For anybody following the Ward Churchill witch-hunt, the name Thomas Brown
should ring a bell. This is a professor from Texas who has been pursuing
Ward Churchill like Ahab pursued Moby Dick. He achieved a certain
recognition for exposing Churchill's failure to properly document the
charge that the U.S. Army handed out smallpox blankets to the Mandan
Indians in 1837. Churchill cited Evan S. Connell's "Son of the Morning
Star: Custer and the Little Big Horn" and Russell Thornton's "American
Indian Holocaust and Survival" but neither book says anything about the
army playing such a role.

In my view, Churchill made this mistake because of a predisposition to see
the genocide against the Indians in the light of the German genocide
against the Jews, which did involve systematic murder. Although army raids
did cost the lives of many tens of thousands of Indians, most died because
of diseases that they had no resistance to or from the effects of stealing
their land and killing their game. Apologists for the American genocide
state that this lets the U.S. ruling class off the hook because Indian
deaths were "accidental". However, everybody knew that smallpox could be
spread through contact, including Lord Amherst, the British officer who did
distribute smallpox blankets to Indians in 1763.

Brown pops up on the comments pages at Inside Higher Education whenever an
article appears about Ward Churchill. This is an online publication that
was launched by editors and reporters at Chronicle of Higher Education, a
print publication that has much more clout than the upstart Inside Higher
Education. Both publications hew to a careful "balanced" approach which
amounts to printing articles pro and con about Ward Churchill.

However, some of the articles are harder to define in this fashion,
especially Jon Wiener's "A Lesson From the Churchill Inquiry," that appears
in the June 30 edition
(<http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2006/06/30/wiener>http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2006/06/30/wiener).
Wiener is a Nation Magazine contributor who has written about the culture
wars in the academy, John Lennon and lots of other subjects from a
generally progressive standpoint. In this article, he goes out of his way
in an unseemly fashion to praise the investigating committee at the U. of
Colorado:

"Ward Churchill should be fired for academic misconduct -- that's the
decision made by the interim chancellor at the University of Colorado at
Boulder, after receiving a report from a faculty committee concluding that
Churchill is guilty of falsification, fabrication and plagiarism. That
report shows that, even under difficult political conditions, it's possible
to do a good job dealing with charges of research misconduct."

I posted a brief reply to Wiener shortly after his article appeared:

"I think the usually astute Jon Wiener is missing the point. It would have
backfired if the investigating committee had been composed entirely of
yahoos from the U. of Colorado law school who had been after Ward's scalp
for years now. By adopting the discourse of the touchy-feely humanities
world, the committee made it easier for people like Jon Wiener to swallow a
bitter pill. There never should have been an investigation to begin with,
not as long as the U. of Georgetown is hiring people like Douglas Feith."

A day later Thomas Brown chimed in:

"Does the fact that other academics found guilty of misconduct have
received lesser sanctions automatically mean that Churchill's sacking is
inappropriate? Not at all.

"Take the time to read the CU investigative committee's report on
Churchill. They researched the sanctions given to offenders such as
Churchill, and found that sacking is a common outcome. A perpetrator who is
caught in one offense and who repents may escape firing. But a repeat
offender such as Churchill--who is also loudly proclaiming that he did
nothing wrong and that he intends to keep on doing what he's doing--can
expect to be dismissed.

"Just this week, a UNC-Chapel Hill professor was given a year in prison for
research misconduct. Churchill should consider himself lucky that he's only
getting fired.

"As to the political context of the situation, I think that Prof. Eckstein
put it rather succinctly. Live by it, die by it."

(The Eckstein referred to above, by the way, is as obsessed with Ward
Churchill as Thomas Brown. He is a U. of Maryland professor who has
contributed to David Horowitz's Frontpage four times in the past:
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=3055>http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=3055)

Although the comments editor at Inside Higher Education was beneficent
enough to allow one of my comments to appear on their august publication's
website, two have not been forwarded. Since I have a reputation for being
something of an ill-mannered lout, let me assure you that my comments were
beyond reproach in keeping with the faculty club atmosphere of Inside
Higher Education. In fact, compared to a number of the anonymous rightwing
ranters who haunt the comments section of Inside Higher Education, I would
come across as St. Francis of Assisi.

Since the comments editor has seen fit to exclude my latest comment, I am
repeating here on these mailing lists and my own blog:

---

In his comments on Ward Churchill, Thomas Brown states, "Just this week, a
UNC-Chapel Hill professor was given a year in prison for research
misconduct. Churchill should consider himself lucky that he's only getting
fired."

My eyebrows went up when I read this. When the hell did professors start
going to jail for "research misconduct"? I spent an hour on Lexis-Nexis and
Google News trying to find evidence of such a thing, but could not turn up
a thing. The plain fact is that there is no such crime as "research
misconduct". People go to jail for car theft, battery, bank robbery,
etc.--not for improper citations or plagiarism.

Of course, if people like Thomas Brown, Art Eckstein and David Horowitz had
their way, people would go to jail for "false" beliefs just the way that
they did in the 1950s. Perhaps Brown was confused by his own call for
jailing Churchill on the charge of perjury. Brown raised this question
after Churchill referred to the Mandan incident at a Colorado trial
stemming from his role in Columbus Day protests. After I raised hell on the
Internet for Brown raising the question of jail time for perjury, he
amended his attack on Churchill as follows: "The first draft speculated
that Churchill *may* have committed perjury. I am not a lawyer, and used
the word "perjury" as any layman would, to describe dishonesty in a court
proceeding. Given that the technicalities of perjury rules can vary from
one venue and one situation to the next, I have removed that statement."

At any rate, if Brown or anybody else could provide the documentation for
professors at the University of North Carolina being jailed for "research
misconduct," I'd like to hear about it. That sounds like we would be much
further along toward the fascist state that David Horowitz, Art Eckstein
and Thomas Brown obviously long for.



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