In the Dark
Reader (and tireless commenter) Jean Bart sends in this Michelle Goldberg story about the latest wrinkle in the Middle East Studies struggle. [Day pass/ad viewing required] If you've been following the saga of Martin Kramer, Campus Watch, and so on, the outlines of the debate will be familiar enough. This plot point involves a House bill to increase Federal oversight of University ME studies. As this oversight would only apply to programs on the public tit, I can't get as worked up about it as some of the academics quoted in the story.
As a practical matter, however, it's worth thinking about what areas of inquiry might come up in the crosshairs if Congress, with the assistance of the Ivory Towers In the Sand crowd, really starts reviewing academic work—and more important, what the tactical implications of that might be for the U.S. Think, for example, about Noah Feldman, the alarmingly youthful Islamic expert and fair-haired boy who speaks fluent Arabic, learned all of Shariah law in one weekend cram, issued his first fatwa at the age of six, unwinds by composing verses in ancient Aramaic, and so on. Feldman's seems like exactly the kind of education this house bill would tend to curtail, since his overall theories are very close to those of John Esposito, one of Kramer & Co's arch-villains. Yet Feldman is hardly an anti-American, or even anti-Bush, zealot. His book After Jihad comports easily with the Administration's ideas about democratization in the Middle East, and he worked on efforts to draft an Iraqi constitution earlier this year (though he vanished from that project pretty quickly).
It seems to me this House effort risks aggravating a real problem (insufficient understanding of the culture and politics of a region the U.S. is intimately involved in) in order to address a largely imaginary one (widespread indoctrination in anti-Americanism). It's hard enough to understand what's going on in the Middle East without more congressional micromanagement.
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Stop federal funding and you will likely get a stop to the congressional micromanagement, no? Or the status quo with these programs is fine, and leave them as they are.
Proponents of these programs want money with minimal or no strings attached, which suggests minimal or no oversight, which leads to minimal or no accountability.
This is really welfare to the professoiate. I'd suggest the government should not be involved in funding it.
And if our elected representatives vote to fund it then it seems reasonable that they should ensure the purpose of the funding is being met. If they don't (monitor the use) then we have the choice of voting them out.
Of course, I think I'll just vote them out if they decide to send public funds to the Academy for such things... in the hopes of shortening the cycle considerably.
"It seems to me this House effort risks aggravating a real problem (insufficient understanding of the culture and politics of a region the U.S. is intimately involved in) in order to address a largely imaginary one (widespread indoctrination in anti-Americanism)."
You got that exactly backwards. Our supposed "insufficient understanding" is neither that great nor that significant. Their widespread indocrination of anti-Americanism, along with many other horrendous concepts, is crucial.
Tim C,
Somewhat off topic.
The comments on the Amazon page for Noah Feldman you linked to, if true, suggest that he has a less than perfect understanding of the region and that he is not a particularly good example of the harm this bill would inflict. Being able to recite scripture by rote may not make for a pertinent understanding of the politics of the ME, especially from a liberal standpoint. All this is apart from the academic freedom issues raised by the Salon article.
I'll admit to not being familiar with his work.
Right then, back to the sauce.
http://www.mahmood.tv/
OT again but here is a rather interesting blog from Bahrain.
BTW - Mahmood's blog has several posts on the Nancy Ajram affair. Freund wrote about this a short while back.
Let's not forget that Congress likes to define "federal funding" as broadly as possible for purposes of claiming the right to exercise control. For instance, it's tried to defined "federally funded" colleges as colleges where any student is getting money from the Feds.
"Who takes the king's shilling...."
Why do so few recipients of government funding understand that basic principle? Academic freedom does not oblige those who oppose your views to fund your research.
One of those quoted in the Salon piece uses Gary "October Surprise" Sick as his example of a "moderate" on the middle east. These folks are seriously weird. Let them all raise their own dough.
Kevin
Jean Bart's already changed his name again. You need to update the scorecard.
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One of those quoted in the Salon piece uses Gary "October Surprise" Sick as his example of a "moderate" on the middle east. These folks are seriously weird. Let them all raise their own dough.