To the New
York Times,
As the Islam 370 lecturer with controversial views of 9/11, I would like to
weigh in on the side of Stanley Fish's misleadingly-titled op-ed “Conspiracy
Theories 101.” Fish summarizes his position: “In short, whether something is
an appropriate object of academic study is a matter not of its content — a
crackpot theory may have had a history of influence that well rewards
scholarly scrutiny — but of its availability to serious analysis.”
Fish is right. As university instructors, we are being paid to teach
students to think critically, not to parrot our personal views or
regurgitate received wisdom. I say this despite the fact that one of my most
valuable learning experiences as an undergraduate at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in the 1970s was auditing the classes of the late Harvey
Goldberg, a radical socialist firebrand whose lectures, delivered in an
inimitable rant while stalking the stage and gesturing in the manner of Mick
Jagger, could hardly be described as dispassionate critical performances.
Goldberg is still a hero of mine, though I no longer fall within hailing
distance of his ideology or teaching style.
So how will I teach students about "9/11 and the war on terror"? Fish
writes: “Any idea can be brought into the classroom if the point is to
inquire into its structure, history, influence and so forth.” In an
introductory course on Islam, it is entirely appropriate to devote a week to
inquiring into the structure, history and influence of the “war on terror”
as it is perceived by Muslims as well as non-Muslims. The fact that
somewhere between 60% (Pew, 6/2006) and 89% (al-Jazeera, 10/2003) of Muslims
and al-Jazeera viewers respectively believe that the story of the “19 Arab
hijackers” is a lie is interesting, and worthy of critical analysis and
inquiry. Likewise, the fact that 42% of Americans believe that the 9/11
Commission Report is a coverup (Zogby, May 2006) and that half of New
Yorkers believe that top US officials committed high treason and conspiracy
to mass murder on 9/11/01 (Zogby, 8/2004) is worthy of critical analysis—in
the New York Times as well as the academy. Since there are a great many
critics of the 9/11 Commission Report who appear to be arguing
rationally and citing evidence that is not easily dismissed, it is
imperative that the full light of critical scrutiny be focused on their
claims.
David Griffin, in The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions
has critically analyzed the 9/11 Commission Report, using impeccable
academic methodology, and found it so wanting as to be a ludicrous
"571-page lie." This is a fact that all academics and critical thinkers need
to come to terms with, whatever departments they teach in and whatever their
personal political views. An honest and thorough critique of Griffin's
The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions would be a useful
enterprise.
Obviously I will not be able to do justice to the subject of 9/11 one
week—which is fine, because the course is Islam: Religion and Culture,
not Conspiracy Theories 101. Nonetheless I believe the two
controversial essays I will be assigning from an academic book I co-edited
and to which I contributed, 9/11 and the American Empire: Christians,
Jews and Muslims Speak Out (Interlink, fall 2006:
http://mujca.com/newbook.htm)
will be useful objects of analysis and inquiry.
Sincerely,
Kevin Barrett
Coordinator, Muslim-Jewish-Christian Alliance for 9/11 Truth
http://mujca.com
Member, Scholars for 9/11
Truth
http://st911.org
Member, SPINE
http://physics911.net
"...I’ve had enough of someone else’s propaganda, I am for truth..."
Malcolm X
"An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor
does truth become error because nobody sees it.
Truth stands, even if there be no public support. It is self sustained."
Gandhi
"First they ignore you. Then they insult you. Then they fight you. Then you
win."
Gandhi
Conspiracy Theories 101
By STANLEY FISH
Published: July 23, 2006
KEVIN BARRETT, a lecturer at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, has now
taken his place alongside Ward Churchill of the University of Colorado as a
college teacher whose views on 9/11 have led politicians and ordinary
citizens to demand that he be fired.
Mr. Barrett, who has a one-semester contract to teach a course titled
“Islam: Religion and Culture,” acknowledged on a radio talk show that he has
shared with students his strong conviction that the destruction of the World
Trade Center was an inside job perpetrated by the American government. The
predictable uproar ensued, and the equally predictable battle lines were
drawn between those who disagree about what the doctrine of academic freedom
does and does not allow.
Mr. Barrett’s critics argue that academic freedom has limits and should not
be invoked to justify the dissemination of lies and fantasies. Mr. Barrett’s
supporters (most of whom are not partisans of his conspiracy theory) insist
that it is the very point of an academic institution to entertain all points
of view, however unpopular. (This was the position taken by the university’s
provost, Patrick Farrell, when he ruled on July 10 that Mr. Barrett would be
retained: “We cannot allow political pressure from critics of unpopular
ideas to inhibit the free exchange of ideas.”)
Both sides get it wrong. The problem is that each assumes that academic
freedom is about protecting the content of a professor’s speech; one side
thinks that no content should be ruled out in advance; while the other would
draw the line at propositions (like the denial of the Holocaust or the
flatness of the world) considered by almost everyone to be crazy or
dangerous.
But in fact, academic freedom has nothing to do with content. It is not a
subset of the general freedom of Americans to say anything they like (so
long as it is not an incitement to violence or is treasonous or libelous).
Rather, academic freedom is the freedom of academics to study anything they
like; the freedom, that is, to subject any body of material, however
unpromising it might seem, to academic interrogation and analysis.
Academic freedom means that if I think that there may be an intellectual
payoff to be had by turning an academic lens on material others consider
trivial — golf tees, gourmet coffee, lingerie ads, convenience stores,
street names, whatever — I should get a chance to try. If I manage to
demonstrate to my peers and students that studying this material yields
insights into matters of general intellectual interest, there is a new topic
under the academic sun and a new subject for classroom discussion.
In short, whether something is an appropriate object of academic study is a
matter not of its content — a crackpot theory may have had a history of
influence that well rewards scholarly scrutiny — but of its availability to
serious analysis. This point was missed by the author of a comment posted to
the blog of a University of Wisconsin law professor, Ann Althouse: “When is
the University of Wisconsin hiring a professor of astrology?” The question
is obviously sarcastic; its intention is to equate the 9/11-inside-job
theory with believing in the predictive power of astrology, and to imply
that since the university wouldn’t think of hiring someone to teach the one,
it should have known better than to hire someone to teach the other.
But the truth is that it would not be at all outlandish for a university to
hire someone to teach astrology — not to profess astrology and recommend it
as the basis of decision-making (shades of Nancy Reagan), but to teach the
history of its very long career. There is, after all, a good argument for
saying that Shakespeare, Chaucer and Dante, among others, cannot be fully
understood unless one understands astrology.
The distinction I am making — between studying astrology and proselytizing
for it — is crucial and can be generalized; it shows us where the line
between the responsible and irresponsible practice of academic freedom
should always be drawn. Any idea can be brought into the classroom if the
point is to inquire into its structure, history, influence and so forth. But
no idea belongs in the classroom if the point of introducing it is to
recruit your students for the political agenda it may be thought to imply.
And this is where we come back to Mr. Barrett, who, in addition to being a
college lecturer, is a member of a group calling itself Scholars for 9/11
Truth, an organization with the decidedly political agenda of persuading
Americans that the Bush administration “not only permitted 9/11 to happen
but may even have orchestrated these events.”
Is the fact of this group’s growing presence on the Internet a reason for
studying it in a course on 9/11? Sure. Is the instructor who discusses the
group’s arguments thereby endorsing them? Not at all. It is perfectly
possible to teach a viewpoint without embracing it and urging it. But the
moment a professor does embrace and urge it, academic study has ceased and
been replaced by partisan advocacy. And that is a moment no college
administration should allow to occur.
Provost Farrell doesn’t quite see it that way, because he is too hung up on
questions of content and balance. He thinks that the important thing is to
assure a diversity of views in the classroom, and so he is reassured when
Mr. Barrett promises to surround his “unconventional” ideas and “personal
opinions” with readings “representing a variety of viewpoints.”
But the number of viewpoints Mr. Barrett presents to his students is not the
measure of his responsibility. There is, in fact, no academic requirement to
include more than one view of an academic issue, although it is usually
pedagogically useful to do so. The true requirement is that no matter how
many (or few) views are presented to the students, they should be offered as
objects of analysis rather than as candidates for allegiance.
There is a world of difference, for example, between surveying the pro and
con arguments about the Iraq war, a perfectly appropriate academic
assignment, and pressing students to come down on your side. Of course the
instructor who presides over such a survey is likely to be a partisan of one
position or the other — after all, who doesn’t have an opinion on the Iraq
war? — but it is part of a teacher’s job to set personal conviction aside
for the hour or two when a class is in session and allow the techniques and
protocols of academic research full sway.
This restraint should not be too difficult to exercise. After all, we
require and expect it of judges, referees and reporters. And while its
exercise may not always be total, it is both important and possible to make
the effort.
Thus the question Provost Farrell should put to Mr. Barrett is not “Do you
hold these views?” (he can hold any views he likes) or “Do you proclaim them
in public?” (he has that right no less that the rest of us) or even “Do you
surround them with the views of others?”
Rather, the question should be: “Do you separate yourself from your partisan
identity when you are in the employ of the citizens of Wisconsin and teach
subject matter — whatever it is — rather than urge political action?” If the
answer is yes, allowing Mr. Barrett to remain in the classroom is warranted.
If the answer is no, (or if a yes answer is followed by classroom behavior
that contradicts it) he should be shown the door. Not because he would be
teaching the “wrong” things, but because he would have abandoned teaching
for indoctrination.
The advantage of this way of thinking about the issue is that it outflanks
the sloganeering and posturing both sides indulge in: on the one hand,
faculty members who shout “academic freedom” and mean by it an instructor’s
right to say or advocate anything at all with impunity; on the other hand,
state legislators who shout “not on our dime” and mean by it that they can
tell academics what ideas they can and cannot bring into the classroom.
All you have to do is remember that academic freedom is just that: the
freedom to do an academic job without external interference. It is not the
freedom to do other jobs, jobs you are neither trained for nor paid to
perform. While there should be no restrictions on what can be taught — no
list of interdicted ideas or topics — there should be an absolute
restriction on appropriating the scene of teaching for partisan political
ideals. Teachers who use the classroom to indoctrinate make the enterprise
of higher education vulnerable to its critics and shortchange students in
the guise of showing them the true way.
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Religious Leaders Outreach Program MUJCA-NET can help arrange
for a 9/11 Truth outreach person to speak to a priest, imam, rabbi
or minister in your area. We can also help arrange for a speaker to
visit your church, synagogue or mosque and/or meet with members of
your religious group (all religions welcome). We can also provide
9/11-related educational materials as finances permit.
Click here for more information |
Media Interview Requests MUJCA-NET may be able to arrange media
interviews with, and guest appearances by, its founders, endorsers,
and supporters in your area. It's an amazing story--Jews, Christians
and Muslims uniting to fight for 9/11 truth and put an end to
the bogus "war on terror"
along with the escalating violence
between the Abrahamic faiths.
Click
here for more information. |
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Eminent Theologian David Griffin Sparks 9/11 Truth Groundswell
David Griffin, one of America's most eloquent and influential
theologians, has summed up the overwhelming evidence for US
government 9/11 complicity in in his bestseller
The New Pearl Harbor. (Read
Marc Estrin's review.) (Listen
to Pacifica radio interview.) Dr. Griffin's follow-up book,
The 9/11 Commission Report: Omissions and Distortions,
demolishes the last shreds of doubt that 9/11 was an inside job, and
the official story a transparent cover-up. |
Day
of Prayer for 9/11 Truth Jews, Christians and Muslims from
around the world are uniting to pray for 9/11 truth every Friday
afternoon. (Muslim congregational prayer occurs shortly after noon
on Fridays.) Muslims are asking God to end the nazi-style
persecution aimed at them, and related political violence
perpetrated by all sides, by helping reveal the the truth about what
happened on 9/11. All are invited to join.
Click here to find out how. |
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Please
Support MUJCA-NET MUJCA-NET needs your support. We are a
non-profit organization and the scale of our activities depends
entirely on your generosity. We would like to get copies of David
Griffin's two 9/11 books (see above) into the hands of every
religious leader in America. And we would like to push 9/11 truth
onto the front pages of every newspaper in America. But we can't do
it without your help. If you would like to donate to MUJCA-NET,
click here.
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Book-in-Progress: The Myth of 9/11 MUJCA-NET co-founder Kevin
Barrett is writing a book entitled The Myth of 9/11: An American
Muslim Speaks Out. Dr. Barrett, an Arabist specializing in the
analysis of myth, literature and folklore, argues that the official
story of 9/11 is a myth, both in the popular sense of an untrue
story, and the scholarly sense of a founding narrative legitimizing
a particular social order.
Preview and
comment on The Myth of 9/11. |
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