Hypocrisy in Academia and the Media
Bob Jensen at Trinity University 
Last Updated on March 13, 2005

Click Here for the Original February 3, 2005 Message

The Messaging After February 3 is Shown Below and again near the bottom of this document.

Preface Written on February 3, 2005

Language is much more restless than life.
Manuel Seco

My experience is probably typical and thus the fear of giving "offense" consigns thousands of graduates to incomplete educations. Sort of like proper Victorian sex education. A vicious cycle is created - "safe lectures" beget boredom and this only encourages yet more sleeping and more garbling. This censoring can also have more tragic consequences for those oblivious to awaiting minefields.
Robert Weisberg, "The Hidden Impact Of Political Correctness," Minding The Campus, September 13, 2007 --- http://www.mindingthecampus.com/originals/2007/09/the_hidden_impact_of_political.html


History of Political Correctness --- Click Here
History of Political Correctness --- Click Here (Video)

From Opinion Journal on December 31, 2007

Best of the Web Today - December 31, 2007 By JAMES TARANTO

Liberals Against Diversity http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/30/business/30kristol.html

The New York Times op-ed page is trying to go from bad to diverse. The page has hired William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard, as a weekly columnist, starting next Monday. The Politico http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1207/7613.html reports that word of the hiring "caused a frenzy in the liberal blogosphere Friday night, with threats of canceling subscriptions and claims that the Gray Lady had been hijacked by neo-cons":

*** QUOTE ***

But Times editorial page editor Andy Rosenthal sees things differently.

Rosenthal told Politico shortly after the official announcement Saturday that he fails to understand "this weird fear of opposing views."

"The idea that The New York Times is giving voice to a guy who is a serious, respected conservative intellectual--and somehow that's a bad thing," Rosenthal added. "How intolerant is that?"

*** END QUOTE ***

It is tempting to make fun of Rosenthal for discovering liberal intolerance at this late date, but we're bigger than that. Instead, we'd like to chew over one particular liberal plaint about Kristol's hiring, from Katha Pollitt http://www.thenation.com/blogs/anotherthing?bid=25&pid=263993 of The Nation:

*** QUOTE ***

What ever happened to meritocracy? For Kristol to get a Times column--after being fired from Time magazine no less--is as meritocratic as, um, George W. Bush becoming the leader of the free world. A pundit, even a highly ideological one like Kristol, has to be (or seem) right at least some of the time. But what's striking about Kristol is that he's has been wrong about everything! . . . And it's not as if he's a great prose stylist, either. At least David Brooks can occasionally turn a phrase. Kristol just churns out whatever the argument of the moment happens to be, adds jeers, and knocks off for lunch.

What this hire demonstrates is how successfully the right has intimidated the mainstream media. Their constant demonizing of the New York Times as the tool of the liberal elite worked. (Maybe it also demonstrates that the people in charge of the decision aren't so liberal.) I'm sure we'll hear a lot about the need for balance at the paper--funny how the Wall Street Journal doesn't feel the need to have even one resident liberal, but fine, let's have balance. Let's have a true leftist on the oped page--someone as far to the left as Kristol is to the right. Noam Chomsky, anyone? (and why does he seem just totally out of bounds but Kristol does not?) Barbara Ehrenreich? Naomi Klein? Susan Faludi? Gary Younge? me?

*** END QUOTE ***

So Pollitt's gripe is (in part) that she didn't get the gig! We'll give her points for candor, but doesn't she sound for all the world like one of those dead white males complaining about being passed over in favor of an affirmative-action hire?

Don't get us wrong. We don't mean to suggest that conservatives qua conservatives have civil rights. If the Times had a policy of refusing to hire conservative columnists, we might criticize or mock the paper for it, but we would never argue that the law should compel it to treat right-leaning job applicants equally.

Yet Pollitt's complaint runs directly counter to the standard liberal argument for affirmative action. In his influential split-the-difference opinion in University of California v. Bakke http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=438&invol=265 (1978), Justice Lewis Powell opined that racial preferences in college admissions could be justified in the interest of "the attainment of a diverse student body." In Grutter v. Bollinger http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=438&invol=265 (2003), a 5-4 Supreme Court majority endorsed Powell's view. Writing for the majority in Grutter, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor noted that corporate America had embraced the diversity rationale:

*** QUOTE ***

The [University of Michigan] Law School's claim of a compelling interest is further bolstered by its amici ["friends of the court" who filed briefs in support of the university's position], who point to the educational benefits that flow from student body diversity. In addition to the expert studies and reports entered into evidence at trial, numerous studies show that student body diversity promotes learning outcomes, and "better prepares students for an increasingly diverse workforce and society, and better prepares them as professionals." . . .

These benefits are not theoretical but real, as major American businesses have made clear that the skills needed in today's increasingly global marketplace can only be developed through exposure to widely diverse people, cultures, ideas, and viewpoints.

*** END QUOTE ***

If we define "affirmative action" broadly as the pursuit of diversity, almost everyone can support it, even those who reject racial preferences as a means to that end. In this sense, then, the Times's hiring of Kristol is an instance of affirmative action that no one should find invidious. He was hired without regard to race or other suspect classifications, evidently because his viewpoint is underrepresented on the Times op-ed page

Yet Pollitt objects to Kristol's hiring precisely because it promotes diversity. She would rather his slot had gone to her or someone else who would have been the Times's eighth or ninth liberal rather than its second conservative. Look at this column http://www.thenation.com/doc/20061106/pollitt or this online debate http://www.slate.com/id/2000105/entry/1000998/ , and you'll see that she approves of racial preferences. When it comes to affirmative action, then, she favors questionable means so long as they do not further the worthy end.

Jensen Comment
Particular departments in universities often have the same problem with such a extreme lack of diversity in politics and scholarship that we suspect there is great fear of exposing students to conservative points of view.

Not Even One Conservative for Tokenism:  Duke is for Democrats and so is the University of Iowa
The University of Iowa's history department and Duke's history department have a couple of things in common. Both have made national news because neither has a Republican faculty member. And both rejected the application of Mark Moyar, a highly qualified historian and a Republican, for a faculty appointment. Moyar graduated first in the history department at Harvard; his revised senior thesis was published as a book and sold more copies than an average history professor ever sells. After earning a Ph.D. from Cambridge University in England, he published his dissertation as "Triumph Forsaken: The Vietnam War, 1954-1965" with Cambridge University Press, which has received even more attention and praise. Moyar's views of Vietnam are controversial and have garnered scorn and abuse from liberal historians, including the department chair at the University of Iowa, Colin Gordon. Moyar revealed on his resume that he is a member of the National Association of Scholars, a group generally to the right of the normal academic organization. Gordon and his colleagues at Iowa were undoubtedly aware of Moyar's conservative leaning and historical view. Moyar is undoubtedly qualified. He is unquestionably diverse; his views are antithetical to many of the Iowa professors' views. Yet the Iowa department hired someone who had neither received degrees from institutions similar to Cambridge and Harvard nor published a book despite having completed graduate school eight years earlier (history scholars are expected to publish books within approximately six years of finishing their doctorates). In the Iowa history department there are 27 Democrats and zero Republicans. The Iowa hiring guidelines mandate that search committees "assess ways the applicants will bring rich experiences, diverse backgrounds and ideology to the university community." After seeking a freedom of information disclosure, Moyar learned that the Iowa history department had, in fact, not complied with the hiring manual. It seemed that Moyar was rejected for his political and historical stands. Maybe it was an unlikely aberration. But Moyar told the Duke College Republicans earlier this fall that he is skeptical because an application of his a few years ago at Duke for a history professorship progressed in much the same way it proceeded in Iowa.
The Duke Chronicle, November 1, 2007 --- Click Here

One of the least diverse academic associations is the highly liberal Modern Language Association. However, even the MLA could not muster up a vote critical of the firing of Ward Churchill by the University of Colorado.
While material distributed by those seeking to condemn Churchill’s firing portrayed him favorably, and as a victim of the right wing, some of those who criticized the pro-Churchill effort at the meeting are long-time experts in Native American studies and decidedly not conservative.
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, December 31, 2007 --- http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/12/31/mla
Bob Jensen's threads on Ward Churchill are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HypocrisyChurchill.htm


My new “Evil Empire” essay is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United States" --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm 

I’m really not trying to squelch academic freedom.  As a novice, I guess my simplistic point is that over the past few decades, minorities and feminists have convinced us, at least me, that certain languages (words and pictures) are unacceptable on any side of an academic debate. The purpose is not to stifle debate. Rather the purpose is to show respect in the debate and not encumber it with old stereotypes that are no longer acceptable.

My feelings on hypocrisy is that the academic reactions to inappropriate languages in debate are sometimes, possibly quite infrequently, one sided with a sound of silence if those languages are directed toward business or government leaders. There is not so much silence when those languages are directed toward someone taking a liberal stance.

Most of this document verbatim as written before February 3.  A genuine friend and scholar named Paul Williams from the left side of the world did not think the language (words and pictures) of the liberal cartoonists and writers in question were racists.  Nor did I ever think they were racists to the core.  The focus here is on "language" of racism.  Over the past five decades, new language norms have arisen in both the media and in academia.  For example, editors will now insist on certain norms such as "African American," "Native American," and "Women" (as opposed to say ladies).  Some historical works from different era of language norms, such as Huckleberry Finn, become banned in many libraries because of the language and characterizations of minorities and women.

Particularly in academia, inappropriate use of "language" is sometimes jumped upon irrespective of a writer's intent or values.  Gays and feminists are particularly militant in this regard.  The point I was making with respect to the language of racism (as opposed to racism itself) is that the liberal side of the academy is sometimes hypocritical in the use of the language itself.  These academics would bristle if "brown," "chocolate," "Prissy," or "thick-lipped" were used to describe Shirley Chisholm.  I've not yet met a liberal professor willing to admit that the use of the same terms is inappropriate when describing Condoleezza Rice.  Of course this does not turn professors into racists if they are silently tolerant of those terms when used for Shirley Chisholm or Dr. Rice.  But it may or may not make them hypocritical if they remain silent with respect to mean-spirited and vicious use of these term.

The question of hypocrisy here boils down to perception of the intent by writers who use an inappropriate language with racial connotations.  Paul Williams concludes that there is no intent it this case worthy of speaking out against by any member of the academy.  I come to a different conclusion.  I think these writers pulled out their inappropriate words and characterizations with vicious intent as part of an effort to block the path of Condoleezza Rice to becoming Secretary of State and most certainly any thought of her one day becoming  a candidate for the U.S. Presidency.  If you want to make a liberal bristle just hint that Dr. Rice may become a presidential candidate.  Please don't think I'm advocating her candidacy in this document.

And so the issue boils down to perceived intent with respect to clearly inappropriate "language."  In this particular instance I think the liberal cartoonists had particularly focused intent and used the language of racism to further their cause.  Paul Williams argues otherwise, and I most certainly respect the scholarship and passion of his arguments.  

I do agree with Paul that the Independent Women's Forum is something a lot less than independent. (Sigh!)

Thank you Paul and all the others who entered into this thread.  I

Bob Jensen


Condoleezza holds a watermelon : An example of hypocrisy of in academe
Think of the Faculty Union's response if Reverend Jesse Jackson had been holding the watermelon

"College Flunks Professor Over Test," by Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, September 14, 2006 ---

The background for three questions that angered many at Bellevue Community College started like this: “Condoleezza holds a watermelon just over the edge of roof of the 300-foot Federal Building, and tosses it up with a velocity of 20 feet per second....”

Forget velocity — the question set off protests at the college, which is near Seattle, and infuriated civil rights groups. While no last name was given, people took the question as a reference to the secretary of state, and combining her name with watermelon was viewed as racist. The professor who wrote the question apologized, and the college’s president and board apologized. But now the college is trying to suspend the professor for a week without pay, and he is challenging the decision as inappropriate.

Peter Ratener, the professor, has appealed to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education for assistance, and that group is now organizing an outcry in response to the college’s response to the outcry Ratener created.

“Given the reaction of the community and the college, one might think Ratener was guilty of committing a serious crime, rather than writing an accidentally offensive math problem,” said Greg Lukianoff, president of FIRE. He called the suspension — which currently is on hold pending appeals by Ratener and the faculty union — “unfair and a violation of the First Amendment.”

The test question that set off the furor actually was given first in 2004, without incident. This year, another professor used the question on a practice test, and a student’s complaint led to widespread publicity and demands for apologies.

Ratener said that he frequently includes celebrity names on his tests, to relieve student tension, and that he has used Bill Clinton and Madonna, among others, in this way. He originally wrote this question with the name Gallagher, a comedian known for smashing watermelons. But when he realized that many of his students wouldn’t know Gallagher, he substituted Condoleezza. He said that name is “a fascinating name to me,” and that race and politics had nothing to do with his choice.

In an apology he issued — to students, colleagues and Secretary Rice — he said that he still should have realized the potential problem and caught it. “The responsibility is ultimately mine alone,” he wrote. In the apology, he talked at length about his sadness and shame at having upset so many people and embarrassed his colleagues. And he repeatedly talked about his commitment to equity and respect for people of all kinds.

Continued in article


This question which has to be asked is: Would the newspapers that published the offensive material about Islam also print cartoons mocking the Nazi holocaust or the destruction of the World Trade Centres? I think not.
Kevin Martin as quoted by Sigurd N Skirbekk, "Dialogue key to bridging cultural divide," Aljazeera, February 8, 2006 --- http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/6A50D011-7047-43C6-A60A-3C5B985BB70F.htm

Where Do Editorial Cartoonists Draw the Line? NPR's answer is at
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5198673


Racially Biased Journalism
USA Today Caught in Photo Scandal of Darkening a Photograph of Secretary of State Rice

The USA Today version on the right was deliberately altered to make Condi Rice look more menacing. Notice how the whites of the eyes are highlighted to make her BLACK eyes look BLACKER and HATEFUL. The doctored photo is here on USA Today's site (they'll probably take it down with some heat). You have to look overseas here to see an unbiased version. Under the heat of protest, will USA Today apologize? Or, don't they care about racism when directed at "house Niggas" like Condi? Rathergate, OJgate, now Condigate! What will the MSM think of next? And if anybody would like to see why I think this is a scandal, take a look at an enlarged version of the photos that I put into photoshop and animated. This is scandalous stuff folks!
"THE CONDI RICE - USA TODAY SCANDAL," From the Pen, October 25, 2005 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1509631/posts


Say What?  Stereotyping African Americans
Once Joan Baez finished her minstrelsy riff, the audience, in which I did not see a single black person, went wild with applause and hoots and hollers. I have never felt so embarrassed for a bunch of "liberals" in my life. I wonder where Baez got her notions of how poor black country folk talk—she couldn't be stereotyping, could she?
Ronald Bailey, "Joan Baez and Me:  She gwine tell de folks how dat ol' missuh prez'dent be a debbil!" ReasonOnline, November 4, 2004 --- http://www.reason.com/links/links110404.shtml 


That N-word on campus
Bob Jensen's threads about hypocrisy in academia the media are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm

"Explosion Over the N-Word," by Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, September 20, 2005 --- http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/09/20/florida

When Kanye West blasted President Bush’s treatment of poor black people in New Orleans after Katrina hit, the rapper unintentionally set off a hurricane of words in Florida.

The Independent Florida Alligator, the student newspaper, ran a cartoon last week that criticized West’s statements by showing him holding a large playing card marked “The Race Card,” and having Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state, exclaim with scorn at West: “Nigga Please!” Since the cartoon ran, there have been multiple rallies against the student newspaper, with the latest drawing several hundred on Monday; the president of the university and other senior officials have condemned the cartoon and called on the paper to apologize for it; and there have been reports that students reading the paper on campus have had other students come up and grab the paper away from them, saying that it is racist.

In a statement published in the newspaper, Bernie Machen, Florida’s president, said of the cartoon, “Such depictions reinforce hurtful and damaging stereotypes. They poison the ongoing struggle to overcome the racial barriers that divide our country, and give comfort to bigots who seek affirmation for their racism.” He added that he and many students and faculty members were “disgusted by the image and discouraged that such an insensitive cartoon could be published in a newspaper that, while independent from the university, is written and edited by UF students.”

The newspaper is holding its ground and refusing to apologize. In fact, it is going on the offensive, calling many of its critics hypocrites. An editorial published Monday noted that the university has invited West and numerous other performers to its campus, paying them tens of thousands of dollars — even though they use various forms of the n-word in their work.

In addition, the editorial noted that some of the students who are leading attacks on the paper use forms of the n-word in their profiles on Facebook, the popular Web site with which college students meet others and stay in touch with their friends. Many black students at Florida, the editorial said, are members of a group called “N*ggas That Pledge.”

Mike Gimignani, editor of the paper, said in an interview Monday that the university was using “double standards” to criticize the paper. Editorial cartoons need to be short and to the point, and good cartoons get people talking and thinking, he said, adding that this one succeeded. “I would run it again tomorrow,” he said.


Some words from an anti-establishment professor that did not receive the sound of silence, but the reactions are extremely divided between academics who abhor Churchill's Nazi words versus academics who defend his Nazi wording.

After the essay was brought to light, Hamilton College said it had to honor its invitation in the interests of free speech, though the college president, Joan Hinde Stewart, said she found the remarks personally repugnant.
"Professor Is Assailed by Legislature and Vandals," by Michelle York, The New York Times, February 3, 2005 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/03/nyregion/03hamilton.html?oref=login  

Colorado lawmakers yesterday denounced an embattled professor whose scheduled appearance at an upstate New York college was canceled amid protests over his writings on the Sept. 11 attacks, in which he compared the victims to Nazis.

The professor, Ward Churchill, meanwhile, rebuffed calls to resign and said yesterday that his truck had been painted with swastikas overnight as it sat in his driveway. The Boulder County Sheriff's Department said it was investigating.

Calling his written remarks an "evil and inflammatory blow to the healing process," the Colorado House of Representatives unanimously approved a resolution condemning Professor Churchill. "The victims of the World Trade Center were innocent in every sense of the word and should always be remembered as innocent," the resolution states.

The uproar concerns a three-year-old essay by Professor Churchill, who teaches ethnic studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder. In it, he called the workers killed in the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 "little Eichmanns," technocrats who had a role in their country's economic power and its foreign policy, which included the 1991 gulf war.

Continued in the article

Ward Churchill argues his side of the case in The Denver Post, Tuesday, February 01, 2005
Jensen Comment:  My reaction is that I've no objection to his right to argue his case in every legitimate manner even though I might argue the opposite on some issues.  What I object to is the use of inappropriate words and ethnic slurs that are not necessary to the argument and are offensive to many persons on both sides of the issues. In the past two decades, ethnic groups and feminists have hammered into us that some "languages" are inappropriate. I would be condemned if I used these languages. Why should Churchill get away with it just because he argues on the side against the establishment?

Some anti-establishment academics are defending Professor Churchill's language and positions --- http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/indian/churchill.htm 

Bob Jensen's threads on Ward Churchill are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HypocrisyChurchill.htm


February 3, 2005 reply from Haines, Harry W [hhaines@trinity.edu

Professor Jensen’s suggestion that opposition to Dr. Rice’s appointment is racist seems overblown to me, despite the clearly racist imagery of the Danziger political cartoon included in the Independent Women’s Forum posting that he provides below via a link. The Danziger cartoon deserves condemnation, and I will use it in class as an example of racist codes. I could not access the Oliphant cartoon via the link, but Trudeau’s strip simply communicates contempt for President Bush and does not denote or connote a racist or misogynist interpretation of Dr. Rice that I can detect, except in what Trudeau obviously regards as the mind of the President himself. In the strip, Trudeau has the President voice an offensive nickname for Dr. Rice, and that employs a far different visual and textual code than the one used by Danziger. I suspect it takes a willful misreading of the strip to conclude that Trudeau is launching a racist attack on Dr. Rice. So, we have one example of a racist political cartoon (Danziger’s). That does not add up to a racist media campaign against Rice.

The assertion that academics are hypocritical simply because some of them may not agree with Professor Jensen’s reaction to media coverage of the Rice confirmation is hyperbolic, at best. Many of us recall President Truman’s advice about vacating hot kitchens, and some of us might actually interpret the media coverage as appropriate scrutiny. If “liberal hypocrisy” means resistance to Rush Limbaugh’s mendacious assault on civic dialog, I am guilty as charged and proud of it. And I know many conservative Republicans in this town who share that view.

It is precisely our training in the humanities that makes it possible and necessary for academics to place this process in a context that differs from the one manufactured by political operatives and media hucksters. Our weakness, of course, rests on the ability of political operatives to marginalize us by convincing Americans that their universities, like other key social institutions, cannot be trusted. If the irrepressible David Horowitz and his so-called “Intellectual Diversity” initiative is any measure, the attack on academic freedom is well underway. The attack feeds off a sense of betrayal and victimization, and it benefits from the economic stress that many families now face. We can’t turn that around by pandering to talk-radio and buying into the rhetoric of “elites,” “bias,” “ideological diversity,” “political correctness” and all the other doubletalk originating in think tanks and PR agencies and which echo like a ominous drum beat through the public square. We need to organize first a strategy within our various professional organizations, using them as a base, and then experiment with a variety of communication strategies aimed at protecting our profession from degradation. Academics have been far too timid in our response to the campaign of deception and deceit directed against us, and I think many of us are simply fed up with the purposeful and cynical misrepresentation of our profession by political propagandists.

The assertion that mere party affiliation equates with some imagined ideological tilt in the classroom, as these original postings seemed to do, strikes me as particularly strident and inaccurate. I don’t see it. What I do see is an assault on academic freedom by a myopic political movement with a track record of neutralizing social institutions ranging from labor unions to television networks. That’s what academics, of all political persuasions, should be concerned about, because our own social institution is now on the movement’s radar screen. In Colorado, this radical movement, operating under the misnomer “conservative,” has already used state power to intervene in the professional relationship that professors have with students. The current strategy of “Intellectual Diversity” is an adaptation of the propaganda strategy directed at news organizations, this time around applied to the academy with the obvious objective of securing de facto sinecures while silencing whatever limited structural analysis is now possible of the movement’s operations and its breathtaking excesses.

Harry Haines

 


Messaging Before February 3, 2005

Normally I don’t write about politics, because I’m really not a political person.   I’m ashamed of the academy unless I’ve missed something significant.  Our campuses explode with indignity and demands for apologies when racism is directed at a black liberal.  But all we hear is the sound of silence, accompanied by a few smirks, when racism is directed at a conservative black leader.

I don’t listen to the Rush Limbaugh radio broadcasts.  But I can guarantee that across all the red and blue states of America he’s painting a picture of the academy that’s not pretty.  He’s painting us in as racism hypocrites.  

By now we've learned to accept hypocrisy in the media.  Jimmy (The Greek) Snyder was fired from his basketball television broadcasting job due to one off handed remark that was probably not intended to be racist at the time he said it.  But writers for newspapers made racist remarks and cartoons about Condoleezza Rice and are still carrying on with blatant and intentional racism.  We've learned to distrust the media because of its hypocrisy.  We do not intend higher education to be so hypocritical with regard to racism.  Due to its sound of silence, the academy is comprised of hypocrites.

What doesn’t the academy demand apologies for all racism? Just think of the outrage in academe from Berkeley to Harvard if these racial slurs were directed toward a liberal black leader of the world.  Policy and politics should be debated, but racism is below the belt.  I might add that Condoleezza Rice rose out of nowhere to become a Professor of Political Science and then Provost at Stanford University
Garry Trudeau refers to Condoleezza Rice as "Brown Sugar," a Jeff Dan Zinger cartoon that portrays her as Prissy from "Gone With the Wind" (also the topic of a Wall Street Journal editorial last month) and, most recently, a Tuesday political cartoon from Pat Oliphant that depicts the secretary-designate as a parrot with enormous lips. (This seems to be a running feature; yesterday's Oliphant cartoon does it also, this time with President Bush as a pirate.) Blogger Winfield Myers catalogues other examples.
See Penraker --- http://www.penraker.com/archives/000839.html 
You can read Dr. Rice's resume at http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/ricebio.html 

 And let's not forget the sexist charge that "Condoleezza Rice Needs a Man."

And the liberal racists who portray her as "brown sugar" and a thick-lipped parrot did not do their homework.  I doubt if many of us in the academy really appreciate what a tenacious fighter she has been.
On Jan. 16, the
Los Angeles Times interviewed several senior faculty members and a Hoover Institution fellow about Condoleezza Rice's divisive tenure as Stanford's provost from 1993 to 1999. As her confirmation hearing to become secretary of state started Jan. 18, some people on campus predicted that the unwieldy Department of State will face an upheaval as well. "You can imagine her confronting a State Department culture that will have some similarities to what she presided over here at Stanford. A culture very traditional, very set in its ways, very consensual and consultative in manner," said DAVID KENNEDY, the Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History at Stanford University .
Stanford in the News
, January 27, 2005 --- http://news-service.stanford.edu/ 


During too many years of struggle, Condoleezza Rice has had to grapple gnashing wolves on the campus of Stanford and in Washington DC .  She's been humiliated and scarred, but Dr. Rice is tougher than Rocky Balboa.  If the liberals in academe and the press would give her just half a chance, she might make significant progress in cleaning up the mess we call the U.S. State Department.

I think a particular issue is the very issue that makes the academy look like hypocrites on fundamental human rights in the eyes of our students and the public.  Moreover this is an example of liberal hypocrisy that is loading Rush Limbaugh's cannons.  It's the best example I have on the fundamental values issue that's destroying the Democratic Party across the red states.  Liberal values are not so much the issue as is liberal hypocrisy.  Hypocrisy about fundamental human rights is destroying student and public respect for the academy, the media, and the Democratic Party, especially across the red states.  In my mind, hypocrisy is THE values issue. 

As an example, I will pick up on a November 17, 2004 press announcement of the "Independent Women's Forum" in Washington DC.  Of course such an announcement would not be reported in the Washington Post or the NYT or CNN.  I have no knowledge that the women of the AAUP or any other academic group have taken a similar stand on this rights issue.  But I suspect Rush Limbaugh has been firing salvos about the sound of silence in the media and in academe. I apologize if I have not picked up on some academic literature protesting the way Dr. Rice is being treated with racism by the media.

The Independent Women’s Forum today (November 17) denounced as blatantly racist several editorial cartoons featuring Dr. Condoleezza Rice, National Security Advisor and President Bush’s nominee for Secretary of State. These cartoons clearly draw upon centuries of deep-rooted, wicked and indefensible portrayals of black women.
Independent Women's Forum --- http://www.iwf.org/articles/article_detail.asp?ArticleID=699 

And the hypocrisy extends to more than just the newspaper and magazine cartoon writers.  A Washington Post writer apparently had to go to The Wall Street Journal to air a related protest.
Because of her race, her symbolism and her personal story, Ms. Rice is not a run-of-the-mill appointment but a historic one. Which makes some of the more vitriolic charges against the first African-American woman ever chosen for the office once held by Thomas Jefferson particularly wounding and politically risky.  Mark Dayton of Minnesota accused her of lying in order to deceive the American people into going to war -- a charge that is not just false, but suffers additionally from not being believed by most Americans. Ms. Rice was not a generator of intelligence. She was a consumer -- of a highly defective product.  Nor was she the principal architect of the Iraq War. That distinction lies with the president and vice president. To pin so much of the war on Ms. Rice, as her Senate opponents needed to do in order to try to sink her nomination, seems unfair and disproportionate.  You don't expect to see an iconic civil rights leader like Andrew Young indignantly defending a Bush administration appointment. It took the Senate Democrats' attack on Ms. Rice to produce that unlikely scene.

Charles Krauthammer from The Washington Post, "War and Condoleezza, The Wall Street Journal, January 28, 2005 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110687731241738999,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep 


January 29, 2005 reply from Kenneth Lambert [klambert@MEMPHIS.EDU]

Bob,

Your comments are on target. I hear a lot of concern about diversity and tolerance relative to gender, race and ethnic background, sexual preference, etc. Where is the diversity of political ideas within the academy and where is the tolerance for conservative politics on campus? Also, where is the diversity and concern for balance when it comes to hiring conservative faculty on almost all university campuses--especially in arts and sciences, journalism, law, and education?

Ken

January 31, 2005 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Regarding the racism allegation, I would just like to suggest that your premise that Oliphant and Gary Trudeau were engaging in racist behavior worthy of condemnation might not be correct. If you read the funny pages like I do, you know there has been a running satirical joke about Condi Rice that was started by the creator of the Boondocks strip, an African American named Aaron Mc(I can't remember the rest). Boondocks is about two African American street kids. 

A running joke some time ago was that Condi Rice's problem is that she needed a man (a sexist, but not racist joke). This strip, not surprisingly here in good, old red state NC, gets more negative response than all other strips combined because the rednecks here simply don't get the joke (they don't like it when somebody makes fun of white folks or the black folks that white people find acceptable). Trudeau is decidedly not a racist and Condi Rice is decidedly NOT brown sugar. That's the joke! She is a cold, ruthless, technocrat that puts career ahead of everything else (reminds me a lot of _____________). I am pretty sure that among the majority of African Americans she is viewed in a negative way regardless of how successful she has been. 

As Chris Rock noted after the 2000 election, every black person who voted for Bush is in his cabinet. Before "conservatives" start throwing stones, it might be time to reflect on your own behavior. The Republican party of Lincoln has morphed into the party of Jefferson Davis. You don't have to a genius to know what the Republican party's Southern strategy was all about. Let's foment the resentment of southern whites over voting rights and school integration. Atlantans can spout all they want about the new South, but believe me there is a lot of the old South still around and the Republican party has been noticeably willing to invite these people into the party as one of its core constituencies, along with the Charles Dobsons, Jerry Falwells, and other assorted crackpots. 

Demonizing the people's government in a democracy is a rather odd way to show one's commitment to democracy. There are legitimate issues with Condi Rice's competence and for those familiar with the code it is well within Oliphant's or Trudeau's purview to make fun of her in the way they did (any Africa American groups up in arms over the characterizations?). On the day after 9/11, Le Monde ran the headline "We Are All Americans Now." At no time in U.S. history has the U.S. enjoyed more global goodwill and been in a better position to leverage that goodwill to mount an effective program to control Islamic terrorism. In less than 18 months all of that goodwill was pissed away and in its place was the most global bad will the U.S. has ever experienced. This may be one of the most incompetent administrations is U.S. history and Condi Rice is one of its principal architects. 

Best regards (really), 
Paul

January 31, 2005 reply from Alexander Robin A [alexande.robi@UWLAX.EDU

Paul, thanks for this post. Perhaps this is akin to the oft repeated "liberal media bias" in spite of Fox, Rush Limbaugh, etc. just about ruling the airwaves.

Robin Alexander

January 31, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Paul,

Yours is the best defense that I have seen of the racial slurs.

I wonder if the AAUP or other members of the academy would have had the same defense for political cartoons that made racist depictions of Shirley Chisholm.

I suspect there is a bit of hypocrisy in that only liberal cartoonists can "get away" with racist pictures and slurs in the academy without being considered racists. There would be no sound of silence of a picture of Shirley Chisholm with exaggerated lips and bitter chocolate innuendos. I honestly believe the hypocrisy is that liberals can do no wrong in the eyes of the heavily left leaning academy.

I guess the Independent Women's Council of Washington DC has a different ("blatantly racist") take on the racism interpretation. They don't seem to chuckle at or even tolerate these cartoons. I also don't think these women would buy into your defense that these are not racist putdowns of Rice.

***************** 
The Independent Women’s Forum today (November 17) denounced as blatantly racist several editorial cartoons featuring Dr. Condoleezza Rice, National Security Advisor and President Bush’s nominee for Secretary of State. These cartoons clearly draw upon centuries of deep-rooted, wicked and indefensible portrayals of black women. Independent Women's Forum --- http://www.iwf.org/articles/article_detail.asp?ArticleID=699 
****************

In either case, what the cartoonists are doing is playing right into the hands of Rush Limbaugh, and Rush influences votes across the red states. If the Democratic Party hopes to change red into blue, it should officially denounce this form of "non-racism" that is too subtle for dummies like me to understand.

Bob 

January 31, 2005 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU

Bob, 

I concede the cartoons may be seen as sexist. You may not know this but the Independent Women's Forum, that expressed such righteous indignation is not independent. It is an ultra conservative, pro big business group and its indignation has a most certain political objective. I wonder if it raged at the Willie Horton ads or took offense at Ronald Reagan's sterotypical welfare cheat -- a black woman driving a Cadillac, even without suggesting that far more white people were on welfare than African Americans. 

Having watched Helm's Congressional Club operate all those years Jesse was in the Senate, I know that, as Alan Wolfe has eloquently written about, for the right, politics is only about winning -- anyway, anyhow. When God speaks the truth directly into your ear why be bothered with nuance. 

Paul

February 1, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Robin,

I also appreciate Paul's posting, although I don't think this divisive political theme that I started, now regretfully, is appropriate for the AECM. I might add that that I am not a fan of Rush Limbaugh's and view him as dangerous in the way he mesmerizes the public. But I will say this about Rush's role in the media --- Rush has always been honest about his biases and makes no pretense that he's independent or fairly broadcasts both sides of political issues.

Some newspaper and magazines are totally up front about their biases. Nation, for example, admits to having leftist biases in articles and commentaries published by Nation. New Republic admits to having conservative biases with the same honesty.

What is more worrisome are the major media sources that make a pretense of being independent, which by the way is what Dan Rather still insists about his news casting. Hidden bias has been alleged in various research studies of the major urban newspapers and the three major television networks. Having mere pretense rather than reality is unethical in a way that failed audit independence is viewed as unethical.

I think Fox dropped all pretenses a long time ago The WSJ is somewhat different than the large urban newspapers. It makes no pretense about its biases in its editorials. But the reality, in my viewpoint, points to considerable fairness is most of what is published in the rest of the paper. I suspect the WSJ is the most feared newspaper among CEOs and large accounting firms. This is not what you would expect if you only read WSJ editorials.

PBS probably has the hardest time walking the line. It deliberately tries to balance its admittedly biased program segments, It's up to viewers to judge whether PBS succeeds or fails in this balancing act. PBS is subject to direct political pressures. For example the recent denouncement by Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings to the PBS cartoon "Postcards from Buster" program is an example. PBS is now deciding whether or not to ever air this program. I guess most of the objection is to the statement by two women on a maple sugar farm saying something to the effect that "parents don't approve of our lifestyle." The biased right reporting of this in New Republic is more objectionable to me than the NYT's version that leans more to the left.

I guess what I object to most is not bias or even pretense of bias that does not conform to reality. I object most to racism in any form. Along with the Independent Women's Forum, I thought various popular political cartoonists recently became "wickedly" racist. Whether the cartoons appeared in biased newspapers or "independent" newspapers, there's no excuse for racism in print. But I am now confining my comments on this issue to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm 

In a private message to me, Paul did concede that the cartoons might be "seen as sexist." He does not think they are racist. He also pointed out that the Independent Women's Forum should not be viewed as politically independent. I belatedly must agree with him on this. Sigh!

I do not agree with Paul that cartoons themselves are not racist, and I am certain than many groups in the academy would be in an uproar if had the cartoonists' target been Shirley Chisholm rather than Condoleezza Rice.  But I hope to confine my future comments on this issue to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm

Bob

February 1, 2005 reply from Alexander Robin A [alexande.robi@UWLAX.EDU

Thanks for the responses. Two things: One about civility which I totally agree is important and possible. In the past campaign and generally in politics these days, there is not only lack of civility but also disregard for the truth. Ideally, we'd all pretty much agree on the facts and then discuss the implications of those facts based on our values and opinions. But as one listens to different sides of an issue, one gets the impression they are living on different planets - the "facts" cited are entirely different!

Second about bias. Intentional but disavowed bias is indeed unethical, a form of lying. On the other hand, bias is entirely unavoidable even in science because we come to a question with a cognitive map of how the world works. This shapes even the way we phrase the question, and how the question is stated often reflects a bias that limits the accuracy or usefulness of the results. The history of science is filled with examples of how hard the scientific establishment had been on someone who came along and was able to see beyond the world view of the time. If it happens in science, it certainly happens elsewhere.

News is always biased just in the fact of what is chosen to report and what aspects are reported. More than a liberal or conservative bias, I notice that news reporting has a negative bias. Bad things happening are reported much more than positive items. Breakdowns of civility and conflict resolution are reported much more than the tremendous amount of work and successes that is going on at developing ways to solve problems constructively. The negative bias, unfortunately, creates a sense of hopelessness and while everyone has heard of bin Laden, very few have heard about Marshall Rosenberg, for example. (http://www.cnvc.org/) Anyway, he (or she) who says he's unbiased is lying, perhaps unintentionally.

Robin Alexander

January 31, 2005 reply from Jagdish Gangolly [JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU

Paul, Robin,

This thread reminds me of one of my heroes, the Late George Charles Sumner Benson who lamented, during our occasional lunches at the Faculty Club in Claremont, about the shrillness of political discourse in the United States during the mid eighties; and he pointed finger squarely at the conservatives. I am sure it was very painful to him since he considered himself a conservative (he also was earlier the Deputy Secretary of Defense under President Eisenhower; he used to swear by Friedman's 'Capitalism and Freedom', ). We disagreed on many matters (I considered myself to be a libertarian and also a civil libertarian, he considered himself to be what one could call "North-east Republican", an endangered species these days), but he taught me to disagree without being disagreeable. We always ended our lunches with Scottish (me) and Indian (he) ethnic jokes, without either taking offense.

The Late George C.S. Benson, a political philosopher, wrote one of the early books on business ethics, and was the founding President of the Claremont Mens' College (now Claremont McKenna College).

Civility seems to be mistaken for weakness these days.

I agree with George, and with Paul.

Jagdish




"Equality of Opportunity: The Water We Swim," by Ben Stein, The New York Times, January 30, 2005 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/30/business/yourmoney/30every.html  

In 2005, however, day-to-day business swims in the water of stunning, unbelievable moral progress. It is a whole new world, a new universe of equality of opportunity.

Every job in every field is open to everyone, with perhaps a very few exceptions. Women are heads of gigantic high-tech companies like Hewlett-Packard. Blacks are heads of immense financial companies like Merrill Lynch and American Express and vast communications combines like Time Warner (and, Time was among the WASPiest of companies long ago.) Blacks and women can be found at every prestigious, well-paid perch. Jews are hired at law firms that would not have let them in the door during my youth, except as tailors. Jews are the heads of industrial corporations where they would not have been considered for interviews in 1958.

As for Asians and Hispanics, they, too, are rising everywhere. Asians lead the technology world to an astonishing extent, and Hispanics are a potent force in the media, law and other fields.

THE daily news is filled with alarums and excursions about the trade deficit, the budget deficit, corporate profits, malfeasance in high places and worries about pensions. All are real problems, to be sure, but if we take a step back, if we think like historians instead of gossips, we see something amazing: society has been made so much more open than my father - a visionary in his own way - could have dreamed only 47 years ago.

Of course we have problems. We always will. But the stunning achievements of American business in opening itself up to all in the society - that is the water in which we swim. And we should swim with a great deal of pride. The big story, the sweep of opportunity, is one that we ignore every day - and are the poorer for it.




Hiring in Academe is No Longer Part of the Diversity Formula
Republicans are an "endangered species among professors. 

Among professors of anthropology, the ratio of democrats to republicans is 30:1.  Among economics professors it is 3:1.

Thus, the social sciences and humanities are dominated by Democrats. There is little ideological diversity.
"Two new scholarly studies," by Daniel Klein et al. on the political orientation of academic faculty, National Association of Scholars --- http://www.nas.org/aa/klein_launch.htm 
Also summarized in The Chronicle of Higher Education, December 3, 2004, Page A15.

Abstract: In Spring 2003, a large-scale survey of American academics was conducted using academic association membership lists from six fields: Anthropology, Economics, History, Philosophy (political and legal), Political Science, and Sociology. This paper focuses on one question: To which political party have the candidates you've voted for in the past ten years mostly belonged? The question was answered by 96.4 percent of academic respondents. The results show that the faculty is heavily skewed towards voting Democratic. The most lopsided fields surveyed are Anthropology with a D to R ratio of 30.2 to 1, and Sociology with 28.0 to 1. The least lopsided is Economics with 3.0 to 1. After Economics, the least lopsided is Political Science with 6.7 to 1. The average of the six ratios by field is about 15 to 1. Our analysis and related research suggest that for the social sciences and humanities overall, a "one-big-pool" ratio of 7 to 1 is a safe lower-bound estimate, and 8 to 1 or 9 to 1 are reasonable point estimate. Thus, the social sciences and humanities are dominated by Democrats. There is little ideological diversity. We discuss Stephen Balch's "property rights" proposal to help remedy the situation.

We conjecture that if Berkeley and Stanford are non-representative, it has less to do with geography than with the elite character of those institutions. That is, we would conjecture that the more elite institutions tend to be more rock-solidly Democratic and statist. This conjecture is in line with Lipset’s findings about academic elites (Lipset 1982: 151). (Here, the Klein & Stern survey is of no help, because it collected no information about the “tier” of the respondent’s institution.)
"How Many Democrats per Republican at UC-Berkeley and Stanford? Voter Registration Data across 23 Academic Departments," by Daniel B. Klein and Andrew Western, "Two new scholarly studies," by Daniel Klein et al. on the political orientation of academic faculty, National Association of Scholars --- http://www.nas.org/aa/klein_launch.htm 

Abstract: Using the records of the seven San Francisco Bay Area counties that surround University of California, Berkeley and Stanford University, we conducted a systematic and thorough study of the party registration of the Berkeley and Stanford faculty in 23 academic departments. The departments span the social sciences, humanities, hard sciences, math, law, journalism, engineering, medicine, and the business school. Of the total of 1497 individual names on the cumulative list, we obtained readings on 1005, or 67 percent. The findings support the "one-party campus" conjecture. For Stanford, we found an overall Democrat to Republican ratio of 7.6 to 1. For UC-Berkeley, we found an overall D to R ratio of 9.9 to 1. Moreover, the breakdown by faculty rank shows that Republicans are an "endangered species" on the two campuses. This article contains a link to the complete data (with individual identities redacted).

In the Accounting and Marketing Departments with only 31 individuals, 25.8% were registered as democrats and only 3.2% were registered as republican.  Another 3.2% were registered as American Independents.  It appears that 61.3% of the accounting and marketing faculties were not registered in either the democratic or republican parties.  

Bob Jensen  

January 25, 2005 reply from Taggart, Kenneth [ktaggart@trinity.edu

I have written about this before on Tiger Talk, but the Wall Street Journal recently had a long and excellent article on a heartening change (for Republicans) in the domination of the Left on U.S. universities. College Republicans now outnumber College Democrats, both in numbers of chapters and in membership, I even notice that this trend carries over to highly politically incorrect activities, like Harvard’s gun club with more than 100 student members!! I know that most of our colleagues would say that they don’t inject personal bias into their courses, or that it doesn’t really matter if they do, or, even worse, that they are simply telling the truth that everybody knows. I’m convinced that our professors do inject their political views into their commentary during course lectures and discussions. A cursory look at faculty bulletin boards would make it obvious that they clearly spell out their positions on political issues. On many of them, it is virtually the only commentary posted. I know this is only natural and human that we make personal comments in class, but we have a responsibility to be fair and even-handed, and should comment without extreme sarcasm or disdain. A telling observation on page 6 of the article is the following: “A brand-new American Council of Trustees and Alumni survey finds that half of all students—not just conservatives—at the top 50 colleges [I would hope this includes TU] say that profs frequently inject their political views into courses, and almost one-third think that they have to agree with those views to get a good grade.” The article can be found at http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110006149 

Just my two cents,

Ken Taggart

January 25, 2004 reply from XXXX

-----Original Message-----
From: XXXXX
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 12:32 PM
To: Taggart, Kenneth; Jensen, Robert
Subject: RE: Republicans an endangered species in academe?

 

Is impartiality necessary? Hal Barger was one of my first professors here in 1980. I was in his American and Texas Government class. It was clear he supported Carter and even said so in class. But he was honest about it and he respected the opinions of the students, even when I wore a Reagan button and a rather vocal Anderson supporter who did not hesitate to express herself. And while he did inject his views in comments about the material he didn’t let it interfere with subject of the course. As a student and even after I returned to Trinity as an employee, Dr. Barger was always one of the people here I highly respected, even when we disagreed.

 

I disagree that professors must be impartial. Students have always had a healthy skepticism of authority and are generally bright enough to recognize bias when it occurs. What professors need to do is simply be honest with their students. What departments as a whole need to do is ensure that the podium doesn’t become a pulpit. I also think there is great value in exposing the younger students to the opinions of the older professors. There are often very good reasons why a certain opinion is held. It is misleading to allow students to think that every opinion is yes or no. Life is a lot more complicated than that.

 

We are supposed to be preparing young people to go into the world and be autonomous. They will someday have the power to determine the course of our nation and of the world. They must have the ability to discern fact and opinion and balance differing views to prevent our society from falling into chaos. It is incumbent upon us to teach them how to do this. Shielding them from opinion does not give them the experience that they will require later in life.

XXXXX

January 25, 2004 reply from Bob Jensen

Impartiality is neither a theoretical nor practical goal.  However, I’m a firm believer that there are two or more sides to “nearly” every argument and that it is a duty of an academic not to totally dominate a course with one sidedness in spite of strong personal bias.  A course must follow a curriculum plan.  Students generally dislike courses or entire degree programs that are billed as one thing and turn into something else.  For example, I know of an instance where a business law course heavily became a Bible reading course that was not originally deemed part of the curriculum plan. 

Students who take a capital markets course will be very disappointed if the professor uses this platform to only lambaste capital markets in society.  Students came to learn more about the how capital markets work and how organizations raise capital in a market system.  One of my advisees vocally complained about and dropped, years ago, a political science course on multinational business that turned “100 percent” (her words) into professorial preaching about the evils of multinational business without any chance (in peril of a bad grade) to examine the good things that many multinational firms do around the world.  The course description did not match the course content.  I think students are turned off whenever teaching becomes preaching.

I guess what I am saying is that the course description is a contract with a student.  Strong partiality in any course should be part of the course description that, in turn, as been approved as part of the curriculum plan.  I also am a firm believer that political leanings should not be any more of a factor hiring decisions than gender, race, or sexual orientation should be a factor.  Should an economics department or a political science department blacklist faculty candidates who are not politically correct?  I think not and am proud that Trinity seems to have avoided this in both such departments. 

I think that many colleges have succumbed to subtle and political blacklisting of faculty candidates.  Hiring bias may be the leading factor why conservatives are becoming an “endangered species” in colleges in the U.S., Canada, and most other parts of the world.  At least this is becoming the case according to the two studies that I mentioned in my original memo.  I say this knowing full well that a psychology professor here at Trinity is fond of reminding me that correlation does not imply causation.

Clearly there is some institution-wide partiality in schools like Brigham Young and Baylor, but this is known up front by students who either did or did not apply to those universities because of this partiality.  See “God and Man at Baylor” --- http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/125/42.0.html

Students do not expect Baylor-like partialities in the University of Texas or Trinity University .   Nor do students expect, with an average of nine liberal faculty for every conservative faculty member in any University X, that 90 per cent of the courses will preach liberalism in one form or another.  They came to learn all sides of history, economics, science, business and whatever else.

Bob
email: 
rjensen@trinity.edu
Homepage:  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/

 

Miscellaneous Items:

64 Definitions of Racism --- http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~muter/racism.html 

Racism and the System --- http://www.volconvo.com/forums/showpost.php?p=85855&postcount=1




Media Bias

Like many threads, this thread that started out meandered.  In this case it meandered from bias in the academy to media bias.

January 31, 2005 reply from Alexander Robin A [alexande.robi@UWLAX.EDU

Paul, thanks for this post. Perhaps this is akin to the oft repeated "liberal media bias" in spite of Fox, Rush Limbaugh, etc. just about ruling the airwaves.

Robin Alexander

February 1, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen

Hi Robin,

I also appreciate Paul’s posting, although I don’t think this divisive political theme that I started, now regretfully, is appropriate for the AECM.  I might add that that I am not a fan of Rush Limbaugh’s and view him a dangerous in the way he mesmerizes the public.  But I will say this about Rush’s role in the media --- Rush has always been honest about his biases and makes no pretense that he’s independent or fairly broadcasts both sides of political issues.

Some newspaper and magazines are totally up front about their biases.  Nation, for example, admits to having leftist biases in articles and commentaries published by Nation.  New Republic admits to having conservative biases with the same honesty.

What is more worrisome are the major media sources that make a pretense of being independent, which by the way is what Dan Rather still insists about his newscasting.  Hidden bias has been alleged in various research studies of the major urban newspapers and the three major television networks.  Having mere pretense rather than reality is unethical in a way that failed audit independence is viewed as unethical.

I think Fox dropped all pretenses a long time ago   The WSJ is somewhat different than the large urban newspapers.  It makes no pretense about its biases in its editorials.  But the reality, in my viewpoint, points to considerable fairness is most of what is published in the rest of the paper.  I suspect the WSJ is the most feared newspaper among CEOs and large accounting firms.  This is not what you would expect if you only read WSJ editorials.

PBS probably has the hardest time walking the line.  It deliberately tries to balance its admittedly biased program segments,  It’s up to viewers to judge whether PBS succeeds or fails in this balancing act.  PBS is subject to direct political pressures.  For example the recent denouncement by Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings to the PBS cartoon "Postcards from Buster" program is an example.  PBS is now deciding whether or not to ever air this program.  I guess most of the objection is to the statement by two women on a maple sugar farm saying something to the effect that “parents don’t approve of our lifestyle.”  The biased right reporting of this in New Republic is more objectionable to me than the NYT’s version that leans more to the left.

I guess what I object to most is not bias or even pretense of bias that does not conform to reality.  I object most to racism in any form.  Along with the Independent Women’s Forum, I thought various popular political cartoonists recently became “wickedly” racist.  Whether the cartoons appeared in biased newspapers or “independent” newspapers, there’s no excuse for racism in print.  But I am now confining my comments on this issue to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm

In a message to me, Paul did concede that the cartoons might be “seen as sexist.”  He does not think they are racist.  He also pointed out that the Independent Women’s Forum should not be viewed as politically independent.  I belatedly must agree with him on this.  Sigh!

I do not agree with Paul that cartoons themselves are not racist, and I am certain than many groups in the academy would be in an uproar if had the cartoonists’ target been Shirley Chisholm rather than Condoleezza Rice.  But I hope to confine my future comments on this issue to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm

You can read Paul’s defense of the cartoonists at the above.

February 1, 2005 reply from Paul Williams [williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU]

Bob,

A public thank you for epitomizing civic discourse. It might surprise some to know I started life as a Republican --- my first presidential election I voted for Barry Goldwater. But, apparently like Kevin Phillips, I have had an epiphany-- a lot sooner than he did. I doubt that bias or uncivility is any worse now than ever. There have been instances of fisticuffs on the House floor in the past, something that hasn't happened lately. The Lincoln -Douglas debates were not without mudslinging and name calling. What concerns me most is that at the seat of power, there is increasingly but one bias -- that of corporate money. The political process in the U.S. is controlled by those with wealth and that is a dangerous bias for most of us who are not wealthy. Forty percent of the Senate are now millionaires and the percentage grows with each election. It now costs millions to be elected and once elected you have a lifetime sinecure -- 94% of incumbants win. Millionaires think like millionaires, but what's good for millionaires (contrary to supply siders) is not necessarily good for the rest of us. Bill Gates, brilliance aside, would not be a billionaire in a Robinson Crusoe economy. His wealth is dependent on a great deal (his father is active in campaigning to keep the inheritance tax because as he argued "I gave Bill the money to start Microsoft and I was able to do so because I went to college on the GI Bill and bought my first home with a GI loan). That great deal seems to be egregiously short-changed. I wonder where George W would be today if he had actually been born in Crawford Texas to a father who worked graveyard shift at a chemical plant and a mother who worked in the school cafeteria? Think he'd be president? Finis!

 PFW


Most Serious Challenges to Academic Freedom

The most serious problems of freedom of expression in our society today exist on our campuses. . . . The assumption seems to be that the purpose of education is to induce correct opinion rather than to search for wisdom and to liberate the mind.
Benno C. Schmidt, Jr., "The University and Freedom," speech to 92nd Street Y (New York: March, 1991), p. 1,3.
As quoted by Craig R. Smith in "Academic Freedom vs. Civil Rights:  A Special Report of the Center for First Amendment Studies California State University, Long Beach," March 2004 --- http://www.csulb.edu/~crsmith/acadfree.html 


Say what?  "If you construct a career raging against the system, you can’t stop raging just because the system has accepted you."
“To live outside the law, you must be honest.” Thompson, like a lot of people in the sixties and seventies, interpreted Dylan’s famous apothegm to mean that in order to be honest you must live outside the law. By the time the fallacy in this reading became obvious, his persona, thanks in part to the Uncle Duke figure in Garry Trudeau’s comic strip, but largely because of his own efforts, was engraved in pop-culture stone. It’s an occupational hazard: if you construct a career raging against the system, you can’t stop raging just because the system has accepted you, or has ceased to care or to pay attention. The anger needs someplace to go. At its best, in the Nixon era, Thompson’s anger, in writing, was a beautiful thing, fearless and funny and, after all, not wrong about the shabbiness and hypocrisy of American officialdom. It belonged to a time when journalists believed that fearlessness and humor and honesty could make a difference; and it’s sad to be reminded that the time in which such a faith was possible has probably passed.
Louis Menand, "Believer," The New Yorker, February 28, 2005 --- http://www.newyorker.com/talk/content/index.ssf?050307ta_talk_menand 


Ideologies make them both predictable and dreary
I am growing tired of academics whose ideologies make them both predictable and dreary, and I care not a fig if they are professional America knockers or professional America boosters. As with any country possessing the power to "murder and create" (T.S. Eliot's phrase), America has not always used its might wisely, but there are hundreds of crosses dotting the Normandy beachheads that remind us of the times when we were prepared to sacrifice to set others free. Among the many things Mr. Churchill needs to learn is this lesson and others like it.

Sanford Pinsker, The Irascible Professor, March 10, 2005 --- http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-03-10-05.htm 
Bob Jensen's Evil Empire” essay --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm


A Done Deal with Ward Churchill Blows Up
Settlement negotiations between the University of Colorado and professor Ward Churchill stalled Friday because of renewed opposition by groups that want to see him fired even if it takes a court fight to make him go away. "The ball is in CU's court," said Churchill attorney David Lane, who confirmed negotiations have hit a wall. Late Thursday, a settlement was all but done after lawyers for Churchill and the university agreed on financial terms. But when revelations arose Friday about a plagiarism complaint against Churchill, regents balked. Churchill critics, including former state Senate President John Andrews, and private citizens across...
Arthur Kane and Dave Curtin "Regents balk at Churchill deal:  Plagiarism allegation stalls buyout proposal," Denver Post, March 12, 2005 --- http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2758694,00.html 
Bob Jensen's threads on Ward Churchill are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyChurchill.htm 


On the Broader Front of Tenure and Academic Freedom
"It's like the old Dylan line - you don't need a weather vane to know which way the wind is blowing," said Robert Polhemus, English professor and chairman of the faculty senate at Stanford, paraphrasing the singer's "weather man" line. "For a generation, professors took both tenure and academic freedom for granted in a way that won't be possible in the next decade."  Legislators in at least eight states, including Colorado, have entertained bills or resolutions in the past several months reflecting the conservative push to balance what they claim is an overbearing liberal bias on campus. And tenure has long been open to attack on the grounds that it too thoroughly insulates even incompetent academics.  CU is just the latest skirmish.
Kevin Simpson, "Sacred cow of tenure laid low?" Denver Post, March 13, 2005 --- http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2760059,00.html 
Jensen Comment:  Who would've guessed that the focal points of academic freedom and free speech would be on the loose-lipped  President of Harvard University and a Colorado University professor of ethic studies with questionable credentials in his original job application?  Although there is a ground swell across university campuses for faculty rights to speak their minds without fear of losing their jobs, these are two instances where victory for rights of tenure are bittersweet.  I also wonder if the same groundswell would have taken place had Professor Churchill aimed his hate at the liberal establishment rather than the conservative establishment.  I would bet on it!  I think the faculty circulating petitions on your campus to save Churchill would scream and cheer if Churchill is saved and Lawrence Summers gets fired from Harvard.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm 

My personal opinion is that Summers should be fired for seriously breaching his principal-agent responsibility as President of Harvard, which is a position where freedom of speech should be more restrained because of externalities attached to the job title itself.  I originally thought Ward Churchill should not be fired.  But as events of his life unfold, I now think he should be fired if he truly lied on his resume and job application.  Many professors get fired for phony credentials.  Academic freedom does not protect lies.


I think that in a popular Broadway play (later a movie staring Burt and Dollie), these called a "side steps" (for failing to admit to blatant prejudice in the academy)

"Proving the Critics’ Case," K.C. Johnson, Inside Higher Ed, August 26, 2005 --- http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/08/26/johnson

Inside Higher Ed recently reported on four University of Pittsburgh professors critiquing the latest survey suggesting ideological one-sidedness in the academy. According to the Pitt quartet, self-selection accounts for findings that the faculty of elite disproportionately tilts to the Left. “Many conservatives,” the Pitt professors mused, “may deliberately choose not to seek employment at top-tier research universities because they object, on philosophical grounds, to one of the fundamental tenets undergirding such institutions: the scientific method.”

Imagine the appropriate outrage that would have occurred had the above critique referred to feminists, minorities, or Socialists. Yet the Pitt quartet’s line of reasoning — that faculty ideological imbalance reflects the academy functioning as it should — has appeared with regularity, and has been, unintentionally, most revealing. Indeed, the very defense offered by the academic Establishment, rather than the statistical surveys themselves, has gone a long way toward proving the case of critics who say that the academy lacks sufficient intellectual diversity.
In theory, ideology should have no bearing on how a professor teaches, say, physics. Even so, should responsible administrators worry that the overwhelming partisan disparity is worthy of further inquiry? And, in theory, parents who make their money in traditionally conservative professions such as investment banking or corporate law probably do not encourage their children to enter academe. Yet, as money-making fields have always been attractive to conservatives, why has the proportion of self-professed liberals or Leftists in the academy nearly doubled in the last generation?

Had members of the academic Establishment confined themselves to such arguments (or had they ignored the partisan-breakdown studies altogether), the intellectual diversity issue would have received little attention. Instead, the last two years have seen proud, often inflammatory, defenses of the professoriate’s ideological imbalance. These arguments, which have fallen into three categories, raise grave concerns about the academy’s overall direction.

1. The cultural left is, simply, more intelligent than anyone else. As SUNY-Albany’s
Ron McClamrock reasoned, “Lefties are overrepresented in academia because on average, we’re just f-ing smarter.” The first recent survey came in early 2004, when the Duke Conservative Union disclosed that Duke’s humanities departments contained 142 registered Democrats and 8 registered Republicans. Philosophy Department chairman Robert Brandon considered the results unsurprising: “If, as John Stuart Mill said, stupid people are generally conservative, then there are lots of conservatives we will never hire.”

In a slightly different vein, UCLA professor John McCumber informed The New York Times that “a successful career in academia, after all, requires willingness to be critical of yourself and to learn from experience,” qualities “antithetical to Republicanism as it has recently come to be.” In another Times article, Berkeley professor George Lakoff asserted that Leftists predominate in the academy because, “unlike conservatives, they believe in working for the public good and social justice, as well as knowledge and art for their own sake.” Again, imagine the appropriate outcry if prominent academics employed such sweeping generalizations to dismiss statistical disparities suggesting underrepresentation of women, gays, or minorities.

These arguments become even more disturbing given the remarkably broad definition of “conservative” employed in many academic quarters. Take the case of Yeshiva University’s Ellen Schrecker, recently elected to a term on the AAUP’s general council. This past spring, Schrecker
denounced Columbia students who wanted to broaden instruction about the Middle East for “trying to impose orthodoxy at this university.” The issue, she lamented, amounted to “right wing propaganda.”

The leaders of the Columbia student group, who ranged from registered Republicans to backers of Ralph Nader’s 2000 presidential bid, were united only in their belief that matters relating to Israel should be treated objectively in the classroom. Probably 98 percent of the U.S. Congress and all of the nation’s governors would fit under such a definition of “right wing.”

Indeed, it seems as if the academic Establishment considers anyone who does not accept the primacy of a race/class/gender interpretation to be “conservative.” To most outside of the academy, such a definition would suggest that professors are using stereotypes to abuse the inherently subjective nature of the hiring process.

2. A left-leaning tilt in the faculty is a pedagogical necessity, because professors must expose gender, racial, and class bias while promoting peace, “diversity” and “cultural competence.” According to Montclair State’s Grover Furr, “colleges and universities do not need a single additional ‘conservative’ .... What they do need, and would much benefit from, is more Marxists, radicals, leftists — all terms conventionally applied to those who fight against exploitation, racism, sexism, and capitalism. We can never have too many of these, just as we can never have too few ‘conservatives.’”

Furr’s remarks echoed those of Connecticut College’s Rhonda Garelick, who decried student “disgruntlement” when she used her French class to discuss her opposition to the war in Iraq and teach “‘wakeful’ political literacy.” Rashid Khalidi, meanwhile, rationalized anti-Israel instruction as necessary to undo the false impressions held by all incoming Columbia students except for “Arab-Americans, who know that the ideas spouted by the major newspapers, television stations, and politicians are completely at odds with everything they know to be true.”

To John Burness, Duke’s senior vice president for public affairs, such statements reflect a proper professorial role. The “creativity” in humanities and social science disciplines, he noted, addresses issues of race, class, and gender, leading to a “perfectly logical criticism of the current society” in the classroom.

At some universities, this mindset has even shaped curricular or personnel policies. Though its release generated widespread criticism and hints from administrators that it would not be adopted, a proposal to make “cultural competence” a key factor in all personnel decisions remains the working draft of the University of Oregon’s new diversity plan. Columbia recently set aside $15 million for hiring women and minorities — and white males who would “in some way promote the diversity goals of the university.” And the University of Arizona’s hiring blueprint includes requiring new faculty in some disciplines to “conduct research and contribute to the growing body of knowledge on the importance of valuing diversity.”

On the curricular front, my own institution’s provost, Roberta Matthews (who has written that “teaching is a political act") intends for the college’s new general education curriculum to produce “global citizens” — who, she commented, are those “sensitized to issues of race, class, and gender.”

Given such initiatives, it is worth remembering the traditional ideal of a university education: for faculty committed to free intellectual exchange in pursuit of the truth to expose undergraduates to the disciplines of the liberal arts canon, in the expectation that college graduates will possess the wide range of knowledge and skills necessary to function as democratic citizens.

3. A left-leaning professoriate is a structural necessity, because the liberal arts faculty must balance business school faculty and/or the general conservative political culture. University of Michigan professor Juan Cole, denouncing the “ridiculous and pernicious line” that major universities need greater intellectual diversity, complained about insufficient attention to the ideological breakdown of “Business Schools, Medical Schools, [and] Engineering schools.” UCLA’s Russell Jacoby wondered why ” conservatives seem unconcerned about the political orientation of the business professors.” Duke Law professor Erwin Chemerinsky more ambitiously claimed that “it’s hard to see this as a time of liberal dominance” given conservative control of the three branches of government.

Professional schools reflect the mindset of their professions: Socialists are about as common on business school faculty as are home-schooling advocates among education school professors. But, unlike business schools, liberal arts colleges and universities do not exist to train students for a single profession. Nor are they supposed to balance the existing political culture. If the Democrats reclaim the presidency and Congress in the 2008 elections, should the academy suddenly adopt an anti-liberal posture?

The intellectual diversity issue shows no signs of fading away. Ideological one-sidedness among the professoriate seems to be, if anything, expanding. And so, no doubt, will we see additional surveys suggesting a heavy ideological imbalance among the nation’s faculty — followed by new inflammatory statements from the academic Establishment that only reinforce the critics’ claims about bias in the personnel process.

In an ideal world, campus administrators would have rectified this problem long ago. A few have made small steps. Brown University’s president, Ruth Simmons, for instance, has
expressed concern that the “chilling effect caused by the dominance of certain voices on the spectrum of moral and political thought” might negatively affect a quality education; her university’s Political Theory Project represents a model that other institutions could follow.

To my knowledge, however, no academic administration has made the creation of an intellectually and pedagogically diverse faculty its primary goal. This statement, it should be noted, applies equally as well to institutions frequently praised by conservatives, such as Hillsdale College. Such an initiative, of course, would encounter ferocious faculty resistance. But it would also, just as surely, excite parents, donors, and trustees. If successful, an institution that made intellectual diversity its hallmark would encourage imitation — if only because other colleges would face the free-market pressures of losing talented students and faculty. So, the question becomes, do we have an administration anywhere in the country willing to take up the cause?


That can do a disservice to academic values

"If the Law Is a Ass, the Law Professor Is a Donkey," by Adam Liptik, The New York Times, August 28, 2005 --- http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/weekinreview/28liptak.html

PROFESSORS at the best law schools are generally assumed to be overwhelmingly liberal, and now a new study lends proof. But whether the ideological imbalance matters - to the academic environment students encounter, to the kinds of lawyers the schools produce and to the stock of ideas the professors generate - depends on whom you ask.

The study, to be published this fall in The Georgetown Law Journal, analyzes 11 years of records reflecting federal campaign contributions by professors at the top 21 law schools as ranked by U.S. News & World Report. Almost a third of these law professors contribute to campaigns, but of them, the study finds, 81 percent who contributed $200 or more gave wholly or mostly to Democrats; 15 percent gave wholly or mostly to Republicans.

The percentages of professors contributing to Democrats were even more lopsided at some of the most prestigious schools: 91 percent at Harvard, 92 at Yale, 94 at Stanford. At the University of Virginia, on the other hand, contributions were about evenly divided between the parties. The sample sizes at some schools may be too small to allow for comparisons, though it bears noting that by this measure the University of Chicago is slightly more liberal than Berkeley.

If the liberal law professors mean to indoctrinate students, though, they have failed spectacularly in some notable cases. The United States Supreme Court's two most conservative members, Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, are products of Harvard and Yale, respectively. And if John G. Roberts Jr., another conservative, is confirmed this fall, another conservative graduate of Harvard Law will be added to the court.

Whatever may be said about particular schools and students, professors and deans of all political persuasions agreed that the study's general findings are undeniable.

"Academics tend to be more to the left side of the continuum," said David E. Van Zandt, dean of Northwestern's law school, where the contribution rate to Democrats was 71 percent. "It's a little worse in law school. In other disciplines, there are more objective standards for quality of work. Law schools are sort of organized in a club structure, where current members of the club pick future members of the club."

That can do a disservice to academic values, said Peter H. Schuck, a Yale law professor and the author of "Diversity in America: Keeping Government at a Safe Distance." "We have a higher responsibility to our students, ourselves and our disciplines," he said, "that our preference for ideological homogeneity and faculty-lounge echo chambers betrays."

Continued in article


From Opinion Journal on April 13, 2006

The Seattle Times reports that a racist question appeared on a math test at Bellevue Community College:

*** QUOTE ***

[Student Chelsey] Richardson, 25, said she found the question on a practice test for a math final she was studying for in March. The question read, "Condoleezza holds a watermelon just over the edge of the roof of the 300-foot Federal Building, and tosses it up with a velocity of 20 feet per second." The question went on to ask when the watermelon will hit the ground, based on a formula provided. The question propagates a racial stereotype and denigrates[ ** ] Secretary of State Rice, said [the Rev. Wayne] Perryman [a civil rights activist Richardson contacted]. While Rice's last name wasn't mentioned, the reference was clear, he said.

"How many Condoleezzas spell their name tha