By James Bowman on 2.8.05 @ 12:08AM
Richard Cohen thinks Ward Churchill’s rights trump Bill O’Reilly’s.
Richard Cohen had a Voltairean moment the other day. Or rather a
pseudo-Voltairean movement, since the well-known saying: "I don't
agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right
to say it" seems not to have been said by the French sage after
all. He is one of those people, like Lincoln and Mark Twain, who
seem to attract credit for witty or pithy sayings the way the
remotest corner under the bed attracts dust-bunnies. From his own
remote corner of the op-ed page of the Washington Post, Cohen
noted the following undisputed facts:
(1) that Hamilton College in upstate New York had invited as a
speaker someone who described the victims of the September 11
terror attacks as "little Eichmanns" who deserved what they
got;
(2) that there had been a predictable outcry of protest at the
invitation from many both inside Hamilton College and outside it,
notably including Bill O'Reilly of the Fox News Channel whom Cohen
describes as having, "in effect, organized an Internet lynch mob, a
collection of cyber- goons -- one of whom threatened to bring a
gun" and
(3) that, after hanging tough for a while, Hamilton College had
caved and rescinded the invitation.
Cohen's point was that the college should not have done so. Not,
of course, that he agrees with that description of those who died.
On the contrary, he describes this person, whose name is Ward
Churchill, as an "idiot" and his words making the comparison
mentioned above, which he quotes at length, "repellent, idiotic" --
not surprising, I guess, coming from an idiot -- "and badly
written." But still he should have been allowed to have his say,
thinks R. Cohen. Here's his argument, such as it is:
Hamilton should not have invited Churchill in the first
place. His ideas are trash, clichés to boot, and the school
could have…changed its mind once it found out more about
him. But once he had accepted, and once Hamilton had insisted by
all that is holy that it would stick to its guns, it could not then
collapse because those ideas, as loathsome as they are, might have
real consequences. Hire some guards. Frisk the audience. But don't
cave to the mob.
The mob? Was it only a mob because Bill O'Reilly was leading it?
Is any large group of people protesting at the granting of a forum
to some "idiot" spouting offensive nonsense then a mob? And is it
then only necessary for such a person to have acquired such a forum
under false pretenses or the cover of his hosts' ignorance for him
to be granted a privilege that many people who might have
interesting or profitable things to say are denied?
Yet the popularity of the pseudo-Voltairean quotation suggests
that some such idea of what true liberalism involves enjoys a
perverse popularity. Carried to its logical conclusion, it could
only encourage those who hold stupid and offensive views to make
them still more stupid and offensive -- enough at least to get the
liberals on their side in defending their right to a forum. And the
freedom to be stupid and offensive, though an undoubted corollary
of liberal principles, carries with it no right to a hearing from
those who resent stupidity and offensiveness. There is a limit to
what any of us can attend to in a short lifetime, and true
liberalism must also afford us the freedom so to organize our lives
as to limit the amount of stupid and offensive things we are forced
to listen to. God knows enough of them get through in any case, no
matter how good our screening system.
Even if no one at Hamilton College would have been forced to
listen to Mr. Churchill's words, the College itself has a
responsibility in its putative role as an upholder of civilized
discourse not to offer such an incentive to speakers to be even
more stupid and offensive than they already are. Responsible
scholarship depends on the upholding of intellectual standards, and
the abdication of such responsibility in the name of freedom of
speech is a bit of sophistry of which I doubt even Voltaire would
approve.
And anyway, it's not as if poor Mr. Churchill, who is a
self-described "Indian activist" and a tenured professor at the
University of Colorado at Boulder, has no forum without the
Hamilton College gig. In fact, according to a report in the Post of a couple of days
later, back in Boulder he was able to deploy his own rent-a-mob
shock troops to shout down a disciplinary hearing of which he was
the subject. If the forces of liberalism ever allow those
deliberations to resume, and they reach the illiberal conclusion
that Mr. Churchill should no longer be allowed to impose his stupid
and offensive views upon the students of the University of
Colorado, he will always have the Internet to fall back on. Out
there, you can be as stupid and offensive as you like and somebody
will be listening.