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Contributors
Bruce S. Thornton - Contributor
Bruce Thornton
is a professor of Classics at Cal State Fresno and co-author
of Bonfire
of the Humanities: Rescuing the Classics in an Impoverished
Age and author of Greek
Ways: How the Greeks Created Western Civilization (Encounter
Books). His most recent book is Searching
for Joaquin: Myth, Murieta, and History in California (Encounter
Books). [go to Thornton index]
The
Left-Leaning Ivory Tower
The Unchallenged Assumptions of Orville Schell...
[Bruce S. Thornton] 7/30/04
To find a
good example of the "long march through the institutions" undertaken
by sixties leftists after they left school, look no further than
the career of Orville Schell, dean of Berkeley's School of Journalism.
Because the
political program of the left was unlikely to prevail through
democratic means -- thanks to the
good sense of the American
people -- those who, like Schell, have endorsed various socialist
nostrums could realize their utopian schemes only "by insinuation
and infiltration rather than confrontation," as Roger Kimball
has put it. Thus they settled in the universities and the media, "working
against the established institutions while working in them," in
the words of sixties leftist guru Herbert Marcuse.
But there
is another dimension of the institutionalization of the left,
one also illustrated by Schell. It's what Tom
Wolfe
famously called "radical chic" -- the use of leftist
ideology as a fashion marker to signify one's elitist superiority
to the bovine middle class blind to the horrible oppression and
injustice of America. This combination of elitist privilege and
ideology has been a pretty good deal for lucky leftists like
Schell, for their insidious undermining of democracy's institutions
works just slowly enough to allow them to continue to enjoy the
prestigious and profitable benefits of those same institutions
that their "progressive" ideas are corrupting.
The circumstances of Schell's hiring at Berkeley illustrate
just how entrenched the left has become in American universities.
Before going to Berkeley as dean, Schell had written for various
publications, produced some television documentaries, run an
organic farm, and published several well-received books on China,
having given up on finishing his PhD. In other words, a pretty
good career, but not one that would usually confer qualifications
to become dean of one of the country's most prestigious journalism
schools. But if Schell lacked one of the requirements for the
position, a completed PhD, he did have impeccable leftist credentials.
That was qualification enough for Berkeley profs like Troy Duster,
another ex-sixties-radical who was instrumental in Schell's hiring.
We see in
this episode one of the effects of the entrenchment of the
left in the universities----the establishment
of a "good-ole-leftist-boy" network
that spreads around institutional goodies to its cronies. (I
wonder where the female and minority faculty of Berkeley were
when another privileged, prep-schooled white guy was given a
job over the no doubt many better-qualified journalists "of
color.") Schell himself recently helped out another ex-sixties
radical, Robert Scheer, by hiring him this spring to teach a
course at Berkeley on "Covering the Iraq War." Given
that Scheer and Schell, both Nation contributors, have been outspoken
and shrill opponents of the war in Iraq, it's hard to see how
the whole notion of journalistic fairness and objectivity, let
alone academic critical thinking on an issue, could cut any ice
during Scheer's lectures.
Schell's
ideology, however, doesn't keep him from enjoying the privileges
and prestige underwritten by those
nasty old capitalists
who create all that surplus wealth. He's a regular at the yearly
World Economic Forum shindig in Davos, where, as he has smugly
written, "many of the attendees rank high on the periodic
tables of wealth, power and fame." Schell has hobnobbed
as well with George Soros, fawningly interviewing the wacky billionaire
who made a fortune by being a rapacious capitalist freebooter
and who now, like some medieval knight buying masses for his
soul, is doing penance by funding leftists and publishing screeds
whose premises and prescriptions, if actually followed, would've
kept him from getting rich in the first place. Like Soros, or
John Kerry and John Edwards, for that matter, Schell finds a
populist rhetoric of "equality" for the common man
convenient camouflage for power and privilege.
This elitist
disdain crops up regularly in Schell's writings. A sure sign
of this dislike for the common man is
the obligatory
sneering at religious believers, especially evangelical Christians.
In his piece on the World Economic Forum in Davos, Schell pauses
in his complaint about how Vice President Cheney's security needs
interfered with elite schmoozing to say that the Bush administration "reflects
a spirit deeply evangelical. In its embunkered totalism, more
concerned with justifying and converting than questioning and
learning, it seems strangely akin in spirit to the discipline
of Leninism."
This comment
is remarkably ignorant and bigoted, the word "evangelical" nothing
more than an epithet. More, this caricature of evangelical belief--
something it can be safely assumed that Schell knows nothing
about except that it's a Bad Thing--is compounded by the odious
comparison to an ideology responsible for millions of deaths,
an ideology, by the way, that has more in common with Schell's
political beliefs than with anything in evangelical Christianity.
Schell's
snobbery slipped out again in a comment he made after the election
that recalled California governor
Gray Davis. Asked
why the Bay Area voted overwhelmingly against the recall, Schell
responded, "It strikes me that the better educated people
are, more often than not, they tend to be more liberal, and I
think this is a very well-educated area." He went on to
add, "When you live in a beautiful place, which the whole
Bay Area is, you draw people for whom that is important and the
idea of preservation, moderation, of walking a little more softly,
is important. And I think that creates a kind of liberal mind-set
in an environmental sense and in a larger political sense."
In other words, if you're wealthy enough to get an advanced
degree and afford some of the most expensive real estate in the
country, you'll end up with the proper political ideology, one
that is supposed to advance the interests of the common man who
cuts your lawn or services your Volvo.
That Schell
doesn't think much of the average person is even more obvious
in his vision of what should be
the role of journalists
in a democracy. If you think the media should attempt to discover
and publicize the truth, and then let the people make up their
own minds, listen to Schell: "In a democracy, indeed in
any intelligent society, the media and politicians have to lead.
The media should be introducing us to new things, interesting
things, things we don't already know about; helping us change
our minds or make up our minds, not just pandering to lowest-denominator
wisdom."
This brief
statement is a gold mine of liberal media pathologies. First,
there is the assertion that the media--staffed
by the
unelected and run by those dedicated to profit--should "lead" us.
Lead us where? Who decides where we should go? Based on what
ideas or principles? And how do we hold these media "leaders" accountable?
If you dislike George Bush, you can vote against him in November.
But if you don't like the Los Angeles Times, all you can do is
not read it. But it will still be publishing and influencing
others with its biases.
The fundamental
elitist assumption is that the people need "leading" in
the first place, since they are incapable of knowing on their
own where they should be going and how they should get there.
Thus the media should be "helping us change our minds." Again,
who decides to which ideas our minds should be changed? Those
in the media, who use their influence to promote their particular
ideologies, prejudices, and preferences, not to mention their
own careers? The op-ed page, not the front page, is where one
should try to change minds. The blurring of reporting and opinion,
obvious to any careful reader of a major newspaper like the Los
Angeles Times or the New York Times, where "stealth editorials" lurk
in nearly every story and headline, has never been so brazenly
asserted.
But of course
Schell avoids any overt recognition of the consequences of
his own journalistic vision of "changing minds," which
will have to be a media driven by the vision of what exact ideology
you want those minds changed to. When the liberal/leftist bias
of those "mind-changers" is decried, however, immediately
the apologists fall back on the old ideal of journalists as,
in Schell's terms, "truth-mongers."
Thus, in
Schell's view, journalists should not have any loyalties to
their own society and people: "We are not a national
media," he has opined. "We are a global media . . .
I think we, above all other countries, need to view ourselves
as journalists as something of a stateless people." The
implication is that journalists should be just neutral fact-gatherers
with no other loyalties, not even to their own people. That arguable
assumption aside, it's hard to square this view of Olympian neutrality
with Schell's other vision of journalists as "mind-changers," who
will necessarily have loyalties to the ideas they think people's
minds should be changed to.
This contradiction
between journalistic objective truth-gatherers and proselytizing
mind-changers was papered
over as well in Schell's
glowing New York Times review of fellow Nation-contributor Eric
Alterman's What Liberal Media?, that extended exercise in Oz-like "Pay
no attention to the man behind the curtain!" Alterman gives
the game away early on in his book when he says that the liberal
media "is tiny and profoundly underfunded compared to its
conservative counterpart," and then adds, "as a columnist
for the Nation . . . I work in the middle of it [i.e. the liberal
media]." If you define the hard-left ideology of the Nation as "liberal," then yes, the media aren't liberal, they're
downright conservative. But this is a verbal bait-and-switch,
an attempt to use language to hide the well-documented and repeatedly
demonstrated fact of liberal bias in the mainstream media.
Schell, however,
endorses Alterman's chicanery by falling back on the notion
of "how crucial it is to have fair and accurate
news media at home" whose job is to keep "this democracy
well enough informed to make intelligent decisions." No "mind-changing" journalist "leaders" here,
only media Joe Fridays seeking "just the facts." But
Schell can't help giving the game away either, once more his
elitist prejudices and biases undercutting all these claims to
objectivity. "Liberals," he writes, approving Alterman's
similar bigoted assertion, "do not tend to see themselves
as representatives for any ideological movement." Unlike
those close-minded, doctrinaire conservatives, "they favor
self-criticism, diversity and fairness."
The arrogance
of this is breathtaking, not to mention laughably false, given
the ideological rigidity and
complete lack of diversity
that characterize, with some few exceptions, the liberal and "progressive" worldview.
That's why one of the best recent books on the media and bias,
William McGowan's Coloring the News, was ignored by all those "self-critical" and "fair" editors
at the New York Times.
In fact,
a conference at Berkeley last year on media coverage of the
Iraq war, hosted by Schell, was notably
deficient in "diversity" and "fairness." CNN,
National Public Radio, PBS, ABS, CBS, the BBC, the New York
Times,
the Los Angeles Times, even the notoriously propagandistic Al
Jazeera were all invited, but not the Fox News Channel, the Wall
Street Journal, or the Washington Times. A few conservative writers
like Victor Davis Hanson were invited, but they were drowned
out by the chorus of consensus that the media, particularly the "embedded
journalists," were complicit in the Bush administration's
packaging of the illegitimate war in Iraq.
The low value
of fairness, objectivity, and balance in Schell's thinking
is most obvious in his commentaries on
the war, which
follow the old Marxist script of evil capitalists pulling all
the strings of government and culture alike in order to further
their nefarious greedy ends. In a piece entitled "No Exit
Strategy?" Schell recycles this discredited thesis. The
Bush administration, Schell intones, "has brought the notion
of the 'marketization' of American life to heights unequalled
in history." Government cabinet-level departments "are
now run more like large corporations than agencies of government."
Schell then
spices up his anti-business prejudice with some more anti-evangelical
bigotry: those in Bush's administration "exude
a faith-based fervor in their market-driven conviction that they
have been almost divinely anointed to usher us into a new world,
one guided by new styles of management and sanctified by the
accumulation of wealth." But just like their buddies in
the business sector, these apostles of greed over-reached in
Iraq, and now find themselves facing "a version of collapse
that may one day look not so different from that of Enron, WorldCom,
or Tyco."
This demonizing
of business, a hoary staple of Marxist thinking, was stale
back in the sixties when it was
popularized by Herbert
Marcuse and the novels of Thomas Pynchon. Forty years of history,
however, have rendered it as convincing as phrenology or mesmerism,
except in the minds of those like Schell whose intellectual clocks
stopped around 1970, leaving them ideologues incapable of "self-criticism," "fairness" and
a "diversity" of ideas.
For those
stuck in the amber of the radical sixties, Vietnam is their
most glorious memory, a time when they rose
up and confronted
the military-industrial complex and forced it to retreat from
its neo-colonial and imperial ambitions. That's why at every
opportunity Vietnam is trotted out, surely the most overused
false analogy ever. So too with Schell, in a piece last year
called "From Sands to Quagmire," where he mediates
on his own begged question, which is that Iraq is indeed a "quagmire": "Body
counts, B-52 strikes, wounded GI's in medi-vac choppers, downed
helicopter gunships surrounded by AK-47 toting peasants, 'Five
O'clock Follies-like' Centcom briefings, anti-war demonstrations,
troops escalations, and a repetition of official expressions
that the war is still 'on track,' all have a haunting ring."
We all know what this comparison to Vietnam is really about:
America deserves to lose in Iraq because its aggression is unjust
and driven by profit and imperial ambition, just as in Vietnam.
But of course the analogy is false on numerous levels, the most
important being that the insurgents in Iraq do not have what
Uncle Ho had: two nuclear superpower sponsors to provide armaments,
personnel, and international political pressure.
What does have a "haunting ring" about this war, however,
is the relentless assault of those domestic critics like Schell
who attempt to erode our will to pursue to its proper end a conflict
democratically sanctioned by Congress. We know the results of
their earlier success: an oppressive tyranny in Vietnam, replete
with gulags, ethnic cleansing, torture, millions of refugees,
and economic backwardness; and the "malaise" of the
seventies, which emboldened the Soviet Union in Central America
and Africa and kept us from responding to the first attack by
the Islamists, the take-over of the American embassy in Tehran.
With someone
like Schell running one of the country's major journalism schools,
there is little hope that the corruption
of the media by its ideological prejudices and preferences can
be changed. The "long march" has done its work, leaving
our public institutions in the hands of those whose ideology
runs counter to the basic principles of American life.CRO
copyright
2004 Bruce S. Thornton
Searching for Joaquin
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Greek Ways
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Bonfire of the Humanities
by Victor Davis Hanson, John Heath, Bruce S. Thornton
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Plagues of the Mind
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Eros: The Myth of Ancient Greek
Sexuality
by Bruce S. Thornton
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