On 9/5/06, paul phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Boy, if Fish's doctrine were really adopted, 90% of all (neoclassical)
economics profs would be fired.

Fish was Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the
University of Illinois at Chicago from 1999 to 2004, but there is no
evidence that he sought to apply his doctrine to economics.  :->

BTW, which government of the world has presided over the largest-scale
purge of professors and other professionals in recent memory?  The
secular government of the United States of America:

<blockquote><http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/9c65cf0098d9fd852b6cc81cfa749748.htm>
IRAQ: Threatened teachers fleeing the country
24 Aug 2006 14:14:55 GMT
Source: IRIN

BAGHDAD, 24 August (IRIN) - "When I was a child, I dreamt of being a
professor so that I could give knowledge to thousands of people in my
country," said Hala Jumeiri, an engineering professor at Mustansiriyah
University in Baghdad. "I fulfilled my dream - but today I'm fleeing
Iraq for my own safety because violence has reached the classroom."

Jumeiri and her family are packing their bags and will leave the
country in the next few days after she received threats and two of her
colleagues were killed for doing their jobs.

"Gangs want to destroy the scientific minds of Iraq and with the
current lack of security, even giving a low mark to a student in an
exam can be reason enough to be threatened or killed," Jumeiri said.

Being a teacher in Iraq today has become as dangerous as being a
soldier in action, teachers say, and it's a risk many are not willing
to take.

Ever since a Shi'ite shrine was attacked last February in Samarra,
125km north of Baghdad, sectarian violence has raged throughout the
country, creating a climate of lawlessness that criminal gangs are
exploiting. Teachers are one segment of Iraqi society that is
suffering the consequences.

According to the Iraqi Health Ministry, 3,438 Iraqis were killed in
July – 1,855 because of sectarian or political violence, and another
1,583 from bombings and shootings. This is the highest number of
violent deaths in any month since the United States-led occupation of
Iraq began in April 2003.

Since February, nearly 180 professors have been killed and at least
3,250 have fled Iraq to neighbouring countries, according to the
Ministry of Higher Education.

"The number of teachers leaving the country this year is huge and
almost double those who left in 2005," said Professor Salah Aliwi,
director general of studies planning in the Ministry of Higher
Education. "Every day, we are losing more experienced people, which is
causing a serious problem in the education system."

Students targeting teachers

Such is the prevalence of violence in Iraq, that students have started
killing professors.

"My husband was a professor at Baghdad University. One of his students
was not doing well and he had to fail him for this year," said Salua
Muhammad, 51. "He was killed on 26 July. His colleagues said the
reason was that he failed a student who got upset and shot him at the
door of the college."

The victim, Dr Barak Farouk, 58, is one of dozens of other professors
who have been killed in similar circumstances, according to the
Ministry of Higher Education.

Ali al-Kafif, 53, was another professor at Baghdad University who was
murdered ostensibly for not passing students.

"He received threats in the form of letters saying that if he didn't
pass all the students in his class, he was going to die - and it
became reality. He was killed on 5 August after three students were
failed," said Fua'ad Yehia, 49, a colleague of al-Kalif.

"He was considered a good professor and a friend by students and his
death was really a surprise to us," Yehia added. "They left a note
near his body saying: 'Death for those who are responsible for
oppression in the classrooms'."

Dr Essam al-Rawi, president of the University Professors Union of Iraq
(UPUI), said that such targeting by students is driving teachers out
of the country. This, he said, has created a big hole in the education
system.

"We cannot approve [or pass] someone who is not up to it," al-Rawi
said. "But today we are in a situation where sectarian violence is
forcing us to do it and whoever does not accept this has fled Iraq for
their won safety."

Some teachers have been targeted because they were former members of
the dissolved Ba'ath Party or because they belong to certain sects in
the country, al-Rawi added.

Shortage of teachers

There are no reliable statistics on how many professors have left Iraq
since the US-led coalition forces began occupying Iraq three years
ago, but UPUI statistics show that more than 10,000 professionals in
general, including doctors, have already gone.

"Universities are worried about the number of professionals left
because for sure when the new term starts there will be a lack of
professors to teach students. The better ones had already left in the
early years of the [US] invasion," Aliwi said.

The Ministry of Higher Education is trying to lure professionals back
to Iraq by offering higher wages, but continuing instability is
putting people off from returning.

"I will not return to Iraq until I see that it has become a secure
country," said Dr Amin Youssef, a professor of medicine who is now
based in Amman, the Jordanian capital. "The ministry offered me an
excellent salary, but I have a family to look after and no amount of
money can protect us from violence."

AS/SZ/ED</blockquote>

Shouldn't US leftists worry about this, since it's happening under the
military occupation by our own government?  No, many US leftists have
a more important thing to do: grasp at straws as they really want the
President of Iran to purge professors in his country!
--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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