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Cornell Rejects Academic Freedom
FPM ^ | May 7, 2004 | Joe Sabia

Posted on 05/10/2004 3:38:17 PM PDT by swilhelm73

After banning the press from videotaping its weekly meeting, the Cornell University Student Assembly (SA) rejected the Academic Bill of Rights. Citing the document’s objectives as “redundant,” “irrelevant,” “insulting,” and “objectionable,” the SA determined that academic freedom was unimportant to the Ivy League campus.

The Resolution on Academic Freedom — based on David Horowitz’s Academic Bill of Rights — was introduced by a bipartisan coalition of Cornell students, including the editor-in-chief of The Cornell Daily Sun. The resolution stated that the “SA affirms [the] principles of academic freedom and intellectual diversity” and went on to cite six principles:

(1) Students should be graded on the basis of their reasoned answers and appropriate knowledge of the disciplines they study.

(2) Curricula and reading lists in the humanities and social sciences should provide students with dissenting viewpoints where appropriate.

(3) Faculty should not use their courses for the political, ideological, religious, or anti-religious indoctrination.

(4) All faculty should be hired, fired, or promoted and granted tenure on the basis on their competence and appropriate knowledge in the field of their expertise.

(5) Selection of speakers [and] allocation of funds should not discriminate on the basis of his or her political or ideological affiliation.

(6) The obstruction of invited campus speakers, destruction of campus literature, or any other efforts to inhibit the civil exchange of ideas should not be tolerated.

Any reasonable person, whatever his political philosophy, should agree with the abovementioned tenets if he is committed to intellectual diversity. Unfortunately, Cornell leftists will do anything — including censorship — to hold on to their monopoly of power.

The debate on the Academic Bill of Rights got off to an auspicious start when SA representative Michelle Fernandes tried to eject Cornell American editor-in-chief Ryan Horn from the meeting. Horn, a well-known conservative journalist on campus, brought a digital camcorder to the event to record the debate. Fernandes raised an objection to Horn’s presence saying, “Point of privilege. I want [him] to stop videotaping.” Horn replied, “Respectfully, no.” Nick Linder, president of the SA, then ordered, “As chair, I have to ask you to leave the meeting. It’s my duty to uphold that. Turn that off or leave”

Horn expressed outrage and cited his First Amendment rights. He defiantly ignored Linder’s decision, remained in his seat, and secretly videotaped the entire affair.

Following the camcorder fiasco, Cornell Democrats president Tim Lim — thinking he was speaking off the record — slammed the Academic Bill of Rights as “a publicity stunt [by] neoconservatives such as David Horowitz.” Lim then went on to claim that promoting academic freedom was a part of a partisan conspiracy engineered by the College Republicans.

The liberal Democrats controlled the entire tenor of the debate. Leftist Brennan Veys amended the resolution by removing two key phrases from the bill: (i) “students should be graded on the basis of their reasoned answers and appropriate knowledge of the subjects” and (ii) “all faculty should be hired, fired, and promoted, and granted tenure on the basis of their competence.” He claimed that including these clauses in an Academic Bill of Rights was an “insult” to Cornell’s faculty.

When Veys was confronted with certain facts — namely that 97 percent of Cornell’s faculty are Leftists and that 21 of 23 government department professors are registered Democrats — he shook his head dismissively. Ross Blankenship, a co-sponsor of the bill, asked Veys, “How comfortable do you think a Cornell student is in writing an essay in support of President Bush?” At this question, the Democrats laughed hysterically, indicating that Blankenship was paranoid.

When the votes were tallied (8 in favor, 9 against), SA president Linder announced his final judgment, “The chair will cast a vote in, uh, the negative.” He then smirked at the co-sponsors of the bill, waved them off, and said, “Have a nice day.” And with that, the Academic Bill of Rights died at Cornell.

Cornell University has a shameful record on intellectual diversity. There is no tolerance for conservative ideas among the faculty, the administration, or the student government. At every turn, the instinct of radical leftists is to censor those views with which they disagree. They have succeeded, in large part, because their totalitarian judgments are enacted under the cover of darkness. That is precisely why the Student Assembly tried to ban video coverage of its Politburo-style meeting.

The debate (or lack thereof) over the Academic Bill of Rights at Cornell revealed precisely why this measure is so desperately needed here. And that is why Cornellians committed to intellectual diversity will continue to fight for it.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: New York
KEYWORDS: 1stammendment; academicbor; academicfreedom; aclumia; ccrm; cityofevil; conservativebashing; cornell; firstammendment; highereducation; horowitz; indoctrination; ithaca; leftismoncampus; liberalelites; liberaltalkingpoints; nofirstammendment; nofreedomofspeech; nofreedomofthought; reeducationcenter
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1 posted on 05/10/2004 3:38:20 PM PDT by swilhelm73
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To: swilhelm73
I'd never actually read this Academic Bill of Rights. The principles seem so eminently reasonable, I don't see how anyone could possibly find them objectionable.
2 posted on 05/10/2004 3:42:51 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam
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To: swilhelm73
Is Cornell state-sponsored terrorism or is it a private school? I forget.
3 posted on 05/10/2004 3:42:55 PM PDT by Republicus2001
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To: swilhelm73
INTREP - education (?) -universities - academic freedom (and the stiffling thereof)
4 posted on 05/10/2004 3:44:20 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: Unam Sanctam
Here is a link to it;

http://studentsforacademicfreedom.org/abor.html
5 posted on 05/10/2004 3:45:01 PM PDT by swilhelm73
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To: swilhelm73
Liberals and democrat party members are the sworn enemies of Freedom of Speech and Academic Freedom.

This represents an amazing historical evolution, at least in the case of liberals. Over the last 100 years, liberals have adapted the complete diametrically opposed opposite of their original philosophy and positions.

It is really amazing to watch, especially in such a 21st Century toilet like Cornell.

6 posted on 05/10/2004 3:46:27 PM PDT by FormerACLUmember
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To: swilhelm73; Behind Liberal Lines
Ithaca is the City of Evil Ping!
7 posted on 05/10/2004 3:51:22 PM PDT by Clemenza (Strolling along country roads with my baby...)
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To: swilhelm73
I agree that university liberal arts departments tend to have an anti-conservative slant (as a liberal arts student myself). This is often translates into intolerance for dissenting points of view. But I diagree that David Horowitz would do very many things that were genuinely nonpartisan.

Academic freedom is vital to a university's intellectual culture. When it comes from a genuinely nonpartisan source, then there can be a healthy discussion.

8 posted on 05/10/2004 3:59:11 PM PDT by ggordon22
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To: FormerACLUmember
This represents an amazing historical evolution, at least in the case of liberals. Over the last 100 years, liberals have adapted the complete diametrically opposed opposite of their original philosophy and positions.

It's even funnier that they don't realize it.

9 posted on 05/10/2004 4:02:05 PM PDT by VeniVidiVici (In God We Trust. All Others We Monitor.)
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To: ggordon22
But I diagree that David Horowitz would do very many things that were genuinely nonpartisan.

Which points on the list do you see as being anything other then "genuinely nonpartisan"?

10 posted on 05/10/2004 4:16:39 PM PDT by Bob
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To: Bob
Yeah, seriously! In the absence of the existing thought-control regimes on university campuses, no honest person in the world could find anything to object to in this list.
11 posted on 05/10/2004 4:27:19 PM PDT by thoughtomator (yesterday Kabul, today Baghdad, tomorrow Damascus)
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To: thoughtomator
Animal Farm
12 posted on 05/10/2004 4:40:37 PM PDT by samadams2000 (Liberalism is communism one drink at a time)
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To: Timesink; *CCRM; martin_fierro; reformed_democrat; Loyalist; =Intervention=; PianoMan; GOPJ; ...
Media Schadenfreude and Media Shenanigans/City Of Evil PING
13 posted on 05/10/2004 4:47:16 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS. CNN ignored torture & murder in Saddam's Iraq to keep their Baghdad Bureau.)
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To: ggordon22
Academic freedom is vital to a university's intellectual culture. When it comes from a genuinely nonpartisan source, then there can be a healthy discussion.

(1) Students should be graded on the basis of their reasoned answers and appropriate knowledge of the disciplines they study.

If a student's grade may be reduced for a difference of political ideology there is no academic freedom.

14 posted on 05/10/2004 4:50:46 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS. CNN ignored torture & murder in Saddam's Iraq to keep their Baghdad Bureau.)
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To: Bob
(2) Curricula and reading lists in the humanities and social sciences should provide students with dissenting viewpoints where appropriate.

The language is that of deceptive neutrality and is obviously disingenuous. I have never been in a university course where dissenting viewpoints were not discussed. When you take a class on Freud, you hear from Freud's critics. When you take a class on existential philosophy, you hear from the critics of that philosophy. What is meant here, if I can read between the lines, is politically or ideologically dissenting viewpoints. As in, viewpoints that espouse a non-Marxist, non-postmodernist, non-liberal point of view. Which is a healthy thing, I think. But I prefer language that says what it means.

And beside that, what about the sciences, engineering, business schools? Academic freedom is easily as threatened, if not more, in those disciplines.

(3) Faculty should not use their courses for the purposes of political, ideological, religious, or anti-religious indoctrination.

Agreed. But the language again is highly politicized. The focus is on faculty and the influence they wield in the classroom. Only certain threats to academic freedom are mentioned -- some of the most pernicious, including government interference in curriculum, and the potential conflict between corporate and academic research interest aren't even mentioned. The focus is exclusively on socio-political considerations, and the sciences are hardly mentioned. There is much more to academic freedom.

There is nothing nonpartisan about it. That being said, there are many good points in it. I just think they would be more credible coming from someone other than Horowitz. I've never liked that guy.

15 posted on 05/10/2004 4:51:06 PM PDT by ggordon22
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To: ggordon22
Get real! Either academia hires conservatives too for liberal arts departments or it's one big fraud. Universities were never so unbalanced in favor of commies and leftists. Many departments are virtually recruitment and hiring centers for the most disgusting feminazis and neo Marxists. Where they hire ONLY THEIR OWN KIND!
16 posted on 05/10/2004 4:51:58 PM PDT by dennisw (Exposing John Kerry--> Swift Boat Veterans for Truth---> http://www.swiftvets.com)
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To: swilhelm73
Far above Cayuga’s waters,

there’s an awful smell.

Could it be Cayuga’s waters?

No it must be Cornell."


17 posted on 05/10/2004 4:59:57 PM PDT by DeFault User
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To: Republicus2001
Private. Though it was one of what were called the land grant colleges, in the the 19th century, I believe.
18 posted on 05/10/2004 5:09:29 PM PDT by ontos-on (te)
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To: ggordon22
You are foolish to claim that the "source" of these principles is what should determine the response to it. This is precisely why such principles are needed. When neutral principles of freedom are rejected for the "source", you are really dealing with a totalitarian place where one's identity prevents one from getting a fair hearing for what one proposes.

In fact, the content of the principles is what doomed them. The close vote was a sham engineered to look like there is a chance of reasoned debate in the institution. The lack of reasoned debate and insistence that there be no record proves that. The event shows that the left at academic campi throughout America have been captured by totalitarians where freedom, diversity and academic freedom to voice dissenting views, are anathama to the commisars in charge.

19 posted on 05/10/2004 5:17:38 PM PDT by ontos-on (te)
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To: Unam Sanctam
The principles seem so eminently reasonable, I don't see how anyone could possibly find them objectionable.

Think like a totalitarian.

20 posted on 05/10/2004 5:26:55 PM PDT by Clint Williams
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