Now and again, at times when I haven't been “on
the air” very much, someone will write to ask whether I
intend to cover some subject or other that has arisen in the meanwhile.
One such email was received regarding the Imus controversy --
which became eclipsed by Blacksburg, so that cable TV went from
all Imus all the time to all Virginia Tech all the time. So, because
of the receipt of occasional missives of inquiry, it has occurred
to me that, in addition to saying what little I have to add about
some of these matters, I might also explain why much of the time
I was “off the air” -- a partial absence which could,
of course, be considered inconsistent with the animating spirit
of writing all the time, writing from one’s kitchen, from
one’s desk, from airports, from hotels, from anywhere and
everywhere without cease. The thought of explaining one’s
absence seemed an especially likely one because the reasons could
conceivably be of interest to liberal people of intellectual bent
-- there still are a few of us, after all.
The last few weeks have been heavily devoted to
one prong of our two pronged law school. Persons familiar with
the Massachusetts School of Law will know that it has what could
be called two different tracks. On the purely academic side, from
the day of its founding in 1988, it has been different from any
other law school. There are perhaps 230 or 240 or so law schools
in this country, but, as far as I know, ours is the only one whose
announced mission, and whose program accordingly, is to provide
legal education and social mobility to members of the working
class, immigrants, people in midlife and minorities. There probably
are a handful of other law schools, or maybe fewer, that do provide
education to such people, but I don’t know that this is
their proclaimed mission, as it is MSL’s. Because of our
mission, and an academic program geared accordingly, we deliberately
keep MSL’s tuition to less than half of the average law
school tuition in our area (and in most other parts of the country
as well), teach not just the academic side of law but also (unlike
most law schools) focus extensively on teaching the practical
skills that lawyers must have (e.g., teaching students how to
try cases, negotiate, write contracts, draft wills and trusts,
deal with clients, etc.) (the teaching of practical skills, one
notes, is a large part of medical education and of most forms
of professional education, albeit not generally of legal education),
and deliberately reject use of the particular alphabet test, the
LSAT, which has been used for 40 years and more to turn law schools
into a bastion of the upper middle class and above.
The other prong of MSL will be thought by some
to be at the opposite pole from a focus on providing practical
legal education to the less advantaged of American society. It
is to make accessible to the public some of the best intellectual
and academic thinking taking place in the country on a host of
political, historical, social, economic, medical and legal subjects.
(Perhaps surprisingly for a law school, legal subjects are the
least of it.) That academic institutions should make such thinking
accessible to the public is something that I have been hearing
since I entered the University of Michigan in 1956 -- 51 years
ago, no less -- but that has rarely, if ever, been done since
then by institutions of higher learning (which instead have largely
gone in the opposite direction entirely). For the purpose of doing
what others do not, MSL puts on one hour long television shows,
called The Massachusetts School of Law Educational Forum,
which generally consist of one hour long panel discussions of
a particular subject, puts on one hour long television show about
books, called Books of Our Time, on which an author is
interviewed about his or her latest book, has now inaugurated
a new, one hour long radio program called What The Media Doesn’t
Tell You, which discusses important subjects that the mass
media fails to cover or covers only very sparsely, two to three
times a year holds one or two day intellectual conferences featuring
leading academics and thinkers who discuss a particular topic
from a host of angles, and twice a year publishes an intellectual
magazine, called The Long Term View, which devotes each
issue to a single subject. The television programs are seen throughout
the Northeast on Comcast’s own Channel CN8 (as well as on
some other stations around the country), are viewable and downloadable
on the internet, and are also converted into radio programs that
are heard in the United States on Sirius, on the World Radio Network).
(WRN also broadcasts the programs in Europe and Africa.) The new
radio program, What The Media Doesn’t Tell You,
is heard on the same station in the same areas, and is likewise
streamed and downloadable on the internet.
People who read or write liberal commentary are
likely to be interested in many of the television and radio programs,
and issues of the magazine, which can all be accessed at www.mslaw.edu.
The dichotomous combination of providing practical
education and social mobility to the less affluent of American
society, plus simultaneously providing public access to some of
the best thinking of the American academic and intellectual worlds,
causes me to think of MSL as the Eric Hoffer of law schools. (Hoffer,
of course, was the working class guy -- a longshoreman, I think
-- who became a leading philosopher.) And it was the access-to-the-best-thought
prong of the school that occupied my time for approximately the
last four weeks and caused me to often be “off the air”
in terms of internet writing.
In particular, a lot of preparation had to be
done to inaugurate the new radio program. Outlines had to be prepared,
and interviews had to be, or shortly will be, taped on various
important questions. One is why The New York Times failed to carry
its story about the NSA spying on Americans as soon as the story
was available, in October 2004, well before the November 2004
election and at a time when the story could have (and I think
would have) changed the results of the election, instead waiting
14 months to carry the story (in mid December 2005), and then
lied about when it had first known of it. Others of the questions
have been why the mass media has carried little or no information
on:
(a) why Iran does or does not have at least
as much right as the U.S. to “meddle” in Iraq --
our mass media simply assumes that it is perfectly proper for
the U.S. to take the most serious and often quite deadly military
actions there but it is improper for Iran to do anything there
(b) the government’s extensive ability
to know, before 9/11, that airplanes could and might well be
used as missiles to destroy buildings (the media instead carried
only the Riceian, Bushian lies that this was not foreseeable)
(c) the existence of and our failure to develop
any countermeasure for, a submarine-borne Russian missile, called
the Sizzler, which apparently has a conventional warhead, gives
only very short warning, and can readily knock out an entire
aircraft carrier, therefore threatening our entire carrier based
strategy all over the world, and has been sold to the Chinese
and offered to the Iranians (who could use it to destroy our
carrier forces off the coast of their country)
Another intellectual project that took extensive
time was reading and preparing a sixteen page outline of The
Mighty Scourge, which is the most recent book by the dean
of Civil War historians, James McPherson. The book represents,
one thinks, the culmination of McPherson’s oeuvre, and he
will appear at MSL for a daylong conference on August 25th to
be interviewed about his book and to extensively discuss the book
with the audience, who will doubtless include history professors,
high school history teachers, civil war aficionados, and people
with a general interest in American history. (The book’s
title This Mighty Scourge, is taken from a classic passage
in Lincoln’s Second Inaugural – which contains some
of the most classic passages ever written in the English language.
The two most pertinent sentences (in my view) say: “Fondly
do we hope -- fervently do we pray -- that this mighty scourge
of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue
until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred
and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every
drop of blood drawn by the lash shall be paid by another drawn
with the sword", and as was said three thousand years ago,
so still it must be said, “The judgments of the Lord are
true and righteous altogether.”
Yet a third intellectual project that took extensive
time was whipping into final shape for publication -- or at least
attempting this -- a 900 plus pages volume containing all four
books of the slightly fictionalized memoir of a career entitled
Thine Alabaster Cities Gleam. (The first three volumes
were previously published separately. The final volume has not
been published before.) Proofreading 900 plus pages, and then
looking the book over later -- albeit not nearly as closely --
for further mistakes that inevitably creep in, because of the
vagaries of technology when prior mistakes are being corrected,
is a time consuming job, to say the least.
There was also the matter of the TV show called
Books of Our Time. It was necessary to begin reading
(in order to subsequently prepare an outline for an interview
about) the book for the next program, Howard Gardner’s new
Five Minds For The Future. (Gardner is the famous Harvard
professor who is the father of the now widely accepted theory
of multiple intelligences.) Thank God the taping of this show
will not occur until May 23rd, so there is plenty of time; yet
it still was necessary to begin doing the work.
And, finally, this last weekend there was a conference
to attend at MSL on the need to begin teaching American history
in the context of world history, instead of in isolation from
world history. This subject, long overdue, was fathered in a book
by the conference’s keynote speaker, Thomas Bender of NYU,
who had previously been interviewed on Books of Our Time.
The conference, I am pleased to say, attracted speakers and attendees
from all over the country, nearly 55 in all, which isn’t
bad for an academic conference dealing exclusively with one specialized
subject.
So . . . there has been a lot going on that has
occupied much of my time and has kept me largely “off the
air.” During this “non-broadcast” period there
have been a few events which I ordinarily might have written about:
the Imus affair, the Blacksburg disaster, and Bill Moyer’s
TV show on the media’s complicity in the run up to Bush’s
war in Iraq. Because so much has already been written about the
first two of these matters subsequent to their occurrence, and
much was previously written in the last few years about the third,
I shall borrow by analogy from another of Lincoln’s classic
statements: “When a campaign biographer in 1860 asked Lincoln
for details of his youth and young manhood,” writes McPherson
(pp. 187-188), “the nominee replied: ‘It is a great
piece of folly to attempt to make anything out of my early life.
It can all be condensed into a single sentence, and that sentence
you will find in Gray’s elegy: ‘The short and simple
annals of the poor.’’” In other words, my comments
on the subjects at hand will be brief.
With regard to Imus, I do not bleed for him. There
was a (relatively brief) period when I used to watch his show
because he had some interesting discussions with interesting people.
Eventually, I stopped watching it because the guy was just too
self absorbed to be bearable. (To my surprise, after it hit the
fan, one or two other people told me they agreed about his self
absorption.) And even in the period when I watched his show, because
of the discussions, the impression he made on me was that underneath
it all, and maybe not so deeply buried, the guy was a bigot, anti
Semitic, misogynistic and, in effect, a 1969 hard hat. (Since
all this was just my impression, it could all be wrong, of course.)
We are of almost the identical age -- isn’t he too 67 or
so? -- and he struck me as an unregenerate, white, majoritarian
guy of my own generation. (Again, possibly wrong, but that’s
how he struck one.)
As said, I don't bleed for Imus. And bad as his
conduct was, it is still a shame that anyone, even Imus, is overturned
because of the actions of two of the biggest of the big mouthed
jerks of our time, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson. They have a
few things to answer for themselves, you know, and fundamentally
are, as said, bigmouths. As well, Imus caught his lunch for saying
things that others, very unfortunately, say all the time, a fact
which has regularly been pointed out, and -- but not so often
pointed out -- he caught his lunch even though he, in a way, is
nothing other than just another reprehensible participant in the
vast trashland (pace Newton Minow) that our culture has largely
become or remained. As they say, 500 channels and nothing is on,
at least much or most of the time, because it’s all trash
or at least so much of it is. If you like murder and violence,
and lack of cleverness, even when mayhem is missing, then TV and
movies are the place for you. Most newspapers are about as bad.
One holds no brief for the TV or movies of our
youth -- Minow did make his remark (TV is a “vast wasteland”)
about 1960 or 1961, after all. But it hasn’t gotten better.
If anything, worse, and there is a hell of a lot more of it.
So much for Imus. Blacksburg? -- what can one say?
People who have said some of what there is to say have been crucified,
have received hate mail and, I understand, worse. For they pointed
out the societally inadmissible relationship between what happened
at Blacksburg (and the Texas Tower, and Columbine, etc.) on the
one hand, and the violence which is approved by and endemic to
American society and the American government on the other hand.
They have inadmissibly pointed out -- with what one would think
almost a desire for crucifixion they have accurately pointed out
-- that a jerk like George Bush goes to Blacksburg to allegedly
mourn, while not giving one damn about the scores of thousands,
maybe hundreds of thousands, of Iraqi and American deaths he is
directly or indirectly responsible for in Iraq, not to mention
the thousands who now live without arms or legs or with shock-addled
cerebellums. And what goes for Bush goes for his supporters too,
who likewise have gone down the road to traitorously destroying
what is best about this country.
It is, one would think, likely that schools (and
other institutions and businesses) will now take further steps
to try to prevent yet more Blacksburgs, Columbines, etc. That,
one supposes, is to the good, and desirable. It will not, of course,
cure the underlying problem of violence everywhere, in American
thought, in our foreign actions, in our movies, on TV.
As for the matter Bill Moyers brought to the fore
last Wednesday, once again, what can one say? The incompetence,
stupidity, pack mentality, failure-to-cover important matters,
failure-to-dig-after-the truth, panting after the big shots, elitist,
lack of intelligence, etc., nature of the mass media is only too
well known. (It is the reason, indeed, for some of the specific
programs of a very different nature that are part of MSL’s
various TV series (e.g., a program on the nature of terrorists)
and is the reason for MSL’s new radio series entitled What
The Media Doesn’t Tell You.) Moyer’s program
nonetheless made a real contribution by disclosing some of the
rotten media tricks played by this Administration to insure that
we would get into war and by informing people who might otherwise
have been ignorant of the general mendacity. It is also fair to
ask, one supposes, whether whatever is left of Colin Powell’s
reputation can survive Moyer’s broadcast. An older man whom
I knew well and admired greatly used to be fond of quoting the
old saying that “When you lie down with dogs, you get fleas.”
Presumably because of ambition, Powell lay down with, he gave
vital help to, a pack of rabid dogs. Now he is covered with fleas.
(Why is one not surprised that, after Powell retired as Secretary
of State, Prince Bandar, the Saudi hatchetman in America who is
a close friend of the Bush family, bought Powell a 1995 Jaguar
to replace the one that Bandar knew Powell’s wife missed
so much, and Powell accepted the gift of a replacement Jaguar?)
BC columnist Lawrence R. Velvel,
JD, is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. Click
here to contact Dean Velvel.
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