Monday, March 24, 2008

Ben Stein v. Darwin, Courts v. academic freedom?

• In this morning’s Inside Higher Ed: See Ben Stein’s Movie:
........Intelligent design — the idea that the “irreducible complexity” of living things can’t be explained without some notion of a creator — continues to fuel struggles on the local level to control K-12 school boards. Now proponents of the controversial idea — dismissed as pseudoscience by a wide consensus of scientists — have graduated to college, and they wield a powerful new weapon: Ben Stein.
.....The author, actor and lawyer, a former speechwriter for Presidents Nixon and Ford, perfected his monotone delivery in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” when he memorably induced a state of catatonia by lecturing his students about voodoo economics. ("Anyone? ... Anyone?") He used the deadpan style to similar effect in the quiz show “Win Ben Stein’s Money,” which pitted contestants against the host for a portion of his own paycheck. Now the conservative commentator is more interested in waking America up, with a documentary that seeks to challenge the “progressive orthodoxy of government-issued science in its winter of discontent.”
…..
.....“Expelled” begins, according to a preview on the documentary’s Web site, with a montage sequence that introduces Stein’s quest to investigate scientists who have lost tenure bids or their jobs for supporting intelligent design or questioning evolution’s ability to fully explain the origins of human life. As a lone professor repeatedly scrawls “Do Not Question Darwinism” on a classroom blackboard, Stein pits the victims of evolutionary dogma against Dawkins and other atheists. As Martin Luther King Jr. addresses a crowd on screen, Stein suggests that suppressing intelligent design contradicts America’s ideals of free expression. Flashes of Nazi death camps accompany the assertion of evolution’s “dangerous” implications….
Not So Free Speech in Campus Governance:
.....When the U.S. Supreme Court two years ago limited the First Amendment protections available to public employees, faculty groups thought that they had dodged a bullet. While the decision didn’t go the way professors hoped, it specifically indicated that additional issues might limit its application in cases involving public college professors.
.....Now, however, a federal court has applied just the principle that faculty groups thought shouldn’t be applied in higher education — that bosses can punish employees for speech deemed inappropriate — to a case involving a university. As a result, the American Association of University Professors and the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression are asking a federal appeals court to affirm that the Supreme Court decision does not apply to public higher education. The two groups warn that failure to reverse the lower court’s decision could make it impossible for professors to freely debate hiring choices or campus policies….

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

As a good republican, Stein is sure to make a profit on this ridiculous cause celebre of his. Sort of like O'Reilly and others making money off the phony attack on Christmas.

Anonymous said...

Another liberal Demoncrat bites the dust!

"Perjury, Obstruction Charges Brought Against Detroit Mayor, Aide"

torabora said...

Education will never be free from politics but the creation of the Federal Department of Education was bound to piss everyone off over time as the shifting winds of administrations waxed and waned. Today AI...tomorrow Darwin. It's positively stupid....and it's unconstitutional.... Like much of what the Beltway does to us.

That's why we have accreditor problems, funding problems, ESL problems, NCLB problems, and now AI problems. It's not exactly partisan..I see it as an evitable result of a government without any sense of probity. Both parties do it.

Education begins at home and should end at the citizens statehouse. Get Washington D.C. out of the classroom.

Anonymous said...

But it takes a Republican to really fuck up, including lying about getting into an illegal war.

torabora said...

1:08 As if there is such a thing as a "legal" war. At the very least ALL wars are immoral...they involve mass numbers of young men killing people they don't know to further the policies of folks they don't know. So what the hell difference does it make if a war is legal...HMMMMMM? Gimme a break man! Catch-22 is an all time favorite of mine. Have some sympathy for the devil. Peace Out!

Besides all that his nickname IS "W".Coincidence? I think not! Sheessh!

Tell you what... I'll trade you your "lying about getting into an illegal war" for my "Tonkin Gulf Resolution". There never was anything tangible resource wise in SE Asia but at least there's oil in the mid-East. No doubt about it.

Anonymous said...

I'll give you Tonkin in exchange for Baghdad recognition.

By illegal I mean one started by an aggressive nation with no evidence of a need for self protection. Ambiguous, yes, but it's a start to the dialogue.

torabora said...

12:02 I believe that Constitutionally POTUS needs a declaration of war to do what we did in Vietnam and are doing in Iraq. There were valid reasons for both actions but absent a DoW direct intervention should have been avoided. We've been electing garbage for politicians for decades and this is what we end up with. I just hope we can get a future Iraq similar to Jordan out of this mess. With the oil wealth that Iraq has the country should be able to be bribed into peace.

Anonymous said...

what war? i think the war you are referring to ended in May 2003...

torabora said...

6:26 Oh Yeah...The "mission accomplished" flyboy photo-op.

That one deserves a big Chunk Sheeesh!

I'll never understand how the US Government could FUBAR such a simple job as knocking off Saddaam.

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry but I just cannot get behind anybody whose one word grates in my head, "Bueller. Bueller." LOL

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...