<
FREE hit counter and Internet traffic statistics from freestats.com
(DV) Jensen: Iranian President's Attacks on Academics Should Sound Familiar in the US


HOME 

SEARCH 

NEWS SERVICE 

LETTERS 

ABOUT DV CONTACT SUBMISSIONS

 

Iranian President’s Attack on Academics
Should Sound Familiar in the US

by Robert Jensen
www.dissidentvoice.org
September 11, 2006

Send this page to a friend! (click here)

 

When I published an article this summer that condemned the past six decades of U.S. policy toward Iran, and the Middle East more generally, as a strategy of “domination-through-violence,” one critic e-mailed to suggest that if I was so unhappy with the United States, “why don’t you and all the other liberal professors just pack up and move to Iran and see how you like it there.”

 

Though I never gave the idea much thought -- I’m a U.S. citizen who believes I have an obligation to work to make this country better, and besides I like it here just fine -- it appears the option of going to Iran is no longer available to me or my leftie colleagues after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s announcement this week that he wants to purge liberal and secular teachers from Iranian universities. 
 
Hmm. Sounds kind of familiar. After nearly a decade of public political work in various movements on the left side of the political fence, I long ago lost count of the number of times angry readers have expressed their desire to purge U.S. universities of the liberal and secular forces that they believe are out to destroy all that is good about God and Country. This past year, for example, a number of politicians called for the firing of University of Colorado professor Ward Churchill for harsh remarks he made about U.S. policy, and it appears that the university is going to answer those calls, albeit under the cover of contentious claims that Churchill plagiarized and fabricated research. 
 
I’m not suggesting the situations of U.S. and Iranian academics are the same. At this moment in history, U.S. professors have extensive legal guarantees of academic freedom that are mostly observed, even if there are other kinds of pressures that can subtly shape how that freedom is exercised (such as the pressure to secure grants for research, which tends to push professors away from radical ideas that might challenge the centrist-to-conservative leanings of major funders and university administrators). 
 
But while the ideologies and traditions of the two societies are quite different, it’s interesting that Ahmadinejad justified his desire to deal with dangerous professors because of the university officials’ “tendency to introduce politics into academic affairs.” The phrase is reminiscent of a common complaint aimed at folks like me, that we “politicize the classroom.” 
 
In the Iranian case, it seems clear that Ahmadinejad is the one who wants most to introduce politics into the university by excluding opponents or even potential opponents. No doubt most everyone in the United States -- including those who have in recent years called for the firing of me and other professors with similar views -- would agree that the Iranian president’s motive is to eliminate as much dissent as possible. 
 
That’s easy to see, but many in the United States find it difficult to imagine that similar complaints about so-called dangerous left-wing professors might spring from such political motivations. How can so many believe that ridding U.S. universities of professors with a certain politics is not ideologically motivated, but simple common sense? 
 
The quality of discussion of these issues would be improved considerably if we recognized that all teaching about human affairs has a politics. That doesn’t mean teaching is nothing but the imposition of a professor’s politics on a class. But we should realize that every decision in courses that deal with human behavior and society -- from the structure of the class, to the specific topics covered, to the books assigned -- reflects a professor’s assessment of a variety of political and ethical questions. 
 
As academics, it’s our job to assess competing theories and decide which should be taught in what fashion. That can be done competently in a responsible fashion that airs all-important ideas, or done poorly with prejudice. But it always involves judgments about politics and ethics. Professors should be willing to defend their decisions, and I am always happy to do so. I trust that business school professors who teach the doctrines of corporate capitalism without serious consideration of alternatives and challenges are willing to do the same. 
 
I don’t know enough about the internal political dynamics in Iran to understand exactly what Ahmadinejad hopes to accomplish by going after academics, but I assume it’s not that different from the reasons conservative forces in the United States go after leftists: 
 
* First, because academics are relatively privileged compared to many other workers, it’s easy to target us; teaching college usually is a lot easier than working in a factory or cleaning an office building. 

 

*Second, in a society dominated by conservatives in government and the corporate world, universities are one of the few places where liberals and even leftists are present in significant numbers; it’s easy for many to imagine that there’s a conspiracy afoot. 

 

* Third, focusing attention on the alleged leftist menace, wherever it can be conjured up, helps divert attention away from the failure of conservative policies at home and abroad; demonizing opponents is a road-tested political tactic. 
 
Early reports suggest that many in Iran see through Ahmadinejad’s political intentions. Perhaps there’s a lesson in that for us. 
 

Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center. He is the author of The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both from City Lights Books). He can be reached at: rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.

Other Recent Articles by Robert Jensen  

* Getting Cognitive: The Limits of George Lakoff’s Politics
* Florida’s Fear of History: New Law Undermines Critical Thinking
* Attacking Iran: Bad Policy is a Bipartisan Affair
* The Four Fundamentalisms and the Threat to Sustainable Democracy
* Why Leftists Mistrust Liberals
* “Crash” and the Self-Indulgence of White America with Robert Wosnitzer
* Why I am a Christian (sort of)
* The Failure of Our First Amendment Success: Dealing with the Death of Discourse
* "Dangerous" Academics: Right-wing Distortions about Leftist Professors
* MLK Day: Dreams and Nightmares
* Intelligent-Design Debate Reveals Limits of Religion and Science
* The 1st Amendment's Assembly and Petition Clauses -- Eviscerated by Big Money?
* Give Thanks No More: It’s Time for a National Day of Atonement
* Abe Osheroff: On the Joys and Risks of Living Authentically in the Empire
* The Challenge of a Broken World
* TV Images Don't Bring Change
* From Hiroshima to Iraq and Back with Sharon Weiner
* Demonizing News Media is Attempt to Divert Attention from Policy Failures
* Iraq’s Non-Election
* A New “Citizens Oath of Office” for Inauguration 2005
* Election Day Fears
* Large Dams in India -- Temples or Burial Grounds?
* US Supports Anti-Democratic Forces in Venezuela Recall
* Kerry's Hypocrisy on the Vietnam War 
* “Fahrenheit 9/11” is a Stupid White Movie
* It’s Not Just the Emperor Who is Naked, but the Whole Empire
* Hunger Strike Remembers the Victims of World Bank Policies
* Condi Rice Wouldn't Admit Mistakes
* Former President Bush Involved with Donation
to Group with Terrorist Connections
* Bush's Nuclear Hypocrisy
*
Observe Right to Unionize by Making it Reality
*
New Purported Bush Tape Raises Fear of New Attacks
*
General Boykin’s Fundamentalist View of the Other
*
Just the (Documented) Facts, Ma'am

* Through the Eyes of Foreigners: US Political Crisis
* “No War” A Full-Throated Cry 
* Media Criticism of Iraq Coverage Reveals Problems with Journalists' Conception of News
* Embedded Reporters Viewpoint Misses Main Point Of War
* Fighting Alienation in the USA
* Where's The Pretext? Lack of WMD Kills Case for War
* For Self-Determination in Iraq, The U.S. Must Leave
* The Images They Choose, and Choose to Ignore

* Embedded Media Give Up Independence  
* On NPR, Please Follow the Script

HOME