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Thread ID: 14660 | Posts: 2 | Started: 2004-08-09
2004-08-09 05:30 | User Profile
Under the Radar (political correctness in academia)
Cathy Young, reasononline, Jul. 2004
These days, talking about political correctness in academia makes you sound like a quaint throwback to the 1990s. It seems utterly irrelevant to the post-9/11 era, a threat dwarfed by (depending on whom you listen to) either terrorism or losing our liberties to the war on terrorism. Eric Wasserman, executive director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), says many people have a knee-jerk reaction to the very phrase political correctness, seeing it as an old story.
But in fact, says Wasserman, the phenomenon is very much alive. On campuses across America, the censorship of speech and ideas in the name of sensitivity continues unabated.
In April, for instance, the faculty council of Oklahoma State University approved a ââ¬Åracial and sexual harassment policyââ¬Â that amounts to a far-reaching speech code. According to a report in The Daily Oââ¬â¢Collegian, the policyââ¬â¢s definition of harassment includes ââ¬Åa hostile environment that unreasonably interferes with the work or academic performance of those of a particular race, color, ethnicity or national origin,ââ¬Â even if such ââ¬Åinterferenceââ¬Â is ââ¬Åunintentional.ââ¬Â It covers ââ¬Åverbal and nonverbal harassment, as well as print and electronic harassment.ââ¬Â
The policy does purport to exempt any ââ¬Åpresentation or inquiry falling within justifiable academic standards covering course contents and pedagogy.ââ¬Â But justifiable is a nebulous term, and the policy as a whole is so broad and so vague that it would surely chill the legitimate exchange of ideas, particularly outside the classroomââ¬âin student papers, for instance.
Some recent incidents involving student journalism bolster these concerns. Around the same time that Oklahoma State approved its harassment policy, a controversy erupted at Oregon State University after the student paper, The Daily Barometer, ran an article by staff columnist David Williams titled ââ¬ÅA message from a white male to the African American community.ââ¬Â Williams argued that one reason for the social ills disproportionately afflicting blacks is that character and accountability in the black community are undermined by a tendency to rally around prominent African-Americans behaving badly, from O.J. Simpson to singer R. Kelly, currently facing child pornography charges on the basis of a videotape allegedly showing him having sex with an underage girl.
Williams went out of his way to qualify his message, saying he realized his article could be seen as ââ¬Åpicking on the worstââ¬Â of the African-American community and that his judgment on the issue might be suspect because he is not black. ââ¬ÅI have never been the victim of racism,ââ¬Â he wrote. ââ¬ÅI am a white male. This all is very easy for me to say.ââ¬Â Williams nonetheless concluded that blacks ââ¬Åneed to grow beyond the automatic reaction of defending someone because he or she shares the same skin color and is in a dilemma.ââ¬Â
Maybe it was a good column making a necessary point, and maybe it was tired and condescending. But the reaction went far beyond criticism of Williamsââ¬â¢ arguments or tone. Following a protest rally, The Daily Barometer ran a groveling editorial that repeatedly apologized for printing the column and called its publication ââ¬Åan inexcusable mistake.ââ¬Â Williams was fired from his position as columnist. At a campus forum held a few days later, university president Ed Gray called the incident a ââ¬Åteachable momentââ¬Âââ¬âthe teaching in question, of course, being about diversity and institutional racism, not about freedom of the press. The Barometerââ¬â¢s Forum editor, Christina Stewart, offered yet another apology for letting the offending article appear. (In a twist, it was subsequently revealed that Williamsââ¬â¢ column had been inspired by an article on a similar subject by the Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist Leonard Pitts Jr., who is black.)
This case is one of many recent examples of politically correct censorship of campus journalism. April, apparently, is the cruelest month for student papers: April Foolââ¬â¢s Day editions are especially likely to incur the wrath of the sensitivity police. At Carnegie-Mellon University, a joke edition of The Tartan, which contained admittedly (and intentionally) offensive racial and sexual humor, resulted in the paper suspending publication for the rest of the semester and agreeing to future content review by the administration.
Thanksgiving, it seems, can be risky too. In 2003 the South Missouri State University student daily, The Standard, got in trouble for a cartoon in which a pilgrim on the second Thanksgiving complained to his wife that the Indians ââ¬Åbrought corn . . . again.ââ¬Â This joke was deemed offensive to Native Americans. The administration is still investigating The Standardââ¬â¢s editor-in-chief, Mandy Philips, and faculty adviser, Wanda Brandon, with possible sanctions pending. It is worth noting that SMSU, unlike Carnegie-Mellon, is a public institution bound, under current law, by the First Amendment.
Litigation by FIRE and other groups has resulted in some victories for free speech. In February of this year, the University of California at Irvine and the University of Colorado at Boulder reversed their bans on ââ¬Åaffirmative action bake sales,ââ¬Â protests in which cookies were sold at higher prices to Asians and whites than to blacks and Hispanics in order to illustrate the absurdity of awarding extra points to minority college applicants. In March, Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania revised a student code of conduct under which any speech that ââ¬Åannoyedââ¬Â or ââ¬Åalarmedââ¬Â someone became a potential target. FIRE and its legal networks had filed lawsuits in both cases.
But larger problems remain. A survey conducted by FIRE last year found that more than half of college students at both public and private institutions believe that a student club espousing traditional beliefs about womenââ¬â¢s roles should not be allowed on campus; this view is also shared by a quarter of administrators at public universities and nearly half the administrators at private ones. Other results from the survey confirm that when it comes to unpopular views on such issues as abortion or homosexuality, many college students and administrators hold freedom of expression in fairly low regard. One recent trend is for Christian student groups to be denied recognition if they ââ¬Ådiscriminateââ¬Â by requiring their leadership to subscribe to the Christian faith.
In fairness, there have been some egregious instances of right-wing censorship as well. At the University of Scranton, a Catholic institution, the April Foolââ¬â¢s Day edition of the student daily The Aquinas was confiscated and the paper itself shut down because of a parody of The Passion of the Christ. At Forsyth Community College in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, writing instructor Elizabeth Ito did not have her contract renewed after some students complained about her anti-war comments in class on the day of the ground invasion of Iraq.
But these examples remain few and far between. Two years ago, when ââ¬Åthe new normalââ¬Â was still new, I argued that despite some attempts to suppress ââ¬Åunpatrioticââ¬Â speech, the greatest threat to free speech on campuses still came from the left. That remains true today.
In April, a few days after football star Pat Tillman was killed in action in Afghanistan, The Daily Collegian, the student daily at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, ran a column by graduate student Rene Gonzalez mocking Tillman as a ââ¬ÅRamboââ¬Â and an ââ¬Åidiotââ¬Â who ââ¬Ågot what was coming to him.ââ¬Â Gonzalezââ¬â¢s attack on Tillman sparked widespread outrage and was denounced as ââ¬Ådisgustingââ¬Â and ââ¬Åintellectually immatureââ¬Â by university president Jack M. Wilson.
Nonetheless, Wilson emphasized that Gonzalez had the right to express his opinion, and The Daily Collegian stood by its decision to run the column as a matter of commitment to ââ¬Åthe backbone of journalism: The First Amendment.ââ¬Â The contrast to The Barometerââ¬â¢s handling of Williamsââ¬â¢ column is revealing.
Maybe the editors of the Collegian simply have more backbone. Or maybe in the groves of academe, not all offensive speech is created equal.
(Posted on August 6, 2004)
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Don't you just hate to hear the words.."I'm a white male". It sends chills down my spine...I just want to shake the spineless fool who apologizes for his very existence. I remember the first time JT opened my eyes to the phenomenon in one of his articles...I've been correcting every white MAN I know when ever they..as I put it..apoligize for their existence. When ever you hear someone make that statement..please correct them..."I'm a white man"....or.."your a white man"
Posted by Rob at 4:52 PM on August 6
I remember it was Jared Taylor that really opened my eyes up to white guilt too. I saw him on the Donahue show. He beat Donahue and the other libs so bad, I thought Donahue must have secretly agreed with him. This one black lady told Jared that white people should be ashamed because of what he said, and then he asked her if blind people should be ashamed if he happened to be blind or people in wheel chairs if he were confined in one. Then, he explained what white guilt was and that he didn't subscribe to it. Watching that unfold was truly an awkening experience for me, and I'm sure to many others.
Posted by adam at 5:54 PM on August 6
It is indeed a "teachable moment" - and the lesson that should be taught is that only a truly inferior people can tolerate no criticism or ridicule.
Posted by Andy DeLuvian at 9:24 PM on August 6
This is ridiculous. This nation's constitution was written by white people for white people and we should not let the multicultural fascists take away our rightful inheritance of this country.
Posted by at 9:27 PM on August 7
"Williams was fired from his position as columnist." It is no wonder why more people don't speak the truth about blacks. Are your convictions worth losing your job over? This guy bent over backwards to try and make a fair argument and still lost his job. Where are all the whites who should be out there protesting this egregious act? Cowering in the background because they don't want to be ostracized as well. Even the blind can see the devastating effects black culture is having on this country but very few dare speak out against it for fear of these kinds of consequences.
Posted by Casey Crews at 10:00 PM on August 7
The moral of the story is that if you're a "person of color" you can get away with almost anything you say, and that what would be politically incorrect and possibly cause for being kicked out of school or losing a job if you're white, is simply cause for a "slap on the wrist" if you're non-white. The hypocrisy of all of this will hopefully cause more of a backlash among young whites because without such a backlash I see things continuing to be "business as usual" in the politically correctness racket.
Posted by Paul Jones at 10:29 PM on August 7
"This is ridiculous. This nation's constitution was written by white people for white people and we should not let the multicultural fascists take away our rightful inheritance of this country."
It is not being taken away, it is being handed on a silver platter. Whites share socialist premises with very few exceptions. . .
Posted by at 2:38 PM on August 8
Sadly, this very fear is based on consequences all too real. There's freedom of speech for everyone unless he is a white male. Those of us who dare to poke our heads up and speak about what we're noticing going on around us is verboten. It's like that scene in the Wizard of Oz where Dorothy is scolded "Ignore that man behind the curtain..." We're not supposed to be noticing what's really happening to us. The worst part of the whole PC cult is that it's now largely composed of young white people who really buy into this silliness. They're blind and indoctrinated. We can thank our colleges for perpetuating this quasi-Marxist mind rot.
Posted by CRB at 7:04 PM on August 8
[url]http://www.amren.com/mtnews/archives/2004/08/under_the_radar.php[/url]
2004-08-09 08:04 | User Profile
"We can thank our colleges for perpetuating this quasi-Marxist mind rot."
I don't think so. I think we can blame Abu Grhaib women writers making "white men" under attack by "quasi-Marxism" to bring on Pee Cee. Then they bring on "Radical Islamic terrorists" to kill Americans with anthrax poisoning -- wait! - that wasn't Islamic terrorist who sent the anthrax through the mail, it was somebody inside government, apparrently trying to setr thien up, a Jew, probably -- we know from the contents of the letters enclosed saying "Death to Americans and Israel. Allah akhbar" or some shit like that -- and every good neoconservative -- maybe every conservative in general, its not really all that clear how many work for fthe jews under cover, he he he -- liberal Peeceeers and terrorists, no difference.
We can thank our colleges, during the Vietnam war -- some of them; those that weren't controlled by right wing conservative Republican pathologcial liars and psychotic killers who always run for office by shooting to kill whoever gets in their way of their resounding democracit election victories. -- for saving untold lives in the genocides they had planned for Vietnam, not to mention US soldiers, whom the pathologifal liars and psychotic killers view as their special babies to kill and then throw the blood in our faces forever afterward saying "oh, look what Jane Fondas tits did". .. and preserving dignity for America, until the Republican conservative pathological liars and psychotic killers could get the jews to start it up the killing again. ... at least the college where I taught in the late 60's and early 70's did that, largely due to my personal influence.
White men as white jews.