Author Archives:
Hypocrisy, Thy Name is WashU

Authored by אנדר-ויק. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
Target is homophobic…or so Washington University in St Louis would have you believe. Not long ago, this ever so progressive university withdrew from the Target After Hours Shopping program the retail chain created to serve college freshman through offering not only extended hours, but transportation from campus to the store and back. The justification given by Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Jill Carnaghi was that, “We need to walk the walk as well as talk the talk. ” What Carnaghi meant is that Washington University cannot merely preach tolerance, but must actively champion it. So you’d think that Target must’ve been donating to the Westboro Baptist Church or doing something equally nefarious, right?
As it turns out, Target earned the university’s ire by making the mistake of donating some $150,000 to Minnesota Forward, a political action committee formed to “ensure that private-sector job creation and economic growth are at the top of the agenda during the 2010 campaign.” How is this an issue of tolerance? Well, it seems that Minnesota Forward decided to give Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmers some money. Emmers, more than simply failing to stand up for gay rights, is closely associated with a homophobic rock ministry that advocates the murder of homosexuals based on the Bible (though curiously, they seem less concerned about killing violators of the Sabbath, another scriptural gem). While this is no doubt troubling, this is also not related to why Minnesota Forward helped finance his campaign. On their own website, the group notes that “As a legislator, Tom Emmer voted against job-killing taxes and for reduced government spending. Emmer voted with the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce 91% of the time on votes scored by the Chamber.” In other words, for a commerce-minded PAC, he seems to be an ideal candidate. Likewise, as Target is a Fortune 100 company interested in protecting its bottom line and delivering ever-larger returns for its investors, it seems only natural that they would donate to Minnesota Forward. That Emmers is a bigot (or at least keeps company with them) does not indicate Minnesota Forward or Target supports discrimination. In the case of Target, one would be hard-pressed to find a more tolerant company of its size. When not setting records with its generous charitable contributions, Target is busy earning a perfect rating on the Human Rights Campaign Corporate Equality Index, which measures GLBT treatment in the work place. And it has long had some of the most generous domestic partnership benefits of any major American corporation.
So you would think that if the university was prepared to hurt its students to send a message to a gay-friendly corporation that they ought not donate to groups that donate to incidentally-homophobic individuals, that it must take a similarly extreme approach across the board. I did. Hence my surprise when in my university inbox I see an announcement for a university-sponsored blood drive that will be taking place next week. Maybe the higher-ups missed a memo, or maybe they just didn’t think they could get the same smug satisfaction from treating the American Red Cross with the disdain they did Target, but this effort is exponentially more harmful to homosexuals than anything Target can be linked to. Why? Well since 1983, any “male who has had sex with another male since 1977, even once,” has been barred from giving blood thanks to the FDA. This, of course, is one of a myriad of restrictions imposed that would seem intent upon limiting the spread of HIV. Since homosexual men constitute the majority of HIV-positive individuals in the US, this seems reasonable enough on the surface. But, while the majority of those with HIV may be gay, the majority of those who are gay do not have HIV. Even those who can prove their health are ineligible on a permanent basis to donate blood. That, to me, seems far more outrageous than a gay-friendly company backing a PAC for economic reasons, which later went on to back a homophobic candidate for economic reasons.
And I won’t even get started in pointing out the hypocrisy of getting outraged at Target without kicking the ROTC off-campus like Columbia and Stanford.
If you liked this post, you may also enjoy these recent articles:
2010 Census…Answering the Race Question
What does it take to be a census worker? If your answer involved the ability to read pre-scripted statements from a piece of paper and refuse to answer direct questions, you’d be damningly correct. At 4:36 PM CST I called the Census Bureau to clarify their expectations regarding Question #9, which inquires about one’s race. This question is problematic both in their decision to ask it and in answer expectations, but I’ll elaborate on that a bit later. First, the call:
4:36 PM CST
Call placed. The automated system cannot understand me, and after several failed tries declares that it will connect me with an employee.
4:39 PM CST
Connected to the employee, where I ask about what constitutes an acceptable answer to race. She reads an official answer that does not address my question (included below), prompting me to repeat myself. She then says that she cannot answer my question, and to put whatever I want.
4:42 PM CST
I declare that my concern is being legally compliant, and I would thus like to speak with somebody who can indicate whether my intended answer is legal or not.
4:43 PM CST
The second employee indicates that there is no illegal answer to the question, my only obligation is to answer it. She goes on to claim that I can even make up a race if I like.
Now, why is it that I have a question about race? Should that not be exceedingly straightforward?
Put simply, the issue with categorizing oneself by race stems from race being a social construct. This is demonstrated aptly by the fact that there is no universally accepted definition of race, and that there is likewise no uniformity of opinion on what constitutes a racial group and how many exist. This is perhaps most notably demonstrated by the fluidity of our racial categories over the history of the Census.
As Jeff Jacoby notes, we’ve vastly expanded our racial category options:
In 1850, the Census Bureau divided Americans into “white,’’ “black,’’ and “mulatto’’; by 1890, it was classifying “Japanese’’ and “Chinese’’ as races, along with “Negro,’’ “mulatto,’’ “quadroon,’’ “octoroon,’’ and “white.’’ Based on this year’s enumeration, the government proudly announces, “Tabulations will be available for 63 race categories — six single-race categories and 57 different combinations of two or more races.’’
If you’re wondering how there are 63 racial categories now, then let us look at what the Census Bureau has to say:
The Census Bureau collects race data in accordance with guidelines provided by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget and these data are based on self-identification. The racial categories included in the census questionnaire generally reflect a social definition of race recognized in this country, and not an attempt to define race biologically, anthropologically or genetically. People may choose to report more than one race to indicate their racial mixture, such as “American Indian and White.” People who identify their origin as Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish may be of any race.
In addition, it is recognized that the categories of the race item include both racial and national origin or socio-cultural groups. You may choose more than one race category.
As you can see, their definition is exceedingly unhelpful. They acknowledge that their is no biological, anthropological, or genetic standard by which they are defining as race, but that instead the definition shall be the product of social standards. This assumes a national uniformity that does not exist, an acceptance of questionable consensus standards, and attaching oneself to a label whose boundaries are rendered fluid by virtue of their function as a sub-category of something as mutating in definition as race is. More at issue though is the decision to include “national origin” or “socio-cultural groups” as valid identifiers of race, for it would seem to sanction a massive range of answers that in both social and historical context would not fit what the average person understands to be a race. “Korean” is a nationality and “Hmong” is an ethnicity, yet the census lists the former as an option and the latter as an example of an acceptable expansion upon the “Other Asian” choice.
By this standard then, I could readily identify as American, for I was born here. Some conservatives have considered this very idea, and seem to believe it technically legal. And Jacoby agrees, noting that the New York Times endorsed this very notion in the mid-19th century. Of course, I’m a first generation American, the product of legal immigration. Being of Canadian stock, I might then identify under that category instead. But is isn’t as though my family spent centuries in Canada. We fled there from what is now Belarus in the early 20th century, so Belarusian might seem more fitting. Based on the history of said region though, I might just as easily identify as Lithuanian, Polish, or Russian for at one time or another they all occupied said land before my family escaped. The Russians had the most recent control, so identifying as Russian might make the most sense. Complicating the picture though is that fact that my family is most likely not from Belarus, but settled there at some period during the Russian occupation, at which time Russian simultaneously held a multitude of other neighboring territories, any one of them being potential historic homes of my family.
Given how confusing national origin would prove, I might instead identify as being of a socio-cultural group. At the most basic level, that might mean identifying as either Jewish or Semitic. Either should clearly be a valid answer, for just over two decades ago, the US Supreme Court acknowledged Jews as a being part of a racial category separate from Caucasians. This could further justify me describing myself as either Ashkenazi for specificity’s sake, or as Israeli, Hebrew, Egyptian, or Iraqi based on the national origin criteria stated above and Jewish history. Obviously, the national origin identification choices are even more absurd than before, for I am much more removed from any of those lands than Belarus or Canada. Ashkenazi seems equally poor, for it is a better indicator of how frequently I recite Birkat Ha’Kohein and what I consider chametz than anything else. That theoretical value is expunged outright by my atheism.
So why not save myself the mental energy and identify simply as Jewish? After all, the Census is said to collect data for statistical purposes, and will neither be linked to the individual nor freely divulged in a way that threatens privacy. Or at least that is the official claim. History though tells us a much different story. In 1942, Congress passed the Second War Powers Act, which required that”any information or data” be collected by the Census Bureau be made available to other government entities. It is well established that this enabled the government to more easily locate and intern Japanese-Americans during the Second World War. More recently, the Department of Homeland Security collected Census data on Arab-Americans, which we know only through a FOIA petition from EPIC. Given then that the cause for concern extends beyond general distrust of an overreaching government, and there are multiple examples of outright abuse, I have no desire to identify as such on my form.
Many would suggest then that I identify as White. But I see two substantial problems with this. First, as mentioned earlier, I am bothered by the notion of embracing a social construct to placate government workers. Even if I accepted the notion of race, and that White was the logical choice, I would remain hesitant, for virtue of the simple fact that I’m Jewish enough to not be White in the eyes of a disturbingly large percentage of the population. But second, and perhaps more importantly, I do not wish to provide said answer for the very reason that the inquiry on race is pernicious. Look at the official justification for said inquiry:
Information on race is required for many Federal programs and is critical in making policy decisions, particularly for civil rights. States use these data to meet legislative redistricting principles. Race data also are used to promote equal employment opportunities and to assess racial disparities in health and environmental risks.
If you cut past the rhetorical efforts to make this seem positive by citing “civil rights” and “equal opportunity” issues, the meaning is rather clear: tell us your race so that we can better interfere in your community and use race-related issues to justify doing so. Even if we are to assume it will be used only in service of every liberal’s favorite example of what makes this necessary, the Voting Rights Act, it remains objectionable. While laudable in helping to enfranchise Black voters, the VRA has also been widely cited as justification for affirmative racial gerrymandering. That is, while our courts have held that redistricting efforts that diminish the political power of minorities are impermissible, no such restriction extends to redistricting in such a way as to optimally concentrate minorities into voting regions that give them more power. In practice, this leads to the creation of majority-minority districts, where a target percentage is to be Black or Hispanic, so as to ensure that candidates of said group are move viable, and that those groups at large can put their votes to better use. This is extremely objectionable, in that it leads to the creation of extremely odd shaped voting districts, the disproportionate influence of certain groups who are being extended special privilege, and has partisan implications. That last point is especially concerning, for Hispanics, and to a far greater extent Blacks, do not vote Republican. Thus, racial redistricting counts, as one of its major consequences, the creation of permanently Democratic seats, thereby negating the value of having actual elections.
So, knowing that specific racial information is liable to be exposed and abused, and objecting to both the notion or race and the available labels, how did I answer the question of race? I checked “Some other race” and wrote “No race” in the provided box. I am hoping that this does not yield a follow-up phone call or direct visit, but I certainly imagine it will. After all, while the workers I spoke with seemed to believe that however I identified would be valid, and I found “No race” the closest acceptable short answer, I should be compliant with the law. Yet, since my answer surely is not the sort they desire, mere compliance probably won’t end their harassment.
I mention legal compliance because of the United States Code, Title 13 (Census), Chapter 7 (Offenses and Penalties), SubChapter II:
221. Refusal or neglect to answer questions; false answers
* (a) Whoever, being over eighteen years of age, refuses or willfully neglects, when requested by the Secretary, or by any other authorized officer or employee of the Department of Commerce or bureau or agency thereof acting under the instructions of the Secretary or authorized officer, to answer, to the best of his knowledge, any of the questions on any schedule submitted to him in connection with any census or survey provided for by subchapters I, II, IV, and V of chapter 5 of this title, applying to himself or to the family to which he belongs or is related, or to the farm or farms of which he or his family is the occupant, shall be fined not more than $100.
* (b) Whoever, when answering questions described in subsection (a) of this section, and under the conditions or circumstances described in such subsection, willfully gives any answer that is false, shall be fined not more than $500.
* (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, no person shall be compelled to disclose information relative to his religious beliefs or to membership in a religious body.
Though the Constitutional mandate for the Census does not mention race as required information, the Supreme Court has held that questions not explicitly included in the Constitution may still be made a mandatory component of the Census, such that legally speaking the above penalties could realistically be imposed on those who fail to answer or who inaccurately answer the Census. Rare as enforcement may be, the risk is higher than I care to assume given my financial limitations and desire to avoid even the remote prospect of imprisonment.
It is clear that we must, legally speaking, all fill out our Census forms, and we must indeed answer absurd questions such as those asking about race. But, short of not outright lying, there is no established guideline. So fill in whatever answer you find most comfortable, appreciating fully the consequences of giving the government certain answers, be it helped to undermine the democratic process or receiving further communications from their army of underinformed temp workers.
If you liked this post, you may also enjoy these recent articles:
Previously Unreleased: The Changing Nature of Dhimmitude and the Jizyah
What follows is a short academic work I authored in 2009 but have never released. My hesitation to do so was out of concern that it might be misunderstood, in that Christian Europe in centuries past did abuse Jews more greatly than the Islamic world, but that says nothing of the present condition, where Islam seeks to violently eliminate the Jewish community around the globe, and Christians do not (at least not as a matter of religious doctrine). Thus, I ask that this be read with the understanding that any claims seemingly defensive of Islam do not reflect support for the faith in the 21st century, where it foments violence and human rights violations like no other.
In order to preserve formatting, specifically as related to footnotes, I have this as a PDF and uploaded it to Scribd. The essay is embeded below, though you may download it as well.
If you liked this post, you may also enjoy these recent articles:
How Liberal Politics Ruined Student Life
When you consider that our campus paper runs three editions each week, features breaking news updates online between editions, and has put out some wonderful special editions centered around events like the Vice Presidential Debate, we’re quite lucky. Or at least we were. Even as recently as March 2009, Student Life was a publication that had quality standards commensurate with our peer institutions, displayed respect for core journalistic values, and fostered a free and open culture that made involvement both simple and pleasurable. But, with the staff change that took place in April 2009, none of this can be said anymore with a straight face. There has been a noticeable decline in quality, a reckless disregard for journalistic standards and values, and a regression to secrecy and power politics.
Though I do not want to paint too rosy a picture about the operations and content of Student Life prior to this staffing change (such as the horrid coverage of Dr. Daniel Pipes), as somebody who has worked at other student papers and for a range of more professional sources too, I feel able to say that on the whole, the previous standards of operation were generally commendable, and the results often praiseworthy.
First and foremost among what made Student Life function as a credible vehicle that was more newspaper than sub-tabloidal misallocation of paper (as is presently the case) was that, rather than choosing governing sentiments as fit the agenda of those in charge, they upheld journalistic standards, chief among them free speech. It is understood that, especially as it pertains to editorial columns, the writer is given sufficient discretion to not only choose their topic, but write about it in a tone and with a slant of their own choosing. For their part, the editor is generally expected only to make alterations to grammar and syntax, and if need be, removing statements that qualify as libel. And that was the position taken by my editor, and insofar as I am aware all others, up until the staff shift. Not a single article I wrote between September of 2008 and April of 2009 was censored, including an article where I advocated applying an obscure Israeli law that would make the vast majority of its government eligible for life imprisonment and another article decrying Gandhi and the undue popularity he continues to enjoy postmortem. The new staff however, was quick to abandon this standard. Or rather, Kate Gaertner was. Being the new Senior Forum Editor, she has the ability to override the decision of the daily editors. And, at least in my experience, said group was not actively inclined to follow Gaertner’s reckless lead. Rather, they were just a bit too green behind the ears to challenge her abuse of authority, meaning that from day one, she could censor articles whose viewpoint she disagreed with, altering the tone, or making changes that made the article less coherent (as happened with my Fujimori article), thereby making the author seem less competent.
I was greatly concerned when, within a week or so of assuming power, she overrode the daily editor and made drastic changes to an article about the Federal Reserve written by fellow CLA member Phil Christofanelli. While some of her changes were legitimately necessary to enhance the readability of his column, having seen both the original version submitted and that which ultimately ran, I can say with confidence that she grossly distorted Christofanelli’s position, and left out crucial details that supported or qualified his position, and which were contextually critical. Alas, this was not the last example of her flagrant disregard for the opinions of the few non-liberals who had opted to lend the paper credence by letting it cite us as examples of a balance that never truly existed. The very next week, my article about the famed Peruvian politician Alberto Fujimori was savagely butchered.
Length was obviously not the issue, for it was among the shortest columns I turned in last year, and was nearly three hundred words shorter than the column I’d run the previous week about US-Israel relations. Indeed, the version she decided to run without my consent was a mere 19 words more brief. The real changes she made were not to length, but message. My article was unabashedly supportive of Fujimori, who many conservatives hold as hero based on the stellar results he generated while in power, especially as compared to the job done by those who preceded and succeeded him. In her mind however, that was unacceptable. After the column ran, I met with her to discuss my profound anger over the rape of my column. Her justification was that because I was the only Student Life columnist whose focus was on international affairs, she felt the need to moderate my tone, given that I had no left-wing counterpart. Never mind that with the arguable exception of Christofanelli, who covered various domestic policy issues every other week from a qualified libertarian position, every other writer for the section had a pronounced left-wing orientation. Yet at no time did she ever feel that balance was needed there. After all, the views of said columnists aligned generally with her own, so she felt no need to restrict their speech. In that particular exchange her seeming fetish for censoring conservatives was re-iterated throughout, as she issued various proposals that involved cutting, marginalizing, or balancing my column and no others. We ended with me making rather clear that should my column ever again be censored, I would cease to write for Student Life, as I now have.
Censorship though is not limited to those writing, as such policies just as readily apply to those wishing to join the staff. One individual wishing to write for Forum sent Gaertner an email detailing their desire to write for her section. She did not ask for a writing sample or details of the writer’s credentials. She did however make certain to confirm that their political position was one consistent with her own. She stated, in reference obviously to me, that the paper already had a writer who is “very neo-conservative in his stance [ed - this is grossly inaccurate], very pro-Israel” and that she was not looking to hire another such writer in the name of the “balance,” which consisted of me on the right, and most of the rest of the staff on the far left. It wasn’t until she was sufficiently ensured she wouldn’t be adding another conservative to the staff that she granted the applicant a column.
Of course, once granted a column, even if a Forum writer is not subject to censorship as a result of their ideological sympathies, it all but certain they will suffer from the ill-effects of mismanagement and/or power politics. For instance, it was not until shortly after I attempted to submit my Srebrencia column (now run elsewhere) during the first week of class this academic year that a clear word limit was ever stated, being set at a meager 700 (which, in turn, has caused a decline in quality perhaps moreso than any other singular action since the staffing change). Problem was, what your limit was would vary depending which editor you asked, and who you were. Under the old regime, if there was a word limit, it was perhaps a soft 1000, and I ran at least four articles that were between 800 and 1000 words without so much as a suggestion that I consider writing shorter submissions. Under the new regime, the limit is a hard 700. But, and here’s the catch, it applies selectively. I had run multiple columns longer than that in the short reign of the new governing regime. And indeed, I was told by my editor that the submitted article would run, but that in the future, I should keep articles under 800 words. A friend of mine writing for Forum was told to keep his columns under 550 words by a different editor. Presumably these were not arbitrary decisions, but rather the result of mismanagement by Gaertner, as applied to her subordinates.
I am especially inclined to believe the fault lies exclusively with Gaertner based on her inability to relay simple information to her staff in a timely fashion. After the last minute rejection of my Srebrenica article for being longer than a limit I was never told about, and other issues to be detailed below, I resigned from Student Life on August 30, 2009. From what I have been told, even though the article was in her hands well in advance of that time, she did not bother cutting it until printing day, keeping the Friday Forum Editor in the dark. Likewise, he was not even told of my resignation until the next week, at which time he was tasked with finding a way to fill column inches he had come to expect were already accounted for, being that I had a weekly column.
Still, it may not merely have been an issue of incompetence and limited communication skills on Gaerner’s part, as her apparent love for instigating petty conflicts in an inexplicable quest to ensure that her authority was never challenged, even though hierarchically she was never in any danger, manifested itself regularly. This is perhaps best evidenced by her fear of openness, and the associated reliance on secrecy, witnessed clearly in her management of the Executive Board. Made up officially of senior staff, its job is to select the topics for the staff editorials, as well as the position that will be taken therein. Whatever the connotations of her name, the staff in charge before her held that such meetings should be open to all Forum writers interested in attending, and that when there, participants were equal in status to those who were official members of it. They recognized that there was no negative consequence to this approach, as only those genuinely interested would attend if not obligated. At the same time, there was tremendous benefit that came with it, including helping to determine who would be offered promotions at the next staff roster adjustment, encouraging interaction between junior and senior staff, fostering an open atmosphere that instilled faith the paper, and allowed for a diversity in opinion to be given voice that might otherwise be sorely lacking. Gaertner however, would have none of this. Though she herself had attended several such meetings before being made an editor, unsure in power based on her underwhelming experience and leadership skills, she sought to keep the meetings closed, limiting them only to the newly appointed editors, all of whom had the same or less experience than her, and were disinclined to challenge her authority. Or rather, she almost did.
Having regularly attended such meetings previously, and moreover having both written a Staff Editorial (about University College access by undergrads) and having introduced a piece of software still widely used by Student Life staff to collaboratively edit articles (Writeboard), I continued to attend the meetings without issue. And at first, there was no apparent problem, for she had not announced a policy switch, and no other non-editor besides me made a point of attending such meetings. One week however, I suggested to a friend of mine that also wrote for Forum that he experience an Executive Board meeting, as they sometimes featured rather interesting debate. He agreed, and we went together to the next such meeting. Shortly after leaving, he received an email from Gartner, wherein she said stated he was not welcome at said meetings in the future. She said, “One thing that I wanted to address with you is that the editorial board meetings are technically open only to senior staff members, and we invite Caleb, as a columnist, to come to our meetings because we feel he helps us to strike the appropriate political balance of opinion that an editorial board for our campus community should reflect.” That she even allowed me to continue attending for the remainder of the academic year was a bit shocking, for her actions detailed earlier in this article make clear she had no true allegiance to balance. But this was to be short lived.
Just before the start of the academic year, and prior to my resignation from the paper, I sent Gaertner an email inquiring as to when and where the Executive Board meetings would be held this year, thinking that it might have changed from last year. In response to my inquiry, she informed me that “the scope of eboard has changed this year, and in keeping with our goals, it will be limited to editors.” Now, insofar as I can tell, that policy was not any different from the preceding year since her assumption of power, with one notable exception. And that is the concern for balance. It seems that over the summer, she lost any interest in even pretending that her section enjoyed any. Not being one to avoid confrontation, I responded to her, stating as much, albeit with a somewhat nicer tone. She of course ignored this, as she often did emails I sent where the answer would invariably require that she either concede something to me, or put her foot in her mouth. While other writers would hear back from her in hours, I would never get a response as soon as the circumstances forced her hand, even if I sent two or three emails on the same topic over the course of a week or two. To do otherwise would require that she be less paranoid about protection authority nobody ever sought to challenge. And that inclination seems absent from her DNA.
Ultimately, I do not believe that the sad state Forum, and to a lesser extent other sections of the paper, currently find themselves in is necessarily a permanent condition. Past leadership has demonstrated that within our student body there are a perfectly sufficient number of capable individuals to run a high quality campus newspaper. But those presently in power, especially Gaertner, have done considerable damage in the present to our paper’s quality and reputation. If, when the next staff re-assignment comes around serious changes are not made, with more qualified individuals being given greater authority, I fear that what is presently just a dark period for the paper will become something more permanent and more destructive. Its longterm viability, if present conditions persist, is questionable. And, even if it were to continue on, in its present capacity that would serve only as a blight on this fine institution.
If you liked this post, you may also enjoy these recent articles:







The Rise of Kate Gaertner And the Fall of Her Newspaper
Oct 1
Posted by Caleb Posner
The above quote is a verbatim reproduction of a comment made by Richard Jesse Market at 10PM on September 13, 2010 in response to a fence-sitting staff editorial entitled “Donate Blood and Fight Homophobia,” which ran in that day’s issue of Student Life, the ever-declining rag which is the Washington University campus newspaper. Written not long after I had criticized the paper over their decision to remain silent about the staggering hypocrisy of the university in first ending its cooperation with Target in response to their indirect aid of a homophobic politician, and then running a massive blood drive from which homosexuals are prohibited, this editorial was intended to encourage students to have their cake and eat it too, and to avoid admitting that the self-satisfaction so many members of our community enjoy is undeserved.
If you clicked through to read the staff editorial, you may have noticed that Mr. Markel’s comment is absent from the page. And why exactly is that? Well, it is the result of the continued degeneration of journalistic standards and the notion of editorial independence under Kate Gaertner.
Where first she made a name for herself in censoring conservative submissions from long time columnists, she soon moved on to hiring new writers based exclusively on their political positions. Dissent was never something she tolerated, hence her eventual decision to close down the Editorial Board to non-editors (a position she has since switched again, now requiring new editorial writers to attend). But now it seems her loathing of an alternative opinion has reached such profound heights that she has banned all members of the Editorial Board from openly disagreeing with the staff editorial. Never mind that it is a consensus view and not something which all members must sign off on. Here, it must be pointed out that Richard Markel is as close to a conservative member of the editorial board as can be found, and thus is always shouted down. So, in effect, this policy exists to curtail the critical speech of a single member, based entirely on the grounds that it would look “unprofessional” for an editor to break with his publication. It is worth mentioning that such policies never existed under previous management, and this decision was made by Kate Gaertner herself.
It is at this point where I must mention that Mr. Markel did not merely have his comment deleted, but was explicitly threatened. He was told to fall in line, or to resign. This speaks to Kate’s seeming goal of chasing every last non-liberal off of the paper’s staff. First, I resigned in August of 2009, after having spent but a few weeks under her as Senior Forum Editor, based on her willingness to censor columns she disagreed with and her infusion of political bias into ever aspect of her management. Later, with Kate’s promotion to Editor-in-Chief and the end of the academic year, the generally moderate-toned libertarian who joined at the same time I did, Phil Christofanelli, resigned as well. He attributes his decision largely to the displeasure he felt writing for Kate, who he acknowledges put personal politics above editorial freedom.
This alienating pattern of mismanagement has had some severe consequences. When I wrote for Student Life there were so many forum contributors that there was talk of having each writer submit a piece every third week. Now however, they are currently “desperate for writers,” according to one inside source. And it shows in the many issues where they struggle to fill even a single side of a page with editorial content. Alarmingly, they would have even less if Kate Gaertner had her way, as it is only through the intervention of Senior Forum Editor AJ Sundar that a handful of right-leaning editorials have been published from Mr. Markel, who even as a voter for Barak Obama is apparently too conservative for the Editor-in-Chief’s tastes. What little content they do run from other writers tends to be shamefully bad, with pieces either being little more than stream of consciousness drivel, or burying the lead so deeply as to leave the reader wondering if the article ever underwent even the most modest revisions.
Particularly striking was “Constitutionally Correct?” by Sophie Adelman, which after deftly managing not to express any opinion for the first two thirds of her mercifully short article, ends with what amounts to a condemnation of free speech rights protecting Fred Phelps. Mr. Markel, outraged by her position, sought to write a response defending the importance of extending free speech even to the most reviled bigots. After turning in said article, he was confronted by other members of the paper staff indicating that his column would not be run as submitted. Various points made by those party to the discussion, such as a refusal to include language that made it a direct response rather than an alternative view of the same issue, were at least understandable even if not correct. Others however, are a different story, which you’ll soon discover yourself.
As it happens, within the Student Life office, various staff members tend to congregate. And, since that can make for some excellent drama, occasionally some of those not party to the argument of the moment will secretly record the conversation and share it with others for amusement. That happened the very same day Mr. Markel was arguing to have his article run, and I have since been given a copy of the argument.
In the conversation, he is told that the word “fag” cannot appear in his article, even in the context of quoting Phelps and the signs he protests with. The idea of running a censored version of that word was met with nearly as much hesitance. Moreover, discussion of how Mr. Markel has been making too many waves and would be advised to watch out can also be found, though this is stated somewhat less bluntly. Embedded below via Youtube is the audio file, which I have edited only to remove information which might identify my source, and to try and improve sound quality. I have cut off the start and end points as necessary, but the middle portion remains unedited, so that you too can judge how they handle such matters.
Lastly, though I have already spoken a great deal about censorship as directed by Kate Gaertner at Student Life and its negative ramifications, I must share one last thought. The September 22nd staff editorial, of which Kate was a strong proponent, is focused on condemning a peer institution’s newspaper for its failure to censor columnists. Now, while I’ll readily admit that the Johns Hopkins editorials condemned by Student Life don’t reflect especially well upon the paper that ran them, the very last thing a newspaper should go out of its way to advocate is increased editorial censorship. The fact then that the current staff is so enthused by it as to no longer simply practice it covertly, but to champion it in print, says all that is needed to confirm that Student Life is a damn disgrace of a newspaper.
Please note that the information included above has been culled from a variety of sources, ranging from my own interactions with various staff members, to tips given by a large number of past and present Student Life staff members. That Richard Markel is the protagonist of this particular entry on Kate Gaertner’s Student Life speaks only to the fact that he remains among the brave few willing to stand his ground in some capacity. His opinion was not solicited at any time before, during, or after the composition and editing of this piece. All sources that have asked not to be named will remain anonymous.
If you liked this post, you may also enjoy these recent articles:
Share this:
Like this:
Posted in Campus Issues and Personal Commentary
Leave a Comment
Tags: Caleb Posner, censorship, Investigative Journalism, Johns Hopkins, Kate Gaertner, politics, Richard Markel, Student Life, Washington University