Monday, October 21, 2019

In 2019, the campus jackboots feel comfortable making their real agenda this plain

Frederick Hess at the American Enterprise Institute passes along any eye-opening remark from a prominent academic:

Some in the academy increasingly argue that the whole notion of free inquiry is a reactionary blemish rather than a bedrock principle. Indeed, in a new book published by Oxford University Press, New York University professor Ulrich Baer has done a signal (if disheartening) service in articulating this ominous new stance.
NYU’s Baer, a professor of comparative literature, German, and English, and author of What Snowflakes Get Right, told Inside Higher Education last week that “the urge to block speech, which is really a reminder that the university’s purpose is to vet ideas and regulate speech so that teaching and learning can proceed, is related to a new generation’s realization that free speech has become a weapon for conservatives to undermine equality and the university itself.” He explained that free speech “is neither a blanket permission to say anything without consequence . . . nor identical with academic freedom.”
Got that? Forget all that talk of free, untrammeled inquiry. The university’s very purpose is to “vet ideas and regulate speech” — with an eye to the fact that “free speech” itself is a political “weapon” that threatens the “equality and the university itself.” What Baer offers is a pivot that would leave behind any squeamishness for those wishing to stifle conservative perspectives or maintain any romantic attachment to the age-old principles articulated by the American Association of University Professors.
You see, Baer argues, “universities get confused about their mission in the free speech debates and insist . . . that open-ended and unregulated inquiry is their purpose.” In fact, Baer says, universities are supposed to tolerate free inquiry only as a means for “advancing knowledge and seeking truth,” and the campus mandarins should serve as censors who determine which ideas and speech do so — and which do not.
This is the next front in the push by campus culture warriors to marginalize and silence those who hold objectionable views or values. Baer is explicit on this count, explaining that “free speech only has meaning in the university when it’s paired with the legally mandated principle of equality for all qualified participants.” He elaborates: “When a speaker proposes that some people are innately inferior, such speech conflicts directly with the university’s mandate to provide equal access to its facilities and resources.”
Now, I’m scratching my head trying to think of many campus speakers in 2019 who spend their time arguing “that some people are innately inferior.” But the game, of course, is that Baer and his cronies will define ideas and thoughts they dislike as fitting the bill — and they trust that progressive, weak-kneed campus censors will see things their way. Recent history suggests that they’re on safe ground, on that score.
Baer explains that this profound redefinition of the university reflects the “new generation’s” sense “that free speech can serve as a hollow concept to advance a reactionary agenda.” This cynical dismissal is a telling summation of how Baer and likeminded illiberal thugs view the ideals of free inquiry and academic freedom.
Be sure that hordes of like-minded jackboots are chomping at the bit to make this guy a thought leader. The camel's nose is now in the tent.

Baer and his ilk are going to be appointed arbiters of what "equality" means. And that in turn will establish the parameters around what we get to say without running afoul of them.

It's very late in the day. There's not much time to mount effective resistance to this.

21 comments:

  1. The sky falls from a new release from a leftist Compararative Lit Prof? I do know that the American Library Association has not altered their firm and unwavering stance against censorship of library materials since 1938, and they did have to do battle with the McCarthyites in the 50s, among their many other strong stands throughout the years. Would you have this prof's book squashed to make it somehow earlier in the day? Too many busybodies, way too many troublemakers and far too many barristers are making it late in the day. Hope you enjoy the cow you're having over the publication of a book. In today's info overload it would be impossible to publish anything as widely influential as an Uncle Tom's Cabin. And you know what group leads the charge in censorship challenges? Your ilk--the conservative Christians.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I presume you realize that the ALA and the AAUP are co-champions of intellectual and academic freedom and free inquiry.

    ReplyDelete
  3. You're comparing apples to oranges. This isn't about "library materials." This is about prohibiting people from speaking in classroom settings or anywhere on campus. As a matter of fact, this Baer does not agree with your ALA that a university ought to be a place of free inquiry. He says quite explicitly, “universities get confused about their mission in the free speech debates and insist . . . that open-ended and unregulated inquiry is their purpose.” And the fact that he is accusing some phantom element of asserting that some people are "innately inferior" indicates that that will be the basis on which the self-appointed overlords will decide if someone is allowed to express a viewpoint.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "Unregulated inquiry." Got that? And the jackboots will be in charge of the regulating.

    ReplyDelete
  5. It is all about censorship. And the right is as good at it as the left wver will be. Organizations such as ALA and AAUP fight this. Of course this Baer character does not agree. Nor does the ALA or the AAUP or you and me. I sure do got that. Do you about the long history of censorship efforts by your right wing in Anerica? I don't think it's stopped either, so get off your high horse.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Don't treat me like a dumb ass but I guess I am by coming here. Nobody else apparently does.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ah, running out of gas, I see. Resorting to a remark on the number of commenters.

    The right is barely even represented among teachers and administrators in post-American schools. so I fail to see how they are relevant to the situation at hand.

    ReplyDelete
  8. What does seem curious, however, is how “political correctness,” which more or less means censorship, is sold as an entirely liberal problem. Maybe this is because those on the left are held to a higher standard -- but the idea that liberals are all out to censor speech seems to be a wonderful piece of ammunition for right wing demagogues like Donald Trump. When asked about calling women names like “fat pigs” and “dogs” at the first GOP debate, Trump responded with the clever dodge that he doesn’t have time “for total political correctness.” The crowd roared excitedly, sick of all those liberals trying to shut them up.



    But what about those roaring conservatives? Historically, censorship is not a problem on the left, but the right. It was not right wingers but socialists and communists who were barred from speaking freely throughout the 20th century, starting with the Sedition Act of 1918, which made it illegal to “willfully utter, print, write, or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language about the form of the Government of the United States,” and landed certain leading socialists and anti-war activists, such as Eugene V. Debs, in prison. It was not some P.C. liberal, but Ted Cruz's spiritual ancestor Joe McCarthy, who attacked countless individuals for Soviet treason -- some of whom were maybe slightly to the left of Dwight Eisenhower -- without a shred of evidence.
    https://www.salon.com/2015/08/31/americas_true_p_c_villains_the_maddening_censorship_doublespeak_of_right_wing_culture_warriors/

    ReplyDelete
  9. My point is we fought you fuckers and still are and we'll fight this fucker.

    ReplyDelete
  10. And no way is that running out of gas.

    ReplyDelete
  11. "This fucker" is not some lone agent. He and his ilk run post-American education. You won't fight him effectively if you don't see that.

    ReplyDelete
  12. And your Salon article is a ripe specimen of disingenuousness. Donald Trump is not representative of the conservative lineage. Neither are the authors of the Sedition Act. And the author gives away the degree of skewedness of his worldview by calling Joe McCarthy Ted Cruz's "spiritual ancestor." What a drive-by smear.

    ReplyDelete
  13. So the right does not have a long history of censorship and curtailing freedom of speech in America? And the Christian right, oh my they can really be pains in the cranium. Citizens harmng noone but themselves thrown in jail for violating their moral codes.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Nope. No long history of censorship.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Oh, man, no censorship, not because you haven't tried, just that you haven't won. By far the bulk of censorship xhallenges are initiated by right wing Christians. Google it. And don't just damn an entire truthful exposition because you find a line or 2 offensive. ALA & AAUP are on your side but they don't take sides, if you can grasp that.

    ReplyDelete
  16. In 2013 Forbes ran a piece entitled Ted Cruz--Reincarnation of Joe McCarthy.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Just google Ted Cruz Joe McCarthy for a host of articles over the years making a comparison. I think it has to do with his prosecutorial style you dig so much. Pairs poorly with freedom for the inquisitioned.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Yeah, it's about how Cruz pulled out all the stops to try to prevent the absolutely abysmal Chuck Hagel from being confirmed as defense secretary.

    So is the New Yorker article from the same time. Then there's a 2016 Register article about how he said he might launch an inquiry into why some Department of Commerce people were working on handing over key elements of control of the Internet from ICANN to IANA before Congress had made such a transition a done deal.

    From there the google search deteriorates into off-the-cuff comparisons by the likes of Mark Cuban and Jim Carrey.

    None of this comes anywhere close to what Baer is proposing.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Well, we within the IF* community unite with you to oppose Baer's proposals. We also defend his right to propose and publish anything he wants to.

    *Intellectual Freedom

    ReplyDelete
  20. Teddy has been trying to change his image. Google Ted Cruz Abraham Lincoln. Click on images.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Defending his right to publish what he wants is a nice little footnote. The important thing here is for everybody to call out his viewpoint for the poisonous shit that it is.

    ReplyDelete