John K. Wilson's blog

Edward Glick and the Imaginary Quote

Edward Bernard Glick has a tirade against liberal academia in an op-ed in the Jerusalem Post this week (it originally appeared on American Thinker last month) this includes a very interesting quote. And by "interesting," I mean, "made up."

According to Glick, "Duke University is a case in point. The chairman of one of its major departments was once asked in a radio interview if his department hired Republicans. He answered: 'No. We don't hire Republicans because they are stupid and we are not. Why should we knowingly hire stupid professors?'"

There's only one small problem with this quote. It's entirely fictionalized.

As the blogger Evil Bender pointed out, Glick gives no source and no quote like this exists anywhere.

It appears that Glick was paraphrasing (albeit with quotation marks and the wrong source) a famous quote that Robert Brandon, chair of the Duke philosophy department, gave to the Duke Chronicle in 2004.

In the interview, Brandon noted: "I don't know the political affiliation of all of my colleagues in philosophy, nor do I care. Our last hire was in the history of modern philosophy. We hired an expert in Kant and Newton. Politics never came up in the interview."

Unfortuntely, Brandon added his speculation on the reason why more liberals worked in academia: "We try to hire the best, smartest people available. If, as John Stuart Mill said, stupid people are generally conservative, then there are lots of conservatives we will never hire. Mill's analysis may go some way towards explaining the power of the Republican party in our society and the relative scarcity of Republicans in academia. Players in the NBA tend to be taller than average. There is a good reason for this. Members of academia tend to be a bit smarter than average. There is a good reason for this too."

Brandon explained a few days later that he was trying to tell a joke and noted, "Typically, we know nothing about the candidates' politics until after they are hired."

As I explain in my new book, Patriotic Correctness: Academic Freedom and Its Enemies, the reason for liberal dominance in academia is not because conservatives are stupid, but because liberals are stupid: in general, far more liberals than conservatives are willing to spend years pursuing a Ph.D. in order to desperately search for a job that, if they're lucky, pays far less than most other professional positions. You'd have to be an idiot to seek out this miserable excuse for a career, and it turns out that liberals are usually those idiots.

Of course, some people might point out that a prominent conservative professor who makes up quotes because he can't be bothered to find the real words is, in fact, stupid. But there are many smart conservatives who do pay attention to basic professional standards. However, these smart people on the right are far more likely to go into business, law, medicine, or politics than the tough, low-paid road of academia.

Guilty Pleas Benefit Academic Freedom

Mahtab Shirani, a University of Illinois at Chicago student, pleaded guilty last week to sending a threatening email to administrators and faculty one day after the Northern Illinois University massacre earlier this year. Shirani's message declared, I'm aiming to kill as many as I can this is not a joke....After NIU, it's UIC's turn to face disaster. Sit back and relax now, you'll get what you deserve. Shirani will be sentenced to 10-16 months in prison. (The print version of the story, but not the online one, says that Shirani will pay more than $20,000 in restitution for security costs due her to note.)

So what does this have to do with academic freedom? Death threats are one way to silence free speech, and too often colleges do too little to stop and punish such threats.

In another victory for academic standards (and academic freedom), the creators of numerous diploma mills, Dixie and Steven Randock, pleaded guilty and Dixie received a three-year prison sentence. These diploma mills have used threats of libel suits to try to suppress their academic critics, such as the courageous George Gollin of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (where gutless administrators tried to silence his anti-diploma mill website).

Sadly, the Justice Department is refusing to make public the names of the people who bought these fake diplomas (although the names are being forwarded to a federal employment clearinghouse). There's no valid reason to keep the names of these slimeballs secret. They're using fake credentials to advance their careers, and the public (and their employers, especially if they work at colleges) deserve to know the facts.

My New Book on Patriotic Correctness

You can buy my new book, Patriotic Correctness: Academic Freedom and Its Enemies, now available in paperback.

I'll be doing a booksigning in Chicago on Friday, July 11, at 7:30pm at Women and Children First bookstore, 5233 N. Clark. I'll be talking about both of my books, including my new book on Obama, Barack Obama: This Improbable Quest.

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