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coda
9th July 2007, 12:20
I can't believe this is still going on!!!!


"The Regents of the University of Colorado will hold a meeting on July 24, 2007 on the Boulder campus of the University of Colorado regarding the termination of Ward Churchill. The location has yet to be determined however it will commence at 8:00 a.m. It is anticipated by Professor Churchill that this meeting will result in his unlawful termination in retaliation for his First Amendment protected speech. Professor Churchill has requested that the entire meeting be held in public and that public testimony be taken by the Regents. As of now, the Regents plan to meet behind closed doors and will not take public testimony.'


Statement of Support from Noam Chomsky:

"Without reservations, I support Churchill’s right to free speech and academic freedom, and regard the attack on him as scurrilous - and by now craven cowardice as well, as the state authorities and other critics pretend that the issue is (suddenly) his academic credentials and ethnic origins. That’s a real disgrace." - Noam Chomsky



http://wardchurchill.net/

Glory to Bethune
9th July 2007, 16:12
Chomsky himself is craven for supporting only Churchill's "right to free speech" rather than endorsing the truth of Churchill's comments. Amerikkkans are indeed little Eichmanns.

redterror19
10th July 2007, 02:55
Originally posted by [email protected] 09, 2007 11:20 am
I can't believe this is still going on!!!!


"The Regents of the University of Colorado will hold a meeting on July 24, 2007 on the Boulder campus of the University of Colorado regarding the termination of Ward Churchill. The location has yet to be determined however it will commence at 8:00 a.m. It is anticipated by Professor Churchill that this meeting will result in his unlawful termination in retaliation for his First Amendment protected speech. Professor Churchill has requested that the entire meeting be held in public and that public testimony be taken by the Regents. As of now, the Regents plan to meet behind closed doors and will not take public testimony.'

http://wardchurchill.net/
It was only recently that the committee investigating Churchill released its findings and accused him of research misconduct. They failed to agree unanimously on punishment, as some members of the committee felt his firing would stifle academic freedom. The committee also elsewhere questions the timing and motivations of the investigation, which sure as heck makes me wonder what's really behind taking down Churchill. I don't think it's concern over academic rigor. If you're railroading and blackballing someone from academia, it's not really in your interest to hold public hearings. More and more people will be forced underground now that we know we can't openly dissent.

PRC-UTE
10th July 2007, 20:13
Originally posted by Glory to [email protected] 09, 2007 03:12 pm
Chomsky himself is craven for supporting only Churchill's "right to free speech" rather than endorsing the truth of Churchill's comments. Amerikkkans are indeed little Eichmanns.
rubbish.

coda
25th July 2007, 04:26
University of Colorado Fires Professor After Remarks Likening Sept. 11 Victims to Nazi

By DAN ELLIOTT

Associated Press Writer
(AP) 10:04:11 PM (ET), Tuesday, July 24, 2007 (BOULDER, Colo.)

The University of Colorado's governing board on Tuesday fired a professor whose essay likening some Sept. 11 victims to a Nazi leader provoked national outrage and led to an investigation of research misconduct.

Ward Churchill vowed to sue, saying "New game, new game," after the Board of Regents' 8-1 vote was announced.

Three faculty committees had accused Churchill of plagiarism, falsification and other misconduct. The research allegations stem from some of Churchill's other writings, although the investigation began after the controversy over his Sept. 11 essay.

"The decision was really pretty basic," said university President Hank Brown, adding that the school had little choice but to fire Churchill to protect the integrity of the university's research.

"The individual did not express regret, did not apologize, did not indicate a willingness to refrain from this type of falsification in the future," Brown said.

Churchill's essay mentioning Sept. 11 victims and Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann prompted a chorus of demands for his firing, but university officials concluded it was protected speech under the First Amendment.

But Brown recommended in May that the regents fire Churchill after faculty committees accused him of misconduct in some of his academic writing. The allegations included misrepresenting the effects of federal laws on American Indians, fabricating evidence that the Army deliberately spread smallpox to Mandan Indians in 1837, and claiming the work of a Canadian environmental group as his own.

But the essay that thrust Churchill into the national spotlight, titled "Some People Push Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens," was not part of the investigation.

That essay and a follow-up book argued that the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks were a response to a long history of U.S. abuses. Churchill said those killed in the World Trade Center collapse were "a technocratic corps at the very heart of America's global financial empire" and called them "little Eichmanns."

Churchill has said Eichmann was a bureaucrat who carried out policies like the Holocaust that were planned by others but was still responsible for his own actions.

Churchill wrote the piece shortly after the attacks, but it drew little notice until 2005, when a professor at Hamilton College in upstate New York called attention to it when Churchill was invited to speak there.

In the uproar that followed, the regents apologized to "all Americans" for the essay, and the Colorado Legislature labeled Churchill's remarks "evil and inflammatory."

Bill Owens, then governor of Colorado, said Churchill should be fired, and George Pataki, then governor of New York, called Churchill a "bigoted terrorist supporter."

Churchill remained on the university payroll but had been out of the classroom since spring 2006, first because he was on leave and later because the school relieved him of teaching duties after the interim chancellor recommended he be fired.

The lone no vote on Tuesday came from Regent Cindy Carlisle, who could not be located for comment.

"I am going nowhere," Churchill told reporters, calling the academic investigation "a farce" and "a fraud."

Churchill's attorney, David Lane, said that the decision was retribution for Churchill's Sept. 11 remarks and that he would file suit on Wednesday.

"For the public at large, the message is there will be a payback for free speech," Lane said. "It sends a message out to the academic community generally that if you stick your neck out and make politically inflammatory comments, you will be dragged through the mud for two years and you will ultimately have your tenure terminated."

coda
25th July 2007, 06:54
University of Colorado Set To Fire Ward Churchill
by Ira Chernus
July 24, 2007


On Tuesday, July 24, the University of Colorado Board of Regents will decide whether to accept the recommendation of CU President (and former Republican senator) Hank Brown, and fire CU Professor Ward Churchill. It's not likely that Brown, one of the shrewdest (and most conservative) politicians Colorado has produced, would recommend the firing unless he was already sure the Regents would back him up. So it's a very good bet that the Regents will indeed give Churchill the axe. The only thing that might change their minds is an outpouring of public opinion supporting a professor's right to voice unpopular views.

The Regents' decision is not merely a local affair. It has enormous impact on the whole country. That gives you the right -- and the responsibility -- to let them know what you think. The chair of the University of Colorado Board of Regents is Patricia Hayes. You can write to her at: [email protected]



Why should you bother? It's still a rare occasion when a tenured professor is fired because he is an outspoken leftist. But every time a witchhunt is successful, it encourages other right-wingers to go after their favorite target. It brings the next witchhunt closer and increases the odds that it will succeed.



I'm an outspoken leftie professor at the University of Colorado too, so I've got a personal stake in this. Someone once asked me to wear a big button that said, "I am Ward Churchill." I said I'd prefer a button reading, "I am Next." But you never know who will be next. There is nothing very special about Colorado. It can happen anywhere. The witchhunters may be coming to a campus near you. That's one reason the fate of Ward Churchill matters to you.



The visible fallout from the Churchill case -- the future attacks on leftist academics -- is only the tip of the iceberg. The bigger effect is one we'll never see or hear: the silence of all those, on and off campuses, who start censoring themselves, not speaking their minds completely and directly, avoiding controversial topics in their teaching and research, because they see which way the political wind blows.



Right after the 9/11 attack, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said that people had better "watch what they say." That's the same message the CU Regents will send across the country by firing Churchill. The impact of this chilling effect is invisible and incalculable, but it is very real. And it will directly affect your freedom to hear the diversity of opinions, including the most radical opinions, that our ailing democracy needs so badly. That's another reason the fate of Ward Churchill matters to you, no matter where you live.



Of course the chilling wind would blow coldest across our college campuses. The quality of education in this country would take a blow. The efforts we profs make to engage students in critical thinking would be compromised as faculty avoid potentially damaging conflicts. The long-term trend toward turning colleges into vocational job training centers would get a boost. So would the powerful forces promoting what they call "politically neutral" indoctrination in Western culture and values.



Do we want our universities to graduate incurious and obedient functionaries rather than creative and bold leaders?



You may hesitate to weigh in on the case of the right wingers vs. Ward Churchill because you don't know the facts. After all, the faculty's Research Misconduct Committee produced a voluminous report detailing his supposed misconduct. It's the basis for firing Churchill.



Was the committee fair and accurate in its assessment? To be honest, I don't know. How could I? I'm not an expert in Native American Studies. I don't have the knowledge or experience to make an informed judgment. But neither did the committee, nor anyone else in the University bureaucracy who has brought Churchill to the academic gallows. There were two experts in Native American Studies on the committee for a while, but they quit (some say they were hounded off) because they were trying to give the matter a fair hearing, and it seemed to them that was not what the committee had in mind.



So a professor is about to be axed for research misconduct even though no one with any expertise in his field has substantiated the charges. In fact a number of experts in Native American Studies who examined the committee's report found that it had numerous flaws and seemed to reflect the selective use of evidence to advance a predetermined objective. They found no evidence of gross errors, which is what "research misconduct" means, in Churchill's work.



To be sure, Churchill has his critics in his academic field. So do I. That's what academia is all about. But as Eric Cheyfitz of Cornell University, who closely studied the committee's report, wrote, it "turns what is a debate about controversial issues of identity and genocide in Indian studies into an indictment of one position in that debate." If you start firing professors because some of their colleagues don't like their research, most all of us would have to go. And if you take apart the work of a productive scholar, looking for every little flaw you can find (a misplaced citation here, a small misquote there), most all of us would have to go. But that's not research misconduct.



Churchill's scholarship as well as his politics has always been controversial. Critics charged for many years that he wasn't adhering strictly to all the academic rules. But CU officials ignored those charges for most of those years. (In fact they granted him tenure even though he did not have a Ph.D and his work was somewhat unconventional, because they wanted a star to show their commitment to diversity. Now they are using the same unconventionality to hound Churchill out -- and raise grave questions about their concern for diversity.)



CU officials only became concerned about the quality of Churchill's work after right-wingers discovered his now-famous essay that called corporate functionaries working in the World Trade Center on 9/11 "little Eichmanns." That triggered an avalanche of conservative pressure on CU to fire Churchill. Of course the University administrators could not come out and say they were investigating him for unpopular political opinions in the post-9/11 era. So they got the Research Misconduct Committee to go through his writings with a fine-tooth comb. Lo and behold, they found the "evidence" they were looking for.



There's a lot more to the case. Charges of plagiarism rest on weak evidence and strained interpretations that don't withstand serious scrutiny. The University administrators broke their own system's rules in a number of ways. Most importantly, they let a massive campaign by outsiders -- conservatives from across the country -- influence what should be strictly an internal decision-making process.



It looks like President Hank Brown is catering to those outsiders. He has rejected his own faculty advisory committee's recommendation to discipline and suspend Churchill, opting instead to go for out-and-out firing.



The irony is that once the Regents do give Churchill the axe, he will go to court and argue that his contractual rights were violated. Both sides will trot out their experts. In the end, some judges who know nothing at all about Native American Studies will have to decide whether there is compelling evidence of research misconduct here. Since the whole case of the right wingers vs. Churchill rests on political animus, the outcome will probably depend on how conservative those judges are. If it ever reaches Supreme Court, we can unfortunately pretty well predict how it will go.


The last chance to stop that slide down the slippery legal slope is to convince the Regents that it's not in their best interests to fire Churchill. They need to know that the whole world is watching. They need to hear from you. Again, the chair of the Board of Regents is Patricia Hayes. You can write to her at: [email protected] If you want email addresses for the other Regents, go to https://www.cu.edu/regents/RgntsPUB0101.html.



Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin. Email: [email protected]


http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cf...43&ItemID=13360 (http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=43&ItemID=13360)

Luís Henrique
25th July 2007, 14:20
Churchill is an idiot, and quite possibly a fraud. But the problem is, by firing this idiot, CU makes a precedent on firing people who disagree with the mainstream mores, thus undermining the independence of professors and researchers.

Luís Henrique

Comrade Marcel
25th July 2007, 15:17
Churchill is one of those anarchists I respect, because of his essay "pascifism as pathology" and his stance on the "little Eichmanns".

coda
25th July 2007, 17:57
I respect Churchill for his 30+ years of native struggles and decentralization of AIM and his stance on blood quantum.

as for the fraud and scholarship fabrication charges, there is atleast some native oral history of the smallpox blanket theory. I mean, this stuff is well known as fact among indians.

PRC-UTE
25th July 2007, 20:55
Originally posted by Comrade [email protected] 25, 2007 02:17 pm
Churchill is one of those anarchists I respect, because of his essay "pascifism as pathology" and his stance on the "little Eichmanns".
You respect a self-described anti-communist?

EDIT: should also point out, most of the Indians so romanticised by MIMites despise Churchill as a plastic indian and self-promoting gobshite.

coda
25th July 2007, 21:56
<<most of the Indians so romanticised by MIMites despise Churchill as a plastic indian and self-promoting gobshite>>

not me&#33;

RedHal
25th July 2007, 23:18
Originally posted by Luís [email protected] 25, 2007 01:20 pm
Churchill is an idiot, and quite possibly a fraud. But the problem is, by firing this idiot, CU makes a precedent on firing people who disagree with the mainstream mores, thus undermining the independence of professors and researchers.

Luís Henrique
profs can still disagree and babble, but Churchill called the US empire out and called a spade a spade. Freedom of speach and dissent in the "free world" is an illusion, if you step over the line, the ruling class will just tie you down with endless legal hassles so you can&#39;t do your work. They have enough resources(financial and human) to drag it out as long as they want.

Despite his anti-marxism, Churchill is a professor I respect.

peaccenicked
25th July 2007, 23:52
I dont like Churchill. He promotes &#39;blowback theory&#39; which automatically blames terrorism on Muslims and the fictitious group Al qaeda. See cutting edge (http://nafeez.blogspot.com/). Churchill is like most of the mainstream left on this matter. way behind the times. Blinded by the bogeyman and straw dog of &#39;conspiracy theory&#39;, they confine themselves to defending the ever incredulous official story which is no longer part of the serious agenda of anybody with half a brain outside the left, if there is actually anybody inside the left with a brain that has not been intimidated into the academic view of institutionalised class struggle apart from Chavez who calls for a new 9/11 inquiry.

coda
26th July 2007, 05:53
http://www.oilempire.us/ward-churchill.html



Ward Churchill
supports "Blowback" paradigm, misses real story

Professor Ward Churchill is a target of the right-wing propaganda machine for daring to suggest that 9/11 happened as retaliation for US foreign policies in the Middle East.

It&#39;s a shame that Ward Churchill is so opposed to looking at the evidence for Bush / Cheney complicity in 9/11. Churchill notes that the World Trade Center had a CIA office in it -- but fails to mention that this was in Building 7, which was NOT hit by a plane.

Churchill&#39;s comments ironically support the Bush regime propaganda that 9/11 was a surprise attack, which is not true&#33; (Churchill&#39;s main disagreement with the official story is the motivation of the alleged perpetrators -- he&#39;s a supporter of the "Blowback" theory that we were attacked as revenge for US foreign policy, although "Blowback" does not adequate explain the events of 9/11, and the interference with numerous governmental systems designed to prevent attacks.)

Hopefully Professor Churchill will be able to keep his job and that the hate directed against him moderates (or goes away), but it would have been better for him to get his facts straight about Building 7 and how 9/11 was deliberately allowed to happen and assisted.

His books "The Cointelpro Papers" and "Agents of Repression" are among the best analyses of the "COINTELPRO" programs to disrupt social change organizations.


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Left Denial on 9/11 Turns Irrational
by Jack Straw
www.indybay.org/news/2005/05/1736367.php 6 May 2005
www.globalresearch.ca 8 May 2005
The URL of this article is: http://globalresearch.ca/articles/STR505A.html

People like Noam Chomsky and Ward Churchill are turning toward the irrational as they continue to deny increasing signs that 9/11 was an inside job.
Ever since the events of 9/11, the American Left and even ultra-Left have been downright fanatical in combating notions that the U.S. government was complicit in the attacks or at least had foreknowledge of the events. Lately, this stance has taken a turn towards the irrational.
In a recent interview, Noam Chomsky has made an incredible assertion:

"There&#39;s by now a small industry on the thesis that the administration had something to do with 9-11. I&#39;ve looked at some of it, and have often been asked. There&#39;s a weak thesis that is possible though extremely unlikely in my opinion, and a strong thesis that is close to inconceivable. The weak thesis is that they knew about it and didn&#39;t try to stop it. The strong thesis is that they were actually involved. The evidence for either thesis is, in my opinion, based on a failure to understand properly what evidence is. Even in controlled scientific experiments one finds all sorts of unexplained phenomena, strange coincidences, loose ends, apparent contradictions, etc. Read the letters in technical science journals and you&#39;ll find plenty of samples. In real world situations, chaos is overwhelming, and these will mount to the sky. That aside, they&#39;d have had to be quite mad to try anything like that. It would have had to involve a large number of people, something would be very likely to leak, pretty quickly, they&#39;d all be lined up before firing squads and the Republican Party would be dead forever. That would have happened whether the plan succeeded or not, and success was at best a long shot; it would have been extremely hard to predict what would happen."

More recently, Ward Churchill, under fire for his comments following the 9/11 attacks comparing the people in the WTC towers to "little Eichmanns", took a somewhat different turn to the irrational. This comes via an email from a friend:

"I went to the Friday (3/25/05) night event which was organized by the so-called &#39;anarchist&#39; AK Press people who in &#39;true anarchist spirit&#39; only allowed written questions which they selected (i.e. censored) and handed to Churchill to read one by one. Needless to say my question as to how he reconciles the fact that his &#39;roosting chickens&#39; thesis is consistent with the &#39;war on terror&#39; mythology was not asked. A badly phrased 9-11 question did get through. He first said "as to what actually happened on 9-11, I&#39;m open to different theories, I have not seen any evidence" (to which I would of course say - well look at it you idiot&#33;) - or something to that effect - at this point there was scattered clapping - and then he added "But, the problem with the idea that it was an inside job is that it suggests that brown people are not capable of such feats and gives all the credit to the white man, another master race fantasy". Many people seemed to like this silly analysis - although a couple of people shouted loudly "that&#39;s ridiculous&#33;". Anyway he clearly illustrated what a dolt he is, his past work notwithstanding."

This happened in Oakland. The following day, while Churchill was speaking at the Anarchist Book Fair in San Francisco, someone yelled out to the effect that the people who are after Churchill are also the real perpetrators of 9/11. He paused for maybe two seconds, and responded to the effect that this was the same racist crap about brown people not being able to defend themselves. The audience gave him a standing ovation. Such a viewpoint parallels an article in New Left Review from Summer &#39;04 in which a (self-styled) situationist group named Retort from the San Francisco Bay Area claimed the 9/11 attacks are evidence that outside groups can still strike at the dominant spectacle from the outside. The Reverend Chuck-O of Indymedia omnipresence, always on the prowl for anyone daring to discuss 9/11 skepticism and acting when he can to quickly end any such discussions, has also endorsed this view.
With all due regard to Chomsky and Churchill, and an absolute stance against any effort at censorship, we must not let respect for their past achievements or current efforts at repressing them stand in the way of clarity and the insistence on the truth.
Chomsky condemns the actions supposedly undertaken by "Arab terrorists", driven by the injustices of U.S. foreign policy, though he also condemns the "reaction" of the US government to these attacks as opportunistic moves to legitimate imperialist expansion, a perspective widely shared in the American "Left" and even "ultra-Left". On the other hand, Churchill implicitly endorses these attacks as blows against the empire, something others like Retort are more willing to say outright.
But both perspectives fully accept the official story as to who carried out the attacks.

[note: the "Left Denial" article is generally very good about the strange myopia of the "left" about 9/11, but it is marred by a strange focus on alleged, unprovable assertions of temperature inside the burning towers that supposedly means they were demolished, and most of the web links for additional information are bogus. The "Left Denial" article ignores the evidence about foreknowledge, warnings to insiders, the stock trades on United and American Airlines just before 9/11, the anthrax attacks on the media and the Democrats, the motivation of Peak Oil and creating the pretext for invading the Middle East oil fields, among other issues that have very strong evidence for complicity. These omissions allow the leftists in denial to avoid the issue of complicity.]


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www.counterpunch.org/churchill02032005.html

February 3, 2005
On the Injustice of Getting Smeared
A Campaign of Fabrications and Gross Distortions
By WARD CHURCHILL

In the last few days there has been widespread and grossly inaccurate media coverage concerning my analysis of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, coverage that has resulted in defamation of my character and threats against my life. What I actually said has been lost, indeed turned into the opposite of itself, and I hope the following facts will be reported at least to the same extent that the fabrications have been.
The piece circulating on the internet was developed into a book, On the Justice of Roosting Chickens. Most of the book is a detailed chronology of U.S. military interventions since 1776 and U.S. violations of international law since World War II. My point is that we cannot allow the U.S. government, acting in our name, to engage in massive violations of international law and fundamental human rights and not expect to reap the consequences.
I am not a "defender"of the September 11 attacks, but simply pointing out that if U.S. foreign policy results in massive death and destruction abroad, we cannot feign innocence when some of that destruction is returned. I have never said that people "should" engage in armed attacks on the United States, but that such attacks are a natural and unavoidable consequence of unlawful U.S. policy. As Martin Luther King, quoting Robert F. Kennedy, said, "Those who make peaceful change impossible make violent change inevitable."
This is not to say that I advocate violence; as a U.S. soldier in Vietnam I witnessed and participated in more violence than I ever wish to see. What I am saying is that if we want an end to violence, especially that perpetrated against civilians, we must take the responsibility for halting the slaughter perpetrated by the United States around the world. My feelings are reflected in Dr. King&#39;s April 1967 Riverside speech, where, when asked about the wave of urban rebellions in U.S. cities, he said, "I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed . . . without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today - my own government."
In 1996 Madeleine Albright, then Ambassador to the UN and soon to be U.S. Secretary of State, did not dispute that 500,000 Iraqi children had died as a result of economic sanctions, but stated on national television that "we" had decided it was "worth the cost." I mourn the victims of the September 11 attacks, just as I mourn the deaths of those Iraqi children, the more than 3 million people killed in the war in Indochina, those who died in the U.S. invasions of Grenada, Panama and elsewhere in Central America, the victims of the transatlantic slave trade, and the indigenous peoples still subjected to genocidal policies. If we respond with callous disregard to the deaths of others, we can only expect equal callousness to American deaths.
Finally, I have never characterized all the September 11 victims as "Nazis." What I said was that the "technocrats of empire" working in the World Trade Center were the equivalent of "little Eichmanns." Adolf Eichmann was not charged with direct killing but with ensuring the smooth running of the infrastructure that enabled the Nazi genocide. Similarly, German industrialists were legitimately targeted by the Allies.
It is not disputed that the Pentagon was a military target, or that a CIA office was situated in the World Trade Center. Following the logic by which U.S. Defense Department spokespersons have consistently sought to justify target selection in places like Baghdad, this placement of an element of the American "command and control infrastructure" in an ostensibly civilian facility converted the Trade Center itself into a "legitimate" target. Again following U.S. military doctrine, as announced in briefing after briefing, those who did not work for the CIA but were nonetheless killed in the attack amounted to no more than "collateral damage." If the U.S. public is prepared to accept these "standards" when the are routinely applied to other people, they should be not be surprised when the same standards are applied to them.
It should be emphasized that I applied the "little Eichmanns" characterization only to those described as "technicians." Thus, it was obviously not directed to the children, janitors, food service workers, firemen and random passers-by killed in the 9-1-1 attack. According to Pentagon logic, were simply part of the collateral damage. Ugly? Yes. Hurtful? Yes. And that&#39;s my point. It&#39;s no less ugly, painful or dehumanizing a description when applied to Iraqis, Palestinians, or anyone else. If we ourselves do not want to be treated in this fashion, we must refuse to allow others to be similarly devalued and dehumanized in our name.
The bottom line of my argument is that the best and perhaps only way to prevent 9-1-1-style attacks on the U.S. is for American citizens to compel their government to comply with the rule of law. The lesson of Nuremberg is that this is not only our right, but our obligation. To the extent we shirk this responsibility, we, like the "Good Germans" of the 1930s and &#39;40s, are complicit in its actions and have no legitimate basis for complaint when we suffer the consequences. This, of course, includes me, personally, as well as my family, no less than anyone else.
These points are clearly stated and documented in my book, On the Justice of Roosting Chickens, which recently won Honorary Mention for the Gustavus Myer Human Rights Award. for best writing on human rights. Some people will, of course, disagree with my analysis, but it presents questions that must be addressed in academic and public debate if we are to find a real solution to the violence that pervades today&#39;s world. The gross distortions of what I actually said can only be viewed as an attempt to distract the public from the real issues at hand and to further stifle freedom of speech and academic debate in this country.
Ward Churchill is the author of On the Justice of Roosting Chickens.


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peaccenicked
26th July 2007, 08:18
.double post

peaccenicked
26th July 2007, 08:19
Professor Ward Churchill is a target of the right-wing propaganda machine for daring to suggest that 9/11 happened as retaliation for US foreign policies in the Middle East.

While I hate to see anyone harrassed unjustly. Retaliation is blowback theory.
The trouble with blowback theory is that it is plausible but the evidence shows all is not what it seems, as this lecture (http://media.putfile.com/Nafeez-Ahmed---Creating-Terror---7-13-2007) by Nafeez Ahmed demonstrates.
Blowback theory diverts attention away from the history of a false flag operations,
and assumes Al qeada is not connected to the CIA, when it is well documented that it was founded by them.
That is the main story. All else is relatively a diversion.

Volderbeek
27th July 2007, 03:59
Originally posted by [email protected] 25, 2007 06:52 pm
I dont like Churchill. He promotes &#39;blowback theory&#39; which automatically blames terrorism on Muslims and the fictitious group Al qaeda. See cutting edge (http://nafeez.blogspot.com/). Churchill is like most of the mainstream left on this matter. way behind the times. Blinded by the bogeyman and straw dog of &#39;conspiracy theory&#39;, they confine themselves to defending the ever incredulous official story which is no longer part of the serious agenda of anybody with half a brain outside the left, if there is actually anybody inside the left with a brain that has not been intimidated into the academic view of institutionalised class struggle apart from Chavez who calls for a new 9/11 inquiry.
There&#39;s a reason the "mainstream left" doesn&#39;t support 9/11 conspiracy theories. Because the left is supposed to be scientific in its approach to reality (materialism anyone?)&#33; We shouldn&#39;t be joining the right-wing survivalist nutbars in spinning stories just to scare people.

PigmerikanMao
27th July 2007, 04:24
For the most part, the people killed in those attacks were just a bunch of technocrats and bourgeois. <_<

Severian
27th July 2007, 06:09
Churchill&#39;s been fired for his political views. This should certainly be opposed. He should keep his job or not, based on how well he does his job. The precedent set or reinforced by firing Churchill will be used against others.

If we&#39;re discussing Churchill&#39;s politics, though, he&#39;s a raving anticommunist who supported the Nicaraguan contras. He&#39;s a massively dishonest writer - I once started reading one of his books, found him quoting the RCP as representing communists generally and Bob Black representing anarchists generally - in order to prove that the entire left denies the reality of genocide against Native Americans&#33; At this point I decided it wasn&#39;t worth reading any more of his BS....

His crap defending the WTC attack is pretty much in line with that political perspective, with its hostility to class struggle. The number of workers vs more privileged layers killed didn&#39;t matter to al-Qaeda, and doesn&#39;t matter to Churchill.

chimx
28th July 2007, 00:12
Churchill is an idiot, and quite possibly a fraud.

I would say that it would be more accurate the other way around. He is a fraud, and possibly an idiot.

RedKnight
28th July 2007, 00:22
The term "little eichmans" was first used by John Zerzen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Eichmann So that is one way in which he is a plagarist. Also I am more of an "indian" than he is. There is no record of any of his ancestors being native. While I do have native american ancestry going back to my great-great-great-great grandmother. Yet I do not claim to speak for the indiginous population of the United States. I&#39;m an american period. I&#39;m as much a Crow as a modern day Briton is a Celt. Therefore his opinions should have no more weight than mine, based on supposed racial ancestry. No matter where our ancestors came from, we are all in the same boat now.

coda
28th July 2007, 00:33
Published on Thursday, July 26, 2007 by CommonDreams.org

Who Knows Why Ward Churchill Was Fired?
by Ira Chernus

My employer, the University of Colorado, has finally fired my colleague, tenured professor Ward Churchill. Why? There are lots of explanations. Take your pick.

The University claims that Churchill is guilty of “research misconduct.” That’s debatable. As I’ve pointed out on this site, none of the people doing the investigation had expertise in Churchill’s field of Native American Studies. Several people who are experts in that field have challenged the University’s claim. So who knows for sure?

Churchill and his lawyer say it had nothing to do with his research and everything to do with his infamous words “little Eichmanns,” describing the victims of the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center. The nation’s headline-writers agree. None of the headlines I’ve seen mentioned “research misconduct.” They all mentioned 9/11. Churchill’s sacrilege drove conservatives nuts. Last year, even Colorado’s Republican governor called for Churchill to be fired.

It’s not just conservatives. This year Colorado’s new Democratic governor cheered the decision, too, as did many political centrists and even liberals. But it was the conservatives who launched and persisted in the anti-Churchill attack, outraged by his “anti-American” views.

Then there’s another way to see it, through the lens of the old adage, “Follow the money.” Here’s what CU president (and former right-wing Republican senator) Hank Brown wrote in a letter to the whole university community, just hours after Churchill got the axe: “We are accountable to those who have a stake in the university: the people of Colorado who contribute &#036;200 million annually in tax dollars … the donors who gave us more than &#036;130 million this year.” Like any university president, Brown’s job is to watch the bottom line. Like any public university president, he has to satisfy the state legislature (with a majority of centrist Democrats and a sizeable minority of reactionary Republicans).

But in a state that ranks near the bottom in public funding for higher ed, Brown has to keep a special eye on private donors. So at the same time he released a letter to CU donors, on the letterhead of the CU’s fund-raising arm, the University of Colorado Foundation. “Donors to CU gave a record &#036;130 million this past fiscal year,” he wrote, “and it is incumbent upon us to work to continue to be a place worthy of your investment.”

Once the attack on Churchill began, Brown — and all CU administrators and Regents — had to decide whether to curry favor with the left or the right. If you were in their shoes, which flank would you protect? Where would you see the money coming from? Duh&#33;

However, it’s not fair to blame it simply on pursuit of the almighty dollar. There is some evidence that the administrators who nailed Churchill may genuinely share the outraged conservatives’ views.

Just like Hank Brown (who is president of the whole CU system), the head of the Boulder campus, Chancellor Bud Peterson, sent out a letter justifying the firing. The most important issue is about values, Peterson wrote. “We must now reaffirm our core values. … In a time such as ours, in which the very concept of “truth” is often bracketed by relativism … and reduced by manipulation and “spin,” our students must know that when they enter our classrooms, they occupy sacred territory where truth is always pursued on a foundation of ethics, honor, and integrity.”

In fact, if our students have been paying attention they know that CU administrators have been manipulating and spinning this story hard ever since it broke, trying to placate the right-wingers calling for Churchill’s blood.

Our students also know what makes our classrooms sacred territory. They are supposed to be set apart from the rest of society, protected from political pressure, so that people can explore new, radical, even offensive ideas freely, with no risk of retaliation. That’s what makes them the intellectual laboratories that supply the creative new ideas of the future. The whole system would not work unless truth was considered uncertain, elusive, always open to debate.

That’s why conservatives are so easily enraged by academic scholars. Whenever you hear about the need to reaffirm “core values” against the “relativism” of truth, it’s a good bet that the cultural conservatives are back in town, gunning for some more or less arbitrary target who symbolizes the uncertainty of truth, which frightens conservatives so badly they don’t really care who gets hurt, as long as they can wage another battle on behalf of the absolute truth and absolute certainty they crave.

The conservatives thought they got that certainty on September 11, 2001, when New York’s hero, Rudy Giuliani, announced that “the era of moral relativism … must end. Moral relativism does not have a place in this discussion and debate.” Now, with the warrior-in-chief getting record low approval ratings, conservatives can’t even be sure that the war on terrorism can give them certainty any more. So they need another target, to give them that certainty. Remember, no one paid attention to questions about Churchill’s scholarship until he questioned the conservatives’ cherished belief that America is absolutely good and Osama is absolutely evil.

It’s appropriate that Churchill was fired just after the release of the last Harry Potter book. Both generated huge media circuses, because they are both what the public always craves: stories full of colorful characters, some good and some evil, in a plot that creates nail-biting excitement because there must be a definite winner. There can be no compromise between good and evil. But no one knows which side will win until the very end.

Is Ward Churchill Harry Potter or is he Voldemort? That’s what make it such a great media story. You can have it either way. The mainstream media don’t really care.

But for the right wing, Ward must be Voldemort — and Osama. They all play the same role in the morality play that conservatives want life to be. Now CU administrators and regents have satisfied the right by insisting that they know the absolute truth about the Churchill case, even though they have no expertise in his field, while the many experts in Native American studies who came to Churchill’s defense are just dead wrong. Case closed.

Of course, the case has actually just been opened. That’s the big difference between Harry Potter and Ward Churchill. There will be no more Potter books. But the firing of Churchill was merely the end of book one. No one knows how many more volumes will follow, or who will win in the end.

One thing is certain. The outcome of the future volumes will be decided in court by judges, and perhaps jurors, who know nothing about Native American Studies or academic research. However they decide, their judgments will be just as debatable as the latest theory any professor teaches. In the end, there will be no end to the debate about the Churchill case. There will still be lots of explanations, and you will still be able to take your pick — which is just as it should be in a great university.

My university can be a great one. But its administration and Regents have made the task a lot harder. They’ve let the university be turned into a media circus tent blown by the political winds, chasing a chimera of certainty more elusive than any wind. It may look like free speech, academic creativity, and the University of Colorado have been dealt a mortal blow. But remember, you’ve only read the first book.


Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin. Email: [email protected]