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Does anyone else see an organized pattern here?

 
 
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 09:33 am
The Doonesbury comic strip is under attack and being cancelled from newspapers. The Boondock comic strip is also under attack. Rare liberal radio talk shows are under attack and being cancelled. Films featuring liberal thought are being attacked. celebrities who publicly chastise Bush are being attacked and even fired from their jobs.

Does this pattern remind you of the Joe McCarthy period in the 1950s?
I smell an organized pattern here using local polls and other organized methods such as walk-outs of shows, etc., being initiated by the right wing to cancel any Media considered "liberal."

Have any of you picked up any news of such anti-liberal media polls in your area? Have any TV or radio station cancelled liberal shows? Are any liberal comic strips or cartoonists being cancelled? If so, please report them here to A2K so we can publicize what I think is an organized campaign.

BBB
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 09:58 am
Free speech under fire all around the nation
http://www.latimes.com/features/lifestyle/cl-et-rutten24jul24,1,7610557.column?coll=la-home-utilities

REGARDING MEDIA / TIM RUTTEN
Free speech under fire all around the nation
Tim Rutten
July 24, 2004

It's been a rough week for free speech.

In Nevada, Colorado and the nation's capital, that most fundamental of liberties came under assault from a surprising array of antagonists acting out of depressingly similar motives.

At the close of her concert last Saturday night at Las Vegas' Aladdin hotel, singer Linda Ronstadt dedicated an encore rendition of "Desperado" to documentary filmmaker Michael Moore and his new movie, "Fahrenheit 9/11," which is, to put it blandly, critical of President Bush. The pop diva described Moore as "a great American patriot … someone who is trying to spread the truth … someone who cares about this country deeply and is trying to help."

A significant portion of the 4,500 people in attendance disagreed. They booed and some stormed out of the theater, throwing drinks in the air and defacing concert posters on their way out. Bill Timmins, the hotel's British-born manager, had Ronstadt's belongings removed from her suite, sent security guards to escort her to her tour bus and ordered her off the grounds.

"A situation like that can easily turn ugly," Timmins told the Las Vegas Sun. "There were a lot of angry people there after she started talking."

Actually, there are those who might think that when a drunken mob attempts to howl a performer off the stage and successfully intimidates an already timid innkeeper, the situation already is ugly.

Meanwhile, in Colorado, a deeply divided state Supreme Court upheld a district judge's right to impose a prior restraint order on seven news organizations covering the trial of Laker star Kobe Bryant, who is accused of raping an Eagle, Colo., hotel employee.

Last month an Eagle court clerk apparently mistakenly e-mailed the news organizations, including the Los Angeles Times, transcripts of two closed hearings on the admissibility of evidence concerning the alleged victim's sexual history. Bryant's lawyers contend that abrasions observed on the accuser after she reported the incident may have been the result of multiple sexual encounters she had at about the same time. That, the defense argues, makes her sexual history relevant. Prosecutors say that, under Colorado's rape-shield law, the admission of such evidence would constitute an illegal intrusion on the woman's privacy.

The trial court judge has yet to rule on the issue, and, three weeks ago, he ordered the media organizations not to publish any of the material they'd been mistakenly sent and, in fact, to destroy their copies. The Colorado Supreme Court vacated the latter part of his order but upheld the prior restraint on publication.

The U.S. Supreme Court never has upheld a prior restraint on the press' ability to publish or broadcast what it deems newsworthy, even when the information contained in the report had been obtained illegally. On Wednesday, the news organizations ?- now joined by the New York Times ?- filed an emergency application asking the high court to strike down the Colorado ruling.

First Amendment specialist Floyd Abrams, who frequently represents the news media, called the Colorado ruling "disturbing. One of the clearest bodies of law we've had is the law that says prior restraints on the press are all but totally unconstitutional."

The Colorado jurist's rationale for overturning what surely is the most settled issue in 1st Amendment law was indeed novel ?- essentially, an attempt to create what might be termed a "celebrity exception." Writing for the 4-3 majority in the case, Justice Gregory J. Hobbs noted, "The defendant Bryant is an internationally recognized professional basketball star. The press has been covering every minute detail of this case and most of this coverage has been published or broadcast nationwide." Hence, the majority reasoned, an enhanced obligation to protect the accuser's privacy.

Thirty-three years ago, in its landmark decision on the Pentagon Papers case, the U.S. Supreme Court explicitly rejected the notion that considerations of national security could be used to fashion an exception to the constitutional prohibition on prior restraint. Can the Colorado court seriously propose that celebrity creates a necessity that national security does not?

Moreover, as the dissenting jurists argued, most of the information contained in the contested transcripts already is in the public record and the seven news organizations did nothing wrong to obtain it. "These two factors alone," Justice Michael Bender wrote for the minority, "require this court to direct the district court to vacate its order immediately." Bender and his two colleagues also wrote, "Prior restraints are not meant to mitigate harms that have already occurred" and that the trial court cannot "require the media to do what the state failed to ?- give the alleged victim the protection afforded by statute."

Not according to attorney Claudia Bayliff, who works for Legal Momentum, a national organization concerned with women's rights. She told the Denver Post that it would be "an absolute travesty of justice if the court had allowed the press to publish those transcripts. The 1st Amendment is not absolute."

Apparently, though, an alleged victim's right to privacy is.

Finally, in Washington, the liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org and political watchdog Common Cause filed a formal complaint with the Federal Trade Commission alleging that the Fox News Channel's slogan, "fair and balanced," constitutes deceptive advertising.

Slogans notwithstanding, Fox News is the most unapologetically biased major American news operation since the era of yellow journalism. It tilts right and Republican and makes only the most cursory pretense otherwise. MoveOn.org and the Center for American Progress already have made that case by sponsoring the release of Robert Greenwald's compellingly bare-knuckled documentary, "Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism."

It may be the complaint is nothing but a tactical political maneuver, an attempt to light a liberal backfire against the conservative's habitual election-year denunciations of the mainstream media's bias. If so, it's a lousy and unconsciously risky gambit. Does anyone really want the FTC rummaging around in the editorial decisions of any news organization, including Fox, which is what adjudicating this complaint would require?

As Timothy Muris, the commission's chairman, said in a statement: "There is no way to evaluate this petition without evaluating the content of the news at issue. That is a task the 1st Amendment leaves to the American people, not a government agency."

Out of the mouths of bureaucrats …

At some point over the last decade the words "I think you're wrong about that" were replaced by the dismissive "you can't say that." The opponents of free speech always have a higher value that must be maintained by silencing somebody else ?- patriotism for the Las Vegas louts; a woman's right to sexual privacy in Colorado; a distaste for politicized airwaves in Washington.

But this isn't a discussion that admits a distinction between regrettable means and a desirable end. Speech is free for everyone or it's free for no one. There is a long and painful history to teach us that when liberty of expression is suppressed, the public square does not become a silent place but one where the only sound is the voice of authority.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 10:02 am
The news: A nation divided
http://www.latimes.com/features/lifestyle/cl-et-rutten7jul07,1,1283482.column?coll=la-home-utilities

REGARDING MEDIA / TIM RUTTEN
The news: A nation divided
Tim Rutten
July 7, 2004

If the American news media are lucky, 2004 will be remembered as the year of living dangerously. If not, then this election cycle may be recalled as the point at which journalism's slide back into partisanship became a kind of free fall.

Presidential elections always challenge the press: The pace of events and competitive pressure invariably war with the media's duties to provide balance and perspective. Readers, viewers and listeners inevitably become more critical news consumers as their personal preferences solidify. This year, the polls instruct us, the country is likely to approach November so exquisitely divided that serious analysts actually wonder whether Michael Moore's anti-administration agitprop may tip the electoral scales.

This situation ?- with all the extraordinary demands it is bound to make ?- comes at a time when an ever-growing share of the news media is increasingly unsure of its direction and when the public's trust in what it reads, sees and hears has fallen to levels unmatched in recent memory.

The issues can be seen most clearly in the knock-down, drag-out fight among the all-news cable television networks. What began as a normal struggle over ratings has become the contemporary media equivalent of the Spanish Civil War, a vicious battleground in which new technologies and strategies are being tested with daunting implications for the future. Actually, the war is between Fox and CNN. The third network, MSNBC, is sort of like the Catalan anarchists ?- slaughtered by everyone.

Its slogan notwithstanding, Fox News is the most blatantly biased major American news organization since the era of yellow journalism. But by turning itself into a 24-hour cycle of chat shows linked by just enough snippets of news to keep the argument going, Fox has made itself the most watched of the cable networks. One American in four now is a regular viewer.

Fox's winning formula is essentially the continuation of talk radio by other means: All opinions are shouted, and contrary views are admitted only if they agree to come on camera dressed as straw men. To anyone prone to twist the AM dial on the car radio, it's a familiar caldron, a witches' brew of rancor, sneers and resentment stirred for maximum distortion.

A certain number of people find this brew entertaining ?- much, one supposes, as others do bull baiting or cockfighting. The problem is that since it is popular within the relatively small universe of cable news viewers ?- the medium's most popular show actually has an audience about the size of a good metropolitan newspaper ?- and because it's cheap to put on the air, the other two networks are attracted to the model.

Preaching to the choir

Troubling as that may be, it pales beside what's happened to the cable news audience. According to a recent survey by the independent Pew Center, more than half of all Fox News viewers now describe themselves as political conservatives. That is 12 percentage points more than four years ago. Meanwhile, 50% of CNN's viewers now call themselves liberals or independents. Among the Republicans polled in Pew's 3,000-person national sample, Fox is the most trusted source of news. Democrats most trust CNN.

The cable news audience, in other words, is increasingly dividing itself along partisan lines, seeking not information but confirmation.

Popular beliefs about the credibility of other news organizations also divide increasingly along partisan lines. Pew found that only half as many Republicans as Democrats view ABC, CBS and NBC news as credible. The GOP respondents voiced a similar skepticism about National Public Radio and Public Broadcasting's "NewsHour."

The country's three nationally circulated newspapers fared little better. Asked whether they believed "all or most" of what they read in the New York Times, only 14% of the Republicans surveyed and 29% of the Democrats said yes. USA Today is believed by 14% of the Republicans and 25% of the Democrats. Most surprising was the fact that only 23% of Pew's GOP respondents felt they can believe all or most of what they read in the Wall Street Journal, which has one of the nation's most consistently and coherently conservative editorial pages. One in four Democrats trusts the Journal's reporting.

Pew's portrait of a news audience fractured along ideological lines carried consistently over into other media. "The audiences for Rush Limbaugh's radio show and Bill O'Reilly's TV program remain overwhelmingly conservative and Republican," the center's analysts wrote. "By contrast, audiences for some other news sources, notably NPR, "NewsHour," and magazines such as the New Yorker, the Atlantic and Harper's, tilt liberal and Democratic, but not nearly to the same degree."

(Before we declare the apocalypse too loudly, it's worth recalling that similar things have happened in earlier periods of national distress. During the depths of the Depression, for example, the pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic radio priest Father Charles Coughlin had an audience twice that of the popular Limbaugh. At the time, the country's population was half what it is today, and there were no portable radios and only a handful in cars.)

The greater danger for America's people and the press is that what we call partisanship will harden further into what the Founders detested as "faction."

If one believes that the 1st Amendment is meant to protect something other than corporate profits ?- that fair, nonpartisan journalism serves the common good ?- then it is clear that more than ratings or circulation is at issue here: The open society is propped open by truth; knowledge is the air that democracy breathes. Factional dogmatism, with its blind preference for the party line and its confusion between attitudes and ideas, abhors the truly open society. Moreover, our contemporary factions are organized around what the late Canadian philosopher J.M. Cameron called "syndrome thinking": a willingness to embrace a complex of beliefs connected by something other than logic.

These are not novel notions.

In February 1877, during his famous lecture on "The History of Freedom in Antiquity," the greatest of 19th century historians, Lord Acton, said, "If hostile interests have wrought much injury, false ideas have wrought still more; and liberty's advance is recorded in the increase of knowledge as much as in the improvement of laws."
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 10:10 am
Who's Behind the Attack on Liberal Professors?
Who's Behind the Attack on Liberal Professors?
By Dave Johnson
Mr. Johnson is a fellow at the Commonweal Institute.

HNN INDEX: Are Historians Biased?

In a recent article on HNN Professors Eric Foner and Glenda Gilmore worry that academic freedom is being eroded. While they address the McCarthyite tactics of the right, I think there may also be another interesting story here.

I work with the Commonweal Institute, a moderate/progressive think tank. My work with Commonweal involves research into right-wing organizations. This research entails checking the affiliations of conservatives cited in news stories, articles, op-ed pieces, books and articles. The people and organizations Foner and Gilmore mention share interesting connections.

The piece mentions Campus Watch, which is part of the Middle East Forum. If you visit the website of Cursor's Media Transparency, an organization that investigates right-wing foundations, you will discover that the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation fund the Middle East Forum.

Next the piece mentions William J. Bennett. Many of Bennett's activities are funded by the far-right Heritage Foundation, which in turn is funded by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Richard Mellon Scaife, Joseph Coors's Castle Rock Foundation and the Olin Foundation, among others.

Next mentioned is the American Council of Trustees and Alumni. Turns out this group is funded by ... wait for it ... the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Scaife, Coors, Olin and a few others.

Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney, mentioned next, is a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, which is funded by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Olin, Coors and the Smith Richardson Foundation. Mrs. Cheney was also chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, which received funds at the time by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation and Olin.


Every One of Them?

So it turns out that every single right-wing source mentioned in their article owes some portion (if not all) of their livelihood to a very small core group of funders. In my experience, this is not atypical among conservative opinion-makers. It appears that the majority of the conservative experts and scholars writing newspaper op-ed pieces, books and magazine articles, and even the organizations that generate the "talking points" and position papers used by TV pundits and radio talk show hosts, are directly funded by, or work for organizations supported by this core group of funders.

This pattern of concentrated, interlinking financial backing is not found when you look into who is funding people and organizations that would not describe themselves as "conservatives".

So What?

Foner and Gilmore cite several apparently unconnected people and organizations as being part of "a broader trend among conservative commentators, who since September 11 have increasingly equated criticism of the Bush administration with lack of patriotism." Readers of the article might come away with the impression of a number of independent conservative "voices" concerned with what is being said on campus.

But is this true? All the voices cited originate from organizations funded and coordinated by a core group of wealthy individuals and organizations. Any scholar finding what appears to be a broad trend should be aware that the deliberate creation of an illusion of broad trends is a tactic used to influence the public by the conservative movement that is funded by this core group.

Some History of the Conservative Movement

In 1971 the National Chamber of Commerce circulated a memo by future Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell among business leaders which claimed that "the American economic system" of business and free markets was "under broad attack" by "Communists, New Leftists and other revolutionaries who would destroy the entire system, both political and economic." Powell argued that those engaged in this attack come from "the college campus, the pulpit, the media, the intellectual and literary journals, the arts and sciences, and from politicians."

According to the Powell memo, the key to solving this problem was to get business people to "confront this problem as a primary responsibility of corporate management" by building organizations that will use "careful long-range planning and implementation, in consistency of action over an indefinite period of years, in the scale of financing only available in joint effort, and in the political power available only through united action and national organizations." It helped immeasurably, Powell noted, that the boards of trustees of universities "overwhelmingly are composed of men and women who are leaders in the system," and that most of the media "are owned and theoretically controlled by corporations which depend upon profits, and the free enterprise system to survive."

Powell wrote that these organizations should employ a "faculty of scholars" to publish in journals, write "books, paperbacks and pamphlets," with speakers and a speaker's bureau, as well as develop organizations to evaluate textbooks, and engage in a "long range effort" to correct the purported imbalances in campus faculties. "The television networks should be monitored in the same way that textbooks should be kept under constant surveillance." Powell said that this effort must also target the judicial system.

The "Four Sisters"

In 1973, in response to the Powell memo, Joseph Coors and Christian-right leader Paul Weyrich founded the Heritage Foundation. Coors told Lee Edwards, historian of the Heritage Foundation, that the Powell memo persuaded him that American business was "ignoring a crisis." In response, Coors decided to help provide the seed funding for the creation of what was to become the Heritage Foundation, giving $250,000.(1)

Subsequently, the Olin Foundation, under the direction of its president, former Treasury Secretary William Simon (author of the influential 1979 book A Time for Truth), began funding similar organizations in concert with "the Four Sisters"--Richard Mellon Scaife's various foundations, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the Olin Foundation and the Smith Richardson Foundation--along with Coors's foundations, foundations associated with the Koch oil family, and a group of large corporations. (In this article, I will refer to this group of funders as the "Four Sisters Funding Group" or FSFG.)

Following Powell's long-term plan to "build a movement," FSFG has funded and built a network of think tanks, advocacy organizations, and expanded into media, lobbying, and other areas. The work was slow but effective. As Christopher DeMuth, president of the American Enterprise Institute, told a group of conservative business people, "things take time. It takes at least 10 years for a radical new idea to emerge from obscurity."

Creating "Conventional Wisdom"

Now, after 30 years of effort, this core FSFG has built a comprehensive ideological infrastructure. There are now over 500 organizations, with the Heritage Foundation at the hub, all funded by this core group. David Callahan's 1999 study, $1 Billion for Ideas: Conservative Think Tanks in the 1990s, found that just the top 20 of the organizations spent over $1 billion on this ideological effort in the 1990s.

The right-wing movement's messages are orchestrated and amplified to sound like a mass "movement" consisting of many "voices." Using "messaging"--communication techniques from the fields of marketing, public relations, and corporate image-management--the movement appeals to people's deeper feelings and values. Messages are repeated until they become "conventional wisdom." Examples include lines like "Social Security is going broke" and "public schools are failing." Both statements are questionable, yet both have been firmly embedded in the "public mind" by purposeful repetition through multiple channels. This orchestration has been referred to as a "Mighty Wurlitzer, " a CIA term that refers to propaganda that is repeated over and over again in numerous places until the public believes what it's hearing must be true.

As a study by the People for the American Way, has put it: "The result of this comprehensive and yet largely invisible funding strategy is an extraordinary amplification of the far right's views on a range of issues. The various funding recipients do not march in ideological lock-step, but they do promote many of the same issues to their respective audiences. They have thus been able to keep alive in the public debate a variety of policy ideas long ago discredited or discarded by the mainstream. That, in turn, has been of enormous value in the right's ongoing effort to reshape American society. The success of the right-wing efforts are seen at every level of government, as a vast armada of foundation-funded right-wing organizations has both fed and capitalized on the current swing to the right in Congress and in the state legislatures."

The Money Comes With Strings

The FSFG money comes with ideological strings attached. Their think tanks are not independent; their organizations must espouse their ideology. "Cato, for example," as Gregg Easterbrook pointed out in an article in the Atlantic in 1986, "flatly states that it will not release any study that calls for a government program. The institute's president, Edward Crane, says that he receives one or two commissioned reports each year that are 'inconsistent,' and he does not publish them. The analyst Jonathan Stein lost his job at [the Center For Strategic & International Studies] CSIS several months after he published a book highly critical of Star Wars, the study of which is worth millions to think tanks that toe the line. (CSIS denies there was any connection.) "

The core group that controls this movement is now attacking even Republicans who would previously have been considered "conservatives" for inadequate ideological purity. Members of the moderate wing of the Republican Party are derided by the radical right as nothing more than RINO's -- Republicans In Name Only. The FSFG is funding efforts to drive these moderates out of office and out of the party.(2)

The Movement is Coordinated

Currently the core of the "conservative movement" meets weekly with representatives of the FSFG. As Eric Alterman has revealed:

Their weekly agenda was hammered out every Wednesday at a meeting chaired by Grover Norquist, a rightwing Leninist who believes in an ever-shifting tactical alliance.… Among those who attend the invitation-only meetings are spokespeople and representatives of NRA, the Christian Coalition, the Heritage Foundation; corporate lobbyists, the top people from the Republican party and the Congressional Republican leadership, and chief White House aides. Trusted rightwing journalists and editors also attend, though the meetings are off the record.

While the ostensible purpose of the meeting is to share information and coordinate strategy, they also give Norquist the opportunity to act as an ideological enforcer. When one member of the Bush administration worried to a New York Times reporter that the administration's plan to repeal the estate tax would cripple charitable giving, he was publicly warned by Norquist that this was "the first betrayal of Bush", and was gone not long afterward. When a conservative pundit named Laura Ingraham criticised a fellow conservative in the House of Representatives for overzealousness, she was immediately informed by Norquist to decide "whether to be with us or against us". She was no longer welcome at the meetings.

David Brock, in his book Blinded By the Right, described from inside this "movement" how different parts of the right-wing web and their funders interacted during the attempt to remove President Clinton from office. Brock writes that funding was supplied by Richard Mellon Scaife, Federalist Society (funded by Scaife) lawyers and judges working behind the scenes assisting Special Prosecutor Ken Starr and supplying information to (Scaife-funded) American Spectator magazine.

A Case Study

Often it is possible to discern how the timing of a "Mighty Wurlitzer" chorus relates to a planned conservative policy initiative. A recent example is the flurry of articles that hit the press starting in late November, originating from the Heritage Foundation, Americans for Tax Reform and the Tax Foundation, which claimed that the poor do not pay enough income taxes. The Wall Street Journal even referred to the poor as "lucky duckies." The paper did not mention that poor people do pay Social Security taxes. The publicity appears to have been timed to the release of the president's latest tax-cutting program.(3)


The Effect on Society

The core right-wing web of organizations funded by the FSFG has increasingly been able to set the public agenda, shifting national and local politics consistently to the right and away from the mainstream public interest. As a result, right-wing ideological premises and arguments dominate public-issue debate, with big money using this communications infrastructure to drown out other voices, virtually creating a one-dollar-one-vote society. "As one investigative journalist stated years ago in a pioneering investigation of the conservative philanthropy of Richard Scaife," wrote Sally Covington in a 1997 study, "layer upon layer of seminars, studies, conferences, and interviews [can] do much to push along if not create, the issues, which then become the national agenda of debate.... By multiplying the authorities to whom the media are prepared to give a friendly hearing, [conservative donations] have helped to create an illusion of diversity where none exists. The result could be an increasing number of one-sided debates in which the challengers are far outnumbered, if indeed they are heard from at all."

The Right's Attack on Academia

So how does all this relate to the attack on academic freedom which Foner and Gilmore complained about?

It turns out that many of the most important attacks are part of a campaign organized by conservative foundations, as a study by report by the National Committee on Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP) found. In a section entitled, "Targeting the Academy" the report discusses right-wing attacks on academia, including "political correctness" campaigns, efforts to use alumni contributions to advance a conservative agenda, efforts to take over or de-fund the National Endowment for the Humanities and to de-fund the National Endowment for the Arts. These attacks follow the pattern outlined in the Powell memo -- attack the patriotism of liberals and attempt to convince trustees of colleges and universities to remove them, replacing them with ideological "conservatives."(4)

The FSFG supports organizations like Accuracy in Academia, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, the National Association of Scholars, the Madison Center for Educational Affairs (their "Collegiate Network" links over 70 student newspapers), the Institute for Educational Affairs and others. These organizations work to transform academia toward the right's ideological agenda.

Why Do They Hate America?

Daniel Pipes has accused scholars like Foner and Gilmore of hating America. His attacks follow the plan laid out in the Powell memo and in William Simons's book, A Time For Truth. Like Powell and Simon, Pipes accuses liberal faculty of anti-American bias and wants trustees to remove or silence them. "Why do they hate America"? Because, the phrase implies, they are like the terrorists, who also hate America. A search on Google for the term "they hate America" turns up over a million uses. So what Foner and Gilmore encountered is a well-funded campaign to pursue an ideological agenda.

Conclusion

By looking at the backgrounds of the conservative sources cited in Foner and Gilmore's article on freedom of speech on campus, we have discovered another story. What Foner and Gillmore took to be a number of voices signifying, in their words, "a broader trend among conservative commentators, who since September 11 have increasingly equated criticism of the Bush administration with lack of patriotism," is really only the tip of an iceberg of organizations, funded by a core group coordinating a right-wing agenda to put a chill on more than just academic speech. Academics should be on guard because the activities of these organizations follow a pattern designed to mislead the casual reviewer.

The following are the list of organizations and citations for the research for this article:

http://hnn.us/articles/1244.html
0 Replies
 
NeoGuin
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 11:59 am
BBB:

It took you this long to realize this!

I also see shadows of COINTELPRO in a lot of this, I'm sure my subscriptions to "Nation" and "Mother Jones" have me on some sort of watchlist.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 12:22 pm
I've seen it going down from the unique perspective of a Texas resident. The right of free speech is barely acknowledged here. The right to parrot conservatives and neocons is highly lauded.
0 Replies
 
rabel22
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 12:38 pm
BBB
Ive been trying to convince my family and friends that we have been brain washed by the far right conseratives and by the media that they own and control. But most of them think ive got a clinker in my thinker.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 02:12 pm
NeoGuin
NeoGuin, No, I'm not a late comer to the realization. Any alert person has seen the trend for a long time. What I'm talking about are organized attacks in communities against local institutions as well as national.

BBB
0 Replies
 
Baldimo
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 05:15 pm
Re: NeoGuin
BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:
NeoGuin, No, I'm not a late comer to the realization. Any alert person has seen the trend for a long time. What I'm talking about are organized attacks in communities against local institutions as well as national.BBB


If this is true then how come the majority of free speech limitations in colleges happen to those on the right? How come it is the American University system that breeds liberials like rabbits? Why is the PC crowd so enthreched in the school system that anyone who tries to express a conservative view, whether they be student or teacher are shouted down by the people who fun the school system? Here is a case in point:

Quote:
Lawsuit tests religious speech in class
A professor spoke of his religious views in class and says the college then took action against him. Does a teacher have the right to share such beliefs in class?
By Randy Dotinga | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

In a lawsuit that's shining a spotlight on the role of religion in higher education, an Ohio community college philosophy professor says administrators punished him because he made a point of disclosing his Catholic beliefs in the classroom.

While the college hasn't presented its side of the story yet, it appears that the case will pit the professor's freedom of speech against the school's right to control its staff. There's a larger question too, one that will be debated outside the court system: Even if it's legal, should educators ever tell students about their faith?

One national organization has already jumped into the fray. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), a five-year-old legal advocacy group, is assisting James Tuttle, who filed suit on June 30 against Lakeland Community College of Kirtland, a Cleveland suburb.

"Apparently, at Lakeland College, Thomas Aquinas wouldn't be able to teach philosophy," says David French, president of the Philadelphia-based FIRE.

In the lawsuit, Dr. Tuttle says he got into hot water with the college's administration in 2003 after a student complained about his discussions of his Catholic beliefs. Among other things, the student mentioned a note in the class syllabus that Tuttle describes as a "disclaimer."

In the note, Tuttle describes himself as a "catholic Christian philosopher and theologian" who is "passionate, controversial (not politically correct), candid and zany/earthy." He urges students to "be aware of where I am coming from" and says his critics often "have personal issues with faith, religion, morals and ideology."

He finishes the disclaimer by urging students who are "uncomfortable" to talk to him and try to resolve any problems.

According to the lawsuit, Tuttle's supervisor wrote the professor a letter saying the disclaimer bothered him more than the student's complaint. The supervisor allegedly suggested that the part-time professor, who did not have tenure, "would be happier in a sectarian classroom."

Tuttle claims he received only one class assignment last fall, even though he'd received high rankings from students in surveys. When the college later refused to assign him to his requested classes, he refused to teach at the school.

"They directly responded to his viewpoint by essentially demoting, railroading, and terminating him," says Jeffrey Brauer, Tuttle's attorney.

Lakeland Community College's attorney, Bradley Sherman, says the administration did nothing wrong and has a "different view of the facts" than the professor. Mr. Sherman declined further comment.

Tuttle, who drives a limousine for a living, continues to teach part time at another community college, his attorney says.

The case is unusual because "most universities take a hands-off attitude toward their professors," says Eugene Volokh, professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles. But the motives behind the school's actions aren't uncommon, says FIRE's Mr. French. Many administrators wrongly believe that "a public institution must be cleansed of all religions influence to comply with the Constitution," he says. In reality, "they can't favor religious expression, but they can't disfavor it either. They can't single it out for bad treatment."

FIRE, which is nonpartisan, defends students and teachers who claim their civil rights are being violated on campus. Among other actions, the group has gone to bat for religious clubs and student editorial cartoonists who offended ethnic groups. "Those who tend to be censored often tend to be on the right," French says.

Universities can't violate the right of professors to mention religion where it may be appropriate, as in a philosophy class, says Volokh. "It's understood that students are not impressionable youngsters. They're adults, they're engaged in a consultation with a professor." On the other hand, "imagine if the professor says, 'I believe in this, and if you don't say this prayer with me, I will flunk you.' That would be clearly unconstitutional coercion of religious practice," Volokh says. "And you could imagine if the professor spends the entire class preaching his religion, then there might be a violation."

Regardless of the legalities, some professors think the less they say about their own beliefs in class, the better. "As an educator, I worry about starting off a course with a distinct profession of any point of view," says Carney Strange, professor of higher education at Ohio's Bowling Green State University. "It may potentially create a chilling effect on how students examine various points of view. There's a power and position differential between faculty and students."

David Oxtoby, a chemist and president of Pomona College in Claremont, Calif., isn't so strict. While he doesn't think discussion of his Lutheran beliefs should play a role in chemistry classes, he does bring them up in seminars about the interaction between science and religion. "It's important to make your own belief system explicit, then ask students about their thoughts on these types of issues and get a good discussion going."

Both Dr. Strange and Mr. Oxtoby agree on one thing: Proselytizing has no place in the classroom. "The professor needs to be in a role of drawing students out rather than telling them what they ought to believe," Oxtoby says. "That's the crucial difference."


Why is that teachers can speak out about their sexuality but a philosphy teach can't mention his relisious beleifs. This is the limited right of free speech against those that have a conservative view. THis wouldn't happen at any University to someone speaking about if their gay or not. I think you have been taken by your own propaganda!

You forgot to mention some people on the Left who control as well. People like George Soros and Ted Turner are on the far left and also hold reins of power when it comes to the media and certain groups. Don't for get the Gay rights groups who are forcing schools to preach about homosexuality reguardless of what parents think and Planed Parent Hood who had out condoms against the wishes of parents. There are forces on the left who want to control and destroy the fabric of America and what it stands for.
0 Replies
 
JustWonders
 
  1  
Reply Sat 24 Jul, 2004 05:37 pm
Paranoia. If comic strips or liberal radio talk shows are being cancelled it's because of lack of interest on the part of the public, and not because of some vast right-wing conspiracy. But if it makes you feel better to think so...
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Jul, 2004 12:55 pm
BBB
Rolling Eyes Rolling Eyes Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
revel
 
  1  
Reply Mon 26 Jul, 2004 06:06 am
Re: Does anyone else see an organized pattern here?
BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:
The Doonesbury comic strip is under attack and being cancelled from newspapers. The Boondock comic strip is also under attack. Rare liberal radio talk shows are under attack and being cancelled. Films featuring liberal thought are being attacked. celebrities who publicly chastise Bush are being attacked and even fired from their jobs.

Does this pattern remind you of the Joe McCarthy period in the 1950s?
I smell an organized pattern here using local polls and other organized methods such as walk-outs of shows, etc., being initiated by the right wing to cancel any Media considered "liberal."

Have any of you picked up any news of such anti-liberal media polls in your area? Have any TV or radio station cancelled liberal shows? Are any liberal comic strips or cartoonists being cancelled? If so, please report them here to A2K so we can publicize what I think is an organized campaign.

BBB


I wouldn't be a bit surprised to learn that there is an organized effort to disrupt and go after liberal things and people.
0 Replies
 
 

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