Posted on 12/15/2003 12:30:07 AM PST by nickcarraway
D A L L A S, Dec. 13 University of Texas journalism professor Robert Jensen is an unapologetic liberal who openly expresses his strong views, both in and out of the classroom.
"My political views are left," Jensen said. "Some people would call me a radical." In the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, student Austin Kinghorn felt Jensen crossed the line.
"We walked in, and he had the overhead projector turned on, and on there was a sentence, 'What is terrorism?' " Kinghorn said. "And Jensen took the next hour and 15 minutes of class to basically make his point, two days after 9/11, that the American government is a far worse perpetrator of terrorism than the 9/11 hijackers."
Kinghorn, chairman of the Young Conservatives of Texas, was deeply offended.
"I felt like Professor Jensen was manipulating a national tragedy," Kinghorn said, "to make a point that he wants to make about his far-leftist agenda that seems to blame every problem in the world on American policy."
The Young Conservatives decided to make Jensen No. 1 on a newly created "watch list," which was posted on their Web site and also published in a local newspaper. It includes 10 professors at the University of Texas, the nation's largest public college, whom the conservatives accuse of trying to indoctrinate students and using the classrooms to promote their personal agendas.
"It's a list of professors that need to be scrutinized, watched," said Brendan Steinhauser, a member of the Young Conservatives of Texas. "They need to be held accountable for their actions in the classroom. And they haven't been yet."
Conservative Trend
The number of conservative and Republican groups organizing on college campuses has nearly tripled in the last four years. And some officials in Washington also have acted.
"I think you're going to have more and more conservative students standing up and creating a new counterculture that doesn't believe that all morals are relative, that believes in absolute values, that believes in conservative government," Kinghorn said. "And they're going to get louder and louder as they feel more and more oppressed."
Though colleges have a reputation as bastions of liberalism, college students are more likely to call themselves political independents than any other affiliation, according to the ABCNEWS polling unit. For those in college, ages 18 to 22, 27 percent call themselves Democrats, 34 percent Republicans and 35 percent independents. College students are more likely to say they are liberal than other Americans, but the biggest percentage, 41 percent, call themselves moderate.
The general public is roughly evenly divided among Democrats, Republicans and independents.
In Washington, Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., recently introduced an academic "bill of rights" to protect students from "one-sided liberal propaganda." The House of Representatives passed a bill to monitor whether federally funded centers for international research reflect and respond to the needs of national security.
And a group founded by Lynne Cheney, the wife of the vice president, that blasted academics right after 9/11 for being "the weak link in America's response to the attack" urged a Senate committee to raise public awareness of what it called the problem of liberal bias on campus and to encourage universities to conduct "intellectual diversity reviews."
"It's a trend which, if it got completely out of hand, could lead us to another McCarthy kind of situation," said Edmund Gordon, a UT associate professor who is on the Young Conservatives of Texas list. "I certainly hope it doesn't go that far."
Labeled a Radical
Gordon is accused of overemphasizing white oppression of African-Americans.
"I was actually not labeled a liberal," Gordon said. "I was labeled a radical."
He said his classroom has undergone a dramatic change.
"I never had people who were avowedly Young Conservatives in my class, as students, who announced that they were that from the very beginning," Gordon said. "I feel like they were put there to watch me. And this watch list or my position on this watch list is a result of that. So, do I feel like I'm under surveillance? I am under surveillance."
Jensen gives the conservative students plenty to watch, hanging posters of Cuban revolutionary leaders in his office and writing controversial editorials in the Texas papers. One such editorial, published in the Houston Chronicle just after Sept. 11, 2001, was headlined, "U.S. Just as Guilty of Committing Own Violent Acts."
"It led the president of the university to issue a public statement denouncing me, in which he called me foolish," Jensen said.
The reprimand did not bother Jensen or affect his behavior. He's a tenured professor and his job at the public university is protected.
He loves to stir things up in the classroom, and some students are complimentary.
"I think what Jensen really wants us to do is to learn to think critically about our role in society and society as a whole," one student said.
"I think that if a teacher is completely neutral, which I personally don't think is possible, it would make a class boring," said another.
Censorship?
Jensen fears he could be pressured into toning down his message.
"Nobody with power is telling me I can't say something," Jensen said. "It's only going to become censorship if university administrators, who have the power to hire and fire and the power to punish faculty, start requiring a kind of ideological conformity for advancement in the profession. If that happens, then higher education is dead."
The very idea of making lists of members of opposing groups has a long and checkered history in America. Hollywood once had its black list, an unwritten understanding of those who would be denied work because of their suspected affiliation or sympathy with communism. President Nixon had an infamous enemies list, and his political opponents had their own scoreboard of so-called war criminals in his Cabinet. The National Rifle Association recently put out its own listing of adversaries. Some of them said they were proud to be on it.
So, perhaps there's no wonder the latest incarnation of political watch lists has caused such a stir on college campuses. Whether these lists are promoting tactics of intimidation or simply exercising free speech is a matter of debate.
The Young Conservatives say their watch list is about promoting intellectual diversity. But others say it feels more like censorship and the start of a campus culture war.
The Young Conservatives bristle at any suggestion their watch list is a form of censorship. But they intend to put a select group of professors on notice that the classroom is not the place for a one-sided bully pulpit.
"I've had liberal professors who are great professors," Kinghorn said. "I'm not afraid of opinions. None of us are. What we're afraid of is students who don't get both sides of the stories and don't have enough information to make informed decisions, which is supposedly what a college degree is all about."
AND ITS ABOUT DAMN TIME TOO....
If some enterpiseing student(s) has as much grit as the Alamo girl(s).... and publish's on the internet it... IT will be very useful especially with a few notes(or more) on each...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/k-robertjensen/browse (keyword RobertJensen)
He is no stranger to FReeperland. Here is his own idiotorial about appearing on these students' list:
Notice how Disney News Network doesn't give polling figures on what political stripe professors align themselves with? It's the professors who are doing the indocrinating (don't echo back the right propaganda and you might not pass the course).
Political correctness thrives on college campuses. This is why colleges have a "reputation" as being bastions of liberalism. That, and tenured professors who cannot be removed. A list like this at least alerts students to things like anticapitalist socialist professors who "teach" economics.
The very idea of making lists of members of opposing groups has a long and checkered history in America. Hollywood once had its black list, an unwritten understanding of those who would be denied work because of their suspected affiliation or sympathy with communism. President Nixon had an infamous enemies list, and his political opponents had their own scoreboard of so-called war criminals in his Cabinet. The National Rifle Association recently put out its own listing of adversaries. Some of them said they were proud to be on it.
Hollywood had a blacklist long before the 1940s "Red Scare" (which did show the presence of Soviet agents in American government and propaganda efforts being worked into American films). Hollywood still has a blacklist to this day; try crossing a union strike and see how much work you get in Hollywood films.
President Clinton had an enemies list and he harassed them with IRS audits. Seems that many of Bill Clinton's critics got audited.
Or a mysterious gunshot wound to the head or a convenient heart-attack.
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