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(Before Moore takes on any new projects, he should work on a new
conclusion on "Capitalism, a love story" that gets rid of that idiotic
love poem to Obama.)

The Chronicle of Higher Education Review

January 9, 2011
An Open Letter to Michael Moore
Fahrenheit Higher Ed 1

By David Yaffe

Have I got a movie for you! As best I can tell, you're not working on
one right now. You see, I have been following your career ever since I
watched Roger & Me (1989) in high school. I never forgot your
inimitable depiction of late capitalism's collapse in Flint, Michigan.
I remember how agonizing it must have been for you to see your
hometown turn into a third-world country and to realize that the dream
of earning a living wage as a factory worker was over. These days the
only road to the middle class goes through college. (Remember when
"bourgeois" was a bad word?)

So here I am in The Chronicle of Higher Education, read by university
administrators and department chairs, and anyone else who swipes a
copy from the faculty lounge. That means that right now my pitch to
you is hitting the desks of the people who actually run universities.
Faced with shrinking revenue, they have been forced to slash expenses.

There is no shortage of people writing books and op-eds—in these pages
and elsewhere—about how to save the university. But their efforts
don't usually get much attention beyond the ivory tower. That is where
you come in, Michael. You made the top-grossing documentary of all
time (Fahrenheit 9/11). When you pull out a bullhorn, even if people
don't change their politics, they cannot help but listen. And when it
comes to the ills of higher education, people need to listen.

Consider that when I graduated from high school in 1991, I could have
gone to the University of Texas at Austin for around $1,500 (the
annual in-state tuition). Today, not quite 20 years later, in-state
tuition at Austin is nearly $9,000. Instead I was offered a generous
scholarship by Sarah Lawrence College. Tuition, room, and board at
that time seemed unbelievably extravagant: $23,150 (including the dorm
and meal plan). What a difference a few decades make. My dear alma
mater now costs almost $57,000. If tuition continues to increase at
this rate, by the time I expect my son to graduate from college, in
2031, four years of a private-college education without financial aid
could cost a cool half-million dollars.

But enough about me. This is a crisis that affects every American
trying to make a decent living or pursue a coveted career. As I
recently read in The New York Times Book Review: "The cost of a
college education has risen, in real dollars, by 250 to 300 percent
over the past three decades, far above the rate of inflation. Elite
private colleges can cost more than $200,000 over four years. Total
student-loan debt, at nearly $830-billion, recently surpassed total
national credit-card debt."

That is hardly news for readers of The Chronicle, or for most people
in higher education. The reality is so ever-present to us that it
drones on like white noise. The air is full of our cries, but habit is
a great deadener. That's from Waiting for Godot. We are waiting for
someone, or something. Michael, we are waiting for you.

The university system is rife with inequities that need to be publicly
exposed. Most egregious is the exploitation of part-time, adjunct
faculty members, who are often dedicated, passionate professionals who
work for low wages, with no stability. But I also encourage you to
take your cameras outside the campus gates. Remember the middle-class
people you saw disappear in Flint? Their descendants who strive to get
a college degree—and a shot at the middle class—might face
student-loan debt in six figures.

Mike—can I call you Mike?—people mistake you for an all-out leftist,
but you are really more of a moralist. And you always knew how to tell
a good story. People sympathize with your populism (though I could
never quite buy into your conspiracy theories). You're skilled at
identifying the sickness, despite advocating some rather dubious
cures. That said, the solutions on offer from many university insiders
and editorial writers are also way off the mark. Those people call for
abolishing tenure without seeming to give a thought to the fragility
of academic freedom. (A college professor could live with the
stability of, say, a print journalist—a splendid idea!) When it comes
to the fate of academic freedom, don't count me in for fostering such
a radical change.

So, Mike, remember when you tried to track down Roger Smith? Charlton
Heston? George W. Bush? Executives at Goldman Sachs? Well, the world
did not change, but the combined gross of your films is staggering.
More important, you made people think twice about the financial,
international, and moral crises around all of us. The critics gave you
a hard time about the details, but the bigger picture still resonated.

Unemployment continues to hover near 10 percent. We in the
universities watch our students graduate ... to what, exactly? Debt.
Joblessness. Despair. This system is not sustainable. As an idealistic
teenager, I watched Roger & Me looking for someone to blame, and,
needless to say, I found the movie as heartbreaking as it was
satisfying.

I'll be honest: I have no idea who to blame for the woes of the
academy. This is where you need to come in and do your thing, Mike.
It's time for "Fahrenheit Higher Ed."

Burn after reading,

David Yaffe

P.S. Oh, yeah, one more thing: I want a box-office percentage. I need
to send my kid to college in 20 years.

David Yaffe, an assistant professor of English at Syracuse University,
is author of Fascinating Rhythm: Reading Jazz in American Writing
(Princeton University Press, 2005). His next book, Bob Dylan: Like a
Complete Unknown, will be published by Yale University Press this
year.

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