Jonathan
Judaken Smears Campus Watch in Pursuit of Victimhood
by Winfield Myers
• Jun 16, 2015 at 9:21 pm
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Jonathan Judaken, a history professor at Rhodes College, has penned a histrionic
attack on Campus Watch (CW) for the website Inside Higher Ed blaming
CW for a published report on a recent lecture he delivered at the
University of Rochester. Among Judaken's numerous errors, one stands out:
Campus Watch had nothing to do with the article that gave him the vapors.
Don't you hate it when that happens?
The report, by Rochester Institute of Technology English lecturer A.J.
Caschetta, appeared first at Jihad
Watch and then at the Middle East
Forum, of which CW is indeed a project. But as anyone familiar with
think tanks should know, articles appearing on one site do not denote
sponsorship by another. It's a bit like saying, or, given the tenor of
Judaken's piece, screaming while rending one's garment, that Rhodes
College has attacked CW because of the ill-informed actions of a single
professor.
For the record, CW did not commission, edit, or
post Caschetta's article. Judaken's claim, therefore, that Caschetta is
CW's "appointed watchdog" is false. Had he (or the editors of
IHE) glanced at CW's mission statement, he would have seen that CW
critiques the academic field of Middle East studies, plus Moonlighters,
non-specialists who publish heavily in the field. Since his specialty is modern European
intellectual history, he may have concluded that CW had nothing to do
with the essay.
More clues of CW's non-involvement abound: CW isn't mentioned in the
author's byline, nor is the piece posted at CW's website or on any
CW-related social media.
As for his other errors, bearing in mind the brevity of human life and
so addressing only those concerning CW's alleged role, let's note just a
few:
Campus Watch is a project of the Middle East
Forum, a nonprofit organization under section 501 (c) 3 of the IRS
code. It is not in any way related to the other entities he names (the
David Horowitz Freedom Center, Canary Mission, et al.) as a "network
of networks," which implies a formal, administrative connection.
That various groups critique higher education from similar perspectives
does not an organization or even conspiracy make.
But while Judaken has a hard time getting his facts straight, never
let it be said that he isn't possessed of an ironic style, even if
(especially if) he doesn't know it. Despite titling his essay "The
New McCarthyism," he writes, "The Campus Watchers don't want
students to reevaluate and reframe the latest well-worn clichés."
The charge that one's intellectual opponents are guilty of McCarthyism
is surely the most hackneyed, unexamined, ahistorical
cliché in the left's repertoire. It's employed so often one wonders
when a "new" McCarthyism could have emerged from the old, since
dissenters from academic groupthink have been fingered as such since tail
gunner Joe himself strode the earth—before his death a mere 58 years ago.
It's also absurd, since McCarthy was a U.S. senator who could bring the
weight of the federal government down on opponents, while CW and other
private organizations can only . . . write about them. But those who live
in hermetically sealed bubbles often mistake the sting of words for the
boot heel of the state, don't they?
Almost three-quarters of Judaken's essay consists of a breathless
explication of the final chapter of Hannah Arendt's The Origins of
Totalitarianism, "Ideology and Terror: A Novel Form of
Government." This gives him leave to write that, "Hannah Arendt
suggested that what linked Stalinism and Nazism was the reduction of
history to ironclad laws, whether race or class."
Casting oneself as a victim just isn't complete without subtly hinting
that one's detractors (or even non-detractors who don't know you from
Adam) are somehow akin not just to Joe McCarthy, but to Stalin and
Hitler. It's what courageous professors who spend themselves in the
service of fighting ideology do.
Judaken ends his essay by asking what he will tell others about how he
"ended up on Jihad Watch" and answers, "I tell them the
New McCarthyism has arrived."
What's arrived, in fact, is an era of shameless victimology peddled by
fact-challenged academics who equate criticism with state-supported
oppression. Call it the ideology of victimhood.
Winfield Myers is Director of Academic Affairs and Director, Campus Watch, at the Middle East Forum
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text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an
integral whole with complete and accurate information provided about its
author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
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