I am reading a lot of condemnation of Columbia for inviting Ahmadinejad to address the its students.
I have to respectfully disagree with that condemnation and concur with President Bollinger:
I would like to add a few comments on the principles that underlie this event. Columbia, as a community dedicated to learning and scholarship, is committed to confronting ideas—to understand the world as it is and as it might be. To fulfill this mission we must respect and defend the rights of our schools, our deans and our faculty to create programming for academic purposes. Necessarily, on occasion this will bring us into contact with beliefs many, most, or even all of us will find offensive and even odious. We trust our community, including our students, to be fully capable of dealing with these occasions, through the powers of dialogue and reason.I would also like to invoke a major theme in the development of freedom of speech as a central value in our society. It should never be thought that merely to listen to ideas we deplore in any way implies our endorsement of those ideas, or the weakness of our resolve to resist those ideas, or our naiveté about the very real dangers inherent in such ideas. It is a critical premise of freedom of speech that we do not honor the dishonorable when we open the public forum to their voices. To hold otherwise would make vigorous debate impossible.
That such a forum could not take place on a university campus in Iran today sharpens the point of what we do here. To commit oneself to a life—and a civil society—prepared to examine critically all ideas arises from a deep faith in the myriad benefits of a long-term process of meeting bad beliefs with better beliefs and hateful words with wiser words. That faith in freedom has always been and remains today our nation's most potent weapon against repressive regimes everywhere in the world. This is America at its best.
Yes it is, unfortunately, this self-laudatory commentary ignores the fact that Columbia believes in free-speech for enemies of freedom, but not for those who fight for it.
Columbia students who want to serve their country cannot enroll in the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) at Columbia. Columbia students who want to enroll in ROTC must travel to other universities to fulfill their obligations. ROTC has been banned from the Columbia campus since 1969. In 2003, a majority of polled Columbia students supported reinstating ROTC on campus. But in 2005, when the Columbia faculty senate debated the issue, President Bollinger joined the opponents in defeating the effort to invite ROTC back on campus.
The real test of Columbia's values would be to apologize to the U.S. military and reinstate the ROTC program on campus
















Comments (3)
Even though I think that President Bollinger believes what he says- most liberal intellectuals seem to only use these appeals to open discussion when the purveyors of something is wrong with the U.S. crowd come to town. Here in Davis, California the UC Regents just recinded an invitation to Larry Summers, former President of Harvard, to speak. Women faculty objected to his appearance because of his comments speculating that there might be subtle differences between the sexes, etc. Just a wisp of swimming against the mainstream campus mind-set and his speech was cancelled. I bet Bollinger would be similarly kow-towed by the same element on his campus. I wonder if Larry Summers would be allowed to speak at Columbia?
Posted by lynn Christensen | September 20, 2007 6:25 PM
Posted on September 20, 2007 18:25
By hypocritically citing freedom of speech, Columbia diverts attention from their real moral failing. The man is a terrorist and actively engaged in war against the U.S. There is a good possibility he was one of the hostage takers back in the late 70's. What is offensive is the American blood on his hands not his "opposing" viewpoint.
Posted by Dave Calder | September 20, 2007 11:00 PM
Posted on September 20, 2007 23:00
reality differ from what say !
someone from iran
Posted by Mohsen | September 29, 2007 4:20 AM
Posted on September 29, 2007 04:20