蜜桃直播

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Fighting Shadows with 蜜桃直播

Book cover of "The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America's Campuses" by Alan Charles Kors and Harvey Silverglate

This article on Jan. 2, 2000.


According to Dr. Alan Charles Kors, the professor and undergraduate curriculum chair of history who recently co-founded the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (蜜桃直播), the ultimate aim is to go out of business. 鈥淭he goal of 蜜桃直播,鈥 he says, 鈥渋s to eradicate itself by ending the abuses of power that now dominate American academic life.鈥 Kors doesn鈥檛 see that happening anytime soon, however, which is why he and Boston attorney Harvey Silverglate, his fellow scourge of 鈥渕andatory thought-control,鈥 are planning to use 蜜桃直播 to fight what he calls 鈥渢he current assault on liberty and dignity on campuses.鈥

Kors is no stranger to this debate. Long before he and Silverglate wrote "The Shadow University: The Betrayal of Liberty on America鈥檚 Campuses," published in 1998, he had been representing students he felt had been unfairly treated by university judicial codes and otherwise attacking what he saw as campus attempts at thought-control. His most famous student defendant was Eden Jacobowitz C鈥95, who in 1993 was accused of racial harassment for shouting: 鈥淪hut up, you water buffalo! If you want to party, there鈥檚 a zoo a mile from here!鈥 to a group of late-night revelers. The charges against him were eventually dropped, but not before Penn had become a much-derided national emblem of political correctness.

Since that time, Kors believes, Penn has 鈥渦ndergone a sea change in its culture, freedom, student equality and due process,鈥 so he is no longer inveighing against the University administration. 

鈥淧enn is one of the great examples of how sunlight really is the best disinfectant,鈥 says Kors, who was largely responsible for taking Jacobowitz鈥檚 case to the national media. 鈥淧enn took an international hit during the Water Buffalo case. But the cumulative effect of that was the sense that it had to change the substance that had produced such a public perception.鈥

He credits the improved climate to actions and statements made by the trustees and by President Judith Rodin CW鈥66, and to the hiring of Dr. Valarie Swain-Cade McCoullum as vice provost for University life.

"The Shadow University" contains some fiery rhetoric, and its critics argue that it presents a selective account of history. But if the number of pleas for help Kors says it has generated is any indication, then there are plenty of other colleges around the country engaging in the sort of 鈥渢hought control鈥 he once saw at Penn. Since the book鈥檚 publication, Kors says that he and Silverglate have each been getting 20 to 25 requests a week 鈥 letters, e-mails and phone calls, from students and faculty around the country 鈥 all claiming to be 鈥渧ictims of the same kinds of injustices and phenomena that we had described in our book.鈥

The problem, Kors explains, 鈥渋s that there is no way to know which claims are legitimate and which aren鈥檛.鈥 After all, 鈥渢here really are people who are extremely unprofessional and who are fired for cause. There are people who are treated certain ways independently of their politics or their beliefs, because of the way they do things, and there are people who have violated perfectly valid professional rules of conduct or student codes of conduct. And it is very easy for people to claim to be victims of any set of phenomena under the rubric 鈥榩olitical correctness鈥 who really have been treated the way they were for wholly different reasons.鈥

Since both he and Silverglate have jobs, families and lives, he says, the 鈥渙bvious solution鈥 was 蜜桃直播, which can examine the requests for assistance 鈥渟o that we can wage this struggle for liberty and due process and respect of conscience on our campuses with accurate, vetted, appropriate cases.鈥 蜜桃直播鈥檚 office is in Center City Philadelphia, and its Web site is ().

In addition to Kors (president) and Silverglate (treasurer), who handle all cases on a pro-bono basis, 蜜桃直播 has a full-time executive director 鈥 Thor L. Halvorssen C/G鈥96, a former student of Kors鈥 who saw political combat at Penn as editor of the conservative student publication  鈥 as well as a full-time staff member. 蜜桃直播鈥檚 board of advisers represents a broad swathe of political ideologies 鈥 including Boston talk-show host David Brudnoy, writer Nat Hentoff, civil-rights leader Roy Innis, lawyer and social critic Wendy Kaminer, and philosopher John Searle 鈥 and it has received funding from various foundations and individuals, including one Penn trustee whom Halvorssen declined to name.

Halvorssen 鈥 whose tasks include scheduling Kors鈥 many speaking engagements around the country 鈥 says he provides the operational know-how, while Silverglate supplies the legal savvy and Kors 鈥渂rings in the moral, philosophical, theoretical and every other 鈥榠sm鈥 and 鈥榠cal鈥 you can imagine.鈥

For Kors and Silverglate, the problem on college campuses is not so much individual administrators but the whole system 鈥 one that Kors describes as 鈥渄riven by the identification of people at universities not as individual minds, souls and sensibilities but as embodiments of blood and history.鈥 

As an example, he points to a policy statement at West Virginia University a few years back that directed faculty and students to use 鈥済ender-neutral language in speaking about their life鈥檚 partners.鈥 

鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 say, if you were a professor, 鈥楳y wife鈥 or 鈥楳y husband,鈥欌 recalls Kors. 鈥淵ou couldn鈥檛 say, if you were a student, 鈥楳y girlfriend鈥 or 鈥楳y boyfriend.鈥 You had to use gender-neutral language so as not to privilege one form of sexuality. Anybody鈥檚 free to advise someone to do that; I don鈥檛 care. But that was a policy statement.鈥 

Kors advised the faculty there to contact the local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, which threatened to take the issue to the news media. The policy was rescinded. While private universities 鈥渉ave the right to organize themselves around the principles they choose,鈥 Kors acknowledges, 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 have the right to commit fraud and violation of contract. What most universities do is they promise academic freedom, and they deliver selected academic oppression.

鈥淲hat [they could say] is, 鈥榃e believe that your sons and daughters are the racist, sexist, homophobic, Eurocentric progeny of an unjust America 鈥 and for $30,000 a year, we鈥檒l assign rights unequally, engage in a redistribution of rights toward the end of the righting of historical wrongs and undertake by coercion the political reeducation of your children,鈥欌 says Kors. 鈥淟et them advertise that, and then people who voluntarily accept it are exercising their individual rights. We just don鈥檛 think a lot of people would accept such an invitation.鈥

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