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Academics critical of war face harassment in US
By Shannon Jones
22 October 2001
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Free speech is under attack on university campuses across the
United States, with those critical of US policies facing mounting
harassment and threats.
In many cases university officials are caving in to pressure
to discipline or censure faculty and staff that engage in protests
against US militarism or express opposition to the patriotic hysteria
whipped up by the media and government officials since the September
11 terrorist attacks. Professors have faced threats and calls
for dismissal for expressing even mildly oppositional views or
engaging in inappropriate speech. In the majority
of cases those victimized have been left-wing critics of US foreign
policy.
City College of New York faculty and students who attended
an October 2 teach-in sponsored by the Professional Staff Congress
were denounced by the media and the City University of New York
(CUNY) Board of Trustees. The event, Threats of War, Challenges
of Peace, sponsored by the campus professors union, was
open to all points of view, including support for US military
intervention in Afghanistan. During the course of the teach-in
a number of participants attempted to explain the historical context
underlying the resort to terrorism by Islamic fundamentalists.
An October 4 op-ed piece in the New York Post, titled,
CUNY vows crackdown on Anti-US hatefest, called the
event a hard core America-bashing festival. It quoted
CUNY trustee Jeffrey Wiesenfeld who declared, Theyre
fortunate its not up to me. I would consider that behavior
seditious at this time.
CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein denounced the teach-in and
announced his intention to convene a special meeting of the board
of trustees to consider resolutions condemning the event.
At Brooklyn College, the school administration blocked a scheduled
public meeting on campus opposing the war in Afghanistan organized
by the Third World Within-Peace Action Coalition. Campus officials
imposed additional fees and demanded identification checks of
all attendees. Further, the school issued a warning about holding
campus activities that challenged the so-called consensus in the
US supporting the war against Afghanistan. As a consequence organizers
were forced to move the event to an off-campus location.
The University of South Florida placed Professor Sami Al-Arian
on indefinite leave after he appeared on a TV news program where
he discussed his previous association with several academics now
labeled suspected terrorists by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Following the TV appearance the university received angry phone
calls, including death threats. The university claimed the suspension
was to protect Al-Arian.
A library assistant at the University of California at Los
Angeles received a five-day suspension without pay after he sent
out an e-mail criticizing US support for Israel and the ongoing
bombing of Iraq. He was responding to a patriotic mass e-mailing
by a coworker. In issuing the suspension the school cited a policy
banning the sending of unsolicited electronic communications and
a new policy against the sending of political, religious or patriotic
messages. The suspended staff member, a 22-year employee of the
university, said he was unaware of the policies and noted that
he was the only person disciplined in the incident.
A professor at the University of New Mexico was forced to leave
campus for one week after he made an off-the-cuff joke in class
about the attack on the Pentagon the day of the terrorist hijackings.
Several state legislators called for the academic to be fired.
University officials said they were conducting an internal investigation
of the incident.
The schools provost defended the administrations
actions against the professor. Our position is that faculty
members have certain responsibilities to their students. Its
not a free speech issue, its a professional issue,
he claimed.
The Foundation for Individual Freedom, a Philadelphia-based
organization that provides legal help to faculty members who feel
their rights have been abused, said academic freedom of expression
has been eroded since September 11. The group is currently providing
assistance to 10 professors who say they have been victimized
because of their views.
The fact that the attempt to silence academic free speech enjoys
support at the highest levels of government was indicated by the
reaction to remarks made by one New York City school official,
Judith Rizzo, deputy chancellor, who said the terrorist attacks
demonstrated the importance of teaching about Muslim culture.
She was denounced by Lynne Cheney, wife of US Vice President Dick
Cheney, who claimed the statement implied the events of September
11 were the fault of the United States.
A number of media reports have noted the attacks on academic
free speech but have downplayed the incidents, suggesting they
are an understandable overreaction. They have pointed out that
there have also been attempts by school officials to censor views
deemed excessively chauvinist or racist.
As history has shown, all suppression of democratic rights,
no matter against whom it is initially directed, inevitably rebounds
hardest against the most progressive elements in society. By seeking
to crack down on views deemed outside the mainstream within the
educational establishment, the ruling elite and its academic lackeys
are seeking to stifle all critical thought. Such policies pose
a grave threat not just to academics, but to the democratic rights
of the entire working population.
See Also:
US government steps up press censorship
[19 October 2001]
Bushs war at home: government censorship,
secrecy, and lies
[13 October 2001]
US Supreme Court Justice OConnor
says personal freedom will be curbed
[10 October 2001]
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