When I was in the Reagan administration,
America had a lively press that never hesitated to take us to task. Even the
"Teflon President"
received more brickbats than Bush and Cheney.
The lively press disappeared along with its independence in
the media concentration engineered during the Clinton administration. Shortly
thereafter all the liberal news anchors disappeared as well. Today the US media
serves as propaganda ministry for the government’s wars and police state. Yet,
some conservatives continue to rant on about "the liberal media."
That other conservative bugaboo, liberal academia, has also
been crushed. Universities once controlled their appointments, but no more.
Recently, the political science faculty at DePaul, a Catholic university, voted
to give tenure to the courageous scholar and teacher Norman Finkelstein.
The department was unable to make its tenure decision stick over the objections
of the Israel Lobby and their conservative allies, who were able to reach in
over the heads of the political science department and the College Personnel
Committee and force DePaul’s president to block Finkelstein’s tenure.
Finkelstein, a Jew, had angered the Israel Lobby with his criticisms of
Israel’s misuse of the holocaust sufferings of Jews to oppress the Palestinians
and to silence critics.
On September 14, the Los Angeles Times reported that
the appointment of the distinguished legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky as the
Dean of a new law school at the University of California at Irvine had been
withdrawn by the university’s chancellor, Michael V. Drake, who gave in to the
demands of conservatives outside the university. Conservatives are outraged at
Chemerinsky because he criticized Attorney General Gonzales. In withdrawing
Chemerinsky’s appointment, Drake told him: "I didn’t realize there would
be conservatives out to get you." [Furor
disrupts plans for UCI school of law, By Garrett Therolf, Rebecca
Trounson and Richard C. Paddock, September 14, 2007]
Gonzales is the attorney
general who wrote memos justifying torture and denying that the
Bush administration was bound by the Geneva Conventions. Gonzales told a stunned Senate
Judiciary Committee that the US Constitution did not provide habeas corpus
protection to American citizens.
To experience an attorney general of the US fiercely
attacking the US Constitution, rending its every provision, is the most
frightening experience of my lifetime. That the head of the legal branch of the
executive, sworn to uphold the Constitution, would turn against it in order to
enhance unaccountable executive power is a clear impeachable offense. If anyone
anywhere in the world deserved criticism, Gonzales did. But when Chemerinsky
upbraided the despicable Gonzales, conservatives rushed to Gonzales’ defense,
not to the defense of the American Constitution.
It seems only yesterday that conservatives were complaining
about the liberties that liberals took with the Constitution. Liberals were
expanding rights, fancifully perhaps. But today conservatives are curtailing
long established rights, such as habeas corpus and protection against
self-incrimination. Conservatives abandoned "original intent" and
all of their constitutional scruples once they had a chance to cram more power
into the presidency.
In my conservative days as an academic, I experienced some liberal
blackballs. But liberals did not attack academic freedom per se. The new
conservatives despise academic freedom and have created organizations to
monitor departments of Middle East studies in order to lower the boom on
scholars who follow the truth instead of neoconservative ideology or Israeli
policy. Today academic freedom has disappeared just like the independent media.
No one but powerful organized interest groups has a voice. In the media truth
can only emerge on comic shows like The Colbert Report and Jon Stewart’s
The Daily Show.
In years past, conservatives were often shouted down on
university campuses by left-wing students. But today speakers disapproved by
powerful interest groups are simply disinvited in advance. Even Harvard
University has fallen to the new censorship. On September 14, the Harvard Crimson reported that the Israel Lobby was
able to force Harvard University to disinvite three speakers, an Oxford
University professor, a DePaul professor, and a Rutgers professor, because they
had criticized Israeli policy.
In America today, speaking your mind in the media or in
academia is a thing of the past. A country that has no voices independent of
powerful interests is a country in which freedom is dead.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan Administration. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.