[from "Inside Higher Ed," forwarded to me by [EMAIL PROTECTED]

June 16
Connecting the Dots
By Alan Jones

By all objective measures, the dawning of the 21st century should be a
golden era for American higher education. A recent issue of The
Economist described America's system of higher education as "the best
in the world" and provided convincing documentation for its claim. A
recent review article by Jonathan Cole, provost at Columbia
University, meticulously documents the preeminence of U.S. higher
education in the world today as an established fact.

Perhaps sensing the current domestic political climate, however, Cole
uses his analysis as the basis for sounding a strong cautionary note.
"The United States paid a heavy price when the leaders of its research
universities in the 1950's failed to defend the leader of the
Manhattan Project J. Robert Oppenheimer; the double Nobel Prize
chemist Linus Pauling; and the China expert Owen Lattimore. But a wave
of repression in American universities today is apt to have even more
dramatic consequences for the nation than the repression of the Cold
War."

This broad-based and even global acclaim for higher education in the
United States is strangely at odds with the concentrated political
attacks that Cole warns us about and that the academy is currently
experiencing. It is particularly out of step with the dark and
dysfunctional picture of the academy painted by David Horowitz and his
Center for the Study of Popular Culture. If Horowitz were simply a
disaffected political crank, as many have hitherto regarded him, then
his views on the academy could be easily dismissed. Such dismissal
would seem to be all the more in order following his disastrous
testimony before the legislative subcommittee in Pennsylvania in which
he was forced to recant as unsubstantiated several of the cases that
he had been widely circulating as documentation of alleged malfeasance
in the academy.

Oddly, however, his campaign goes on. Horowitz, with assistance from
Karl Rove and the former House majority whip, Tom DeLay, has briefed
Republican members of Congress on his Academic Bill of Rights campaign
and DeLay has even distributed copies of Horowitz's political primer
The Art of Political Warfare: How Republicans Can Fight to Win to all
Republican members of Congress. Rove refers to Horowitz's pamphlet as
"a perfect pocket guide to winning on the political battlefield."

In a more recent development, last fall, Secretary of Education
Margaret Spellings appointed a Commission on Higher Education.
Spellings, described as a protégé of Rove, gained considerable
attention as the principal architect of President Bush's controversial
"No Child Left Behind" initiative. Among the proposals being discussed
by Spellings's new commission is one that calls for scrapping the
current system of accreditation, which is done by independent regional
bodies, in favor of a National Accreditation Foundation that would be
created by Congress and the president.

The current system of institutional review through independent
accreditation boards is one of the hallmarks of American higher
education and is one of the most important structural safeguards of
the academy's ability to ensure academic quality and intellectual
excellence. The introduction of oversight by an inherently partisan
political body in lieu of the currently independent accreditation
process is a peculiar remedy if the perceived ailment in the academy
is political bias. Carol Geary Schneider, president of the American
Association of Colleges and Universities, has said that "the
commission is sending out firebolts, one after another." To chair this
extraordinary committee Secretary Spellings chose Charles Miller, a
former chairman of the University of Texas Board of Regents and,
historically, a large contributor to the President's election
campaigns.

The question of why the academy is under such focused and persistent
attack by individuals like David Horowitz and his political supporters
despite the fact that it appears to be an extraordinarily successful
enterprise and an unrivaled resource for the nation is a question that
many Americans are asking. In understanding the origins, scope and
staying power of this attack it is crucial to understand not only the
political relationships that Horowitz enjoys, but the sources of
funding that created and sustain his Center for the Study of Popular
Culture and its Academic Bill of Rights campaign. It is also critical
to understand that the same funding sources that brought Horowitz's
organization into being, also created and sustain a large and
integrated network of ideologically defined think tanks and centers
both outside of and within the higher education establishment.

When Michael S. Joyce died in February 24, his death received scant
attention in the mainstream press. Although very few people in
academic circles are familiar with his name, he was, nonetheless, one
of the foundational pillars of the current ideological attacks on the
academy. A tribute to him by Peter Collier was published in FrontPage,
Horowitz's Web site. Joyce and his intellectual muse — the late
University of Chicago political philosopher Leo Strauss — would have
been pleased by the level of anonymity that he maintained during his
lifetime. Joyce's ability to maintain such anonymity despite the
enormous influence that he wielded in shaping and developing the
infrastructure of the neoconservative movement in this country is
quite remarkable.

Although The Atlantic Monthly, as early as 1986, was describing Joyce
as "one of the three individuals most responsible for the triumph of
the conservative political movement," he nevertheless adhered
rigorously to the secretive and profoundly antidemocratic principles
advocated by the enigmatic Strauss. As characterized by Jeet Heer in
The Boston Globe, Strauss held that "the best regime is one in which
the leaders govern moderately and prudently, curbing the passions of
the mob while allowing a small philosophical elite to pursue the
contemplative life of the mind. Such a philosophical elite may
discover truths that are not fit for public consumption.... For
Strauss the art of concealment and secrecy was among the greatest
legacies of antiquity."

In 1979, Michael Joyce entered the world of large-scale philanthropy
with assistance from his mentor Irving Kristol, when he assumed the
reins of the John M. Olin Foundation from the retiring president,
William Simon. At Olin, one of Joyce's first projects was to organize
support for the launching of the Federalist Society. Joyce's work in
creating and fostering the development of the Federalist Society is
instructive and foreshadows the role that he has played in current
efforts by neoconservatives to restructure American higher education.
The Federalist Society, with Joyce's ongoing support, not only
fostered the development of ultra-conservative legal scholars and
politicians such as Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Robert Bork,
Samuel Alito, John Ashcroft, Alberto Gonzales and Kenneth Starr (all
of whom are members) but organized them into a powerful force for
reshaping American jurisprudence in support of a larger
neoconservative agenda.

Also significant in this regard is a report by Jerome Shestack, former
president of the American Bar Association, that the Federalist Society
is being increasingly being used as a platform from which to launch
ideological attacks on the mainstream legal community. Through the
device of the Federalist Society publication, ABA Watch, the society
has launched a vicious attack on the ABA. In a special edition of the
Watch, U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), co-chair of the society,
announced that he would no longer invite the ABA to participate on a
pro forma basis in the Senate judicial confirmation process. Employing
rhetoric eerily parallel to that being used in the current attacks on
the academy, Justice Clarence Thomas openly denounced the ABA,
declaring "I am doubtful that the ABA can ever reform itself."

In her testimony before Pennsylvania's Select Committee on Academic
Freedom in Higher Education, which convened in Philadelphia, Anne
Neal, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni,
expressed a similar sentiment as to the ability of the academy to
reform itself. "Faced with growing legislative pressure on this issue,
the higher education establishment issued the American Council on
Education statement, figured it would pretend to have a quick
conversion, endorse intellectual diversity, get those yahoo
legislators off their backs and go back to business as usual. DO NOT
LET THEM GET AWAY WITH THIS CHARADE."

In 1985, Michael Joyce left the Olin Foundation to assume the
presidency of the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, in Milwaukee.
During this time, he not only built the Bradley Foundation into the
largest and most influential right-wing foundation in the country, he
also forged a formidable alliance among a small group of the nation's
largest, far right-wing foundations so that their resources could be
more strategically deployed in support of the developing
neoconservative agenda. Included in this alliance are the Koch
Foundation (either directly or through its subsidiary the Claude Lambe
Foundation), the Castle Rock Foundation (Coors) and the Sarah Scaife
Foundations (either directly or through its subsidiaries the Carthage
Foundation and the Alleghany Foundation) which, together with Olin and
Bradley, have collectively financed the rise of the neoconservative
movement in this country and have done so with an impressive display
tactical precision.

It is a telling marker of the ideological cohesiveness and extremism
of this core group of philanthropies that three of the five founding
members, Joseph Coors, David Koch and Harry Bradley, were members and
financial supporters of the John Birch Society. The Scaife
foundations, headed by Richard Mellon Scaife, are also involved,
albeit in less direct ways.
In the past 20 years this core group of funders has, by many reports,
built and strategically linked an impressive array of almost 500 think
tanks, centers, institutes and "concerned citizens groups" both within
and outside of the academy. It is particularly telling to observe the
funding sources of these organizations during the first 10-15 years of
their existence, when their ideological identities were being
established. A small sampling of these entities include the Cato
Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute,
the Manhattan Institute, the Hoover Institution, the Claremont
Institute, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, Middle East
Forum, Accuracy in Media, and the National Association of Scholars, as
well as Horowitz's Center of the Study of Popular Culture.

The absence of formal organizational linkages between the entities
within these networks creates an illusion of independent analytical
voices reaching similar conclusions about strategic policy issues, a
technique known in the public relations industry as "astroturfing."
This network has developed an enormous capacity to generate "data"
consistent with the targeted political agenda and world views of its
core group of funders to quickly and redundantly represent these
issues in the mainstream press by what appear to be the voices of
independent analysts and to translate these viewpoints into public
policy that serves the focused ideological agenda of this core group
of funders. The Bradley Foundation under Michael Joyce's leadership
has even established a publishing house, Encounter Books, to ensure
that grantees like Horowitz have a quasi-academic outlet for their
viewpoints.

The degree of interconnectedness within this network of organizations
is considerable but almost invisible to the casual observer. For
example, when ACTA's president, Anne Neal, introduced herself to the
Select Committee on Academic Freedom in Higher Education in the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives, she presented ACTA as "a
bipartisan network of college and university trustees and alumni
across the country dedicated to academic freedom."

Full disclosure should have required some mention of the fact that
ACTA (see funding sources above), which changed its name from the
National Alumni Forum in 1998, was established by the Intercollegiate
Studies Institute in 1994. The Intercollegiate Studies Institute in
turn evolved from William Bennett's Madison Center for Educational
Affairs and the Institute for Educational Affairs founded by Irving
Kristol, Michael Joyce's mentor, and William Simon, the first
president of the John M. Olin Foundation. Bennett and Kristol also sit
on ACTA's Board of Directors. The remarkably consistent record of
funding across all of the incarnations of this organization and the
high degree of redundancy with Horowitz's own, highly partisan Center
for the Study of Popular Culture is not consistent with Neal's
definition of ACTA as an independent, non-partisan organization.

Another example illustrative of the quietly incestuous nature of this
network is presented by an article by the Boston Globe columnist Cathy
Young. The article is entitled "Liberal bias in the ivory tower" and
by all appearances is an independent opinion piece written by a
regular Globe columnist. At the end of the article Young identifies
herself as "a contributing editor at Reason Magazine." What is
undisclosed in the article is that Reason Magazine is the publication
of the Reason Foundation, whose funding sources are virtually the same
as those funding Horowitz's "Academic Bill of Rights" project and
Neal's ACTA.

Young's premise for the article is stated in her opening sentence:
"Yet another study has come out documenting what most conservatives
consider to be blindingly obvious: the leftwing tilt of the American
professoriate." The study that she references was conducted by Stanley
Rothman, now emeritus professor at Smith College; S. Robert Lichter,
emeritus professor at George Mason University; and Neil Nevitte of the
University of Toronto, and was published in the online journal Forum.
This study was also cited by Neal in her testimony in Pennsylvania.
Young does not inform her readers that Rothman is director of the
Center for the Study of Social and Political Change, a center with
funding sources that are remarkably redundant with Horowitz's Center
for the Study of Popular Culture. Lichter is also president of the
Center for Media and Public Affairs, which again has funding sources
that are redundant with those referenced earlier.

In addition, a recent article in Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting is
highly critical of Lichter's research methodology. Another example of
such conflicted interests is provided by Professor Thomas Reeves. When
Reeves writes in strong support of Horowitz's proposals on the History
News Network, he fails to note that he is a spokesman for the
California Association of Scholars, a branch of the National
Association of Scholars (see funding sources above) and that he is
director of the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute, which was, again,
brought into being by the Olin and Bradley Foundations.

This manufactured drumbeat against "academic bias" is amplified by
Stanley Kurtz of the Hoover Institution (see funding sources above),
Heather MacDonald, a John M. Olin fellow at the Manhattan Institute
(see funding sources above), and Brian C. Anderson, editor of the
Manhattan Institute's City Journal and a former research fellow at the
American Enterprise Institute (see funding sources above).

The relentlessness with which columnists and experts with direct
funding relationships with Olin, Scaife, Bradley, Koch and Coors level
charges of academic bias and assert the need for legislative reform of
higher education is remarkable. The goal of this narrowly focused and
ideologically driven public relations campaign can only be understood
in terms of its fostering of a political climate in which federal
regulatory "reform" of what is universally recognized as the finest
system of higher education in the world, will be tolerated.

Indeed, as has been discussed, such regulatory oversight may already
be in the offing. The academy stands today as one of the last spaces
in America where the democratic ideas that shape the social, economic
and political fabric of the nation can be openly and independently
debated on the basis of their merits and without coercion or
distortion from vested economic and political interests. It is
certainly in the national interest that it remain such.

Alan Jones is dean of the faculty and professor of psychology and
neuroscience at Pitzer College.

The original story and user comments can be viewed online at
http://insidehighered.com/views/2006/06/16/jones.
(c) Copyright 2006 Inside Higher Ed


--
Jim Devine / "Advocates of capitalism are very apt to appeal to the
sacred principles of liberty, which are embodied in one maxim: The
fortunate must not be restrained in the exercise of tyranny over the
unfortunate." -- Bertrand Russell

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