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The Churchill Firing -- II

July 30, 2007

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Many conservatives believe the firing of University of Colorado Professor Ward Churchill will now reduce liberal politics in academia. Many liberals believe that his firing will uphold high standards of academic scholarship. Both are wrong -- because the firing of Churchill reveals a very pernicious kind of exclusionary dogmatism in scholarly research and writing and media reporting. The firing of Professor Churchill for alleged research misconduct ignored evidence to the contrary provided by professors who know his work best, ignored evidence from a committee of scholars who found the investigating committee itself guilty of research misconduct, and ignored all Indigenous evidence and perspectives that are critical of Eurocentric versions of the history of the European invasion of the Americas.

Research misconduct is in the eye of the beholder. Euroamerican teachers and scholars have taught and written for several centuries that Columbus discovered America. That is a more profound and easily provable case of research misconduct than anything of which Churchill has been accused. The Indigenous peoples of the Americas have been here at least 13,000 years and more likely, according to recent DNA research, 50,000 years. This Columbus lie, which is at the foundation of Eurocentric American history, dehumanizes all those who are now called American Indians by discrediting any of their accomplishments as not being human accomplishments. Everyone who has perpetuated this myth over the years should be found guilty of deceit, research misconduct and racism, according to the standards of the investigating committee.

The 1987 edition of the standard American history textbook, American History: A Survey begins by saying, “For thousands of centuries - centuries in which human races were evolving, forming communities and building the beginnings of national civilizations in Africa, Asia and Europe - the continents we know as the Americas stood empty of mankind and its works” The book informed its readers that American history “is the story of the creation of a civilization where none existed.” Now that is a very egregious form of “research misconduct.” That statement bears no resemblance to the truth and serves only to continue to misinform and to indoctrinate students in Eurocentric lies.

The committee should have read the 2005 national best selling book 1491, by Charles Mann, for a thorough critique of the statements quoted in American History, and for extensive support for Churchill’s arguments about the history of the Americas. Summarizing research and writing over the last 30-40 years, Mann shows that in 1491 the population of the Americas surpassed that of Europe, that American cities such as Tenochtitlan were larger than any found in Europe at the same time and, unlike European cities, had running water, beautiful botanical gardens and clean streets. I would add that nowhere in Indigenous America in the areas of my research (North and Central America) have any jails been found, so far as I have been able to determine. The earliest American cities were thriving before the Egyptians built their pyramids, and the feats of Indigenous American agriculture were unparalleled anywhere else. The journal Science recently pronounced the development of corn from its ancient noble grass ancestors as probably the greatest botanical achievement of genetic engineering in human history.

The European invasion of the Americas reduced an Indigenous population estimated by many scholars at nearly 100 million or more by 90-95 percent. Shelburne Cook and Woodrow Borah of the University of California at Berkeley spent decades reconstructing the aboriginal population of central Mexico where they determined the population to have been 25.2 million before Cortez’s invasion. Just 100 years later in 1623 only 700,000 had survived the Spanish conquest which destroyed not only millions of people but amazing architecture, art, culture and science, burning nearly all the books in their extensive libraries. The highly regarded historian Richard White has described the results of the invasion of Indigenous America as “the greatest human catastrophe in the history of the planet.”

Most people think the Churchill problem began with his planned speech in 2005 at Hamilton College -- after it was shown that he had written that some of the victims of 9/11 were not entirely innocent (CIA agents housed in the building and some technocrats of Western militarism and financial imperialism according to Churchill's clarification of what he meant in a later press release) and were instead akin to "little Eichmanns." My essay is not intended to discuss the appropriateness or validity of his statement or its clarification, but to discuss the attack on Churchill from the perspectives, perceptions and practices of research misconduct as they apply to American history and American Indians. The truth about the beginning of the Churchill controversy is that it began with the right wing attack on Churchill after Churchill and others protested a Columbus Day parade in Denver in October 2004.

The Historical Context

It should be pointed out here that in 1861 Cheyenne leader Black Kettle had been invited to Fort Lyon to negotiate a peace with the the United States. He did so, ceding much of Cheyenne territory to the U.S. and agreeing to live south of Sand Creek. The Cheyenne were given a U.S. flag that they were told they should raise whenever threatened and no one would attack them. In 1864, the Reverend Colonel Chivington led 800 troops of Colorado territorial militia in an unprovoked attack on a sleeping village of mostly women and children at Sand Creek (the younger men were out hunting). The villagers raised the U.S. flag as a sign of peace, but Chivington wanted genocide, massacring the village of 53 older men and 110 women and children, mutilating the bodies of the Cheyenne villagers. They took the Cheyenne scalps and genitalia back to Denver, marching down the streets with Indian genitalia held up on sticks, celebrating their genocidal trophies and their evidence that Indians would never again be able to reproduce.

In 1864 The Rocky Mountain News, one of the Denver papers that convicted Churchill in the press and called for his termination, described the massacre of 110 women and children and 53 older men by 800 Colorado volunteers this way: “Among the brilliant feats of arms in Indian warfare, the recent campaign of our Colorado volunteers will stand in history with few rivals, and none to exceed it in final results.... Among the killed were all the Cheyenne chiefs, Black Kettle, White Antelope, Little Robe, Left Hand, Knock Knee, One Eye, and another, name unknown. Not a single prominent man of the tribe remains, and the tribe itself is almost annihilated.... All acquitted themselves well, and Colorado soldiers have again covered themselves with glory.” History has shown the account of this massacre to be a gross case of research and journalistic misconduct.

One historian called Sand Creek the American My Lai. Former Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell called Sand Creek "one of the most disgraceful moments of American history."

One of the participants in this massacre was David Nichols who was honored by the University of Colorado by having a dormitory on campus named after him. In the 1980s my daughter and other First Nations students at UC protested this name, and the name was eventually changed in 1989 to Cheyenne Arapaho Hall. This local history is not irrelevant to understanding how Colorado to understanding the protests of the Columbus Day parades in Denver, and how Colorado has dealt with Churchill his termination or extermination.

Angry over the acquittal of Churchill and the other protesters of the Columbus Day parade, the right wing searched Churchill’s writing for something with which they could destroy him. That is when they found and publicized his comment, written in 2001, about some victims of 9/11 not being totally innocent. Later they discovered that it would be difficult to fire him on the grounds of his unpopular essay, so they went after his scholarship, looking for something they could call “research misconduct.” Forty-four pages in the “official investigation” (or shall we call it an inquisition) are devoted to trying to disprove Churchill’s contention that U.S. agents deliberately gave Indians small pox invested blankets in 1837-1840, while this represents only three paragraphs in any of Churchill’s 12 books and represents less than a thousandth of one percent of the genocide inflicted on Indigenous peoples. This attack on his position is all done from Eurocentric perspectives, biases and paradigms, totally discounting Indigenous perspectives and oral traditions. Yet universities like Colorado hypocritically claim to support and cherish diversity and dissent while denying validity to non-Euroamerican perspectives and traditions.

University officials said their deliberations did not consider Churchill’s essay about the causes of the 9/11 attack in which a short phrase found in one sentence has been used to indict and convict Churchill in the press. That position is, to say the least, not credible, and is being put forth simply to position the university in the upcoming court battle. Churchill’s attorney, David Lane, says that in order to show that Churchill’s First Amendment rights were violated all he has to do is show that Churchill’s unpopular phrase in that essay was a factor in his dismissal, not the whole cause. Everyone knows that without the publicity surrounding that phrase promoted by the right wing, there would never have been any investigation of his scholarship, which in the previous 30 years the university had found exemplary and worthy of promotion and reward.

Those who deny or ignore the American Holocaust are not being investigated. The scholars and journalists who perpetuate the Eurocentric biases disguised as American history are not being investigated for research misconduct, and are not being fired from their teaching or their positions in the media. The protestations of the university about preserving academic and research integrity ring hollow. The firing of Churchill is itself a form of research misconduct and represents a clear attempt by the right wing to silence Indigenous perspectives and to deny the American Holocaust.

Gary Witherspoon is a professor of anthropology and American Indian studies at the University of Washington. Witherspoon is expanding this essay into a larger work, a version of which is available here.

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Comments on The Churchill Firing -- II

  • This dog won't hunt
  • Posted by Publius on July 30, 2007 at 5:50am EDT
  • These seem to be the elements of Witherspoon's rhetoric: 1. sanitize the "little Eichmanns" comments 2. point out historical injustices toward Native Americans, implying that Churchill's concerns about injustice immunize him from charges of academic misconduct 3. conjure up a vast right wing conspiracy 4. completely ignore the findings of an exhaustive peer review, except to imply that charges of fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism are mere products of "eurocentrism".

    Desperate times may call for desperate arguments, but Churchill should hope that his legal team can come up with more than his pr machine.

  • Posted by Diogenes , This Dog won't Witch Hunt with Cheney on July 30, 2007 at 7:30am EDT
  • While Churchill's comments were offensive to many of us, in or out of context, the right wing noise machine is far worse. Perhaps Mr. Bush should resign over his "academic dishonesty" After all, his propagandists still asssert that 9/11 was ordered by Saddam and that Iraq was filled with WMD's. When it come to lies and deliberate disinformation, the right wing should thread very quietly. Dr. Churchilll's sins are venial compared to those of the organized and tax payer funded deceptions of Shot Gun Cheney's administration. This dog won't witch hunt with them!

  • Posted by JBM on July 30, 2007 at 7:45am EDT
  • The refusal to even admit the documented misconduct in this case only proves the need for outside intervention to effect academic reform. This piece reads like parody.

  • Red Herring
  • Posted by Publius on July 30, 2007 at 7:50am EDT
  • When the facts are on your side, argue the facts. When the law is on your side, argue the law. When neither is on your side, holler and blame Dick Cheney!

  • Elementary logical fallacy
  • Posted by Dave S. , Assoc. Prof at Land Grant U. on July 30, 2007 at 8:10am EDT
  • Though Mr. Witherspoon might dismiss this as typical Western thinking, he should review elementary logic. "Tu quoque," or "you're another," is the argument that your cause is not flawed because your opponent suffers from the same flaw. It's been recognized as fallacious for around 2500 years.

    To put it succinctly, the alleged research misconduct of other scholars does not erase the clear and demonstrated research misconduct of Ward Churchill.

  • Posted by mark on July 30, 2007 at 8:40am EDT
  • Witherspoon claims that "Research misconduct is in the eye of the beholder," but then devotes several paragraphs to invoking objective evidence for the misconduct of 19th-century newspapers and twentieth-century textbooks. Added to that, instead of leaving it there, Witherspoon uses past biases to exculpate Churchill--a pure tu quoque. Finally, those who agree with Churchill's firing are given the final denunciation: "American Holocaust deniers."

    It's an odd conjunction, to place judgment entirely in the eye of the beholder, and then to judge so hard and fast and biliously.

  • Posted by Cal on July 30, 2007 at 9:20am EDT
  • So Native American history makes the people killed on 9/11 fascists? Here in Oklahoma, we are very much aware of the Sand Creek Massacre and the other accounts mentioned. Churchill, though, has created his own cottage industry around causing controversy, rallying symapathizers, and trying to capitalize on other's injustices. He cannot even provide evidence of his claimed ancestry, so why should anyone believe his historical theories? He has done a grave misservice to the Native American peoples by not adhering to sound scholarship. The University of Colorado deliberated long and hard about it and made the correct decision.

    By the way, Native Americans have a profound record of service in the United States armed services and do not blame the 9/11 disaster on President Bush. He had only been in office a few months when it occurred and has successfully repelled further strikes on the US.

    Have a happy day!

  • Alleged?
  • Posted by Jack Olson on July 30, 2007 at 9:35am EDT
  • Ward Churchill is guilty of alleged research misconduct in the same sense that Gary Witherspoon is allegedly a professor of anthropology.

  • when did complaints against Churchill begin?
  • Posted by art eckstein , Professor at Maryland on July 30, 2007 at 9:55am EDT
  • Professor Witherspoon dates the complaints about Churchill to his anti-Columbus Day demo of October 2004, which, according to him, led to a vast right-wing conspiracy against Churchill.

    At the risk of invoking Eurocentric standards of scholarship and the cult of objective facts, the complaints against Churchill began a FULL DECADE before 2004, and they came from the national American Indian Movement (not a right-wing organization). National AIM complained bitterly to the CU administration at that time that Churchill was (precisely) a fraud, for he was falsely claiming to be an Indian, when there was not the slightest evidence that he was one. The response of the then-Chancellor of CU is typical of how far CU at that time was prepared to go to defend Churchill: "Ethnicity at CU is self-defined."

    That Churchill was an academic fraud was well-known at CU in 1997: I know, because a friend of mine was up for a position at CU at that time and was regaled by stories of Churchill's fraudulent scholarship by one of my friend's interviewers.

    My understanding is that the (real) Indian (real) scholars Thomas Brown and John Lavelle began writing long formal refutations of Churchill's work, and submitting them to the CU administration, well before October 2004. Lavelle has been attacking Churchill in print on the Allotment Act since 1995.

    So, at the risk of imposing Eurocentric standards of scholarship and the cult of objective facts, Professor Witherspoon is therefore wildly incorrect, historically, as to when the serious complaints about Churchill started. This finding has implications, of course, for the historical validity of the rest of his analysis.

    The real question here is why CU ignored these protests for so long--for more than a decade--and not only ignored those protests but promoted Churchill to the status of full professor and then chair of a Department instead, when he didn't even have a Ph.D.

  • Posted by Carolyn Segal , Associate Professor of English on July 30, 2007 at 9:55am EDT
  • The premise here--"Research misconduct is in the eye of the beholder"--is faulty and thus makes any argument that follows highly problematic.

  • The masses ask: why pay for political farce?
  • Posted by Buzz on July 30, 2007 at 10:15am EDT
  • " .. conservatives believe the firing of .. Ward Churchill will now reduce liberal politics .. liberals believe that his firing will uphold high standards of .. scholarship .. The firing of Churchill is .. a form of research misconduct and represents a clear attempt by the right wing to silence Indigenous .. "

    Plenty of reasonable people think political hacks like Ward and his ilk (e.g., Nick diGenova, Duke's "Gang of 88," Howard Zinn, Billy Ayers, et al.) have heaped pure B.S. on academia, with one-sided research, fudged data, and verbal flatulence.

    So these reasonable persons refuse to fund public higher-ed at previous levels. Because who wants to pay for politicized bull-crap (even Britney won’t).

    Now, before blaming Dick Cheney for growing public distain of public academia and tenured radicals -- Churchill's crowd/tribe would be better served by looking in the mirror. Why should Jane Six-pack, spend a dime, supporting your politics that insult her?

    The public is many-times smarter than Wart and his ilk. They know the golden rule; those with the gold, rule. No one can force them to pay for intellectualized political bull — that is the real-politik.

    BTW: any data on how much the $14.5B American Indian gaming industry has donated directly Wart-like research? They're pretty good judges of value.

    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Indian+gaming+total&btnG=Google+Search

  • The Churchill Firing II
  • Posted by MSD on July 30, 2007 at 10:15am EDT
  • This is a prime example of how the political agendas rule in the academic world. The political stances of the professorate supercede rational thinking in the case of academic misconduct.

  • Posted by Benjamin on July 30, 2007 at 10:40am EDT
  • On so-called National AIM: http://tryworks.org/blog/the-churchill-smear/hes-not-indian-enough-to-say-it/

  • back for rewrite
  • Posted by school marm on July 30, 2007 at 10:55am EDT
  • Sorry, Mr. Witherspoon; you're piece is off topic (a previous commentator accurately uses the term "red herring"). Since this is your first offence, I'll give you a chance to rewrite it. I do recommend, however, that you submit a draft first, so that we can be sure that your argument addresses the issue at hand.

    Lest you believe this teacher is picking on you as part of a right wing conspiracy, I will mention here that I don't disagree with your historical notes. Nevertheless, your argument is irrelevant to the issue at hand.

  • Posted by DBL on July 30, 2007 at 11:20am EDT
  • I read Mr. Witherspoon's looking for some defense of Churchill and found none. Churchill was fired for fabrication, lying and other academic misconduct and Mr. Witherspoon offered no explanation or defense on these charges. Instead, Mr. Witherspoon merely amplified on his views of how horrible the European explorers and settlers of the New World were.

    Well, as experienced lawyers teach youngsters, when the facts are on your side, pound on the facts, when the law is on your side, pound on the law, and when neither the facts nor the law is on your side, pound on the table. Mr. Witherspoon has done an admirable job of pounding on the table, but I doubt that will be enough to persuade anyone of Churchill's innocence of the charges of academic misconduct.

  • exclusionary dogmatism
  • Posted by that dog will hunt on July 30, 2007 at 12:30pm EDT
  • As I read this essay, Dr. Witherspoon understands Churchill as the catalyst for something scholars in Native American studies have noticed for a long time: the "exclusionary dogmatism in scholarly research and writing and media reporting" when it comes to Native Americans and Native American history. I'm not surprised that this insight should cause a lot of tantrums and ad hominem attacks on Dr. Witherspoon. I know that Dr. Witherspoon felt that the way the essay was edited for publication altered his argument somewhat. A fuller version is on his website: http://garywitherspoon.com/
    Many scholars in ethnic studies, not just Dr. Witherspoon, feel this has nothing to do with Churchill and everything to do with what Dr. Witherspoon calls "exclusionary dogmatism".

  • Posted by Benjamin on July 30, 2007 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Ward Churchill's submission to the CU Regents on the day of his firing. It includes a point-point refutation of the specific charges (the three or four that were left, anyway, after appeal).

    http://tryworks.org/blog/2007/07/30/highlights-from-ward-churchill%e2%80%99s-submission-to-the-regents/

  • Ward & affirmative action
  • Posted by Buzz on July 30, 2007 at 1:55pm EDT
  • " .. The response of the then-Chancellor of CU is typical of how far CU at that time was prepared to go to defend Churchill: “Ethnicity at CU is self-defined.”

    Another keen insight by Dr. Eckstein.

    Now that Mr. Churchill and CU have made a national joke of affirmative action -- anyone can now claim to be part of whatever "disadvantaged" group she/he wants -- isn't the Bollinger ruling now moot?

    That is, if anyone can claim to be black-Latino-American Indian-Asian-nonwhite-gay-lesbian-trans-whatever? As in the movie "I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry"?

    Excellent job, Mr. Churchill. You're too smart, for your own good. Lovely mess that you've left behind for others to clean up. Give Michael Moore a call -- you'd be two peas in a pod.

  • Posted by Benjamin on July 30, 2007 at 2:15pm EDT
  • Video of Ward Churchill's being enrolled in the Keetoowah Band of Cherokee.

    http://tryworks.org/blog/the-churchill-smear/now-about-ward-churchill%E2%80%99s-cherokee-enrollment%E2%80%A6/

  • Posted by Just John on July 30, 2007 at 3:20pm EDT
  • News story explaining that Churchill's status with the Keetoowah tribe is "honorary" because he can't sufficiently prove Indian ancestry:

    http://www.dailycamera.com/bdc/buffzone_news/article/0,1713,BDC_2448_3792747,00.html

    But I s'pose that's in the eye of the beholder, too.

  • Posted by Benjamin on July 30, 2007 at 3:40pm EDT
  • No, it's just not true. The UKB does have an honorary membership, but it's not the same thing as an associate membership, which is what Churchill has. All that's in the links I posted.

  • Ward & non-Colorado AIM
  • Posted by Buzz on July 30, 2007 at 3:50pm EDT
  • As the Western New York chapter of the Ward Churchill Fan Club (WCFB) is posting anti-CU material -- consider this about Wart by the non-Colorado AIM group:

    http://www.haloscan.com/comments/pirateballerina/675/#54059

    About WCFB's Western NYS chapter --

    http://www.pirateballerina.com/blog/entry.php?id=556

    Keep trying, BW -- Ward-o needs all the help that you can muster. Heck, at the rate the USA's finances are declining, Ward-o's $68,000/year pension check might be made "low priority" in the CU bureaucracy.

  • Posted by Just John on July 30, 2007 at 4:45pm EDT
  • Benjamin, call it honorary or associate, the bottom line is that Churchill was never enrolled as a member of the tribe. "Associate" isn't the same thing as "member," or the tribe wouldn't make that distinction. Unless that's in the eye of the beholder, too.

    Why associate? Because he cannot prove Indian ancestry. That's why the hapless CU administration was reduced to saying that at CU, "ethnicity is self-defined."

    In other words, all in the eye of the beholder.

    But behold here a quote from a press release from the Keetoowah band, May 18, 2005:

    "The United Keetoowah Band would like to make it clear that Mr. Churchill IS NOT a member of the Keetoowah Band and was only given an honorary 'associate membership' in the early 1990s because he could not prove any Cherokee ancestry."

    Quoted in:

    http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_3786590,00.html

    The article adds, "The chief said his tribe had decided to honor Churchill with the associate membership because Churchill had promised to write the tribe's history and had pledged 'to help and honor the UKB.'

    'To date Mr. Churchill has done nothing in regards to his promise and pledge.'"

    Maybe Mr. Churchill has Indian ancestry -- but he has not convinced those to whom he would belong. I take it he has convinced you.

  • The Old Versus the New American History
  • Posted by Richard on July 30, 2007 at 8:30pm EDT
  • Prof. Witherspoon wrote that: "The firing of Professor Churchill for alleged research misconduct ignored evidence to the contrary provided by professors who know his work best, ignored evidence from a committee of scholars who found the investigating committee itself guilty of research misconduct, and ignored all Indigenous evidence and perspectives that are critical of Eurocentric versions of the history of the European invasion of the Americas."

    It may very well be that most of America is unaware of the criticism of the process used to deny Prof. Churchill the rights he is due under the U.S. Constitution. But the personal attacks against Witherspoon indicate more of a political agenda than a scholarly debate.

    Witherspoon is pointing out a double standard between the old and the new American history that has been a staple of the "culture wars" since Lynne Cheney attacked the New American History Standards for the teaching of history in the public schools.

    The Churchill case has sent chills throughout academia. Where are the defenders of academic freedom and tenure when we need them most?

  • How noble
  • Posted by Buzz on July 30, 2007 at 11:05pm EDT
  • " .. Where are the defenders of academic freedom and tenure when we need them most?"

    A unique configuration of "give us the tax-money and shut up." Jane Six-Pack should just pay her taxes, then listen respectfully as her "intellectual betters" crudely lecture her about how lousy her ancestors were.

    Thanks to government-supported pension funds, tenured radicals now have millions of assets in Lockheed, KBR, Haliburton, Boeing, GM, IBM, and other progressive companies.

    Noam Chomsky expresses concern about passing on his multi-million-dollar estate to his heirs. Howard Zinn made millions, criticizing every single U.S. President. Michael Moore has a $3.5MM NYC co-op and a $1.2 Michigan vacation home.

    So, if they are looking for defenders -- let them tap their own assets. They have plenty of resources. Jane Six-pack is trying to pay her tax bill -- and she thinks Ward Churchill, et al., are fakers and phonies.

  • Correx
  • Posted by Buzz on July 31, 2007 at 4:20am EDT
  • " .. have millions of assets in Lockheed .." should be BILLIONS, not millions.

    " .. Michael Moore has a $3.5MM NYC co-op and a $1.2 Michigan vacation home .." should be $1.2MM (million).

    Deep regrets on not respecting their money, with more rigor.

  • Posted by JBM on July 31, 2007 at 8:20am EDT
  • "Where are the defenders of academic freedom and tenure when we need them most?"

    Firing frauds like Churchill, who threaten the very foundations of academic inquiry.

  • These comments provide awesome teaching aides
  • Posted by Scuggy on July 31, 2007 at 10:30am EDT
  • I am absolutely amazed by the comments provided on this piece. Pointing out the fallacious nature, contridictions, lack of appeal to "Jane-drunk" types, and "identity" politics in Witherspoon's piece certainly deserve the highest awards for remedial internet blogging.

    IMHO, Witherspoon is allowing Churchill to defend himself on the merits of his specific "research misconduct" case. The point of the piece is to reiterate the negative connotations that "the firing of Churchill reveals a very pernicious kind of exclusionary dogmatism in scholarly research and writing and media reporting."

    Only one comment deals with this statement/argument, and to use the IRA government approval model, silence is agreement. Instead, commenters "mentally masturbated" by playing to their academic skill sets or noting the political/economic role a section of America plays in this controversy.

    The question, is "exclusionary dogmatism" a working concept that can be applied to this situation and many others (per Witherspoon's argument), is only answered in the affirmative by Witherspoon. The same can be said of Churchill's extra-controversial "Roosting Chickens" piece (based on Malcolm X statements), where identity politics of 9/11 dead surpassed the underlying argument on whether bad US Foreign policy was a high contributing factor to that day.

    Thus, if your comments were written to appeal to the sensibilities of "Jane-drunk", then you might want to leave these questions alone. Personally, I hope you have the forest of trees in perspective.

  • What part of "we're not paying for this" is not understandable?
  • Posted by Buzz , Non-member at Ward Churchill Fan Club on July 31, 2007 at 11:35am EDT
  • First:

    http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/aids

    not

    http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/aides

    Second:

    http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?va=contradictions

    Declining basic skills due to the Ward Churchill Fan Club (WCFC)? Of course not.

    Good job, spelling "masturbated." If that is what the Ward Churchill Fan Club (WCFC) wants to do -- and pays for it, themselves -- fine.

    The vast majority of taxpayers, who own public academia, will NOT pay for this kind of masturbation. Shrill-iary will not either -- she needs political independents to be elected and seize power. So, get over it.

  • Lies are Lies
  • Posted by Jim Horn on July 31, 2007 at 2:25pm EDT
  • The truth about European misdeeds and genocide should be enough without adding falsehoods. Churchill is a wannabe that practices genocide on our history with lies and bad academics. We need the unembellished truth told about our history and not allow ourselves to follow the European path of dishonesty.

  • A little more care required
  • Posted by Pub on July 31, 2007 at 4:50pm EDT
  • Scuggy,

    Witherspoon wrote:

    “The journal Science recently pronounced the development of corn from its ancient noble grass ancestors as probably the greatest botanical achievement of genetic engineering in human history.”

    What does Witherspoon mean, what did he intend to imply? That prehistoric Indigenous agriculturists ENGINEERED corn through knowledge and intention? If you actually read the article (Prehistoric GM Corn by Nina V. Fedoroff) Indians were party to the mutations of teosinte into corn. These mutations spontaneously happen in as little as ten generations (ten years) and about the only thing required is that the seeds be planted, because as the mutations occur the plant loses it’s ability to self-propagate.

    So, were Indians the beneficiaries of a happy naturally occurring genetic development or were they knowledgeable genetic engineers?

    Let’s go with your question about “exclusionary dogmatism”. For Witherspoon to imply Indigenous genetic engineering is a step too far. The mutations to corn require only human seed planting, the plants spontaneously mutate on their own. When his hyperbole is cut to a minimum the story of the development of corn is still pretty amazing.

    If you and Witherspoon want less exclusionary dogmatism you should be a little more careful and accurate with your claims. When Witherspoon hypercharges the facts he risks losing all credibility.

  • Posted by Smeppy on July 31, 2007 at 4:50pm EDT
  • "Shrill-iary" ha ha.

    Is this the Bill O'reilly fan club?

  • Posted by Omri on July 31, 2007 at 7:50pm EDT
  • What utter nonsense. If research misconduct really is in the eye of the beholder, why do we even have academia? If professors are under no obligation to be more honest, to document their claims, and to represent their sources accurately, to do all this better than the nutcases inhabiting the Internet, why even have this institution called academia? The internet is far cheaper to maintain.

  • Posted by smeppy , Now THAT'S a Red Herring! on August 1, 2007 at 5:55am EDT
  • Dave S. writes: "To put it succinctly, the alleged research misconduct of other scholars does not erase the clear and demonstrated research misconduct of Ward Churchill."

    That is not what Witherspoon is arguing. Go back and read the first paragraph. The whole point is that liberals are wrong to believe that firing Ward Churchill will reduce the amount of misconduct in academic research (presuming that that is the real issue). The rest of the article describes the double standard that allows far worse examples of historical falsification and academic misconduct, in the name of eurocentric bias, to go largely unchallenged, or at least unpunished. That much of the argument is not about defending Churchill against charges of academic misconduct. That is left to a few lines at the end of the first paragraph:

    "The firing of Professor Churchill for alleged research misconduct ignored evidence to the contrary provided by professors who know his work best, ignored evidence from a committee of scholars who found the investigating committee itself guilty of research misconduct, and ignored all Indigenous evidence and perspectives that are critical of Eurocentric versions of the history of the European invasion of the Americas."

    These arguments are not even addressed by the anti-Churchillistas on this discussion board, who practice their own style of exclusionary dogmatism.

  • A few quick notes
  • Posted by Rob Schmidt , Publisher at Blue Corn Comics on August 1, 2007 at 5:55am EDT
  • I'm not a Churchill defender, but the criticism of Witherspoon seems a little harsh. A few points:

    1) I think Witherspoon is trying to argue (what he considers) a larger point about unfair and hypocritical standards, not to exonerate Churchill's scholarship. It's not his fault if he didn't write the essay readers expected.

    2) The responders say Witherspoon didn't address the arguments against Churchill. True, but for the most part, they didn't address his counterargument about unfair and hypocritical standards. So let's address it: If academics across America are guilty of making demonstrably false statements such as "Columbus discovered America," should we begin investigating and firing them wholesale? Why or why not?

    3) Witherspoon does address Churchill's scholarship at least once, when he writes, "Forty-four pages in the 'official investigation' (or shall we call it an inquisition) are devoted to trying to disprove Churchill’s contention that U.S. agents deliberately gave Indians small pox invested blankets in 1837-1840, while this represents only three paragraphs in any of Churchill’s 12 books and represents less than a thousandth of one percent of the genocide inflicted on Indigenous peoples. This attack on his position is all done from Eurocentric perspectives, biases and paradigms, totally discounting Indigenous perspectives and oral traditions." In other words, the mistakes were trivial and based on oral claims that usually don't count as "evidence." Does anyone have a response?

    4) Witherspoon apparently defines the "Churchill controversy" as the right-wing attacks on Churchill's left-wing positions. He's within his rights to define the controversy he's talking about and to say when it began. AIM's charges about Churchill's ethnicity are arguably a different controversy.

  • Posted by John on August 1, 2007 at 10:20am EDT
  • Churchill, it is claimed, manufactured evidence, is guilt of plagiarism and of falsifying various sources. Now, in my book, any supporter of this man, ought to deal with such claims, demonstrating their falsity. To make the staggering assertion 'Research misconduct is in the eye of the beholder', simply takes my breath away. This is shameful piece of work by someone who, at least in this instance, appears no better than a pseudo-academic.

  • Academia
  • Posted by Gsilver on August 1, 2007 at 12:25pm EDT
  • Let’s come to an understanding about Indians in the North America. The US government has the power to determine our blood quantum, as an American Indian. The US government has chosen these regressive policies; in hopes that those sovereign American Indians governments would just fade away. I have come to understand these regressive US policies as genocide on the American Indian. What is the point of academia; taking on the issue of Mr. Churchill’s America Indian blood quantum any way? When it comes to other minority do you ask how Jewish they are or how black they are? When a black person receives scholarship or a black professor is hired, do ask if he black enough? Even your US census lets you determine your race. So the issue of Mr. Churchill heritage is a red herring.
    Are there not enough racist concepts, in the foundations of academia? Defending academic scholarship as pertains to the history of US is like saying that the Bible was written by the hand of God. So what’s next in the hall of academia, which all US history is written by the hand of God? No one can add to this history or take away from this history or you will face God’s judgments. The history of the United States of America and the standard of academic scholarship are called in to question. When new facts are uncovered about the US history, it’s no longer called academic scholarship, but fabrications and lies. The scholarly debate has all come down to insufficiencies in their rebuttals and has turn to personal attacks
    Academia has been motivated by the politics of the times. I have known professor that have taken credit for an undergrads works and reported and published it as his own. He has been reported and is still working at the same college. Many professor have had abused their relationship with their students on many levels, and are still working in academia. Taking the action that CU did this have opened a larger issue and that is the good old boy’s network both in academia and in government. That brings up the whole issue of governmental funding of academia. Americans Indians have always been held to a greater standard by US government and academia. Our views and our history are not going away any time soon.

    Hoka Hey!

  • when did the Churchill Controversy begin?
  • Posted by art eckstein , professor at university of maryland on August 1, 2007 at 12:40pm EDT
  • Rob Schmidt writes: "Witherspoon apparently defines the “Churchill controversy” as the right-wing attacks on Churchill’s left-wing positions. He’s within his rights to define the controversy he’s talking about and to say when it began. AIM’s charges about Churchill’s ethnicity are arguably a different controversy."

    Professor Witherspoon can define "the Churchill Controversy" however he idiosyncratically wants.

    But the FACT is that all the elements in the controversy--including not merely the ethno-fraud but the very serious charges of plagiarism and outright research fraud--were in place before the year 2000, and they didn't come from the Right. These charges, and the evidence to back them up, came from (real) Indians, and not just AIM: they came from (real) Indian scholars, and those scholars are Indian rights activists, not right wingers. In other words: Witherspoon is simply historically WRONG to date this from 2005 and to ascribe it solely to the Right.

    The charges from the Indian activist scholars against Chruchill in the 1990s concerned from the first both Churchill's fraud on the Allotment Act and his making up of forts, incidents and even PEOPLE in his repeated false accounts of the Mandan Epidemic of 1837. That's the same story today. Nothing has changed here, except that CU, which had wrongly protected Churchill for political (p.c.) reasons before 2005, is no longer doing so--also for political reasons.

    Professor Witherspoon and Mr. Schmidt should give Indian scholars (e.g., Thomas Brown and John Lavelle) the CREDIT for upholding proper standards of scholarship--instead of denying that such standards exist, or claiming that Indians don't see their value, or idiosyncratically defining the controversy in a way so that the REAL issues that have always existed in Churchill's case don't count.

  • Posted by Ryan on August 1, 2007 at 3:20pm EDT
  • As other posters have noted, Churchill was hired and fired for essentially political reasons. I also agree with Witherspoon's contention that much shoddy scholarship has gone unpunished.

    Pub correctly pointed out, however, that like Mann's argument, Witherspoon's argument is often tendentious and misleading. For example, he uncritically accepts Mann's arguments about the populations of American and European cities: "American cities such as Tenochtitlan were larger than any found in Europe at the same time." Is the reader supposed to believe that the Americas were more urbanized than western Europe c. 1500?

    When Cortes arrived at Tenochtitlan in 1519, it was the largest city in the Americas, with a population of just over 200,000. Yet Paris was at least as large, with a population of 180,000-225,000 in 1500 and about 250,000-275,000 in 1550.

    More broadly, reference to "American cities such as Tenochtitlan" is misleading. To my knowledge, Tenochtitlan was the only city in Mesoamerica and North America with a population of more than 40,000 during the early sixteenth century, while in western Europe, there were then at least a dozen more cities with 40,000 or more people, and three of them (Milan, Naples, Venice) had more than 100,000.

    In terms of urbanization and population density, Mesoamerica was at least comparable to western Europe, but the same cannot be said for North America. The population density in France c. 1500 was twenty-five to two hundred and fifty times greater than the population density in pre-contact North America.

  • WARD CHURCHILL
  • Posted by JOHN FOUST on August 2, 2007 at 5:25am EDT
  • Ward Churchill has been victimized by those people who do not understand the purpose of a Univeristy and the exclusive right held by professors to teach the truth as they see it. It is a forum for debate and learning where students can develop and fofrmulate their own opinions. However, Prof. Churchill chose to discuss issues we all know are true. We all know how the U.S. Government cheated our native american peoples, and no one can contest what Ward Churchill has said regarding the mistreatment and thievery of our government towards these peoples. The very tactics employed against Mr. Churchill by the University of Colorado are not dissimilar to those tactics practiced by the Nazi party under Hitler. When will the book burnings commence at the University of Colorado. Churchill was a voice which exposed the injustice against the American indian. I am a farmer, I have a J.D., and a CPA, and I own land on the Standing Rock indian Reservation in South Dakota, land originally allotted to a Sioux indian in 1910. No one wants to know about the tragidy of Standing Rock, it is our own Darfur, no one cares about our native people and their lives, Mr. Churchill was a voice for those without voices. Mr. Churchill is a hero. In this country today the word hero has been bastardized, if you are in the army you are a hero, if you were in 9=11you are a hero. Not in my book, I was in the army during Vietnam, I never met a hero and believe me the only hero in the army are usually dead ones. A hero is a person who risks everything in an attempt to help others, very few people fall within that classification. Ward Churchill is a hero, because he stood for what he believed in trying to help others who were less fortunate. Going to Iraq does not make one a hero, and as my first sargent told me who had been through two wars, he said only fools get killed in war because most get killed because they made a mistake. Higher Education has few hero's, most educators are only interested in tenure, and having no contact with students, and hate what they are doing and are at the University only because the TIAA-CREF retirement plan will not let them risk their livelihood as Mr. Churchill has done because of his belief. Mr. 'Churchill, you are a hero. John F. Foust J.D., CPA

  • An EXCLUSIVE right?
  • Posted by Song on August 2, 2007 at 12:00pm EDT
  • " exclusive right held by professors to teach the truth as they see it"

    huh? Mr. CPA-lawyer-vietvet-farmer are you saying that the right to teach the truth is held ONLY by professors?

    In any case, the problem here is that it appears that Ward did NOT teach the truth. He betrayed this "exclusive right" by teaching as truth, events in history that he knew to be untrue.

    Why then defend him?

  • What are the charges?
  • Posted by smeppy on August 2, 2007 at 5:15pm EDT
  • John writes: "Churchill, it is claimed, manufactured evidence, is guilt of plagiarism and of falsifying various sources. Now, in my book, any supporter of this man, ought to deal with such claims, demonstrating their falsity."

    This website was posted by a supporter a few days ago, and apparently no one here has read it. Among other things it gives a summary/critique of the 7 charges against Churchill's work (see below). Four of the charges are of academic misconduct, such as insufficient referencing of source material. These are best described as nit-picking. The others are dubious accusations of plagiarism.

    Of all Churchill's prolific output, this was all they got against him. But it was enough to warrant firing.

    This, combined with the political motives of the interrogation from start to finish, should send a chill through any academic who has the spine to take controversial stances, as the work of almost any scholar can be put under a microscope and found lacking by these standards. Especially a scholar who sometimes uses oral traditions ("circumstantial evidence") as sources.

    http://tryworks.org/blog/2007/07/30/highlights-from-ward-churchill%e2%80%99s-submission-to-the-regents/

    On the seven charges which the SCRM finally came up with after their year or so of cracker-jack investigative work.

    * The first two allegations addressed in the Investigative Report concern Professor Churchill’s summaries of the impact on native peoples of two federal laws, the Allotment Act and the Indian Arts and Crafts Act. In its 20-page analysis, the Committee acknowledged that his conclusions may be correct, but criticized the nature of his citations and faulted him for having failed to publish a response to a particular critic. On the Allotment Act the Committee again acknowledged that Professor Churchill was essentially correct and his accuser generally incorrect. However, the Report accuses him of getting the details wrong, despite the fact that he wrote only a few paragraphs on the subject and, thus, did not address any details. For this he is charged with falsification.

    * The third charge concerned Professor Churchill’s statement that there is “strong circumstantial evidence” that John Smith introduced smallpox among the Wampanoags in the early 1600s. The committee took it upon itself to decide that this was an “implausible” conclusion and that, therefore, he had not cited to enough circumstantial evidence. This is characterized as both falsification and fabrication.

    * Professor Churchill’s two paragraph statement that in 1837 the army deliberately spread smallpox among the Mandans at Fort Clark generated 44 pages of analysis on the fourth allegation. While basically affirming his conclusions, the Committee expressed displeasure with the nature, thoroughness and, in some cases, the sources of his citations. Although numerous scholars have made the same general point without any citation, Professor Churchill was charged with falsification, fabrication, and deviation from accepted reporting practices.

    * The fifth charge involved the use of material from a pamphlet circulated by a long-defunct environmental group called Dam the Dams, whose representative stated he was happy to have the article used. In his initial use, Professor Churchill gave Dam the Dams co-authorship credit and presented uncontested evidence that this credit was removed by the magazine’s publisher. In all subsequent use of the material, he credited Dam the Dams in his footnotes. For this he was charged with plagiarism.

    * The sixth allegation asserted that Professor Churchill plagiarized an article he had ghostwritten for Rebecca Robbins. The Committee concluded that he had not plagiarized it, but that having allowed a junior scholar to take credit for the original piece was a failure to comply with established standards of authorship attribution. It reached this conclusion despite the fact that ghostwriting is common practice and the committee could point to no rule or standard that had actually been violated.

    * Finally, with respect to the seventh allegation, the Committee concluded that Professor Churchill had committed plagiarism by not preventing portions of an essay written by Fay Cohen to be published under the name of an Institute of which he was a co-founder, in a volume edited by a third person. The fact that his role consisted only of copy-editing the volume, that Professor Cohen never complained to the publisher, and that she acknowledged having been solicited by CU’s law dean David Getches to make this complaint were deemed irrelevant. Neither Professor Cohen nor the Dalhousie University report on the matter has ever accused Professor Churchill of plagiarism; the closest that report came to doing so was its statement the Professor Churchill has “some” involvement in the process. Thus, the claim that Professor Churchill plagiarized Fay Cohen’s material is simply not supported by the record.

    After having gone through thousands of pages of Professor Churchill’s writings and actively solicited research misconduct complaints, these seven charges were all that remained as the basis for the Investigative Committee’s findings of research misconduct and then-Interim Chancellor DiStefano (acting as both complainant and sentencing judge) to recommendation that Professor Churchill be fired.

  • Oral Traditions
  • Posted by Pub on August 2, 2007 at 6:20pm EDT
  • Smeppy,

    “Especially a scholar who sometimes uses oral traditions ("circumstantial evidence") as sources.”

    Since you’re using Tryworks.org as your source here’s a couple things they left out:

    In the John Smith case one of Churchill’s sources was a children’s book and in the Fort Clark affair he cited a TV episode of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman—both as being within the oral tradition and strong circumstantial evidence.

    I don’t know about you, but …

  • smeppy's fantasies
  • Posted by art eckstein , professor at university of maryland on August 2, 2007 at 8:15pm EDT
  • Smeppy writes:

    *" Professor Churchill’s two paragraph statement that in 1837 the army deliberately spread smallpox among the Mandans at Fort Clark generated 44 pages of analysis on the fourth allegation. While basically affirming his conclusions, the Committee expressed displeasure with the nature, thoroughness and, in some cases, the sources of his citations. Although numerous scholars have made the same general point without any citation, Professor Churchill was charged with falsification, fabrication, and deviation from accepted reporting practices."

    Well,

    1. Churchill has retailed this story seven times in print, so it is more than "a two paragraph" discussion. It is a repeated lie.

    2. The only way that the Commission "basically affirmed" Churchill's conclusions is in the sense that a Mandan Epidemic occurred. It accused him, accurately, of INVENTING entire army forts, events, an Army smallpox hospital in St. Louis, and INVENTING people (including army surgeons who evilly gave the smallpox-laden blankets to the Mandans).

    Have you actually read the report?

  • Churchill's smallpox blanket fraud
  • Posted by Thomas Brown on August 2, 2007 at 8:15pm EDT
  • Rob Schmidt and "Smeppy" do not appear to be familiar with the facts of the case. First, Mr. Schmidt, Churchill did not cite oral history in any of his seven published versions of the smallpox fraud (rather more than two paragraphs). Furthermore, oral history does not support the fabricated portions of Churchill's narrative, and doesn't even address his falsification of his sources.

    "Smeppy" claims that:

    "While basically affirming his conclusions, the Committee expressed displeasure with the nature, thoroughness and, in some cases, the sources of his citations. Although numerous scholars have made the same general point without any citation, Professor Churchill was charged with falsification, fabrication, and deviation from accepted reporting practices."

    Churchill was not found guilty of fabricating the "general point"--that people have been speculating about smallpox blanket conspiracies for years. Churchill was found guilty for inventing details, events, and people, and for falsifying his sources to make them appear to support his fabrication when they actually refute his fabrication.

    Churchill's defenses are available at tryworks.com or wardchurchill.net. The defenses crumble when you compare them to the facts. That is why more than twenty five scholars at CU unanimously agreed that Churchill had committed serious misconduct. Churchill ran his game on them, and they didn't buy it. Any objective thinker who looks closely at the evidence will come to the same conclusion.

    For more details, see my analysis of Churchill's initial fraud, and his subsequent attempts to defend the fraud in my article for Plagiary.org.

  • Affair Ward-o: Absurd? Insane? Death March?
  • Posted by Buzz on August 3, 2007 at 3:15am EDT
  • Thank you, Profs. Eckstein and Brown.

    Does Mr. Churchill and his fawning fans expect to wear-out the legal system (and IHE's inventory of advertising-supported bandwidth) with their continued parsing, half-truths, bluster, and just plain weird rationalizing?

    Dream on. That will never happen. Reasonable persons from across the political spectrum know the damage that Mr. Churchill did to American Indian scholarship.

    All the chattering by his puppy-dog supporters will never change the fact that Mr. Churchill is an academic fraud and should ply his political game outside academia.

    Mr. Churchill did that to himself -- no one else. It is not Cheney's fault. Get over it.

  • Posted by Mark on August 5, 2007 at 5:40pm EDT
  • If it is pornography or right-wing propaganda, it's a free speech issue. Anything else is fair game.

    If you want to keep a job in the Justice Department, you have to prove that you're a "loyal Bushie." Refusing to obstruct justice when ordered to, or refusing to prosecute frivolous cases for political reasons, is grounds for termination.

    Chomsky's job is secure because he avoids discussing the JFK assassination, 9/11, or anything that might disturb the powers that be. There are limits to freedom of speech, and you either self-censor or you get fired.

    When a committee has to spend a year looking for "cause," what you have is a witch-hunt. When there is cause, like lying about WMDs, waging a war of aggression, withdrawing from international treaties for the purpose of violating them with impunity, confessing to illegal wiretapping, or violating your oath of office by calling the Constitution, "just a goddamned piece of paper," instead of upholding and defending it, nobody has to look for it.

    If we ever get a national health care plan, and we are the only developed country in the world without one, Michael Moore will have saved this country trillions of dollars and will have saved millions of lives--why begrudge him what every war-profiteering Congressmember has?

    Ward's a good writer and probably the most interesting professor they have. I hope the school loses a few million dollars in legal fees, a few more in lost tuitions, and a few more in compensation. The higher education industry in this country, like the health care industry, is a lot more expensive than it should be--in fact both health care and higher education should be free.

    I don't really care if Ward is an enrolled tribal member or not. He's one of the few people in this country with something interesting to say, and that makes him a national treasure in my book. If a semi-literate liar like Bush can be President, why the hell can't Churchill be a mere college professor?

  • Free speech? Nah -- $68,000 speech
  • Posted by Buck on August 6, 2007 at 3:15pm EDT
  • "If it is pornography or right-wing propaganda, it’s a free speech issue .."

    Well, given Chief B.S. Artist has a $68,000/year state pension, isn't he economically freer than 80% of the U.S. public to ply his "academic" scam?

    Ol' Wart has done a great job, making free speech pay -- for him. Everyone should be so lucky. He's laughing, all he way to the bank.

  • Read it again, Mr. Brown
  • Posted by Rob Schmidt , Publisher at Blue Corn Comics on December 1, 2007 at 6:45am EST
  • I think Witherspoon is trying to argue (what he considers) a larger point about unfair and hypocritical standards, not to exonerate Churchill’s scholarship. It’s not his fault if he didn’t write the essay readers expected.

    I summarized the "smallpox blankets" issue in a posting at http://www.bluecorncomics.com/smallpox.htm. In it I wrote: "Ward Churchill has also claimed that the Army started the smallpox epidemic of 1837 by giving infected blankets to the Mandan Indians. Thomas Brown has convincingly refuted this claim."

    So yes, I think I understand the basic issues. Again, I don't think Witherspoon was trying to exonerate Churchill's scholarship.