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A Dangerous Professor Speaks

By Robert Jensen, AlterNet. Posted February 9, 2006.


I'm not rabid; I'm a sedate, nondescript middle-aged academic who tries to approach political and moral questions rationally.

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In an "urgent" email last week, right-wing activist David Horowitz hyped his latest book about threats to America's youth from leftist professors.

The ad for "The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America" describes me as: "Texas Journalism Professor Robert Jensen, who rabidly hates the United States and recently told his students, 'The United States has lost the war in Iraq, and that's a good thing.'"

I'm glad Horowitz got my name right (people often misspell it "Jenson"). But everything else is distortion, and that one sentence teaches much about the reactionary right's disingenuous rhetorical strategy.

First, I'm not rabid, in personal or political style. I'm a sedate, nondescript middle-aged academic who tries to approach political and moral questions rationally. I articulate principles, provide evidence about how those principles are often undermined by powerful institutions, and offer logical conclusions about how citizens should respond. I encourage people to disagree with my principles, contest my evidence and question my logic -- all appropriate activities in a university where students are being trained to think for themselves and in a nominally democratic society where citizens should to do the same.

Second, I offer such critiques without hate. Sometimes my assessments are harsh, such as in evaluating George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq and concluding the attack was unlawful and, therefore, our president is guilty of crimes against peace and should be prosecuted. Similarly harsh was the judgment that Bill Clinton's insistence on maintaining the harsh economic embargo on Iraq in the 1990s resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents and, therefore, Clinton was a moral monster who was unfit to govern. None of this has to do with hating either man, but instead with assessments and judgments we should be making.

Third, these critiques are not of the United States, but of specific policies and policymakers. No nation is a monolith with a single set of interests or political positions, and it's nonsensical to claim that harsh critique constitutes rejection of an entire nation.

Why would anyone suggest that I rabidly hate the United States? It's easier to defame opponents using emotionally charged language than engage on real issues. Accuse them of being irrational and hateful. Ignore the substance of the claims and just sling mud. By even minimal standards of intellectual or political discourse, it's not terribly honorable, but it often works.

Beyond these junkyard dog tactics, Horowitz's email also makes one crucial factual error. I did write that the United States losing the Iraq war was a good thing -- not in celebration of death and destruction, of course, but because the defeat temporarily restrains policymakers in their dangerous attempts to extend the U.S. empire. But that was the first sentence of an opinion piece I published in various newspapers in 2004, not a statement to students. The distinction is important.

Horowitz and similar critics argue that professors like me inappropriately politicize the classroom, forcing captive student audiences to listen to radical rants. No doubt there are professors who rant -- from the left, right and center; there's a lot of bad teaching in universities.

But I'm constantly attacked by people who have no knowledge of -- and as far as I can tell, no interest in learning about -- how I teach. Because they hear me express strong opinions at political rallies or read my newspaper opinion pieces, they assume I treat my classroom like a pulpit and students as targets for conversion.

I teach journalism, and in the course of that teaching, I regularly discuss how journalists cover controversial topics; it's hard to imagine teaching responsibly without doing that. When appropriate, I have talked in class about how journalists cover war -- explaining that many people around the world believe the U.S. invasion of Iraq violated international law, observing that U.S. journalists in the corporate commercial media rarely write about that and suggesting reasons for the omission.

There's always a politics to teaching; the choices professors make about what readings to assign and how to approach a subject are influenced by their politics -- left, right, or center. But that does not meaning teaching is nothing but politics.

No one knows that better than professors who hold views challenging the conventional wisdom, those of us who don't rabidly hate the United States but do passionately love learning and the promise of an open, independent university.

Digg!

Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and the author of, most recently, "The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege" (City Lights Books).

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View:
channing
Posted by: channing on Feb 9, 2006 4:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
hopefully, some day, intelligent discourse, debate, dissent and critique will be seen as an asset, some day when everything is not defined purely as "us vs. them".

thank you

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Hey! I just noticed!
Posted by: Crazy H on Feb 9, 2006 5:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seminaries are hotbeds of conservativism! We'd better stop all those reactionaries from polluting the minds of our poor, innocent children...

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Hope you keep your job
Posted by: Urstrly on Feb 10, 2006 5:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for doing what good professors should do: stimulating the hearts and minds of their students to look beyond the surface of things. Horowitz is right: you're dangerous, especially to certain Texans in high places. I just hope you hang onto your job.

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sedate nondescript middle aged author, poet, reporter from OT
Posted by: eileenflmng on Feb 10, 2006 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are others of us who also hold views challenging the conventional wisdom and we do it passionately with love and hope to open minds and to promote the human dialogue about what mainstream and alternate media outlets continue to ignore.

Such as:


Mordechai Vanunu, the 1986 TRUTH TELLER of Israel's WMD program is now under trial in Jerusalem for FREEDOM OF SPEECH.

Israel claims to be a democracy.

'We the people'
in America annually provide 3 Billion USA tax dollars to Israel and so, we are culpable in supporting The Occupation, The Illegal Wall which is not on The Green Line, home demolitions without compensation, 58 year old refugee camps, the building of illegal settlements, etc.

International Inspectors have never been allowed inside Israel's 40 year old Nuclear Reactor facility.

The world rightly demands Iran open up their nuclear facilities.
When will
'we the people'
demand Israel do so too?

Read more on WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org

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The grace of an honest intellect...
Posted by: oldgringo on Feb 10, 2006 6:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice to see that there are still "dangerous professors" possessed of honest intellect that brings to the market place the grace of moral integrity free of personal and/or "class" prejudice allowing of discourse, expression and examination while reserving the responsibility of personal judgement. It is in just such environments that the ideas which move the lot of mankind as a whole forward in the search for a better social, legal, moral, political and philosophical system. By all means, PLEASE CONTINUE!

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Doing the job correctly
Posted by: grzeskor on Feb 10, 2006 6:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ethical journalism practiced well is not easy. Teaching how to practice it is not easy. Teaching students to thhink about issues, concentrate on the issues, not the personalities surrounding them (a la "Getting to Yes!") is difficult but absolutely necessary. Thanks for giving back to real life (a la Viktor Frankl), Professor Jensen.

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View from an open mind
Posted by: MTguy on Feb 10, 2006 7:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a refreshing pause from the partisan rhetoric! For a minute there it felt like I was in the middle of some actual intellectual discourse - a commodity in seemingly very short supply lately.

It is articles such as this that keep me left of center on politics. I simply don't hear any honest appeal to clear thinking and using your heart to guide you, at least in part, coming from the Right Wing. I think if more Democrats who think like Professor Jensen spoke up and were more the voice of their party than those we see today, there would be a sea change in the composition of both houses of Congress next Fall.

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Well, get ready Professor Jensen, its only going to get worse!
Posted by: Prophit on Feb 10, 2006 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are in the middle of the "nazification" of America and you along with other common sense, independant thinking intellectuals will be the first to head to those new KRB camps that are going to be built based on the new contract awarded to do just that.

We will have SLAVE LABOR and it will be done by those who won't conform or shut their mouths. I have letters to that affect by the army and congressional members to companies about using the labor in the camps for their companies.

Be careful, sir, this is no longer a free country and free speech will be rewarded with repression. I fear for my country since none of us are standing up to all of this. We have lost but hopefully we will begin to fight back soon. Our military, which will now be allowed to occupy our civilian soil, is not used to fighting low tech wars as we are seeing in Iraq.

General Pace has already said 'we have lost in Iraq', that is the only good news for us as Americans, since that implies a fighting chance for us when we do decide to take a stand for our nation.

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tiny edit
Posted by: mister-wilson on Feb 10, 2006 11:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
end of fourth paragraph reads:
...citizens should to do the same.

...citizens should do the same.
...citizens should strive to do the same.

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You are proof that Austin is one cool place...
Posted by: outsidea on Feb 10, 2006 6:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey Prof. Jensen,

I have this really cool t-shirt that my wife (Rosalinda another Texan) brought me back from an organizing trip she was on. It has a picture of a guy who looks like Willy Nelson kinda, wearing flip-flops, holding a beer, smoking a joint and it says Keep Austin Wierd...Support Local Business. On the back is a list of many of the local businesses...all of them sound great and one day maybe I will get to Austin to patronize all of them.

Meanwhile, I hope you will keep on keeping on...thank you for doing what you are doing where you are doing it!!!!

Solidarity forever and...wherever

Joseph

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Your Next Book
Posted by: StuartH on Feb 11, 2006 10:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Horowitz is a product of a publishing phenomenon that
has followed Rush Limbaugh into the public arena with
persons like Anne Coulter. These people have made a
career out of bashing liberalism and taking discourse
into a new level of nastiness. Very often you go into
a grocery store and see a whole display shelf full of
these people's work. You see more intellectually honest
and less emotionally gaudy work not selling.

Horowitz is simply an opportunist, jumping on a very
obvious bandwagon. Unfortunately, the dumbing
down of university discourse across America is the
goal of the right wing. If, in 2008, Bush is followed
by a Republican in the White House, look for this
trend to move from organized carping to actions
that result in the removal of honest and independent
scholarship from the entire higher education scene.

What is afoot there should be the subject of your
next book.

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» RE: Your Next Book Posted by: dikaiosyne
» RE: Your Next Book Posted by: Jayzer
A letter to Horowitz long ago
Posted by: amiabledave on Feb 11, 2006 11:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Horowitz:

I just finished reading your perspectives on race in today’s L. A. Times. My sense is that only a privileged person, long on academics and short on a broad life experience, could have written this abomination. Now I don’t know you, but I can easily discern the contempt and cynicism you must harbor for many less fortunate than you.
But not knowing what your starting premises are, it’s hard to imagine by what tortuous route you arrive at your conclusions. Let me briefly try to argue against your core contention.
For example, let’s say that instead of talking about human beings we’ll talk about a certain class of racing cars for our purposes of discussion, some of which are colored white and some are black. Let’s say further that you are not a racist (though you probably are) and, therefore, accept the notion that, if all other things were equal, all human beings would come out of the gate, so to speak, with the same potential.
Now if a highly disproportionate number of black racing cars, far beyond what could be predicted statistically, kept not only losing the race, but also blowing up and crashing into the walls, would we not assume that something is awry other than car color, such as:
1) The dice are figuratively loaded, or
2) The color black has properties that inherently cause bad things to happen.
When I grew up in Chicago in the 40’s, my black friends were in no way different than my white friends, outside of being a little hipper and quicker on the uptake. Yet, in incredible percentages, unimaginably horrible things befell them.
One of my good friends in the early 50s, named Parker, had a cousin called Emmett Till. During a vacation down South, Emmett, age 13, made the horrible mistake of whistling at a white woman. So that later, white men came in the middle of the night, broke into the home, took him away, and so badly mutilated him that the body was unrecognizable as a human form. Even his penis was chopped off.
But, of course, in our equal opportunity society, nobody was made to pay for this. And nobody of that era complained. Preferences, meaning white only, was a term not convenient to use yet. No jury of that time would jail a white man for killing niggers. Now, did conservatives, as they do today, become outraged at this brutality, at the unfairness, at the preferences? Were conservatives ready to throw out the court system because guilty men, like O.J, would walk free.
Of course not. They laughed and celebrated. People still tell jokes in white circles that hearken back to this time. You probably do. This went on every year for centuries. And only progressives (liberals) would change it. And so successful were progressives that people can get away with the sort of nonsense you write today.
Being from a poor family myself, and not having the advantage of an early education, I dug ditches, mopped floors, cleaned toilets, worked on construction gangs, drove taxis and trucks, and waited on rich Republicans right along side of my black friends. But I had a big advantage over them: my skin color, attractive looks, blond hair and blue eyes opened an incredible number of doors that were slammed shut on my black friends. Eventually I was able to educate myself and easily move among the more affluent white element without notice.
I often tried to find bridges that my black friends could walk over. But there were mine fields everywhere. One of the names of those mine fields was probably named Horowitz.

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» RE: A letter to Horowitz long ago Posted by: dikaiosyne
» RE: A letter to Horowitz long ago Posted by: amiabledave
Oh you wacky wacky libs...
Posted by: Asses of Evil on Feb 11, 2006 4:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and your "thinking" and "reason". We don't have time for that right now. We're in a war against Islamofascists who want nothing more than the destruction of the United States....or something. Yes, I've always been dreadfully intimidated by these dangerous dangerous "thoughts" you speak of. Seriously though, keep it real Prof. Jensen.....and hook 'em Horns :)

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Uproar about LIBERAL programing
Posted by: TheJamea on Feb 12, 2006 8:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has long seemed to me that the uproar amongst the Religio-Fascists was largely caused by the current lessening(?) of their ability to program their childrens mind into the bigoted molds that their minds follow. I see that the same uproar has moved into the venue of the university, which are tasked with teaching people to THINK FOR THEMSELVES. If you fully believe that your position is rational and just, then you should have no problem with people deciding for themselves.
This ties to the assertion/rational for the secret spying program. i. e.: If you got nothing to hide, why are you worried about being spied upon? We should ask the entire administration this question, in spades .See the latest Tom Tomorrow cartoon "This Modern World." (www.salon.com/comics/tomo/2006/02/06/tomo/index1.html)
TheJames

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Americans are the only ones who can change America
Posted by: AZEDDINE on Feb 13, 2006 7:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A big applause to Prof. Jensen and what he stands for. I am a Dane looking from outside at the dangerous changes impulsed by President Bush and his policy shapers . What happened to the genuine America, the land of liberties under the Bush administration is like going back the the dark ages when it comes to constitutional rights and ethical norms.
Only Americans can change it and put the nation back on the right course again.
Ahmed Azeddine

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Fascinating!
Posted by: philosopherintraining on Feb 14, 2006 7:39 AM   
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I want to be in this guy's class!

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academics
Posted by: Doubtom on Feb 14, 2006 6:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sedate and rational you may be but what this country desperately needs, is less sedate and more emotional academics, to point to the emperor's clothes. If there's one group we don't hear much from, it's the academics! They take their rightful place alongside the shameful media in being totally ineffectual as protectors of the Republic.

I believe that too many academics are 'married' to the federal government through the many grants that they've come to rely upon, to compensate their meager salaries. Most shy away from biting the hand that feeds them. They're every bit as compromised as the media whores who distribute the government propaganda as news.

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Long time admirer of Prof. Jensen's
Posted by: AlphaHusky on Feb 17, 2006 3:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a great American. Thank you, Prof. Jensen!

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