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Jewish World Review Sept. 22, 2003 / 25 Elul, 5763
David Limbaugh
Horowitz's Delicious Academic Bill of Rightshttp://www.NewsAndOpinion.com | Conservative scholar-warrior David Horowitz has the left in apoplexy over his ingenious proposal for an Academic Bill of Rights that would forbid university faculty from hiring, firing, and granting or denying promotion or tenure on the basis of political beliefs. Hysterical liberals are screaming "quota" and "McCarthyism," neither of which has any basis in rationality. Horowitz's plan would eliminate quotas, not impose them, requiring universities to judge professors on their merits, not their ideology. Horowitz is not demanding that the percentage of faculty conservatives correspond with the percentage of conservatives in the general population. But he doubtlessly believes that if universities were prohibited from discriminating against conservative professors, their percentages on college campuses would increase. Can somebody explain how Horowitz's plan remotely smacks of McCarthyism? Isn't McCarthyism the groundless smearing of political opponents by accusing them of being Communists or the like? If so, then how much more so are liberals guilty of McCarthyism when they demand actual quotas in university admissions and other areas of society? This is all ridiculous. Liberals have gotten to the point that they throw out the term "McCarthyism" practically every time they get caught in the act. Their name-calling is designed to divert our attention from the merits of the Horowitz proposal. How dare anyone challenge their title deed to their indoctrination factories? Yale University Professor Bruce Shapiro a card-carrying far-left liberal by his own proud admission pooh-poohed Horowitz on "Hannity and Colmes," arguing that a professor's ideology has no bearing on most courses. Shapiro pressed, "When you say 10-to-1 liberal, are we talking math professors? Is there a liberal way to teach math? Are we talking about Aristotle versus Plato, or Bush versus Gore? Are we talking about, perhaps, biology professors? What is the relevance of how professors or anybody else votes?" Horowitz shot back, "This is completely ridiculous. Here we have liberals who want diversity of skin color because they claim that that means diversity of viewpoint. That's what the Supreme Court has declared. And yet when I'm showing you that 90 percent of professors come from one political persuasion, you suddenly object. You can't get a good education if they're only telling you half the story." Horowitz is precisely correct, but time didn't permit a more thorough response to Shapiro's specious charge that a professor's politics don't matter in most subjects. Anyone who has attended college in the last 30 years knows better. Perhaps if Horowitz had had more time, he could have directed Shapiro's attention to a few examples, which I cite, among many others, in my new book, "Persecution: How Liberals Are Waging War Against Christianity":
There is more, so much more, but this is the bottom line: Horowitz is dead on, and his opponents are either in denial or being disingenuous. The liberal monopoly on college campuses exists shamefully so. It's relevant, and it matters.
Bravo to David Horowitz for fighting back.
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