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Wednesday, September 1. 2010New York Times Reports (Sorta) On Brooklyn College’s Indoctrination Book (UPDATES)When even the New York Times recognizes criticism of a leftist attempt to indoctrinate students with an Arab-American victimism and anti-American book, the sole one distributed by the college to incoming students and also a reading in the required English course, we’ve surely stirred up something that resonates with many. The NYTs article, Brooklyn College Furor Is More Heated Online, is largely dismissive of the issue as a blogosphere thing and attributes it, as does the college’s Dean involved in the selection, as “unfolding a bit like the debate over the planned Islamic community center in downtown Manhattan: much of the intensity seems far afield, while the response in the neighborhood itself is more muted.” The reporter phoned me a few minutes before posting her report, but I was out, and she hasn’t returned my return call to her. (UPDATE 7:18AM Pacific: The reporter emailed me this morning. I replied that she seems to have attributed a quote from Prof. Bayoumi to me, and she just corrected the syntax in the article to make it clear. She, also, added to her article Prof. Bayoumi's defense of the Gaza Flotilla. Sincere thanks. I, also, noted to her that "I understand that you phoned others earlier, but you are the reporter so you determine the priorities of contacts." The reporter replies that she was on the subway and did not get my phone call back to her.) The Comments at the NYT are, as one would expect there, mostly dismissive. There is one, however, that deserves wider attention:
After the New York Daily News reported the issue, and Professor Emeritus in History at the City University of New York, Ron Radosh, wrote about it in the New York Post, the New York Times, I guess, had to ride to the rescue of leftist hogwash. P.S.: Many of the Commenters at the New York Times article assert that it is up to the students to find an alternative point of view or facts. A current student at Brooklyn College replies at the New York Times with the reality. (Below the fold, with the remainder of this post.) Ron Radosh wrote:
Another professor, KC Johnson of Brooklyn College’s history department, writes:
Well, at least, New York newspaper readers are being given alternative views. More than one can say for the incoming students at Brooklyn College. It, also, might be interesting where the money came from for 1500 books, and what alternative other uses may have been more in need. A current Brooklyn College student replies at the New York Times Comments:
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It's about time the NYT noticed Maggie's! God knows, we have noticed them.
Your point about money is an interesting one. I wonder if the students had to buy the book and how much it cost them.
The book was provided for the students. They were not required to purchase it themselves.
And, that somehow makes it less of an official policy? Not. The opposite.
And, where did the funding come from? And, what other needs for the funds may have been higher priority? When I was still at school, there was never any discussion possible about the content of books we were given to study.
What was in there was Truth, no questions asked. Of course we weren't given anything so blatantly partisan, but some classes were a bit fishy (not language classes though, but history and such and so on). The only mandatory works we were told to read for language classes (not counting books about grammar rules etc.) were a few Shakespeare plays. If there was political bias it was in which authors were approved for our reading lists, but we got to choose the actual books ourselves. Looks like a lot has changed since. |
Since last Friday, when I wrote why I Just Disinherited My Alma Mater, the post has had “legs” about what I and others say is politicized indoctrination as official college policy. Brooklyn College requires incoming freshmen and transfer students t
Tracked: Sep 01, 23:05
The New York Daily News editorial today is titled "Academically incorrect: Brooklyn College book choice makes a mockery of education."This comes in reaction to my blog posts (here, here and here), which the New York Post, New York Times, and many oth
Tracked: Sep 07, 19:46
The New York Daily News editorial today is titled "Academically incorrect: Brooklyn College book choice makes a mockery of education."This comes in reaction to my blog posts (here, here and here), which the New York Post, New York Times, and many oth
Tracked: Sep 07, 20:18
The New York Daily News editorial today is titled "Academically incorrect: Brooklyn College book choice makes a mockery of education."This comes in reaction to my blog posts (here, here and here), which the New York Post, New York Times, an
Tracked: Sep 08, 09:18
Tracked: Sep 09, 05:55
The New York Daily News editorial today is titled "Academically incorrect: Brooklyn College book choice makes a mockery of education."This comes in reaction to my blog posts (here, here and here), which the New York Post, New York Times, an
Tracked: Sep 15, 10:24
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 14, 17:02
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 14, 17:37
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 14, 17:51
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 14, 18:18
Tracked: Oct 15, 06:28
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 15, 10:55
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 15, 10:58
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi’s books continue to be at the center of whether fact or fiction will prevail at Brooklyn College. This might even be viewed as indicative of the wider struggle within US academia over the influence of th
Tracked: Oct 25, 15:12