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05.13.2008 8:00 am

Wash U. law professors object to Schlafly honor

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In a sharply worded letter Friday to Washington University Chancellor Mark Wrighton, 14 faculty members of the Washington University School of Law called on Wrighton to rescind the university’s offer of an honorary degree to Phyllis Schlafly at commencement ceremonies on May 16.

The letter emphasizes that the professors’ concerns are neither political nor ideological. “Our objection to honoring Ms. Schlafly instead stems from the fact that she has devoted her career to demagoguery and anti-intellectualism in the pursuit of her political agenda….”

The professors vow to disassociate themselves from the university’s decision and to “not share the platform with Ms. Schlafly. . . .”

The full text of the letter follows:

May 9, 2008

Dear Chancellor Wrighton,

We are extremely disappointed that the University has chosen to honor Phyllis Schlafly with an honorary degree at this spring’s commencement ceremony.

We are fully committed to the principle of free speech, and we believe the University should encourage a discussion of diverse viewpoints. Commencement, however, is first and foremost a time of celebration of the intellectual accomplishments of our students. It is, we believe, a disservice to those whom we honor to inject into the proceedings a person who has devoted her life to staking out and promoting polarizing, anti-intellectual positions. Northwestern University recently had the good sense to rescind its honorary degree offer to Jeremiah Wright. Washington University should do no less with the offer to Ms. Schlafly.

An even more important reason to rescind the degree offer to Ms. Schlafly is that her repeatedly expressed views are antithetical to some of the most fundamental principles for which this University stands.

Let us be clear. We are not talking about mere political disagreements - including her most famous political success, the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment. Although many of us promoted the amendment, we readily acknowledge that reasonable people can disagree over the question whether - particularly in light of the existing Equal Protection Clause - a specific constitutional amendment was the ideal way to pursue the objective of equality, to which this University is firmly committed.

Our objection to honoring Ms. Schlafly instead stems from the fact that she has devoted her career to demagoguery and anti-intellectualism in the pursuit of her political agenda. She has berated scientific inquiry; apart from her particular stance on the Equal Rights Amendment, she has demonstrated a lack of concern for - and sometimes outright bigotry toward - not only women, but gays and lesbians; and she has led campaigns to undermine the independence of the judiciary. Here are only a few examples:

Ms. Schlafly has repeatedly promoted the teaching of creationism and intelligent design in the public schools. She objects to “force-feeding public schoolchildren with the theory of evolution” and refers to those who believe in evolution as “atheists.” Moreover, she consistently frames evolution as a political issue, instead of a scientific one. Ms. Schlafly wrote in 2006, for example, that “Liberals see the political value to teaching evolution in school, as it makes teachers and children think they are no more special than animals. Childhood joy and ambition can turn into depression as children learn to reject that they were created in the image of God.”

Ms. Schlafly consistently resorts to feminism-bashing rhetoric without engaging in reasoned discussions about the role of women in American society; she just labels people who don’t share her precise priorities as evil feminists. Ms. Schlafly wrote in 1994 of the recently confirmed United States Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg that her “writings betray her as a radical, doctrinaire feminist, far out of the mainstream. All evidence indicates that she shares the chip-on-the-shoulder radical feminist view that American women have endured centuries of oppression and mistreatment from men.” More recently, Ms. Schlafly wrote in 2006 that federal money disbursed to states under the Violence Against Women Act “is used by anti-male feminists to train judges, prosecutors and the police in the feminist myths that domestic violence is a contagious epidemic, and that men are naturally batterers and women are naturally victims.”

Ms. Schlafly repeatedly criticizes “the gay and lesbian agenda.” She has opposed all attempts to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in the workplace. With respect to a proposed law designed to prohibit discrimination against gay and lesbian school teachers, Ms. Schlafly wrote: “Surely the right of parents to control the education of their children is a right of a higher order than any alleged right of, say, the two college-educated lesbian members of the Symbionese Liberation Army to teach our young people.” Ms. Schlafly has also repeatedly denied the dignity of gays and lesbians with demagoguery such as her statement that homosexuality is “like prostitution. Nobody can stop you if you want to be a prostitute or to patronize a prostitute, but you are not going to force us to say that it is morally acceptable.”

Finally, as lawyers and law professors, we are deeply disturbed by Ms. Schlafly’s similarly anti-intellectual campaign against an independent judiciary. Instead of engaging in reasoned debate, she regularly uses the label “activist” to decry judges and decisions with which she happens to disagree. When United States Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote an opinion declaring the death penalty unconstitutional as applied to minors, Ms. Schlafly declared that the opinion was a “good ground for impeachment.” Ms. Schlafly advocated that judicial independence also be abolished here in Missouri, as she actively participated in the attempt to unseat Missouri Supreme Court Judge Rick Teitelman because of the substance of his judicial decisions.

We call on the University to rescind its offer of an honorary degree to Ms. Schlafly. If the University insists on honoring Ms. Schlafly at this year’s commencement, we are committed to disassociating ourselves from that decision. We will celebrate and honor our students, but we will not share the platform with Ms. Schlafly or otherwise support her agenda with our silence. Instead, we will support those students who are leading a protest against Ms. Schlafly’s honorary degree. We are deeply disappointed that the University in which we teach is honoring an individual whose professed values are so antithetical to those of the University. We will convey that disappointment to our students and their parents.

Sincerely,

Kathleen Clark
Professor of Law

Richard B. Kuhns
Professor of Law

Laura A. Rosenbury
Associate Professor of Law

and 11 other law professors

29 comments

Comments are closed.

Norman, please see above, name clearly indicated.
Rob Schultz

— Rob Schultz
8:37 pm May 13th, 2008

Dear BoB Saint Louis:

It’s okay to “sensor” speech; that’s how you take the “pulse” and “temperature” of those who deliver it, and then decide whether or not to “censure” those who would try to “censor” said speech.

Get a freaking GED….

— Mo
9:03 pm May 13th, 2008

Do the other honorees believe they’re being honored for their accomplishments - or for holding the “correct” views? I imagine even Chris Mathews might be offended if he thought that his honorary degree was not a recognition of his accomplishments in journalism, but a pat on the head from self-appointed guardians of proper views.

I would ask the same question of the student protestors. Do they beieve the function of a university is to provide various kinds of imprimaturs to views approved by a self-selected elite?

I hope and trust that no one in the administration will be moved in the slightest by these misguided protests.

— David Murray
11:59 am May 14th, 2008

The honorary degree has nothing to do with free speech, since the University is condoning and honoring that works of Phyllis Schlafly with the degree. Her work has been entirely political, and it is her body of work that the Chancellor and the Board of Trustees is honoring.Remember that Lawrence Summers was fired as President of Harvard University basically for comments about a possible genetic basis for the uneven gender distribution of math professors, while acknolwedging that woman, on average, perform better in school than men. On the other hand, Ms. Schlafly has strongly and consistently argued that women should not be in the workplace, but should only remain in the home. She has also been a vocal advocate promoting discrimination again gays and lesbians. Furthermore, she has passionately argued against teaching about evolution in schools. The Chancellor and the Board of Trustees clearly supports Ms. Schlafly’s views becuase they are honoring her for her political achievements.

— Tony
1:49 pm May 14th, 2008

The Chris Matthews argument from conservative writers is a bit inappropriate because:
1. Chris Matthews was once an aide to Tip O’Neill, a liberal congressman from Massachusetts, but currently is a journalist.
2. Chris Matthews is being recognized for his skills and work as a journalist, not because he previously worked for a liberal Democrat.
3. Phyllis Schlafly is being recognized for her political work as a conservative leader, not for her journalistic work.
4. Phyllis Schlafly has promoted many strong anti-intellectual causes.

— Tony
1:58 pm May 14th, 2008

The well-known horse’s ass Scalia is the poster child for the difference between smart and wise. Plenty of just as respected justices, supreme and otherwise, who vehemently disagree with his positions, which seem grossly colored by his politics. The corollation between his politics and his legal positions means to me that one influences the other. To be able to argue smartly on behalf of them makes his brain agile, but his soul and heart tortured, in pain, and ill. The autistic savant of the constitution, if you will. Did you hear the interviews with him when pandering his book? That nervous self-conscious stupid and anything but joyful giggle he has when asked a question that he has no good answer to? I have compassion for the pain he must be in to act so badly, but Harvard Law School a fair credential for myself, had Archibald Cox, former Solicitor General under Kennedy and Nixon, I believe, for several courses, and a fairly conservative constructionist on the constitution myself, e.g. capital punishment not cruel and unusual, and totally unimpressed with Scalia. He’s no Archie Cox or anyone else to be respected, either.
As Edith Ann, aka Lily Tomlin would say, it’s the truth. Sooner he’s gone, the safer for the Republic.

— Bill Haas
9:23 pm May 14th, 2008

Now back to the point, I’ve been all over this issue all over, but where I am now is here: as soon as one acknowledges that it would be inappropriate to grant a white supremist, alum or not, an honorary degree, we’ve already determined the existence of a principle for granting them. The question becomes, then, what are the standards, and does Phyllis Schlafly meet them. Other than having the same first name as my beloved 83 year old (last week) mother, the answer is no, tho I do respect the agility of her mind, albeit on the wrong side of essentially all issues. Did I mention compassion for the pain she must be in to think so badly?

— Bill Haas
9:26 pm May 14th, 2008

Uh, to person who thinks Chris Matthews is a flaming liberal: He’s made so many sexist, misogynist remarks on his show that he’s approaching Schlafly levels of woman-hate. He had the audacity to pinch Hillary Clinton’s cheek, something he could never get away with with any of the male candidates. I can guarantee that few students and professors are especially proud that Matthews is to be honored, either. It’s a joke.

But, all things considered, he is less egregiously stupid and nominally less hateful than Schlafly.

— J.
1:42 am May 15th, 2008

Chancellor Wrighton should resign. His decision has completely shamed the university and sullied the national reputation he has tried so hard to build. Shame!

— S
11:43 pm May 16th, 2008

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