February 8, 2005
"We Love Free Speech in America"
The People, the President and Ward Churchill
By DOUG GIEBEL
http://www.counterpunch.org/giebel02082005.html
For those of us who have spent time on the college campus or have resided in a
university community, living with questionable opinions of "radical"
professors and students is not unusual. The Mighty Ado over the University of
Colorado's Ward Churchill would barely raise a ripple among those accustomed
to cantankerous academic debate.
The same may not be said for many college and university administrators and
boards of regents, however, when the spotlight of controversy (complete with
angry phone calls, letters and e-mails) is turned on a campus by an incensed
public imbued with near-lynch-mob outrage. Frequently timid, often advised by
overly-protective attorneys, campus boards and administrators may react by
giving in to a managerial "retaliatory" instinct that may stem primarily from
personal irritation that their lives have been upset by uncomfortable
controversy, like flea bites inflamed.
Therefore, the University of Colorado will "investigate" Churchill's written
record and statements in an effort to see if cause exists for his dismissal.
Although the university campus should be the one safe place where opinions and
ideas can be freely discussed and debated short of killing the messenger,
several institutions have already cancelled previously-scheduled appearances
by the Colorado professor. Spirited courage to defend freedom of speech may
not always be an academic virtue.
To those who might wish to be better informed about the ado over Ward
Churchill, I strongly recommend that readers of this column hear Americans
express themselves over Denver's talk radio stations. For several nights, I
have tuned in to KGO-AM (850 on the AM dial) and listened to the voices of
Americans as the rhetoric denouncing Churchill has progressively gone from
"the man's an idiot" to "college students believe whatever their professors
tell them" to "the man should be fired immediately -- no investigation
necessary" to "he's a traitor who deserves the death penalty."
Seldom during these hostility sessions will the talk show host hear from those
who support Churchill's right to express his personal views, and seldom will
the host challenge the callers or question their dismal understanding of "free
speech," "academic freedom" and the central principles of the First Amendment.
Thus callers are led to believe that their hysterical points of view are
correct and have essential validity. On nationally syndicated programs such as
those led by Hannity, O'Reilly and their kin, many who might actually defend
with reason the concept of freedom of speech are demeaned, ignored, shouted
down, ridiculed. Apparently the irony and hypocrisy of this situation is lost
on faithful listeners whose blood lust all but cries, "String 'em up!"
Recently during an Omaha appearance, CBS News reported President Bush as
saying, "We love free speech in America." In addition, the president has
proclaimed the need for free speech in a new Iraqi government, and during the
recent campaign season his administration established "Free Speech Zones"
where protestors could protest to their hearts' content. So: as an admitted
enthusiast for freedom of speech, President Bush should put an end to the
nonsense by publicly proclaiming Churchill's right to speak his mind free from
intimidating threats and free from concern about losing his employment with
the university.
On the other hand, if Churchill is fired for expressing his controversial
views, doesn't it follow logically that he (or anyone else who is fired for
espousing opinions) should be permanently denied all future employment as
well? After all, those opinions, once reported or published, are part of the
individual's "public record," and just as with the Bush remark that "We love
free speech in America," the record and the controversy live on long after the
speaker has turned out the lights and left the building.
Doug Giebel is a writer and analyst who lives in Big Sandy, Montana. His essay
on non-proliferation issues will be published this spring by Canada's Centre
for Foreign Policy Studies. He welcomes comment at dougactz@ttc-cmc.net
=======================================================
Inside the New Print Edition of CounterPunch: a Special Report by David Price
on the CIA on Campus
The CIA's New Campus Spies: Meet "PRISP", it may be at work on a campus near
you. Program doles out cash to train tomorrow's spooks ; they say it's like
ROTC, only it's all secret; a hundred spooklets on campus today; thousands
down the road; pay back your loan by translating for torturers in tomorrow's
Abu Ghraibs; meet PRISP's Frankenstein, Prof Felix Moos; anthropologists and
the CIA, a deadly embrace by David Price; ALSO Alexander Cockburn on Disaster
Relief as Scam; air-conditioned tents for the NGOs and money to burn; how
tourist "development" deepened tsunami's impact; why governments love
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