Claudine Gay's Defenders Shot the Messenger
Harvard should pick someone with academic integrity as its next president.

Claudine Gay resigned as president of Harvard University in January, following numerous allegations that she plagiarized passages in her published works. But in some corners of the media, the fact that she committed plagiarism mattered much less than the fact that it was conservative writers who caught her.
Aaron Sibarium, a reporter at the right-leaning news website The Washington Free Beacon, performed the lion's share of the digging. Christopher Brunet, a conservative writer; Christopher Rufo, a conservative writer and activist; and Phillip Magness, a libertarian economic historian, also made important contributions. Their allegations were very serious, and what they found led many commentators—including Harvard students—to conclude that she should be held accountable. Even The Harvard Crimson's editorial board, writing in support of Gay, nevertheless acknowledged that she had committed plagiarism and that the university's investigation had been inadequate.
Gay's defenders said the charges against her lacked importance and that she was guilty of mere sloppiness—failing to sufficiently paraphrase the passages she had copied. This position became less tenable after subsequent reporting from Sibarium revealed that she had in fact committed traditional plagiarism as well: copying passages from other scholars without citing them.
The next course of action was to shoot the messengers. Since many of the people accusing Gay of committing plagiarism were conservative, their motivations were deemed political and thus dismissible. New York Times columnist Charles Blow described the campaign against Gay as "a project of displacement and defilement meant to reverse progress and shame the proponents of that progress."
Gay's defenders had a point, at least, in noting that conservatives had first set their sights on the president of Harvard after her disastrous testimony before the House of Representatives concerning antisemitism on campus. When Gay ultimately stepped aside, her resignation letter leaned into this explanation while merely nodding at the plagiarism accusations.
"It has been distressing to have doubt cast on my commitments to confronting hate and to upholding scholarly rigor—two bedrock values that are fundamental to who I am—and frightening to be subjected to personal attacks and threats fueled by racial animus," she wrote.
Gay is a more sympathetic figure when the hearing is considered in isolation. While her explanations of Harvard's speech policies in the face of relentless grilling by Republican political figures seemed tin-eared, it is in fact true that such policies are context-dependent; calls for political violence are not necessarily violations of Harvard's policies unless they are directed at specific individuals. She should not have lost her job for articulating that.
Yet Gay is no free speech hero. She may have defended provocative political speech at the House hearing, but her brief tenure at Harvard has not been marked by a dramatic return to free speech principles. In 2023, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression ranked Harvard dead last on its college free speech list. Indeed, one might conclude that in order to restore free speech at Harvard, different leadership is sorely needed.
In any case, the plagiarism allegations had teeth. Reporters discovered numerous instances of Gay lazily copying other scholars' exact passages without naming them. The political ideology of some of her accusers should make no difference; Gay must be held to the same standards as other professors and students. As one member of Harvard College's Honor Council wrote in an editorial for The Harvard Crimson days before her resignation, "There is one standard for me and my peers and another, much lower standard for our University's president."
When Harvard's governing board picks the next president, it should look for someone who both abides by principles of academic integrity and vows to improve the college's free speech standing.
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It seems the only people allowed to note that an "academic" has problems are people who espouse the identical political beliefs of said academic.
...except those people are quite unlikely to do so. I mean, they missed numerous examples of plagiarism in her work for years.
Perhaps we should realize that academics are simply unlikeable politicians. Nothing remotely special.
Actually this is now being found to be somewhat common at Harvard. We just found out that a number of papers published by Harvard academics had other works images with no attribution, and many used to show results of their own work. Even worse, they passed peer review, which indicates peer review is in line with Harvard's ethics.
We've known peer review is shit once they got passages from Mein Kampf through.
She is a diversity hire.
When you hire based on immutable qualities, like skin, color and sex, you don’t get the best candidates
The biggest problem isn't that Harvard hired her and promoted her just because she's a black woman and extreme leftist with a PHD. It's that Harvard gave her that PHD, when she should have been expelled as a serial plagiarist. As consistently as she has plagiarized as a PHD candidate and a professor, I suspect that she also plagiarized in the undergraduate program at Stanford, in high school, in middle school, and if one could find the first book report she wrote in elementary school, it would be copied directly from the encyclopedia. They let her get away with that, and she's been getting away with it ever since.
I disagree she was a "diversity hire", instead, she was hired because she had the desired liberal political positions TPTB wanted.
If she was a diversity hire, she'd be a conservative, considering how Harvard had and still has a real lack of diversity regarding political positions, and excludes conservatives. Conservatives are the underrepresented minority in the Ivy Leage in both who gets hired, and who gets good grades if they reveal their politics in class.
When Harvard's governing board picks the next president, it should look for someone who both abides by principles of academic integrity and vows to improve the college's free speech standing.
Not in the job description. Actually, they want someone to do the exact opposite. Everybody thinking/saying the same thing. And all their work supporting that thing, original or not.
Just the team covering for one of their own; that is the sad state of affairs in American journalism.
She should not have lost her job for articulating that.
No. She should have lost her job for not actually PRACTICING what the policy said, and instead tolerating threats against specifically targeted people.
Harvard has not been marked by a dramatic return to free speech principles.
One problem is that some people at Harvard DO have free speech and others do not. People who have been speaking out against the double standard have been falsely accused of advocating more censorship.
She didn't espouse free speech principles, she lied about Harvard's actual policies and failed to explain why they are not applied equally to all students.
That's pretty much what I said.
I agree.
And by his tone here, Robby is all for the selective allowance of rights and persecution based on the legal content of one's speech.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=m8xWOlk3WIw
Here is how evil the left is
More here:
https://notthebee.com/article/watch-this-tenured-harvard-prof-lost-his-career-thanks-to-claudine-gay-and-faced-threats-because-his-study-found-no-racial-disparities-in-police-shootings
The idea that one may ignore facts if they come from the "wrong" source is pernicious.
Gay should have been run out of Harvard on a rail before the evident plagiarism was discovered, but afterwards, two rails just to make.sure.
Harvard governing board is going to select a president tat embodies Harvard principals. Evil mindless devotion to Marxist religion.
Except when it comes to tuition fees, and then they will be as rapacious as any Golden Age capitalist.
That’s easily solved, they just charge on a sliding scale from Opressors (most expensive) to oppressed (least expensive). I would say free, but I don’t see any of the ivy’s doing that.
Harvard is free if your family income is under 85K:
https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/why-harvard/affordability
Harvard costs what your family can afford. We make sure of that.
If your family's income is less than $85,000, you'll pay nothing.
For families who earn between $85,000 and $150,000, the expected contribution is between zero and ten percent of your annual income.
Families who earn more than $150,000 may still qualify for financial aid.
Families at all income levels who have significant assets are asked to pay more than those without assets.
Which shouldn't be too surprising, given the first half of their motto from their guiding light:
"From each according to his ability...."
Huh, did not know that.
Their goal is to ensure those fees never fall on their own supporters. That's why Obama was so focused on student loan forgiveness for government and NGO employees and now Biden on those with political degrees.
MORE ?blessings? from the Commie-Indoctrination camps.
How smart would a student be if after they learned K-3 reading, writing, basic arithmetic and history and were set FREE to train and work for actual human resource invention and production? How much better off would the nation be?
Imagine ... 10-year olds with CISCO certification, CPR certification, etc, etc ..... but oh no. The Commie-Indoctrination camps instead deem it 'gov-gun' mandatory to spend 12-YEARS learning how to be politically correct and virtue-signal topped off with another 2-YEARS of college in the same GE Commie-Indoctrination. Leaving only 2-YEARS to actually LEARN a d*mn thing.
The CRT trump card: nobody with higher oppressor status can criticize or challenge somebody lower down. If they try, then they are automatically attempting further oppression. As do people even questioning this scam.
Of course, some journalists are just ideological attention whores.
“Gay is a more sympathetic figure when the hearing is considered in isolation.”
I would have said, “… less unsympathetic …” personally, but never mind. The shameless double standards of the socialists become more and more apparent with every new scandal, but it never seems to occur to them that the distress xhe claims to have felt at having doubt cast upon her commitment was also felt by the countless “conservative” victims of cancel culture xhe helped to invent and develop over the last twenty years! Karma is such a bitch when your victims learn how to beat you at your own game …
Aaron Sibarium, a reporter at the right-leaning news website The Washington Free Beacon, performed the lion's share of the digging. Christopher Brunet, a conservative writer; Christopher Rufo, a conservative writer and activist; and Phillip Magness, a libertarian economic historian, also made important contributions.
All of this feels like fair criticism... why can't we do it in the reverse?
"X, from the left leaning newspaper, the New York Times, performed the lionshare of the digging, y a liberal writer; z a liberal writer and activist from the Washington Post [...]" etc.
Facts are facts. Some people are more motivated to dig them up. Don't give them any dirt and they can't do anything to you.
This is not quite true. Many people without ANY dirt were canceled by the left for seeming to be opposed to the political correctness narrative and damaged permanently without any due process at all. "Dirt" of course is in the mind of the beholder, so I won't try to float any "whataboutist" or "it's not fair" claims here.
True, but I'm talking about the Harvard case. Whether or not the diggers are politically motivated is moot, if Gay was violating academic standards. Harvard should thank them for digging it up.
I expected Robby to go somewhere with that, but no, just the fact they are conservative is crime enough for him to side with the Leftist defenders that there was a problem of unknown substance.
Gay's defenders had a point, at least, in noting that conservatives had first set their sights on the president of Harvard after her disastrous testimony before the House of Representatives concerning antisemitism on campus. When Gay ultimately stepped aside, her resignation letter leaned into this explanation while merely nodding at the plagiarism accusations.
No they don't. Compared to previous presidents of Harvard, Gay is a complete lightweight. As many had noted, Gay had some 11 papers published and was a relative unknown in any serious scholarly field. Prior presidents had 100s of papers published and were towering figures in their field. The whole POINT of this project is in fact to discredit racist policies. When the predominant news media structure, which is unabashedly left-leaning won't criticize these racist systems-- because they're accepted as "progress" then the people doing the "lionshare of the digging" are going to be perceived as "right-leaning".
And do I really need to say any more about Overton windows and how far to the West they've been dragged over the last ten years?
Here's Vinay Prasad's comments on the topic, a serious academic himself... oh and "left leaning".
"But... he criticized masks, how can he be 'left leaning'?"
Exactly.
Remember when her resignation letter over the whole plagiarism scandal was run through Grammarly's plagiarism checker and did not pass?
Because I do.
https://twitter.com/EyesOpenNoFear/status/1742257375736668216
You didn't need the plagiarism checker. Just read the letter. It's filled with cliches, and obviously copied from some form letter or guide to how to write business letters - but not quite directly, unless she found an example to copy that was already loaded with grammar and spelling. But there's nothing wrong with that (aside from the bad grammar and spelling); it's perfectly normal to begin with a form letter for things like this, and there's no expectation that such a letter will be original.
OTOH, academic work such as her PHD thesis and academic research since then _is_ supposed to be original, and hers wasn't. She should have been expelled as a graduate student for ethical violations before she got that PHD, and she should have been fired as a professor for the plagiarism and sloppiness in her publications.
Note the one thing Grammarly found was OK: Readability. At least she found something to copy from that she could read. I wonder what grade level that is...
Harvard needs to stop the progressive left from shutting down all other viewpoints.
Apparently, they do NOT "need" to ... or at the very least, they do not FEEL the need to.
A university president has two main jobs:
1. represent the university with integrity and good judgment.
2. keep the donor funds flowing in.
She failed at both jobs, miserably, on a national stage.
Instead the university rallied around to try to keep her.
Listen to Mr. 20th Century White Culture.
In the modern era, a university president has to look like a DEI dream and represent the institution at ecumenical councils.
Guilty. But they do still care about donor cash.
Being sloppy in your work product is acceptable for a Harvard President?
In Harvard defence, their medical school accepts slopoyness if your black and gay
Sad to see someone like you impersonating a very good name.
He's simply parodying a monomaniacal poster - sometimes called Rev Costco - usually seen on the Reason boards.
Yeah, first we have to define 'work' before we can even take it up to the level of 'sloppy'.
Harvard is an intellectual Disneyland in Boston. I love it as a community institution that probably exists no where else but Cambridge England.
Why is this a problem? Or is it the concept of freedom of speech that is riling everyone up?
I suspect that if the plagiarism charge doesn't work, then someone will find a murder charge that does. Please just remain a beacon of free intellectual inquiry into absolutely everything, everywhere, all the time, forever.
Poe?
Gay’s defenders had a point, at least, in noting that conservatives had first set their sights on the president of Harvard after her disastrous testimony before the House of Representatives concerning antisemitism on campus. When Gay ultimately stepped aside, her resignation letter leaned into this explanation while merely nodding at the plagiarism accusations.
It shouldn’t be that surprising. The learned it from the left doing it to them constantly over the last decade or so.
1) Tribal Infidel says X.
2) Tribal Loyalist is vehemently opposed to X.
3) Tribal Loyalist don’t have an argument to validate said opposition.
4) Tribal Loyalist starts digging into Tribal Infidel’s past – everywhere, all the way to grade school if need be – looking for dirt.
5) Tribal Infidel does, in fact, have some kind of dirt that is exploitable (even if it has nothing whatsoever to do with X).
6) Tribal Loyalist exploits Tribal Infidel’s dirt, and makes it a bigger story than X ever was in the first place.
7) Tribal Loyalist demands apology and amends of Tribal Infidel, in the form of recanting X.
8) Tribal Infidel offers insincere apology but nobody cares because the Tribal Loyalist is busy nailing their scalp to the their wall.
Problem with Progs – among so so many – is that they never fail to appreciate that their weapons can cut against them just as hard as anyone else. They wanted a Cancel Culture. Little late to complain about getting what they asked for.
Remember how progressives used to make fun of evangelical conservatives for seeing the world through a conformist religion? I guess they were just projecting.
It's actually really disappointing that the plagiarism is the thing that shamed them into firing her. It was one of many things that were pointed out by the right as evidence that she was completely ill suited for the job and an absolute political hack whose ignores the school's rules for favored classes whilst also wielding them against ideological opponents.
Well, they're not going to budge on the DEI nonsense. Maybe once airplanes start falling from the sky but - so long as the DiVeRsItY iS oUr StReNgTh crowd keeps thinking that they'll solve their unsolvable "equity ≠ bigotry" problem by using racism/sexism/queerism to appoint unqualified minorities to jobs on the sole basis of their intersectionality - and defending it by claiming it's hatred to point out their lack of qualifications, it's going to take the undeniable stuff like this to oust them.
FFS, Fani Willis is practically like, "Yea I'm like the most corrupt person in the world, but I'm a black female. So do something about it. I dare you."
Plagiarism isn't that big a deal since these people aren't academics anyway. They're political activists leeching off the society and people they hate via the education system.
Any private institution will limit free speech as it must. Notre Dame isn't going to allow a couple students to stand up in class everyday and chant "God is Dead" for 40 minutes. No corporation will permit employees to shout "our products stink" every lunch hour in the cafeteria. Colleges need not subscribe to "free and open inquiry" but they should announce to prospective students their policies of what speech will and won't be tolerated on campus. If Hillsdale says "no communist ideology will be permitted" then so be it. If Swarthmore bans any talk of military self-defense, then don't enroll if you can't abide the policy.
The problem is that Harvard claims to support freedom of expression, and that any restrictions are necessary for safety and are evenly applied. They're lying. Some points of view are allowed to be more freely expressed than others, and some people can freely ignore their restrictions.
To the point of lies by commission, not omission, too. They're students are telling them the enforcement is uneven to the point that it harms their academic experience or even them and the response from Harvard is to stick their fingers in their ears and watch the enforcement carry on disparately in front of them, live and in the open.
This is in contrast to the ages of baiting bullshit like poop swastikas "painted" on a single stall in a single restroom on the nth floor of one of 50 dorms where the only way to lock things down further and prevent such speech is even more Orwellian.
Any private college should be allowed to impose any speech codes that they wish, no matter how restrictive.
That being said...
Taxpayer money should NOT be allowed to go to any college whose speech codes are out of compliance with the 1st Amendment.
Furthermore, if a college enforces their speech codes unevenly (for example, calling for the extermination of Israelis is allowed, while calling for the extermination of Palestinians is not) students should be allowed to sue that college for Breach of Contract.
Any private college should be allowed...
It is legitimate to criticize an institution for doing things they are "allowed" to do. Libertarian tolerance does not imply that we must refrain from speaking out about those who are doing things that are harmful and wrong.
The question might come down to what the primary hiring criteria actually are.
If the key factor is to have an actually diverse hire, it should be possible to find someone with sufficient academic integrity.
If the key factor is actually to have an ideologically acceptable hire, that could get to be far more difficult. Ideological orthodoxy frequently ends up being mutually exclusive with intellectual honesty, and without intellectual honesty, can academic integrity truly exist?