Monday, March 28, 2011

America's Thought Police - Wisconsin Mimicks Cuccinelli

Many view Virginia's mentally disturbed Attorney General Ken "Kookinelli" Cuccinelli as an isolated case of hubris filled insanity. One of the many issues where Kookinelli has displayed his extremist crusader mindset has been his vendetta against a former University of Virginia professor whose views on climate change do not jive with Kookinelli's rewrite of reality. Now, a similar vendetta is being played out in Wisconsin where William Cronon, a historian who teaches at the University of Wisconsin, is being targeted for harassment and a demand for copies of all e-mails sent to or from Mr. Cronon’s university mail account. Cronon's sin? To publicly question what's happening in his state politically and to challenge the GOP agenda in particular. So much for academic freedom or the First Amendment. Paul Krugman in the New York Times looks at what's being done to Cronon and this new technique of the GOP to try to silence critics. Here are some highlights:
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Recently William Cronon, a historian who teaches at the University of Wisconsin, decided to weigh in on his state’s political turmoil. He started a blog, “Scholar as Citizen,” devoting his first post to the role of the shadowy American Legislative Exchange Council in pushing hard-line conservative legislation at the state level. Then he published an opinion piece in The Times, suggesting that Wisconsin’s Republican governor has turned his back on the state’s long tradition of “neighborliness, decency and mutual respect.”
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So what was the G.O.P.’s response? A demand for copies of all e-mails sent to or from Mr. Cronon’s university mail account containing any of a wide range of terms, including the word “Republican” and the names of a number of Republican politicians.
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If this action strikes you as no big deal, you’re missing the point. The hard right — which these days is more or less synonymous with the Republican Party — has a modus operandi when it comes to scholars expressing views it dislikes: never mind the substance, go for the smear.
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The demand for Mr. Cronon’s correspondence has obvious parallels with the ongoing smear campaign against climate science and climate scientists, which has lately relied heavily on supposedly damaging quotations found in e-mail records.
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[I]n this case they’ll probably come up dry. Mr. Cronon writes on his blog that he has been careful never to use his university e-mail for personal business, exhibiting a scrupulousness that’s neither common nor expected in the academic world.
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Someone like Mr. Cronon can stand up to the pressure. But less eminent and established researchers won’t just become reluctant to act as concerned citizens, weighing in on current debates; they’ll be deterred from even doing research on topics that might get them in trouble.
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What’s at stake here, in other words, is whether we’re going to have an open national discourse in which scholars feel free to go wherever the evidence takes them, and to contribute to public understanding. Republicans, in Wisconsin and elsewhere, are trying to shut that kind of discourse down. It’s up to the rest of us to see that they don’t succeed.

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