(NAME-MCE) Professor of Hate?

Anselmo Villanueva anselmo.villanueva at gmail.com
Thu Apr 26 08:44:26 EDT 2007


For a better format, links to related stories, and responses from
readers, surf to:

http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/04/26/macdonald

April 26, 2007

Professor of Hate?

In December, the psychology department at California State University
of Long Beach added three statements to its Web site — all under the
new heading of "Statements on Controversial Issues." One endorsed
principles of academic freedom, another emphasized the department's
commitment to diversity and equity, and the third discussed the
"misuse of psychologists' work."

That statement says: "The department of psychology regards it as
deeply unethical that any faculty member knowingly allows his/her work
to be used to support groups that disseminate views of racial/ethnic
superiority and/or racial/ethnic hatred.... We are concerned that
psychological research has been used in the past in intellectually
unjustifiable and socially harmful ways, such as limiting immigration
of certain groups or justifying unequal opportunities in education and
employment. We wish to make it clear that these uses are distortions
of scholarship in the field."

The department gave no indication why it felt the need to issue such a
statement. But anyone who has been wondering will find the answers in
a report released Wednesday by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which
tracks hate groups. The report reviews the career and writings of
Kevin MacDonald, a tenured full professor of psychology who has
devoted much of his work to studying Jews and what he considers the
"evolutionary" way Jewish people band together, in part to undercut
white society in the United States. (MacDonald acknowledges that most
people think Jews are white, and says that in a black/white/Asian trio
of races, Jews would be white, but several times in a phone
conversation he refers to the "Middle Eastern" genetic roots of
European Jews and refers to Jewish people and white people as separate
groups.)

MacDonald has taught at Long Beach since 1985, and for much of that
time, his views on Jewish people, immigration and other topics have
not been widely known. An editor of the student paper said that prior
to the Southern Poverty Law Center investigation, there wasn't much
awareness of MacDonald's views. But there have also been moments when
he did attract attention, as when he testified on behalf of David
Irving, a Holocaust denier who unsuccessfully sued Deborah Lipstadt,
an Emory University historian, over her comments that he distorted
history in his Holocaust denial. (MacDonald's testimony and his
explanation of why he backed Irving are available on the Web site of
the Institute for Historical Review, a Holocaust denying group.
MacDonald says he is not a denier, but was helping Irving defend
unpopular views.)

The 2000 testimony prompted debate at Long Beach, but that has
generally died down, and MacDonald teaches his courses and has been
appointed to serve on various university committees. There are no
reports that he discusses his views on Jewish people or members of
other ethnic groups in class.

Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project of the Southern
Poverty Law Center, said that the group's aim in releasing the report
was exposure, not to seek to have MacDonald fired. "This is a fellow
who associates with white supremacists," said Potok, who noted that
MacDonald's work has been frequently praised by and published by
supremacist groups.

"We're not demanding or trying to demand that he should be fired.
We're very much proponents of the First Amendment and academic
freedom. Our concern is that this man may be teaching these ideas in
his classroom. If you are getting a child development program, you are
required to take a class with Kevin MacDonald. That is remarkable." (A
university spokeswoman said that it does not believe that any of
MacDonald's courses are required for any programs, and while some on
campus disagree, the psychology chair did not respond to messages
seeking clarification.)

Potok contrasted Long Beach's approach — which has been to defend
academic freedom without issuing strong statements denouncing
MacDonald — with the way Northwestern University has responded to a
Holocaust denier, Arthur R. Butz, an engineering professor.

When Butz makes news every few years — as he did last year when
backing Iranian leaders' claims that the Holocaust is a myth —
Northwestern issues statements that defend Butz's right to hold
whatever views he wishes, but that also condemn those views with
regard to the Holocaust. Northwestern President Henry S. Bienen's
statement last year used words like "contemptible insult" and
"reprehensible opinions" to describe Butz's latest remarks.
Northwestern also has a policy that if Butz teaches a course that is
required for graduation or any degree program, another section of that
course must be offered at the same time, so no student ever has to
enroll in one of his classes.

Northwestern's approach "puts some distance" between the university
and bigotry, Potok said.

In contrast, Long Beach's statement about MacDonald says nothing about
his ideas, states his right to academic freedom, and says that "the
personal and academic opinions presented by individuals do not
necessarily represent the opinions or beliefs of the university or the
faculty as a whole."

Potok also asked why Long Beach was not investigating whether
MacDonald's views are ever expressed in his courses.

Toni Beron, a spokeswoman for Long Beach, said that at least two
classes a year taught by all professors — including MacDonald — have
student evaluations, and that some of the questions on those
evaluations are open-ended, allowing students to raise any issue.
"Nothing has come through" to suggest bias in class, she said. "We
don't see it."

If the university receives a formal complaint, faculty members would
then conduct an investigation and might review what goes on in the
classroom.

In an interview Wednesday, MacDonald said that he would never punish a
student for his or her race or ethnicity, and that to do so would be
wrong. He said that because he doesn't discuss his more controversial
views in class, he doubts students even know them. (Two entries on him
on the RateMyProfessors Web site mention his views, but that site is
notoriously unreliable about who is making entries and Beron said that
those did not count as a formal complaint.)

While MacDonald insisted that his in-class performance couldn't be
questioned by the university, he didn't hold back on his views. He
boasted that David Duke loves his writing (but also added that some
white groups that post his writing do so without his permission or
endorsement). He said that the "basic civil rights revolution" of the
'60s was a good thing, but that immigration — legal and otherwise —
generally is not. (MacDonald's anti-immigration stance does not mean
he doesn't have immigration in his family's roots: Relatives came from
Scotland and Germany in the 19th century, he said.)

The problem with immigration, MacDonald said, is that it puts "white
culture" at risk. He said that when America becomes a white-minority
nation, groups like Jews, Latinos and African Americans will "hold
grudges" and somehow harm white people. He said that Asian immigrants
are out-performing white students on college admissions already. And
he said he was just exercising his right as an ethnic American to look
out for his interests. "European Americans have ethnic interests like
everyone else," he said.

MacDonald combines his ethnic theories with his views on Jews in a
subject on which he has written a great deal: Jewish views on
immigration policy. MacDonald said that he believes that Jewish people
view "a homogeneous white population of North America as a threat, and
they would be better off in a multicultural policy." So as a result,
he said, Jewish organizations work with Latino groups to let in
Latinos and others to undermine American culture.

Asked if Jews might support immigration not because of some
Jewish-Latino plot but because of Jewish experience as immigrants, and
particularly because many Jewish lives during the Holocaust might have
been saved with more open immigration in that period, MacDonald said
that would have only been a justification while Hitler was in power.
Once Hitler was out of power, he said, Jews supported the right of
others to immigrate as part of "a historical grudge." More broadly,
MacDonald said, Jewish people — acting collectively — help themselves
at the expense of white groups. Jewish support for liberal ideas is
another example, he said.

Just as MacDonald distinguishes between his writing and what he talks
about in class, so he divides his online portfolio. His university Web
page does not contain his writings about Jewish issues, although it
has a link to his own Web site, where he has many articles and links
about his writing on Jews, as well as responses to his critics.

Several faculty members said that they did not want to discuss
MacDonald — although there have been heated discussions of him on
e-mail lists for professors. Rumors abound that MacDonald will
threaten to sue those who criticize him, although several who have
heard the rumors and cited them in not wanting to talk on the record
said that they didn't know of anyone who had been threatened.

Don Schwartz, a professor of European history who teaches about the
Holocaust and who has spoken out against MacDonald, said he was
pleased to see the Southern Poverty Law Center report. "I think most
of the faculty are largely ignorant of what he has been writing," he
said. Schwartz said he wants people to know about MacDonald when they
are deciding whether he deserves release time for writing or to be
appointed to committees.

"We should think very carefully" about what efforts the university may
be supporting, he said.

Schwartz also said, however, that he has had students who had
previously taken MacDonald's classes, and that none of them indicated
any bias issues or that MacDonald shared his views on race and
ethnicity in class.

Jonathan Knight, who handles academic freedom issues for the American
Association of University Professors, said that if there are no
indications that MacDonald shares his views in class, "I don't see a
basis for an investigation" into what goes on in his courses. Knight
said that the basic principle is that professors should not be
punished for the views they hold.

As to the suggestion that Long Beach should offer separate sections of
courses taught by MacDonald, Knight noted that City College of the
City University of New York tried that approach in 1990 with regard to
Michael Levin, a professor whose articles on race and intelligence set
off a huge controversy. A federal appeals court upheld a lower court's
ruling that the creation of such "alternative" sections violated
Levin's rights, Knight said.

If colleges create "shadow sections" every time a professor offends,
he said, academic freedom would be hurt. "I would find it very
worrisome if an administration anxious not to offend the sensibilities
of students could propose shadow courses because a professor's views
are disquieting on some subject," he said.

Arlene Lazarowitz, a historian who is the director of Jewish studies
at Long Beach, said she was very troubled by MacDonald's research and
disagreed with much of it. Lazarowitz teaches courses on American
Jewish history and she said that the premise that there is a single
Jewish view on most issues is simply not true — whether it is
immigration policy about which MacDonald writes so much or Israel
(while there might be a broad consensus among American Jews on
Israel's right to exist, there is a large diversity of views beyond
that question, she said).

Lazarowitz said that she does not favor MacDonald's censure or firing.
"I very much believe in academic freedom," she said. "And all of us at
the university are doing research that in one way or another may
offend someone."

Her disappointment, she said, is that there have not been public
debates in which others in MacDonald's field publicly critique his
views. "Several faculty members have offered to debate him. I'd like
to see that," she said.

— Scott Jaschik



More information about the Name-mce mailing list