Sunday, September 5, 2010


Author: Solomon
<http://www.solomonia.com/blog/archive/2010/09/an-empirical-test-for-academi
c-hypocrisy/index.shtml> An Empirical Test for Academic Hypocrisy

The following, by Vic Rosenthal

I and others have often written that many 'critics' of Israel who purport to
be concerned with issues of human rights, fairness, racism and so on
actually have a different agenda. We've claimed that they are more concerned
with demonizing the Jewish state than helping its alleged 'victims'.

Sometimes it's not hard to show that 'non-political' human rights groups,
for example, actually have a financial interest in bashing Israel. For
example, there is the case of Human
<http://faculty.biu.ac.il/%7Esteing/oped%20PDFs/2009/hrwsaudi.pdf>  Rights
Watch fund-raising in Saudi Arabia, or the huge sums donated to extremist
<http://fresnozionism.org/2009/08/follow-the-money/>  non-governmental
organizations in Israel by the European Union.

But what about the legions of anti-Israel academics who are always prepared
to bash Israel in the vilest terms? They claim to be motivated by concern
for human rights -- but are they?

Now Fred
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/09/what_kind_of_academic_signs_th.html>
Gottheil, a professor of Economics at the University of Illinois, has
devised an empirical test to find out. Dr. Gottheil took the case of a
petition addressed to President Obama after the Gaza war in December-January
2008-9:

[Dr. David C.] Lloyd's petition was notable not only for its criticism of
Israeli policy -- that is standard fare among the set of academics who
subscribe to a post-colonial view of the world -- but rather for its
demonizing of the Jewish state.

His technique was anything but novel. It associated Israel with pre-Mandela
South Africa. Lloyd's South African-linking brushstrokes were many and
crude, citing "collective punishment," "apartheid regime," "racist regime,"
"besieged Bantustans," "crimes against humanity," and "ethnocidal
atrocities." These were layered on his fact-distorting canvas like icing on
a poisoned cake.

The petition was signed by nine hundred academics, mostly in the US.
Gottheil decided to test their commitment to human rights:

But accepting as genuine the petitioners' stated goal of seeking social
justice in the Middle East, I thought it fitting to contact the signatories
of the Lloyd petition to offer them yet another opportunity to express their
commitment to social justice in the region, this time by endorsing a
Statement of Concern regarding human rights abuses practiced against gays
and lesbians and against women in general in many of the Middle Eastern
countries, including the territories controlled by the Palestinian
Authority. The idea was really uncomplicated: Since they expressed a concern
about social injustice in Israel, they might also be willing to express
their concern about human rights abuses practiced against women, gays, and
lesbians in other parts of the Middle East.

The detailed material for this Statement of Concern was gathered from
sources as widespread as U.N. agencies, survey research units, the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, scholarly journals, and social
justice-related NGOs such as Asylum-Law and Human Rights Watch.

The Statement provided evidence of both the practice and the condoning of
the practice by religious, political, and even academic authorities of
honor-killing, wife-beating, and female genital mutilations. Documentation
was offered for specific countries, for specific practices, and referred to
specific authorities condoning the practices identified.

Gottheil carefully checked the credentials of the signers and excluded those
who were outside of the US, or who were non-academics. In the case of
graduate students, only those with evidence of teaching or published
research were included. He ended up with 675 names, to which he sent the
Statement of Concern, along with a request for endorsement. He did not
indicate any connection between his statement and the Lloyd petition.

You probably know what's coming, but it is even more outrageous than you
think:

Only thirty of the 675 "self-described social-justice seeking academics"
responded, 27 of them agreeing to endorse the Statement. But these 27
signatories represent less than five percent of the 675 contacted. In other
words, 95 percent of those who had signed the Lloyd petition censuring
Israel for human rights violation did not sign a statement concerning
discrimination against women and gays and lesbians in the Middle East.

But wait! There's more:

As many as 25 percent of the Lloyd petition-signing academics were faculty
associated with gender and women studies departments. Yet of these, only 5
endorsed the Statement calling for attention to the discrimination against
women in the Muslim countries of the Middle East. Put more bluntly, 164 of
the 169 faculty who had chosen to focus their life's work on matters
affecting women, and who felt comfortable enough to affix their names to
Lloyd's petition censuring Israel, chose not to sign a Statement of Concern
about documented human rights violations against gays, lesbians, and women
in the Middle East. [my emphasis]

This does not come as a surprise to me, who often marvels at the sheer
insanity of academics, especially those in ethnic or gender studies
programs. An example was the Israeli Ph.D. candidate who argued that the
<http://fresnozionism.org/2007/12/academic-idf-dehumanizes-palestinians-by-n
ot-raping-them/>  fact that IDF soldiers do not rape Arab women proves that
they are racists, and won an academic prize!

A common view on the Left is that all
<http://www.mediterraneas.org/article.php3?id_article=48>  of the problems
of Palestinian Arab women are a result of Israeli oppression (although many
Palestinians themselves are quite clear about their culture's poor treatment
of women). I recall a radio program on Berkeley's KPFA on the subject of
"The Palestinian Women's Movement": the presenter explained that this
'movement' was all about supporting their men in the struggle against
Israel.

Perhaps the academics who signed the Lloyd petition but did not sign
Gottheil's statement held this view. Of course "the occupation" doesn't
explain the violent oppression of women and gays everywhere else in the
Muslim Middle East.

Another possibility is that the academics take the racist position that
backward Muslim Middle Easterners can't be expected to know better, and
therefore their behavior can be excused. Israel, on the other hand, is held
to a standard so high that even self-defense is prohibited.

Or maybe they
<http://fresnozionism.org/2009/10/postcolonialist-dogma-doesnt-fit/>  think
that everything Israel does is wrong because it is a 'colonial power'. It's
interesting that they don't see the truly imperialist Iran -- which controls
Syria, is taking over Lebanon by way of Hizballah, and is working to assert
its hegemony over Iraq -- in that light.

Maybe the simplest explanation is best: while they favor Palestinian
nationalism, Iranian imperialism and radical Islamism -- and are prepared to
keep quiet about the victimization of women and gays so as to avoid damaging
these causes -- they find the idea of Jewish nationalism, as expressed by
the one Jewish state, repugnant.

Posted by  <http://www.solomonia.com/blog> Solomon at
<http://www.solomonia.com/blog/archive/2010/09/an-empirical-test-for-academi
c-hypocrisy/index.shtml> 9:09 PM on Sunday, Sep 5, 2010 |
<http://www.solomonia.com/blog/archive/2010/09/an-empirical-test-for-academi
c-hypocrisy/index.shtml#comments> Comments (1)

 



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