Imagine if 4,000 people – mostly academics proclaiming to
be “friends and colleagues” of Professor Eric Rudolph – published a letter defending that terrorist's association with John McCain, praising his role as a distinguished faculty member
in education at a premier university, and willfully ignoring his past as a domestic
terrorist. While this particular scenario is easy to dismiss as absurd and
unfeasible, that is exactly what has happened regarding Bill Ayers' association with Barack Obama.
As of October 30, no less than 4,090 names appeared in a testament of
support for Bill Ayers from the higher education community. Their statement emphasized, “We,
the undersigned, stand on the side of education as an enterprise devoted to
human inquiry, enlightenment, and liberation. We oppose the demonization of
Professor William Ayers.”
Although the statement makes the occasional argument in
favor of free speech, it does more to condemn the exercise of the first
amendment: “The current attacks appear as part of a pattern of ‘exposés’ and
assaults designed to intimidate free thinking and stifle critical dialogue.” In
fact, it is a select few who have been working diligently to uncover the truth
about Barack Obama’s past, since he has not been forthright with the American
people. In response, Obama has used a multidimensional approach – his campaign,
Obama supporters, and even the Department of Justice – to silence the
discussion about his deeply troubling affiliation with Ayers.
But faculty completely oblivious to this and captivated by “The
One’s” greatness prefer to portray Ayers as a victim of the same “crusades”
that were carried out against professors, including Ward Churchill and Rashid
Khalidi, which in their opinion were “character assassination.” Why
is it that these alleged proponents of “open inquiry and debate” do not want us
talking about Ayers?
The undersigned express disgust with the “unrepentant terrorist”
label, since they claim it is “unrecognizable to those who know or work with
him.” However, according to an Associated Press report from October 18, “Ayers'
connection to the Weather Underground is plastered on his door. A postcard for
a documentary on the group shows an old mugshot [sic] of Ayers. Nearby is cover
art from Ayers' 2001 memoir, ‘Fugitive Days.’”
Since downplaying Ayers’ actions and sweeping them under the
rug does not expunge his record, these professors attempt to rewrite history by
morally equating his goals and mission to the truly noble leaders of the Civil
Rights era: “It’s true that Professor Ayers participated passionately in the
civil rights and antiwar movements of the 1960s, as did hundreds of thousands
of Americans.” As though Ayers were merely one of the Freedom Riders! However, the only apparent equivalence here is between Ayers and
his colleagues, who cannot bring
themselves to condemn violent attacks against Americans by domestic (or
foreign) terrorists.
Double standards are best exemplified in the mainstream
media and on college campuses. In the same way that the media failed to
properly vet Obama and investigate the role that Ayers played in launching
Obama’s political career in Chicago, the university sweeps under the rug whatever
is not politically and ideologically expedient. Their statement, “His
participation in political activity 40 years ago is history; what is most
relevant now is his continued engagement in progressive causes, and his
exemplary contribution – including publishing 16 books – to the field of
education.”
There is no denying the letter’s assertion that “anyone
who voices perspectives and advances questions that challenge orthodoxy and
political power may become a target…cast[ing] a chill over free speech and
inquiry and the spirit of democracy,” is true. But there is no evidence that
Ayers, his colleagues and supporters, or Barack Obama have experienced the censorship
and vitriol that their critics have received. Ironically, they have received this treatment from these self-proclaimed
champions of tolerance and civility.
No longer is this movement of intellectual dishonesty and groupthink
only prevalent in the left-wing bastions of Columbia University and Berkeley. Seventy signers are at Georgia colleges and universities, including faculty,
associate deans, and students, encompassing almost every college at the
University of Georgia – which dominated with 45 signatures. They placed their personal political views over those of their profession and discipline while pretending to defend their profession and discipline.
Intellectual homogeneity is characteristic of many
universities, and the signatories of this letter have highlighted some of the
most problematic departments. Letters such as this help expose the serious predicaments
within academia; it is time that universities are held to account for the toxic
and monolithic environments they have cultivated.