking questions. Tinker-Salas, a Latin American history professor, was born in Venezuela and is a vocal critic of US policy in the region. The sheriffs, part of a federal anti-terrorism task force, told him that he was not the subject of an investigation. Then, for the next 25 minutes they quizzed him on whether he had been influenced in any way by or had contact with the Venezuelan government, on the leadership within the local Venezuelan community, the consulate and the embassy. Then they questioned his students about the content of his classes, examined the cartoons on his door. "They cast the Venezuelan community as a threat," says Tinker-Salas. "I think they were fishing to see if I had any information they could use."

Pomona's president, David Oxtoby, says he was "extremely concerned about the chilling effect this kind of intrusive government interest could have on free scholarly and political discourse."

Last year, some students at the Department of Middle Eastern and Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University ran a campaign against alleged anti-Israeli bias among professors, criticising the university as a place where pro-Israeli students were intimidated and faculty members were prejudiced. A faculty committee appointed by Columbia concluded that there had been no serious misconduct.

These issues are not confined to university campuses: it is also happening in schools. Since February, the normally sleepy, wealthy district of Upper St Clair in Pennsylvania has been riven with arguments over its curriculum after the local school board banned the International Baccalaureate (IB), the global educational programme, for being an "un-American" marxist and anti-Christian. During their election campaign, the Republicans of Upper St Clair referred to the IB, which is offered in 122 countries and whose student intake has risen by 73% worldwide in the past five years, as though it was part of an international communist conspiracy, suspicious of a curriculum that had been "developed in a foreign country" (Switzerland). "Our country was founded on Judeo-Christian values and we have to be careful about what values our children are taught," said one Republican board member. Similar campaigns have also sprung up recently at school boards in Minnesota and Virginia.

Meanwhile, in January in Aurora, Colorado, social studies teacher Jay Bennish answered questions in his world geography class about President George Bush's speech from his students at Overland High School. Caricaturing Bush's speech, Bennish said, "'It's our duty as Americans to use the military to go out into the world and make the world like us.'" He then continued: "Sounds a lot like the things Adolf Hitler used to say: 'We're the only ones who are right, everyone else is backwards and it's our job to conquer the world and make sure they all live just like we want them to.' Now I'm not saying that Bush and Hitler are exactly the same. Obviously they're not, OK? But there are some eerie similarities to the tones they use."

Unbeknown to him, one 16-year-old student, Sean Allen, recorded part of the class on his MP3 player. When his Republican father heard it he was so incensed that he shopped it around to local conservative radio stations, where it finally found a home with radio talk-show host Mike Rosen.

Later in Bennish's class, the teacher had told his students, "I am not in any way implying that you should agree with me. I don't even know if I'm necessarily taking a position. But what I'm trying to get you to do is to think, all right, about these issues more in depth, and not just take things from the surface. And I'm glad you asked all your questions because they're all very good, legitimate questions." Rosen only played the first part of the tape on his programme. He also put it on the internet.

The next day, the Cherry Creek school district suspended Bennish, arguing that he had at least breached a policy requiring teachers to be "as objective as possible and to present fairly the several sides of an issue" when dealing with religious, political, economic or social issues.

The suspension sparked rival demonstrations at school. Hundreds of students staged a walkout, a few wearing duct tape over their mouths while some chanted, "Freedom of speech, let him teach." A smaller demonstration was staged against Bennish, with students writing "Teach don't preach" on their shirts.

But it has primarily been universities that have been on the frontline. And on the other side of the trenches has been the rightwing firebrand David Horowitz. Horowitz, who had Jones on his payroll but fired him after the taping controversy, was raised by communist parents and was himself a marxist as a teenager. He is involved with Campus Watch, Jihad Watch, Professors Watch and Media Watch; he was also connected to discoverthenetworks.org, which targeted Gilroy. A few years ago he founded a group, Students for Academic Freedom, which boasts chapters promoting his agenda on more than 150 campuses. The movement monitors slights or insults that students say they have suffered and provides an online complaint form. Students are advised to write down "the date, class and name of the professor", get witnesses, "accumulate a list of incidents or quotes", and lodge a complaint. Over the past three years Horowitz has led the call for an academic bill of rights in several states. The bills would allow students to opt out of any part of a course they felt was "personally offensive" and force American universities to adopt quotas for conservative professors as well as monitor the political inclinations of their staff.

The bill has been debated in 23 states, including six this year. In July, Pennsylvania approved legislation calling on 14 state-affiliated colleges to free their campuses from the "imposition of ideological orthodoxy". Meanwhile, House Republicans have included a provision in the Higher Education Act which calls on publicly funded colleges to ensure a diversity of ideas in class - code for countering the alleged liberal bias in classrooms.

"The aim of the movement isn't really to achieve legislation," says Horowitz. "It's supposed to act as a cattle prod, to make legislators and universities aware. The ratio of leftwing professors in Berkeley and Stanford is seven to one and nine to one. You can't get hired if you're a conservative in American universities."

Reliable empirical, as opposed to anecdotal, evidence to back up Horowitz's claim of political imbalance is patchy but rarely contested. The most detailed study, conducted by California economist Daniel Klein and Swedish scientist Charlotta Stern, did reveal a significant Democratic bias which varied depending on the course they taught. It showed that 30 times as many anthropologists and sociologists voted Democrat as Republican, while for those teaching economics the ration plummeted to three to one.

But these results gave only a partial account of campus life. Limiting their research to the social sciences and the humanities excluded a substantial portion of the university experience. According to the Princeton Review, four of the top 10 most popular subjects - business administration and management, biology, nursing and computer science - are not in the social sciences or humanities. Republicans are probably more inclined to find a home in some of these disciplines. In any case, most academics do not deny that there is a progressive, liberal bias in academe. "Of course," says Todd Gitlin, a professor of journalism and sociology at the Columbia School of Journalism. "There's a lot of conservatives in oil. But there aren't a lot of conservatives planning on studying sociology."

And while liberals may be more numerous, argues Schrecker, a professor of history at Yeshiva University in New York, that does not necessarily mean they are more powerful. "Progressive academe is like the ninth ward of New Orleans before the levees break - neither secure nor particularly safe. It's one of the few areas left with some kind of progressive culture."

That, rather than protection of free expression on campus, is precisely why it remains a target for the right, they say.

In February, Horowitz published a book, The Professors: the 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America, in which he lists, in alphabetical order, the radical academics whom he believes are polluting academe with leftwing propaganda. "Coming to a campus near you: terrorists, racists, and communists - you know them as The Professors," reads the blurb on the jacket. "Today's radical academics aren't the exception - they're legion. And far from being harmless, they spew violent anti-Americanism, preach anti-semitism and cheer on the killing of American soldiers and civilians - all the while collecting tax dollars and tuition fees to indoctrinate our children."

The book is a sloppy series of character assassinations, relying more heavily on insinuation, inference, suggestion and association than it does on fact. Take Todd Gitlin, a journalism and sociology professor at Columbia University. Gitlin was the leader of Students for Democratic Society, a radical anti-war movement in the 60s. Today, his politics could be described as mainstream liberal. He supported the war in Afghanistan but not in Iraq and hung out the Stars and Stripes after the terrorist attacks on September 11. He has recently written a book, The Intellectuals and the Flag, calling for progressives to embrace a patriotic culture that distinguishes between allegiance to one's country, which he supports, and loyalty to one's government, which he does not.

None the less, Horowitz slams him for participating in an anti-war teach-in in March 2003 at which his colleague Nicholas de Genova called for "a million Mogadishus" to be visited on American soldiers in Iraq - referring to the murder of US military in Somalia. But Gitlin has never met or spoken to Genova and was not participating in the teach-in when Genova spoke. Horowitz also slates Gitlin for "immersing students in the obscurantist texts of leftists icons like Jürgen Habermas", but omits to mention that Gitlin also teaches from the works of Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Hobbes, Locke, Burke, Adam Smith and the gospels.

"Horowitz's idea of research is cherry-picking," says Gitlin. "And he can't even be trusted to find cherries. He comes up with bitter prunes."

Victor Navasky, the Delacorte professor of journalism at Columbia University, is also on Horowitz's hit list. Navasky, publisher emeritus of the leftwing magazine The Nation and chairman of the Columbia Journalism Review, is accused of "bankrolling" the review and denounced for organising lectures by "prominent leftists" such as Michael Tomasky of American Prospect and Hendrik Hertzberg of the New Yorker. Navasky points out that he has also hosted a lecture by Fox news anchor Bill O'Reilly and the editor of the rightwing Weekly Standard at Columbia, and that the only cheque he ever sent the Review was one he returned after the magazine paid him for an article.

"Were it not for all the inaccuracies I would say that I would be flattered to be on the list, but I don't think I earned it," says Navasky. "I don't think anyone seriously considers me a clear and present danger to the republic."

Horowitz accuses those who accuse him of McCarthyism of being McCarthyites themselves. "All they do is tar and feather me with slanders," he says. "It's the politics of Stalinism."

Evidence to back up his central argument - that these political leanings are at all related to a teacher's ability to be fair, balanced or competent in class - are non-existent. Most of the criticisms of lecturers on both the Dirty 30 list and in Horowitz's book are levelled at comments professors have made outside the classroom and rarely do they provide any evidence of the accused actually criticising or ridiculing students with rightwing ideas.

Nobody denies that bad leftwing lecturers exist. As Russell Jacoby argued in The Nation, "Higher education in America is a vast enterprise boasting roughly a million professors. A certain portion of these teachers are incompetents and frauds; some are rabid patriots and fundamentalists - and some are ham-fisted leftists. All should be upbraided if they violate scholarly or teaching norms. At the same time, a certain portion of the 15 million students they teach are fanatics and crusaders." It is not their work as professors Horowitz does not like; it is the ideologies they espouse, whether in or outside the classroom.

Political assaults on intellectuals are not new. Nor are they specific to the US. At the dawn of western civilisation, Socrates was executed for filling "young people's heads with the wrong ideas". Mao targeted professors for particular humiliation during the cultural revolution.

Mark Smith, the director of government relations for the professor's union, the American Association of University Professors, says that these broadsides vary according to the political climate. Shortly after world war one, the litmus test was those who opposed America's participation in the war or backed the fledgling Russian revolution; during the 50s, it was communists; during the 80s, it was leftwing professors in Latin American studies departments. During the early 90s, Lynne Cheney, the wife of the current vice-president, was chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, when she lead the bureaucratic charge against "political correctness". In many humanities faculties, she claimed, the common thinking is that "there is no truth. Everything we think is true is shaped by political interests ... Since there is no truth ... faculty members are perfectly justified in using the classroom to advance political agendas."

"These things go in cycles," says Smith. "Horowitz did not invent this. He's capitalising on an ongoing anti-intellectualism and fear of the other."

Many believe that this current cycle has intensified as a result of the official response to 9/11. Two months after the terrorist attacks, the conservative American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA), founded by Lynne Cheney in 1995, branded colleges and universities the "weak link in America's response" to the terrorist attacks and called on lecturers and professors to defend western civilisation. In a report entitled Defending Civilization: how our universities are failing America and what can be done about it, ACTA president Jerry Martin and vice-president Anne D Neal, wrote: "While faculty should be passionately defended in their right to academic freedom, that does not exempt them from criticism. The fact is: academe is the only section of American society that is distinctly divided in its response to the attacks on America."

Regardless of their accuracy, integrity and provenance, some believe that these assaults do have an effect. "There is a cunning behind the battyness," says Gitlin. "It's not just the self-aggrandisement. It's an assault on one of the few social enclaves that the right doesn't control. There is a scattershot bellicosity whether the fortunes of the political right are up or down. They find it useful for fundraising if nothing else."

Others argue that while the individual accounts are troubling, their ultimate effect on academe can be exaggerated. The response to the recent article in the London Review of Books by two prominent American professors arguing that the pro-Israel lobby exerts a dominant and damaging influence on US foreign policy may be a case in point. Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer have been accused of being anti-semites and bigots, prompting accusations of a McCarthyite witch-hunt. Shortly after publication, it was announced that one of the authors, Walt, was stepping down from his job as academic dean at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and the school removed the piece from the front page of its website. But the Kennedy School and Walt's colleagues said that the move had long been planned. Meanwhile, the school explained the website change thus: "The only purpose of that removal was to end public confusion; it was not intended, contrary to some interpretations, to send any signal that the school was also 'distancing' itself from one of its senior professors."

"The University of Chicago and Harvard University have behaved admirably in difficult circumstances. We have had the full support of our respective institutions," Mearsheimer said. So all that is left are the accusations which, given the nature of the original article, not even the authors say surprised them. People have a right to be offended. It is when that offence is either based on flawed information or mobilised into an institutional or legislative clampdown that accusations of a witch-hunt truly come into play.

"Clearly these things are disturbing," says Jon Wiener, professor of history at UCLA. "But I don't think they are happening because students are demanding it. The Bruin Alumni Association [turned out] to be one ambitious, well-funded guy. There are some frightening moments, but then things seem to return to normal."

"It's not even clear this is much other than the ill-considered action of a handful, if that, of individuals," says DuBois.

But however many people are involved, the attacks do make a difference, claims Gilroy. "Of course it has an effect," he says. "There's a pre-written script you have to follow and if you chose not to follow it, then there are consequences, so you become very self-conscious about what you say. To call it self-censorship is much too crude. But everybody is looking over their shoulder".

Posted by rowan at April 3, 2006 7:58 PM | [eMail this article!] |
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Comments

Alas, when you are dependent on the tits of the tax payers' wallets for your ability to pontificate, those footing the bill can turn off the spout. No one cares what you say, but some of us are tired of your assumption that we must foot the bill for you to say it.

Posted by: Micklethwait at April 4, 2006 11:50 PM

There is a difference between education and pontification and I am an educator. My classroom is not a venue to convert students to any way of belief. I have students who self-identify as "conservative" who return to my classes (and recommend them to others) because they feel comfortable in them. As well a teaching the skills and perspectives of sociology, I attempt to create an open environment for open dialogue - not debate - dialogue. I think that most educators worth their salt do exactly the same thing.

Where the silencing becomes problematic and threatening is when educators are labeled as being "X." Then student perceptions of what happens in the classroom is perceived within the constructed label. It creates a "witch hunt" environment which silences virtually everyone - students as well as educators.

I refuse to play into the polarized rhetoric. We are all much more complex than that, and the world is much more complex than that. I believe that most of us share common concerns about the issues of the world. Certainly, there are enough of them. While we may disagree with how to address so issues, it is a false assumption to think that there is no meeting ground.

Personally, I feel that what I am "paid to do" is to teach my discipline, and to teach students to be critical thinkers and active citizens - regardless of their political, philosophical, or religious beliefs. Encouraging (or recruiting) students to "go after" so-called "liberal" faculty serves neither their educational purposes, nor my meeting of my responsibilities.

While I do not endeavor to speak for all educators in colleges and universities, I do think that most would agree with higher education as an environment of exploration, discovery and learning. You can't foster that in a climate of "hunt them down and kick them out."

I am not trying to toot my own horn, nor to argue exceptionalism. I think that most educators - regardless of political or philosophical bent - do exactly what I attempt to do - create an environment of dialogue not demagoguery.

Posted by: Rowan at April 5, 2006 7:37 AM


Educators are public servants, and it is ultimately the public that will decide if it likes the service educators are providing. If the public doesn’t like what it is seeing, it has every right to change the rules, to constrain the “educators,” to ensure that they carry out the public will. We need accountability. Just because the public has largely left academics free to do as they please does not mean that the public will continue to be so generous. This is not a free speech issue. This is an issue of how to ensure that public servants carry out the wishes of the public, rather than their own wishes or the partisan wishes of minority segments of the public.

One thing to remember is that it is the public who will decide whether or not educators are carrying out the wishes of the public. YOU may think you are doing a great job. But if a critical mass of WE THE PEOPLE do not agree, we will step in and remove some of your discretion.

It’s as simple as that. When I see schools banning the American Flag on campus, when I see Yale admitting former Taliban officials, when I see case after case of administrators gone wild, I for one am ready to tighten the chain of command and remind you and other academics that you serve us—at our pleasure.

Posted by: Micklethwait at April 5, 2006 3:26 PM

Re-Iteration: As I read the response above I suddenly felt like I was hearing my own voice inside a waste basket..."Recently, I was watching a panel discussing Viet-Nam on C-SPAN, at which Henry Kissinger was an integral participant. I watched and was disgusted as Kissinger again retreated into the use of semantics and rationalizations to excuse and exonerate the guilty! Many of these same pukes who got away with blaming Jane Fonda, the Media, specifically Walter Cronkite, and the Hippies, are mentoring this new crop of s--- for brains n----s in how to get away with Murder! Nixon ran on his promise to end a wrong headed war, but then wasted five more years of death on all sides, plus the Cambodian holocaust, while his Secretary of State went around selling everyone down the raging rapids of US Imperialist global domination strategies. Bush doesn't even have to lie to get backing, because informed/enlightened US society has sunk so far since the sixties! Most don't know Kissinger is full of it and a lot of human beings are going to die because of this kind of repeating ignorance and the actions of those who feel no remorse about exploiting it in the past or present, thinking they act as heroic patriots in a Universe fraught and besieged on every side by enemy! In fact, much has been accomplished consciously by a predatory Right to destroy reasonable awareness, much as the Khmer Rouge murdered everyone wearing glasses because it was believed in their primitive imaginations people wearing glasses were brighter than those not wearing glasses and posed a future threat!"

Posted by: Ed at April 5, 2006 3:29 PM

Nice irrelevant tangent, Ed.

Posted by: Micklethwait at April 5, 2006 3:56 PM

How is thoughtful disagreement with "Repeating Ignorance" in whatever form, an irrelevancy? Since when do the ignorant in a democracy get to command the enlightened, or threaten them into compliance with backward/fascist ideals (I pay your salary, so I can do what I want with you untouchables? Democracy functions on financial support of equalization. Anyone not getting that and working against it, like Gingrich, is a fascist and un-American. Diversity and choice are the functions of Democracy, especially when they are healthiest as treasured freedoms available to EVERYONE, not just those who need to shut them down in order to make themselves feel vital... LONG LIVE MAPLETHORP! Egad!

Posted by: Ed at April 5, 2006 5:01 PM

Long Live Ward Churchill !!!! I watched the same Viet Nam show on C SPAN and thought it was frist rate, especially Mr. Pete Peterson, former P.O.W. what clarity. I also watched David Horowitz at Duke University and I watched it from beginning to end with as open mind as possible. I enjoy in fact I love listening as well as reading a wide source of education, information and opinion.

Keep up the good work Rowan !

Posted by: Bill Whitlatch at April 5, 2006 8:10 PM

Ed,

The irony is that Nixon is an example of a servant of the people forgetting that he is just that--a servant of the people.

Again, the point is that we want accountability to the people, whether we are dealing with Nixon or academics who think that they, rather than the people, ultimately call the shots.

Who is it here that is more in favor of democracy, me or you?

You fear the public. I don't.

Public servants need to remember that they serve the public. Otherwise the public may wake up from it's collective slumber and remind them.

Posted by: Micklethwait at April 5, 2006 10:36 PM

Personally, it is nnot the "public" that I fear. It is a heavily financed minority of the population who believes that silencing any voice but their own is "democracy."

Posted by: Rowan at April 6, 2006 8:31 AM

Rowan,

Anway, it sounds to me as if the public simply cannot disagree with you. If they do, it is because they are manipulated fools. Well, good luck fighting for the status quo. We progressives demand progress, and that starts with shaking things up in academia. Personally, I'd like to see an end to tenure. That would be a start.


Posted by: Micklethwait at April 6, 2006 10:15 AM

Well Mick, you seemed determined to disagree - interestingly even when you seem to agree. Making the statement "the public simply cannot agree with you" seems like a ridiculous statement. I have no control over the "public." What constitutes "the public?" You? You and 6 others? You and 2% of the population? You and 20% of the population?

"The public" is a pretty diverse bunch, and I have seen no polls, statistics, or studies that indicates that the majority of the people (or voters, or college students for that matter) endorse a witch hunt for "liberals" in academia. If you have seen such a study, I would really appreciate your sharing it.

I acknowledge that there are differences of opinion and endeavor to allow those voices and views be heard - in my classroom and on this site. However, you would be mistaken to assume that this site is reflective of my classroom as it is not. This is a private site run by me to address issues in ways that I constrain myself from doing in my classroom.

I am not trying to get "conservative" faculty kicked out of my school, nor to keep new "conservatives" from being hired. I am not trying to silence "conservatives" on my campus. In fact, there is no move afoot at my college to hunt down the conservatives and silence them. I do not understand how shutting people up and engaging in censorship is democratic.

Posted by: Rowan at April 6, 2006 12:48 PM

Rowan,

If you don't understand the difference between censorship and accountability, I can't help you. This has nothing at all to do with censorship and everything to do with the question of holding public servants accountable to the public.

Posted by: Micklethwait at April 6, 2006 10:51 PM

When groups are paying students for tapes and notes to "get" professors; when a major cable network "news" host, calls for students to send him material, when the Vice President's wife sponsors "hit lists" for "unpatriotic" faculty, then we are way past "accountability." Students are not hostages in classrooms or at colleges. They have access to a fair amount of information about faculty from other students before they sign up for a class. They can shift to a different professor (most of the time)even after a term starts. They can (often) choose to go to a different school. Every college I know has student evaluations of faculty, and both a regular peer and administrative review. All of these are ways ensuring accountability.

Earlier, you mentioned that tenure should go. Many folks feel that way, but tenure does not give a professor the leeway to do (or say) anything she or he wants in the classroom (nor out of it - at least in relationship to students). There are an array of sanctions that apply even to tenured faculty.

Mick, I have no idea what occupation you are in. But would you feel that you were being held "accountable" if your coworkers or customers were being encouraged to secretly tape record you (sometimes for money)? Or people in the media and the highest reaches of government were publicly encouraging folks to "turn in" people in your occupation? Would you just say "hey, the 'public' speaks" or "it is a great thing that I am being held accountable" (in this kind of manner)?

I have no problem with accountability, but this is not accountability in my opinion - nor experience. If you would feel that this was appropriate in your occupation - or mine, then we just need to agree to disagree.

Posted by: rowan at April 6, 2006 11:32 PM

What a fabulous post and interesting discussion. Although I do not teach myself, I have spent a fair amount of my time, effort, and MY money in higher education attaining three degrees. Comparing higher education professors in particular as public servants seems ridiculous. I choose where I go to university. I choose which classes and professors I study under. I also pay the bill....not the public. So, how one earth do you consider faculty at a university, so-called public, or private institutions, accountable to the PUBLIC? I may, in fact, I currently have $42,000 in federal loans for my last degree completed in Dec. '05. The public has nothing to do with this except to loan me money through a federal program, to which the receive accrued interest (getting them a better rate than Federal Savings Bonds I might add) and THAT is their entire involvement in the curiiculum of a so-called public or private university. Although universities accept money for research from government agencies, and what few federal grants are available are generally Pell Grants or Homeland Security grants....in what way is a university a PUBLIC SERVANT?

I consider myself a progressive Mick, but I have absolutely no clue where you are coming from unless your entire perspective is based upon the K-12 public education system, one which is so regimented by States, I can not see how any teacher would survive a school board review much less parents, if they actually professed personal viewpoints about social and political issues. ( I wish the textbooks I had about history growing up would have actually had diverse viewpoints rather than the 'nationalistic' and exaggerated, views of history.
Lynne Cheney would have this old nationalistic history taught today if she got her way. Sad but true.

But, as addressed here by Rowan, and I believe an entirely critical point which you seem to dismiss, is this: the entire point of education is to learn how to THINK. To critically process information. To be able to go from point a to point b, to create aprocess for decisionmaking - in life, work and the world at large. To understand cause and effect. People who do not get this core understanding out of an education do not do well in the world or their lives for that matter. Education is not learning about what year the civil war took place except as a relationship to cause and effect, before and after, perspective.

Maybe I am off-base here, but, I think this entire witch-hunt is reactionary and absolutely breathtaking. And, we call ourselves a Democracy? If not in education, where do you discuss these issues? How do you teach the cause and effect of the Chilean government and Pinochet? How do you discuss the effect on teachers and the press when the government jails or executes those speaking for freedom or change. How do you discuss the cause and effect on a society, like us, after the 9/11 attacks and the hyper-vigilence and hyper-fear and ultranationalism of a people and their reactions - right or wrong? How do you discuss the fear and it's cause in our society? How do you discuss anything at all based on your rules? Basically, you don't. Which, in my estimation, sucks. I have learned more from open discussion than any other method of teaching my entire life- and, I am no where near a 20 year old either. Many of these discussion have opened perspectives to me, which I may not have otherwise considered. In my value system, it is vital. It is necessary to have the broadest amount of information available to make choices and decisions. The more narrow the focus of overall education, well...it isn't very useful unless you are into trivial pursuit.

I also find discussions about silencing teachers, academics, the press, and voices of dissent to be incredibly chilling.

Posted by: Sine.Qua.Non at April 7, 2006 1:25 PM

Sine Qua Non....Excellent !

Posted by: Bill Whitlatch at April 7, 2006 1:40 PM

"Public servants need to remember that they serve the public. Otherwise the public may wake up from it's collective slumber and remind them."

Pardon me, but as an English professor I have to point out the incorrect apostrophe. As to the comment, it can quickly be seen to be absurd. The Building Code inspectors serve the public but I sure hope they don't just do whatever I tell them too!

At my university we have noticed a change in the student body. Somehow they have gotten the idea that they pay my salary and therefore I must a) allow them the best parking spaces on campus b) warn them before saying anything potentially offensive--and excuse them from class if they leave (reminds me of a child clapping her hands over her ears and saying LALALALALA) and c) justify any grade lower than an A. Well, in Iowa the students are now paying about 50% of the cost of an education, while the state pays the rest (as a taxpayer, I am paying myself). Students seem to feel that in exchange for money they will get a piece of paper, and they expect that piece of paper to guarantee them a well-paying job. They are unwilling to consider new ideas, grapple with shades of gray, entertain empathy, remember anything beyond the next test, and most troubling, their primary source of information is the internet, of which they are uncritical consumers.

I do not consider myself an educator, but a teacher. I do consider myself accountable, but not to a nameless mass. I am accountable to my profession, my students, my principles, and my administrators (lamentably). I am not paid to train monkeys. Perhaps some believe that the products of a university education should be gears in a machine, not thinking, not creating, not observing, and terrified of debate. I believe they should be critical thinkers, able to analyze and synthesize, not afraid to ask hard questions, thoughtful and aware of our history, and seekers of truth from a variety of sources.

Sorry this isn't well organized but it is Fri afternoon of a long week....
Chery

Posted by: Chery at April 7, 2006 1:49 PM

First, I would like to thank folks for their excellent additions to this discussion.

I was also contacted by Scot Silverstein, who is quoted in the original article. He argues that he was misrepresented in the Guardian article, and I have full sympathy with that having been misquoted and misrepresented a number of times myself. Dr. Silverstein has issued a rebuttal/clarification of his position and writings which is available at Infamy! Infamy! Everyone's got it in-fa-me!. I would add that discussion here, but is too lengthy. I encourage people who are interested to follow-up my Dr. Silverstein's piece.

While I appreciate Silverstein's concern about the how he was represented, the basic issue raised by the Guardian is very real. I am disappointed that it looks like the Guardian may have misrepresented some of the examples used, but I could offer a number of examples from my personal experience which are demonstrative of the aggressive attack on higher education, and on educators.

Once again, I appreciate the discussion, and the contact by Dr. Silverstein regarding the Guardian article.

Posted by: rowan at April 7, 2006 4:52 PM

I am truly mesmerized and intrigued by the title of this article (The Silence Expands). There just has to be some clever, literate way to juxtapose it with The Silence Of The Lambs, through a dialogue between Hannibal and Clarise; Ms. Cheney and Angela Davis, perhaps); something about liver and beans and cake, as well as incorporating something about an obsessive compulsive toothless harpy divided between paying attention to her own knitting and needing to witness "unaccountable" public servants getting their comeuppance, but alas...

Posted by: Ed at April 7, 2006 7:59 PM

oops - "Clarisse"

Posted by: Ed at April 7, 2006 8:06 PM

The initial commenter presumes that the “masses” (or should I say THE MAJORITY) are some sort of noble arbiters of humanity. Hardly accurate, as proved again and again historically. Let's see, didn't the masses support Hitler? Haven't they continually been swayed by misinformation and the interests of a variety of hegemonies which have sold them a self-interested agenda? I mean, the examples are endless of poor judgment on the part of a "consensus." Professors do not check their souls at the door of the vicissitudes of "public opinion" in order to be somehow “allowed” to educate. They deserve our respect and gratitude for what they do every day in what is becoming a sadly thankless job.

The topic of mass cruelty or injustice was heavily debated during my recent participation in an Ethics bowl sponsored by a prestigious group of Oregon businesses. They apparently have a different level of consideration and respect for the opinions and analysis of not only our university professors, but the students who these same professors send out into the world.

Those in higher education, by virtue of being somewhat removed from the culture of state and business, are surely more able to express and articulate a critique that is not as heavily influenced by self-interest and propaganda.

Incidentally, since when is there no reciprocity in the relationship between educator and the public? They are NOT any more dependent on the “tits of the taxpayer’s wallets” than the taxpayers are dependent on them for teaching us the myriad things they do. Where would we be without people who have the patience and are willing to sacrifice the heavily reimbursed lifestyles of the business world? It is offensive to me that the initial poster acts as if s/he speaks for all taxpayers, and as if teachers are slaves.

As if educators are not empowered by the amazing breadth of knowledge and analysis that they can TEACH US! I find it utterly arrogant to refer to educators as "servants" (an ugly, antiquated term), and surely revelatory that someone would address an educator with such open disdain and disrespect.


I am not, by the way, an educator.

Posted by: Pamela at April 7, 2006 8:32 PM

I am pleased, very pleased to see the reaction to this subject, I am beginning to feel very good about people coming forward to make their voice (s) heard. I love it ! Haven't seen this much reaction in a long time and it is delightful !

Posted by: Bill Whitlatch at April 7, 2006 10:35 PM
Crd Lorraine Denicourt