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WireTap

What’s Really Behind the ‘Student Bill of Rights’?

By David Bacon, Pacific News Service. Posted June 15, 2005.


Young conservatives are trying to revive McCarthy-era witch-hunts on campuses.

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An older generation of teachers may remember the days of loyalty oaths and red scares. During the McCarthyite early 1950s, educators accused of being Communists or harboring left-wing views were driven from the state's school system. Today, witch-hunts seem once again on the rise.

The latest attempt to return to the time of red-baiting is called -- ironically -- the "Student Bill of Rights." Despite its fine, democratic ring, the phrase is being used to restrict teachers from introducing controversial or provocative ideas into their classrooms.

The argument goes like this: Conservative students are offended when "liberal" faculty try to force them to consider ideas they don't agree with. Political science or sociology instructors, for instance, who support the benefits of living-wage laws for workers, should be stopped from advancing such liberal biases in class.

This may sound far-fetched, but 13 states already have introduced bills that would ban such liberal "indoctrination." These bills, a project of ultraconservative ideologue David Horowitz, aren't aimed at the many prestigious business schools where students aren't only taught that making profit is necessary and virtuous, but also that they should learn to do so as efficiently as possible. Instead, the bills are aimed at teachers who question such established ideas.

This spring in Santa Rosa, conservative students backing the state's own version of the Student Bill of Rights showed where their effort is headed.

On February 25, leaflets quoting Section 51530 of the Education Code were posted on the doors of ten faculty members at Santa Rosa Junior College.

Quoting the code, the leaflet says: "No teacher ... shall advocate or teach communism with the intent to indoctrinate, inculcate in the mind of any pupil a preference for communism." Such "advocacy," the code says, means teaching "for the purpose of undermining patriotism for, and the belief in, the government of the United States and of this state." Fifty years ago, when left-wing teachers were hounded out of the state's schools at the height of the Cold War, this code section was rushed through the legislature to make the purges legal.

A later press release by the Santa Rosa Junior College Republicans claimed responsibility for the leaflets: "We did this because we believe certain instructors at SRJC are in violation of California state law." The same day, a news release titled "Operation 'Red Scare'" ran on the California College Republicans' website, saying the leaflets targeted "10 troublesome professors." The group's chair, Michael Davidson, told blogger John Gorenfeld, "A lot of the college professors are leftovers from the Seventies -- and Communist sympathizers."

Writing to the campus newspaper the Oak Leaf, Molly McPherson, SRJC College Republicans president, explained that "The instructors I 'targeted' were not selected at random ... There have even been accounts of JC teachers openly advocating Communist and Marxist theories ... [which have] been outlawed in the classrooms of a country with the strongest free speech rights in the world."


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David Bacon is an associate editor of Pacific News Service. He is a freelance writer and photographer who writes regularly on labor and immigration issues. His latest book is "The Children of NAFTA" (University of California Press, 2004).

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wow thisis ridiculous
Posted by: redskin69 on Jun 15, 2005 1:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
these freaks want us to bend to them but arent willing to stop preaching their trash. i say for every one of those little freaks that targets a teacher, they get targeted for a good ol fashion boot party.

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JINGOIST
Posted by: jingoist on Jun 15, 2005 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
G-d bless David Horowitz!!!! He's today's preeminent political thinker. It must really hurt to be exposed by a former leader of the "new left." JINGOIST

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» RE: JINGOIST Posted by: redskin69
» RE: JINGOIST Posted by: kittynboi
Rhian
Posted by: Kathryn on Jun 15, 2005 4:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My question is, what happened to freedom of speach and all those other freedoms this country supposedly prizes?

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» RE: hian Posted by: Mountaineer
redstarwraith@gmail.com
Posted by: redstarwraith on Jun 15, 2005 5:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Poor li'l Davey Horowitz. Still trying to "shock his daddy" with his political antics even after the poor old Horowitz senior has shuffled off his mortal coil. Grow up li'l Davey! You were a joke as a Marxist and you're even more obnoxious as a capitalist (although it certainly suits your whore-like nature better). One gets the sense that it was never about ideology with you, only your foolish vanity and ego.

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So it's the eggheads causing trouble again?
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 15, 2005 6:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The good thing about being old is that one is still around. The bad thing about being old is that there's very little that hasn't been around at least once before.

"Freedom is a constant struggle," they tell us. The state of Wisconsin sent us Joe McCarthy. Now they sent us Sensenbrenner. But it took leadership from astute and courageous journalists and prompting from a Republican president to get rid of Joe.

I hope that also comes around again.

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Crybaby "conservatives"
Posted by: yesman on Jun 15, 2005 7:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yet another example of crybaby conservatives. Boo hoo! Someone doesn't agree with us! We're so offended! Let's get Big Government to intervene so we don't have to hear stuff we don't agree with! . . . No wait! I thought conservatives were supposed to be AGAINST Big Government . . . Hmmmm. . . . OK, I see. These crybabys don't really object to Big Government, as long as it's enforcing THEIR prejudices on everyone else.

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But seriously . . .
Posted by: yesman on Jun 15, 2005 9:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But seriously, this article is actually quite revealing. Why do these self-styled "conservatives" want legislation to insure that no one will be able to disagree with them in public? Because disagreements (particularly in an academic environment) will be subject to resolution by means of reasoning and argumentation. And when evidence and reasoning are called for, the "conservatives" are usually found wanting.

Why? Because there often is no rational evidence to support their views. This article shows an excellent case in point. The "conservative" students allege and believe in the existence of a "liberal" bias among faculty. When asked to produce evidence of such a bias, no legitimate evidence is forthcoming. The "conservatives" evidently believe that prejudice is sufficient support for their opinions.

And since such "conservatives" are frequently subject to paranoia, it's much easier for them to believe that the reason why their opinions are ludicrous is because everyone else has been brainwahsed by scary, powerful liberals, rather than simply because their opinions are unsupported prejudices.

But in order for them to identify their own opinions as unsupported prejudices, they would have to engage in at least minimal introspection and self-examination, which is what they want to avoid at all costs. It's much easier and more gratifying to point to an external source for their lack of confidence in their own opinions.

Rather than simply admitting that their opinions are unsupoprted and wrong, and altering them to conform to the facts and evidence, they hold to their prejudices and make up external enemies ("liberals," "the media") to explain their own shortcomings. (Does this sound reminiscent of the ultimate "conservative" crybaby, George W?)

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» RE: But seriously . . . Posted by: cyclone
*&#()@^&(#)*#@()*)_!
Posted by: nickptar on Jun 15, 2005 11:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If they're going to be reviving outdated ridiculous laws, why not start enforcing the law against masturbation? I'm sure it's still on the books. You could probably jail the entire student body that way, if you wanted to. The new law is at least fair, but why do I get the feeling liberals will find it hard to make use of it?

Also, what's with the RSS feed on this story? It says "AlterNet: Whatâ€&trade..."

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» RE: *&#...etc. Posted by: LMNOP
wtf
Posted by: beemadj on Jun 16, 2005 8:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this is fu(ing stupid. the best thing about college is that your no longer forced to choke down the sam stupid sh1t that they make you eat in grade school and high school. where the teachers are drones for the community. colleges are supposed to help you to open up your mind and find your horizons, not impose more limits on you. this sort of behavior would be expected at places like yale and harvard that pump out wasps like a rabbt giving birth but other schools should be free to express themselves.
and people wonder why we have so many problems in this country

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Terror dome
Posted by: zorro on Jun 16, 2005 6:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just the beginning of NEw Nazism. Welcom to the terrorDOme! If they didn't teach truth 'liberal' ideas in university--what would be left to teach? They might as well eliminate all the humanities and every subject not business orientated. And then instead of calling it university or higer education we can call it simply, INDOCTRINATION.

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HITler is smiling these days
Posted by: maxpayne on Jun 17, 2005 5:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To talibanize education was always HITler's dream and in our supposedly land of the free, KONservatives are hell-bent on protecting their corporate cronies who give them the loads of cash to act like NAZIs by taking away the last access to public education.

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Just another front.
Posted by: kittynboi on Jun 19, 2005 3:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just another front in the war on secular, neutral education. While the lower grades are targeted by fundamentalists who want them to teach creationism and get rid fo gay clubs, colleges are the targets of those who wish to make them right wing propaganda centers.

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chemtrailkid
Posted by: chemtrailkid on Jun 19, 2005 4:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those tricky neocons are so smart that they try to pass laws so they won't have to think or back up their knee-jerk policies and the ditto-heads can't be called to the carpet and be embarrassed or exposed for the mindless, witless slobbering morons they really are.
If I could just find my keys to the rocket we could all escape from the planet of the apes.

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Free Speech?
Posted by: mkwagner on Jun 20, 2005 7:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Writing to the campus newspaper the Oak Leaf, Molly McPherson, SRJC College Republicans president, explained that "The instructors I 'targeted' were not selected at random ... There have even been accounts of JC teachers openly advocating Communist and Marxist theories ... [which have] been outlawed in the classrooms of a country with the strongest free speech rights in the world."

The most troubling statement in this article is from Molly McPherson, president of SRJC college republicans. She would have the state of California limit the rights of those with whom she does not agree or whom she fears, in the name of "free speech," and she does not see the contradiction in that.
Nor does she see--obviously because she has not fulfilled her history requirements yet--that these were the same tactics used in the 1930s and 40s by the Nazi Party to control German youth.

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» RE: Free Speech? Posted by: wannabersc
Disturbing Trends Taking Over
Posted by: Telly on Jun 20, 2005 6:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it extremely disturbing that the conservative right wing is using the term FREEDOM OF SPEECH to cover the fact that they demand everyone think like them. And if we dont they try to find a way to take our rights away by conivance and misleading representation. Those of us who do not believe as they do have EVERY RIGHT not to. DO YOU HEAR ME OUT THERE? Every right. And I'll be a nun in purple snakeskin before I allow those rights to be taken away from me. Regardless what my president or the churches feel "is in my own best interest". Who the heck are YOU to know whats best for me?

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Patriotic correctness disguised as 'free-thinking'
Posted by: cmysticism on Jun 23, 2005 2:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kudos to Mr. Bacon for pointing all of this out.
It seems that those who run schools (note that the students have little to no control over their curricula, because, after all, they are "just kids who don't know what's best for them," all of the hoopla about a "Student's Bill of Rights" notwithstanding) are quick to push patriotic correctness on students at every opportunity. But any alternative ideas that effectively challenge the status quo are dismissed as "liberal bias" and forced from the classroom. And these people have the nerve to cry "indoctrination," when indoctrinating students, who are the world's ultimate captive audience at present, is the stock-in-trade of today's compulsory educational institutions?
There should be a large amount of reading material, filled with highly disparate degrees of viewpoints, for students to consider. America is not a land of monolithic sycophants for pro-American ideology, and teaching the "virtues" of the profit motive is one of the mostly highly politically indoctrinating ideas in the school systems today. It prevents students, who have proven to have a greater appreciation for change than older people, to consider new ideas of running society, particularly ideas for establishing a more egalitarian and harmonious world where the profit motive doesn't control and regulate virtually every aspect of our lives, and where the vast majority of people do not labor 60 hours of their lives away every week for the benefit of a tiny plutocratic ruling class. And as always, "communism" is expressed as a dirty word in academic circles, to the point that many students are indoctrinated into hating the very mention of that word without having any idea what it actually means...to them, it's simply defined as, 'An anti-American concept, and against our way of life.'
Well, do students not have the right to consider ideas that may lead to a better way of life for citizens of the future, even if it's not a distinctly "American" way of life? That's a rhetorical question, of course, but I believe that students *should* have such a right. And so should every American citizen who believes that 'Americanism' is anything that facilitates the greatest amount of freedom, liberty, and ability to achieve happiness and fulfillment, rather than the goal of preserving the status quo as-is.

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