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The Most Hated Professor in America (barf alert)
Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription required) | 4/18/03 | Thomas Bartlett

Posted on 04/16/2003 10:17:01 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor

IF YOU CALL Columbia University's main switch- board and ask for Nicholas De Genova,you will not be connected to his office. Instead,you will hear a recording of a statement by the university's president, Lee C. Bollinger, saying he is "appalled" by the anthropology professor's "outrageous comments."

When a reporter calls back and says he wants to speak to the professor rather than lodge a complaint, the operator replies, "So you're not going to call me a bastard or a whore?"

"No. Have other people called you that?"

"Oh, yeah," she says. "They need to understand that he's the one who said that stuff, not us."

The stuff he said continues to elicit angry denunciations, demands for his dismissal, and death threats. During a teach-in last month at Columbia, Mr. De Genova, a 35-year-old assistant professor ofanthro :. pology and Latino studies, told 3,000 students and faculty members that he hoped Iraq would defeat the United States. He also wished for "a million Mogadishus," a reference to the 1993 battle in Somalia in which 18 U.S. soldiers were killed.

After Newsday reported his remarks, the backlash was swift and strong. A letter from 104 Republican members of the U.S. House of Representatives demanded that the university's president fire the untenured professor. (While distancing himself from the comments, Mr. Bollinger has supported the professor's First Amendment rights.) A group of alumni has promised to withhold its donations so long as Mr. De Genova remains at Columbia. He has been lambasted in newspaper editorials and on television programs in the United States and abroad. A columnist in Australia described the Mogadishu comment as "the poisonous fantasy of an obscure American academic."

After a week of maintaining a low profile, Mr. De Genova returned to class on April 8,albeit with two security guards. He has written a letter to the Columbia Daily Spectator, the student newspaper, but he has refused requests for interviews until now.

Q. Were you surprised by the reaction to your speech?

A. I certainly was not expecting anything on the scale of this controversy. ...It so happens that a single journalist from a tabloid newspaper who was interested in scandalmongering was present at the event. In a way that was fairly devious, he tried to solicit comments from me the following day, and in a manner calculated to generate the most inflammatory possible effect, quoted me out of context...

Q. But many of those present have condemned your comments. One organizer of the teach-in called what you said "idiotic."

A. I certainly would never deny that my perspective is controversial. My intervention was intended as a challenge among people who share a certain set of basic premises concerning the fact that this war is unjust. Unfortunately, there has been no dialogue concerning the substance of my speech and its meaning for the antiwar movement. To defensively denounce what I said as "idiotic" merely contributes to the pro-war campaign of vilification. There are people with a very vested interest in exploiting this issue and manipulating it for their own ends, and attacks against me are therefore attacks against the entire antiwar movement.

Q. If that's the case, then didn't you play right into their hands?

A. I think that it's healthy to generate debate and controversy if there is the possibility of clarifying positions, elucidating and elaborating positions in order to provoke more critical thinking?

Q. So you would argue that your comments have been healthy and helpful?

A. There is an impulse to jingoistic, patriotic hysteria during wartime that will seek to discredit the antiwar movement. And that is to be expected. Those of us in the antiwar movement need to confront the really concerted power, money, and resources that have been devoted to trying to narrow the range of possible speech. The real discussion of the substantive issues that I raised has yet to begin and is long overdue. In that sense, I don't think that there's any conclusive way to judge what the effect has been at this point, either for the antiwar movement or for the forces that would be invested in silencing us.

Q. Your comment about wishing for "a million Mogadishus" has attracted the most attention. I read your letter in the "Columbia Daily Spectator," which gave some more context, but I have to confess I don't see how the context changes the meaning of that statement.

A. I was referring to what Mogadishu symbolizes politically. The U.S. invasion of Somalia was humiliated in an excruciating way by the Somali people. And Mogadishu was the premier symbol of that. What I was really emphasizing in the larger context of my comments was the question of Vietnam and that historical lesson... . What I was intent to emphasize was that the importance of Vietnam is that it was a defeat for the U.S. war machine and a victory for the cause of human self-determination.

Q. I'm a little hazy on the rhetorical connection between Mogadishu and Vietnam.

A. The analogy between Mogadishu and Vietnam is that they were defeats for U.S. imperialism and U.S. military action against people in poor countries that had none of the sophisticated technology or weaponry that the U.S. was able to mobilize against them. The analogy between Mogadishu and Iraqis simply that there was an invasion of Somalia and there was an invasion of Iraq.

Q. Just so we're clear: Do you welcome or wish for the deaths of American soldiers?

A. No, precisely not. That's one of the reasons I am against the war. I am against the war because people like George Bush and his war cabinet are invested in needlessly wasting the lives of people who have absolutely no interest in perpetrating this war and should not be there. And any responsibility for the loss of their lives will rest in the hands of the warmakers on the side of the U.S.

Q. There are millions of people in this country and elsewhere who share that point of view. Why did you choose to express it in those terms?

A.Because I was interested in contesting the notion that an effective strategy for the antiwar movement is to capitulate to the patriotic pro-war pressure that demands that one must affirm support for the troops. It really is a disguised form of pressuring people who are antiwar to support the war.

Q.You've certainly heard from detractors. Have you heard from any supporters?

A. Yes, absolutely.

Q. Would you characterize the support as fairly strong?

A. There is an important and growing movement to defend me and to affirm the important role I play at this university for the students who have had contact with me, and to support my right of free speech and the invaluable place of critical perspectives like mine in the larger debate and dialogue.

Q. The comment you made linking patriotism and white supremacy has also caused controversy. Can you expand a bit on that?

A. It's an oversimplification, and a crude one at that, to say that I am simply calling anyone who is a patriot of the United States a white supremacist. But I did trace a historical relationship between U.S. invasions and conquests and colonization to the history of white supremacy and racism in the U.S.

Q. You don't have tenure yet. Are you worried that this could interfere with your chances of achieving tenure at Columbia?

A.I really have no comment on that question.

Q. If you had it to do over again, would you make the same remarks?

A. There is a lesson here for all of us, far and wide, beyond my immediate circle of colleagues and this particular university. There is a message for all people who affirm the importance of free speech and the freedom of thought and expression

Q.I guess my question is, would you have attempted to be clearer?

A. Had I known that there was a devious yellow journalist from a tabloid newspaper among the audience,1 certainly would have selected my words somewhat more carefully. But I would not have changed the message. Unfortunately, that message has been largely lost on people who were not at the event.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: degenova; democrats; jerk; leftist; nicholasdegenova; radical; tenuredradicals
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Arrogant and unrepentant, a perfect case study in the sense of entitlement of a typical radical academic. Note that even though he admits he said all the things that have gotten him in trouble, the hapless reporter who simply reported them is a 'devious yellow journalist'.

How anyone can send their kids to this upper Manhattan sewer is beyond me.

1 posted on 04/16/2003 10:17:02 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: Right Wing Professor
Sounds like he's trying to pull a Dixie Chicks on us.
2 posted on 04/16/2003 10:21:19 AM PDT by YourAdHere (Jenna will win Survivor)
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To: Right Wing Professor
This guy runs a close second.
3 posted on 04/16/2003 10:22:46 AM PDT by martin_fierro (Mr. Avuncular)
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To: YourAdHere
Except at least the Dixie Chicks have some talent. All this guy knows how to do is cloak juvenile left-wing politics in postmodern jargon and spew it out to gullible radical-chic students.
4 posted on 04/16/2003 10:24:04 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: Right Wing Professor
Arrogant, unrepentant and unintelligent, I might add. While he speaks in calm paragraphs, a plus, the substance of what he has to say is awfully thin and predictable. Nothing but a recital of leftist talking points. Lame and boring!
5 posted on 04/16/2003 10:24:13 AM PDT by Revolting cat! (Subvert the dominant cliche!)
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To: Right Wing Professor
"Arrogant and unrepentant..."

Don't tell me you're at all surprised.

New Soviet Man is shameless.
6 posted on 04/16/2003 10:24:35 AM PDT by headsonpikes (Help me decide: Is the Left morally corrupt and intellectually bankrupt, or vice versa?)
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To: Right Wing Professor
I'd say he is stoopid. Just so my point is clear.
7 posted on 04/16/2003 10:24:48 AM PDT by Conspiracy Guy (Saddam's Hiding In Tikrit He's Eating Another Daisy)
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To: Right Wing Professor
No, he was speaking metaphorically, don't you get it. Mogadishu was a metaphor for WW I which enabled the bosheviks.
8 posted on 04/16/2003 10:25:21 AM PDT by WaveThatFlag (Run Al, Run!!!)
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To: Right Wing Professor
I wish Mr DeGenerate "a million San Jacintos".
9 posted on 04/16/2003 10:26:59 AM PDT by jimt (Support our troops !)
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To: Right Wing Professor
-Terror Teacher- Columbia's Nicholas De Genova message of "Death to America!"--
10 posted on 04/16/2003 10:27:12 AM PDT by backhoe
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To: Right Wing Professor
It so happens that a single journalist from a tabloid newspaper who was interested in scandalmongering was present at the event.

That's riggghhht. Hey Mr. 50 cent word--this is called "Guilt Projection."

11 posted on 04/16/2003 10:29:07 AM PDT by SkyPilot (CNN Reports--You Decide! (well,,,,,,not really))
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To: Right Wing Professor
RW Professor is right on. DeGenova admits he said these things, but deflects and evades as much as possible by trying to focus on larger anti-war or free speech issues.

Alot of people opposed this war, but managed to express themselves in civilized ways.

And besides, DeGenova's observations on Vietnam and Somalia become increasingly fantastic over time. Total disconnect with hard reality.
12 posted on 04/16/2003 10:31:22 AM PDT by Gefreiter
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To: Right Wing Professor
As a Right Wing Professor, don't you think it would be better to let this pretentious, back peddling spinster stay there and teach? I mean, he clearly has received and incorporated the ultra Left's talking points on "not wanting our troops to die" and actually being the only people in America smart enough to protect them, but he isn't nearly as smart as he thinks he and I can see in his remarks in his letter to the student newspaper and this that he is destined to open that door right into his face yet again.

What I'm saying is this, don't play into the Left's claims that this is McCarthist or a witch hunt. Let him stay. This shadow will never leave him and he will not persuede students. De Genova will be a permanent reminder of the radicalism passing for Academia in America.

Bring it on! De Genova for Academic Tenure!

13 posted on 04/16/2003 10:31:37 AM PDT by PeoplesRep_of_LA ("As long as it takes...No. That's the answer to your question. As long as it takes." GWB)
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To: Right Wing Professor
" I think it is healthy to create conversation and controversy" Does the good Prof support using the word "N----R" to create contorversy.
Since he says that he mispoke--- did he support Trent Lott who admitted 7 times that he mispoke?
14 posted on 04/16/2003 10:32:55 AM PDT by tsali1927
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To: Right Wing Professor
Nicholas De Genova is a leading Ba-athist Professor at Columbia. He supported the mass murders, rapes and imprisonment of the innocent Iraqis by his Ba-athist buddies under his buddy the Soddomite.
15 posted on 04/16/2003 10:33:56 AM PDT by Grampa Dave (Being a Monthly Donor to Free Republic is the Right Thing to do!)
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To: Right Wing Professor
This jackass has no apologies whatsoever for what he said or meant to imply. The only remorse he may experience, if any, would be the justifiable consequence of getting his ass fired for his hateful comments.
16 posted on 04/16/2003 10:35:19 AM PDT by rj45mis
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To: Right Wing Professor
" There is an impulse to jingoistic, patriotic hysteria during wartime that will seek to discredit the antiwar movement"

Jingoistic?! as in...

"No war for oil"

"Jobs, Not War"

"Support our troops! Oppose U.S. foreign policy"

"No War in Iraq"

...Jingoistic in that way?
17 posted on 04/16/2003 10:35:32 AM PDT by babyface00
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To: Right Wing Professor
Although I would not bother or even be inclined to do so, it would seem that an old-fashioned, NYC-style ass-beating would be a far more economical and effective approach to the "problem" of an arrogant, socialist bastard who delight in yelling "Fire!!" in a crowded theater.

That said, it would prove to be even more economical and effective to ignore this clymer the way that a yapping little mutt is ignored. Just as it's wrong to beat a little mongrel for yapping, it's not worthwhile or even right to take action against a socialist traitor who simply is doing that which he has been programmed to do.

Then, again, I would be hard pressed to cut this clown any slack for "mogadishuing" within earshot of someone who serves our Nation in uniform or has lost someone who was doing so.

Let's face it, this puke has been playing a good many loyal Americans like a fiddle and now has the satisfaction of laughing at those he considers to be inferior to his "enlightened" little self......

18 posted on 04/16/2003 10:39:59 AM PDT by tracer (/b>)
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To: Grampa Dave
"George Bush and his war cabinet are invested in needlessly wasting the lives of people who have absolutely no interest in perpetrating this war and should not be there."

I suggest he ask the troops who were there what they were fighting for and if the cause is just. Oh, never mind, it's eaiser to make blanket statements and never back them up with any substance. I forgot he was a liberal...
19 posted on 04/16/2003 10:41:50 AM PDT by Desecrated (A nickel of every tax dollar should go toward the defense of America)
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To: PeoplesRep_of_LA
As a Right Wing Professor, don't you think it would be better to let this pretentious, back peddling spinster stay there and teach?

If he were just one, I'd agree. But almost all campuses have an oversupply; and Columbia in particular (I except the science departments) looks like the US Wing of the Baath party.

I think if we fire deGenova and four or five others, the left might re-discover that academic freedom , like any freedom, comes with responsibility. And that having discounted academic freedom when persecuting conservative faculty, or those who fell foul of feminists and other identity politics types, they can't immediately wish for it back when the boot's suddenly on the other foot.

20 posted on 04/16/2003 10:43:03 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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