Columbia University President Lee Bollinger recently took a
lot of heat when he allowed Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
to make a speech at the Ivy League institution. Bollinger, a
First Amendment legal scholar, understands the importance of
free speech in a democratic system. And these days, free speech
is under attack on college campuses throughout the nation.
Professor Norman Finkelstein, son of Holocaust
survivors and the most prominent critic of Israeli policy in
American academia,
was denied tenure by DePaul University, even though the political
science department and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
recommended tenure. Harvard law school professor Alan Dershowitz
lobbied against tenure for Finkelstein, an act described by MIT
professor Noam Chomsky as a "jihad" designed "simply
to try to vilify and defame him, in the hope that maybe what
he's writing will disappear." Finkelstein told the Democracy
Now! program: "I met the standards of tenure DePaul required,
but it wasn't enough to overcome the political opposition to
my speaking out on the Israel-Palestine conflict." The late
Raul Hilberg, dean of Holocaust historians and a Finkelstein
supporter, had said: "I have a sinking feeling about the
damage this will do to academic freedom."
Professor Ward Churchill was fired by the
University of Colorado at Boulder, ostensibly because of research
misconduct, a pretext,
many believe, for his unpopular views. Churchill has written
extensively on the genocide of Native Americans and the federal
government's COINTELPRO program. The trouble started when Churchill
characterized the 9-11 attacks as a response to years of U.S.
abuses, and called the victims of 9-11 "little Eichmanns" who
formed a "technocratic corps at the very heart of America's
global financial empire."
Then there is Erwin Chemerinsky, constitutional
scholar extraordinaire who has argued for judicial review for
detainees held at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, and represented Valerie Plame, the CIA agent outed
by the Bush administration. He was chosen to become dean of the
new University of California-Irvine law school. Then, the chancellor
of Irvine rescinded the contract — allegedly due to pressure
from conservative groups — then reinstated Chemerinsky.
Meanwhile, Andrew Meyer, a student at the
University of Florida, was tasered by police during a speech
by Sen. John Kerry, while
he asked questions that were critical of Bush. And there are
calls by the College Republicans for the resignation of David
McSwane, the editor-in-chief of the Rocky Mountain Collegian,
Colorado State University's student newspaper, who wrote an editorial
in which he said "Taser this. F*** Bush."
Conservative pressure groups, including David Horowitz and his
Students for Academic Freedom (in classic Orwellian fashion,
they purport to stand for academic freedom, the opposite of that
which they really advocate), are trying to muzzle free speech
in academia. In their warped worldview, there is a leftwing conspiracy
to control the college campuses and enforce liberal, politically-correct
thinking. They are kindred spirits with those political hacks
in the Bush administration who cried liberal bias in public broadcasting,
and attempted to recreate PBS in the image of Fox News.
And professors are strong-armed and vilified
in the process. Horowitz has compiled a list of the "101 Most Dangerous
Academics in America," which includes Finkelstein; Chomsky;
Kathleen Cleaver of Emory University; Howard Zinn of Boston University;
Manning Marable, Eric Foner and Victor Navasky of Columbia; Angela
Davis of the University of California, Santa Cruz; David Cole
of Georgetown; Derrick Bell of NYU; Amiri Baraka of Rutgers;
Robert McChesney of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign;
Ron (Maulena) Karenga of the California State University, Long
Beach, bell hooks and Leonard Jeffries of the City University
of New York, Juan Cole of the University of Michigan, and others.
Horowitz claims most college professors are left-leaning, which
is hardly the point. I am inclined to believe that free thinking,
open-mindedness and flexibility are more compatible with the
purpose of the university. Ideological conservatism stands for
black or white, right or wrong, friend or enemy, with no shades
of gray. One is not supposed to challenge conventional wisdom,
authority, the laws, the status quo or longstanding institutions.
It is worth noting that in a recent study, psychologist David
Amodio and others found that conservatives tend to be more rigid
and closed-minded, less tolerant of ambiguity and less open to
new experiences.
And as far as the Ahmadinejad speech at Columbia is concerned,
certainly, those chickenhawk Americans who are beating the drums
of war with Iran are dying to be provoked by the words and actions
of the Iranian bogeyman. And denying the existence of the Holocaust,
and presiding over a government that disregards women's and gay
rights, and executes juveniles is reprehensible at the very least.
Is he a petty dictator, as Bollinger suggests? Perhaps. But he
is also a politician who is playing to his base. And there are
many would-be petty dictators in this country who, in playing
to their base, support the most outrageous and unconscionable
policies, such as the criminalization of women's rights, including
abortion, even in the case of rape and incest, guns for everyone,
the teaching of creationism mythology in the schools, homophobia,
criminalization of Latino workers, and the elimination of civil
rights and civil liberties.
Our own President Bush is responsible for
the deaths of 1 million Iraqis and thousands of U.S. citizens,
all from a war based on
lies, for the purpose of protecting his and his friends' oil
interests. His administration, detested by millions, acts with
a total disregard for the law, on a daily basis. Yet, he is allowed
to give speeches everyday — albeit with the aid of teleprompters
displaying phonetically-spelled words — unimpeded, and
without impeachment, for that matter.
Free speech dictates a higher standard than
merely giving a pass to those whose ideas are acceptable, those
with whom we
agree, whoever "we" are. It is better to have all of
the ideas out there in the marketplace, save those which amount
to yelling fire in a crowded room or inciting violence. If the
Constitution is not durable or inclusive enough to protect dissident
views and unpopular statements, maybe it is not worth keeping.
Perhaps it is not worth the paper on which it is written, and
it is time for us to find another plan.
So, enough of this academic McCarthyism. Words are powerful,
as they can liberate bodies and minds, spur revolutions, and
change history. Indeed, the pen is mightier than the sword. But
free speech is supposed to be feared by a dictatorship such as
Burma or China, not a democracy. Which one are we?
BlackCommentator.com Columnist David A. Love is a lawyer based in Philadelphia,
and a contributor to the Progressive Media Project and McClatchy-Tribune News Service. He
contributed to the book, States
of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St.
Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International
UK spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality
conference as a staff member with the Center
for Constitutional Rights, and served as a law clerk
to two Black federal judges. His blog is at davidalove.com. Click
here to contact Mr. Love.