Ward Churchill's Sins Against the Empire
“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
Academic free speech and the First Amendment
once again are under intense fire in the midst of a political
and mass media witch hunt on Ward Churchill, Professor of Ethnic
Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder. The controversy
erupted over objection to Churchill’s participation on a
panel at Hamilton College in upstate New York once a controversial
essay he published on the Internet the day after 9-11, entitled
“Some People Push Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens,”
was unearthed and transformed into fodder for a lurid media spectacle.
Churchill was tarred and feathered as demands
for termination of his tenured position grew to a roar. The attack
shifted from the words of his essay to the body of his writings
and then to charges of plagiarism and scrutiny of his professed
Indian heritage. It immediately became clear that the Right was
hunting far larger game than just a radical critic of US imperialism
named Ward Churchill. They were exploiting the controversy in
an effort to advance their ongoing Culture Wars whereby they seek
to demolish free speech rights, liberal and left values, and the
academic tenure system which in their view protects an army of
crazed radicals corrupting the minds of youth.
Churchill’s essay argued that 9-11 was
inevitable blowback in response to US global terrorism and imperialist
policies against Islamic nations. Harking back to Malcolm X’s
quip that the assassination of President Kennedy was an example
of “chickens coming home to roost,” such that leaders
of a violent system themselves are victims of violence, Churchill
applied the same analogy to the US system as a whole. According
to Churchill, 9-11 was the long-delayed but inexorable moment
when the US paid a small fraction of the political costs it has
incurred in its ruthless assault on nations and peoples around
the globe. Churchill emphasized that unless it drastically changes
its imperialist policies, the US will be struck again, likely
in a bigger and more destructive way.
Churchill underscored the contradictions and
hypocrisies in the thinking of the US government and citizenry,
whereby the nation mourns the victims of the September 11 attacks,
but sheds no tears for the half million children killed in the
US economic blockade of Iraq during the 1990s, the 100,000 innocent
citizens killed in the US bombing and invasion of Iraq, or the
countless others who died as a result of US invasions of Grenada,
Panama, Nicaragua, Chile, East Timor, and elsewhere. The nation
condemns 9-11 as a heinous act, but it is no less despicable than
the terrorist violence the US directs against peoples throughout
the globe.
One can read similar critiques of US imperialism
in Left critics such as Noam Chomsky, but Chomsky is ignored not
demonized. So why the national furor over Ward Churchill? Whereas
Chomsky condemned 9-11 and viewed it as a terrorist attack, Churchill
argued that the World Trade Center, like the Pentagon, was a military
not a civilian target, and thus flying planes into the twin towers
was not an act of terrorism. In imprecise language at best, Churchill
declared that the 2,977 people killed in the “sterile sanctuary
of the twin towers” were not innocent victims, but rather
“little Eichmanns.” Without nuance or qualification,
Churchill argued that those killed in the World Trade Center were
as culpable for US violence as top Nazi bureaucrat Adolph Eichmann
was for Hitler’s “final solution.” In his now
infamous words, Churchill said, “Those in the World Trade
Center . . . were civilians of a sort. But innocent? Gimme a break.
They formed a technocratic corps at the very heart of America's
global financial empire – the "mighty engine of profit"
to which the military dimension of U.S. policy has always been
enslaved – and they did so both willingly and knowingly.”
Electronic Lynching and Right-Wing Jihad
“The most that can honestly be said
of those involved on September 11 is that they finally responded
in kind to some of what this country has dispensed to their people
as a matter of course.” Ward Churchill
Churchill’s essay was flawed in numerous
senses and was sharply criticized by critics from both the Right
and the Left. Churchill rightly condemned the barbaric history
of US imperialism, but he offered no critique of fundamentalist
Islamic movements rooted in fanaticism, intolerance, and violence.
He failed to articulate the fundamental differences between two
forms of opposition to US policy: a secular, pro-modern Left critique
that is progressive, emancipatory, and radically democratic, and
an atavistic, fundamentalist, anti-modern critique that is reactionary,
theocratic, puritanical, and repressive. Numerous liberals and
Leftists have defended Churchill’s First Amendment rights,
while offering more thoughtful and nuanced analyses of 9-11 attentive
to these distinctions. Churchill did, however, raise the difficult
question of what level of responsibility “ordinary Americans”
(those not working directly for the military or “technocratic
corps”) do in fact bear for the violence their government
inflicts on peoples throughout the world.
The critique from the Right went far beyond addressing
the substance of Churchill’s essay, however, to launch vicious
ad hominem attacks on his character and ethnic background (such
as Anne Coulter’s racist essay, “The Little Injun
That Could”), to distort his intention and meaning, and
to demand that he be fired from a tenured position designed to
protect academics from ideological persecution. Conservative politicians
and media pundits demonized Churchill as a “madman”
and “cheerleader for terrorist” who spews vile “hate
speech” tantamount to treason. Gleefully pouncing on their
favorite target -- the alleged hegemony of the “academic
Left” (an absurd myth as any vulnerable and marginalized
progressive professor such as myself can attest to) -- right-wing
pundits like Bill O’Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, and Joe Scarborough
exhorted their benighted media flocks to flood Hamilton College,
the University of Colorado, and Colorado politicians with vociferous
letters of complaint demanding that Churchill be fired.
Right-wing media Czars whipped up such an Orwellian
hate fest that Churchill received 140 death threats within a four
day period after the story broke on national media. Two Boulder
shock jocks pounded on Churchill in a daily hate-fest and bought
a full-page ad in the Daily Camera urging the university to fire
Churchill. Politicians eagerly took the bit to promote their Culture
War against liberal and left values. Along with a bevy of republican
and democrat state lawmakers, Colorado Governor Bill Owens excoriated
Churchill and demanded termination of his tenure. The Colorado
House of Representatives released a Joint Resolution in support
of the 9-11 victims’ families and vilified Churchill for
striking “an evil and inflammatory blow against America’s
healing process.” Republican Representative David Balmer
attempted to force Churchill out of his job by amending a budget
reform bill to the effect that no tax revenues would be sent to
the University of Colorado so long as it continued to employ the
long-haired anti-Christ.
Within the Colorado university community, reaction
was mixed. Outraged Board of Regent members such as Tom Lucern
demanded that Churchill be fired. The Board held a special meeting
on February 3 to determine his fate, and decided to postpone the
decision for a month while they scrutinize every word he has written.
Philip P. DiStefano, the interim chancellor at Colorado University
and Boulder Faculty Assembly, declared Churchill’s ideas
to be “repugnant,” “offensive,” and “odious,”
but nonetheless supported his right to express them, while his
colleagues in the Ethnic Studies department provided “full
and unconditional support” for his free speech rights. While
College Republicans denounced Churchill and organized a petition
drive for his dismissal, student supporters denounced the furor
as a McCarthyesque witch hunt engineered to silence a progressive
member of their community. Showing logical fidelity to their philosophy
of freedom, some College Republicans chastised their right wing
peers and formed the organization Republicans for Churchill in
support of his First Amendment rights. As the mob’s furor
grew, the American Union of University Professors and the American
Civil Liberties Union came out strongly in favor of controversial
speech and Churchill’s First Amendment rights.
Free Speech – Except for You
“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.” Ward Churchill
Churchill’s critics from the Right apparently
never read his essay, or if they bothered have seriously misinterpreted
it. A cursory reading of “Some People Push Back” reveals
that Churchill was not applauding the 9-11 attacks. Rather, as
he clarified in a written statement after the media frenzy broke,
he was “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.” Churchill
insists that he “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.”
Churchill insists that his real point was 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.”
Whereas Bush is perpetuating his violent policies
in Iraq and doing everything he can to increase rather than lessen
terrorism around the world and against the US, Churchill was arguing
that if the US government and citizenry truly want peace, then
they must end the violence against the victims of US ambition
and aggression. Nowhere in his essay does Churchill advocate violence
against anyone, and nothing in his analysis falls outside of the
range of constitutionally protected speech. The fatwas demanding
his termination are baseless.
To give an example of a tendentious and decontextualized
misreading of Churchill, consider his statement from an April
2004 interview in Satya magazine where he stated that “More
9-11s are needed.” Glibly interpreting this statement in
a vacuum, the fulminating pundit could easily uphold Churchill
as pro-terrorism and anti-American. Read in its proper context,
however, it is clear that Churchill is only saying that it may
take more 9-11s before the American people wake up to the real
causes of such attacks and realize if they want peace they have
to promote justice. As of yet, there has been no serious debate
of the various causes of 9-11 and the American people apparently
learned little but how to revert to a blind jingoism.
The methodology of Churchill’s persecutors
is to seize on the inflammatory sound bite about little Eichmanns,
pump it up into alleged “hate speech” against America,
and scrub it from its context where he analyzes some of the root
causes of terrorist attacks against the US. The doublespeak strategy
of Churchill’s right-wing critics is to affirm his right
to free speech, but then argue that it doesn’t apply to
him because (1) taxpayers fund his position and (2) he is incompetent,
morally irresponsible, and lacks integrity.
The first argument is wholly nonsensical. Taxpayers
might have the right to ensure that those people whose occupations
they pay for do their job, but they do not have the right to enforce
the content of their speech and thought. A professor is doing
his or her job when the professor publishes and teaches students
in a professional and responsible way. The terms “professional
and responsible” do not mean that the professor holds no
views of his or her own, even controversial and radical ones,
but rather that the professor respects the students’ own
views and fosters critical thinking and learning processes within
the classroom. As Ward Churchill is a prolific writer who is immensely
popular with his students, there seems to be no credible case
to assail him for being unprofessional or irresponsible. Such
a charge would have to be substantiated on the evidence of his
meeting professional teaching standards, and not on his political
views and writings.
Moreover, who are these “taxpayers”
conservatives insist that professors like Churchill are so beholden
to? There is no monolithic bloc of people against or for someone
like Churchill. Some taxpayers are conservatives who would detest
his views and support his dismissal, but others are liberals and
radicals who defend his views and his right to state them. I am
a professor and taxpayer in Texas and unavoidably fund viewpoints
and research projects (such as animal experimentation) with which
I strongly disagree. But I am under no illusion that I have a
right to tell other professors and state employees what to say
or to silence them when I disagree.
The second argument is agreeable in principle,
but applying it to Churchill smacks of academic fascism. Among
the most vocal of Churchill’s opponents is Colorado Governor
Bill Owens. Reveling in the media spotlight, Owens has lost no
opportunity to defame Churchill on every level. Appearing more
frequently on national TV than Viagra commercials, Owens argues
that Churchill should be fired from his tenured position because
he is “incompetent” as a scholar and teacher and “lacks
integrity” as a human being. Although tenure grants a professor
permanent job status, a professor can nonetheless be fired for
things such as criminal activity, sexual harassment, plagiarism,
or incompetence. Except within the boundaries of following professional
academic rules and social laws, the concept of “integrity”
is not directly applicable to assessing whether or not a professor
should keep a position.
No doubt, universities employ professors who
are liars, alcoholics, drug addicts, poor parents, and so on,
but their faults as persons and “lack of integrity”
have no direct relevance to their academic job performance. Owen
and other persecutors see Churchill’s radicalism not as
a valid political position but rather as a fatal character flaw
(as they no doubt would like to see a uniform America devoid of
dissent) that warrants termination from his tenured position.
But this politicization of moral categories is as arbitrary as
it is repressive.
Similarly, the concept of “incompetence”
certainly is vague and open to conflicting interpretations. If
a professor plagiarized his or her work or lacked rudimentary
knowledge and skills in his or her field, he or she could rightly
be declared as incompetent and justly fired. Unfortunately, many
tenured professors are horrible teachers and never publish or
keep up with the research in their field. Such professors might
justifiably be branded as incompetent, although, for better or
worse, they are protected by the tenure system. But those who
brand a productive scholar and inspiring teacher like Ward Churchill
as incompetent because he made controversial or “offensive”
Constitutionally protected remarks reveal nothing but their own
political motivations and incompetence as citizens who should
be cognizant of First Amendment rights. As Governor of Colorado,
Bill Owens took an oath to protect the Constitution. By persecuting
Ward Churchill for an essay he wrote under the protection of the
Constitution, Owen reveals his own incompetence and lack of integrity
as a governor and shows himself to be the one who should be fired
from his job.
Churchill’s critics self-destruct in their
own contradictions. It is a blatant inconsistency for someone
to say that they support the First Amendment, but then want to
punish someone for exercising First Amendment rights for ideas
that they do not like. Whereas Churchill has said nothing that
amounts to hate speech, his vituperators routinely spew hate speech
against him in the national media. Being a critical and independent
thinker rather than a Pavlovian jingoist, Churchill exemplifies
what it is to be an American, whereas those trying to silence
him and trample on his constitutional rights shame themselves
as the real anti-Americans traitors.
The First Amendment equally protects morally
“responsible” and “irresponsible” speech,
and the Bill Owens and Pat Buchanans of the world are not God-like
enough to set the standards of speech for all. The hysterical
attack on Churchill eerily evokes the tyranny of the McCarthy
era where acts were blacklisted and professors were fired for
having even liberal views or showing dissent against state repression.
It demonstrates the repressive and hegemonic logic of “US
democracy” whereby elites and mass media establish and police
the parameters of acceptable discourse. Churchill has become America’s
own Salman Rushdie terrorized by the fatwa of the Right.
Clarifying Churchill
“America's indiscriminately lethal
arrogance and psychotic sense of self-entitlement have long since
given the great majority of the world's peoples ample cause to
be at war with it.” Ward Churchill
It is not a matter of defending Churchill’s
views or not, but rather of separating a few objectionable or
poorly worded statements (in his hastily written essay) from a
political context that gives a legitimate critique of US imperialism.
Churchill wrongly viewed the World Trade Center as a military
target and absurdly judged everyone killed in the twin towers
as “little Eichmanns.” Unlike the October 2002 attack
on the USS Cole and perhaps even the 9-11 strike against the Pentagon,
flying fully loaded passenger planes into the World Trade Center
was a textbook example of terrorism which involves causing physical
injury or death (“violence”) to innocent people (“non-combatants”)
to further an ideological cause.
Those killed in the twin towers included members
of the US military and intelligence agencies directly involved
in US imperialism, in addition to men, women, and children who
had nothing to do with the military and at best were remotely
connected to the US war machine. Churchill indiscriminately labeled
every victim a “little Eichmann” to advance the following
fallacious argument: (1) social systems of violence and aggression
like Nazi Germany cannot run efficiently without the support of
bureaucrats and functionaries like Adolph Eichmann; (2) everyone
in the WTC worked for the US military or financial regime in some
manner, therefore (3) they are all equally as culpable as Eichmann.
The problem with the argument clearly lies in
the totalizing term “equally,” the universalization
of guilt and blame for US policies, and the untheorized and overly
broad interpretation of “non-combatants.” In a strict
sense, any citizen of the US, any taxpayer, contributes to the
nation’s imperialist and genocidal policies. No one is perfectly
pure, innocent, or outside the system – including well-paid,
anti-imperialist Colorado Ethnic Studies professors who pay taxes
and work for the State. But they do not equally serve the war
machine, either in their occupational capacities or in their knowledge
about US policies and how their work may potentially serve those
ends. Unlike the majority or perhaps all of the victims who perished
in the twin towers, Eichmann played a direct not indirect role
in the Nazi bureaucracy and he had immediate not dim knowledge
of his role. To see everyone from Bush and Rumsfeld to twin tower
janitors, tourists, and passersby as equally culpable combatants
is to abandon all powers of moral and logical discrimination.
Left unqualified, Churchill’s words can be read as an endorsement
of terrorism and mass murder; thus, they had obvious inflammatory
potential that the Right exploited to full advantage to launch
a new round of Culture Wars.
Whereas Churchill’s ultimate meaning was
not always clear in the brevity and rhetoric of his original essay,
in a subsequent statement he has attempted to clarify his view
and prevent further misunderstanding of many points that were
easily misunderstood. Churchill insists he used the “little
Eichmanns” epithet to apply only to the “technicians”
who, like Eichmann, did not directly kill people but kept the
infrastructure of the killing machine working smoothly. “Thus,”
he says, “it was obviously not directed to the children,
janitors, food service workers, firemen and random passers-by
killed in the 9-11 attack.” Whether clarifying or back-peddling,
the more limited application remains inaccurate to the extent
that the US is not killing its own citizens as German Nazis were,
its genocidal policies unfold abroad rather than in at home or
bordering countries, and unlike Eichmann US technocrats may be
genuinely oblivious to the violent nature of the system for which
they work
Right-Wing Nation
“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.” Ward Churchill
The “Ward Churchill controversy”
should not have become a blip on the conservative blogs, let alone
a national media story as prominent as the Michael Jackson trial
for two weeks. As a part of their ongoing culture wars, the Right
has vociferously attacked Churchill in order to advance large
agendas that include their hostility to radical ideas, the “academic
Left,” liberal values, and free speech. The Churchill controversy
will soon be resolved one way or the other, but the Right will
undoubtedly continue to exploit the issue to go after its real
targets: “liberal” or “left” academia
and the tenure system that protects free (read: radical) speech.
Former 60s radical turned ultra-conservative David Horowitz is
among those leading the drive to purge “tenured radicals.”
Horowitz is the author of the “Academic Bill of Rights”
being considered by student governments, colleges and universities,
and legislatures throughout the country. Despite the libertarian
rhetoric of the Bill, it seeks in fact seek to banish critical
and radical viewpoints from the classroom through an interdiction
against “political beliefs,” as if it were possible
for professors not to represent their political ideologies and
the bill did not have its own direct political agenda..
It is no exaggeration to say that within the
second act of the reign of Bush, US society has entered a neo-McCarthyist
period based on militant hostility to progressive values. Under
the guise of a “war of terror,” Bush has initiated
a war on democracy. The PATRIOT Act; the hysterical reaction to
Janet Jackson’s “wardrobe malfunction”; FCC
attacks on “obscenity” in the media; a movement to
ban TV ads for Viagra and related drugs; new efforts to regulate
cable TV and satellite radio; assaults on gay rights; state surveillance
of and repression against animal rights, environmental, and anti-war
activists; drives to overturn Roe v. Wade; efforts to display
the Ten Commandments in secular institutions such as the courts;
a resurgence of creationist dogma in the schools; the nationwide
push for an “Academic Bill of Rights”; and now the
campaign to fire Churchill are indications of a frightening turn
toward tyranny, puritanical restriction, and repression.
The Right has a heart attack over Churchill’s
essay, but there was no outrage or talk of firing when the media
aired the shocking remarks of three star marine general James
Mattis, who commanded Marine expeditions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Before a panel audience in San Diego, Mattis said of Iraqi citizens:
"Actually it's quite fun to fight them, you know. It's a
hell of a hoot. It's fun to shoot some people.” Similarly,
Alberto Gonzalez, the close friend of Bush and attorney who drafted
the policies justifying torture of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib
and elsewhere, not only was not fired for his callous violations
of international law and humanitarian policies, he was promoted
to the highest legal office in the land, Attorney General. And
where is the rabid reaction to snarling pro-violence right-wing
commentator Ann Coulter whenever she spouts inanities such as,
“My only regret with Timothy McVeigh is he did not go to
the New York Times Building”?
Churchill’s essay made numerous important
points and this country ignores him at its own peril. It is most
unfortunate that two words -- “little Eichmanns” –
overwhelmed and obscured a trenchant critique, but such is the
nature of our sensationalistic mass media world. For his logical
transgressions and rhetorical excesses Churchill can be chastised,
but such an exercise of First Amendment rights hardly warrants
being drawn and quartered and losing a tenured position. Churchill’s
fate will be decided soon enough, but the demise of the Constitution
and silencing of critical perspectives within academia will take
a bit longer, and will depend on how citizens respond to cases
such as this.
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