The Phantom City

January 31, 2005

Ward Churchill, Little Eichmann?

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 1:01 pm

Apparently there’s some controversy about University of Colorado Professor Ward Churchill speaking at a college in New York because he wrote an essay back in 2001 calling the September 11 victims in the World Trade Center “little Eichmanns,” among other insults.

Good. The only reason it didn’t happen earlier is because folks were a bit too shocked at the time to notice one more in a series of ignorant essays, but it looks like, paraphrasing what Mr. Churchill says, that the chickens do come home to roost.

I’m a big supporter of free speech, which means I’m also a big supporter of folks being able to complain about what you say. I mean, after all, wouldn’t one figure approbation might be in order if I were to say that it would have been much better if Ward Churchill had been personally attacked by the 9/11 “combat teams” he mentions, due to his tacit approval of the American system that comes from living here and profiting from it without rising up in armed revolution? (Churchill might be Cherokee, another heritage that deserves payback against their oppressors, but it doesn’t look from his description like he’s really going outside the system, there. Legal defense? Head of Ethnic Studies? Not exactly what he advocated we all do in his essay.)

But, I wouldn’t say that seriously. I know next to nothing about Ward Churchill. Kind of like he knew next to nothing about the victims at the WTC. Would it be right to say his death was justified because of his American collaborator status and all of the bad things America has done to the rest of the world? Of course not, no more than Iraqi children deserve to die to expiate our historical sins.

Churchill’s essay probably doesn’t deserve all of the attention. Aside from the controversial aspects, it really isn’t very good, which Churchill sort-of addresses in an equally bad addendum. (He apparently was disturbed he wasn’t able to mention the “ghosts” of American victims throughout time.)

Churchill’s continued academic employment, department chairmanship, and speaking engagements do deserve the attention. In his essay, he’s taken advantage of the worst interpretation of academic freedom — irresponsibility and academic laziness — and as a result should have his competence and desirability as a teacher of students and speaker to the masses called into question. Academic freedom ideally promotes the free interchange of ideas, and hopefully controversial speaking appearances would promote just that. However, if you read the essay, you’ll note there isn’t much room for discussion, just assertion. Churchill has not written an essay to provoke debate.

Churchill’s wife says he has a really big heart. I hope that is the case. He might wish to consider widening what it encompasses a bit.

Update: Mr. Churchill’s speaking engagement has been called off due to threats of violence. Specifically, at least one caller threatened to “bring a gun” to campus if he spoke. Always interesting how folks can take something bad and rapidly do worse things in response. Yep, threatening to kill someone. Way to trump everyone else in sheer evilness. Since when did doing something even worse become the acceptable response to anything you don’t like? (While I would think, say, 9/11 survivors might feel that angry about Churchill’s speech, apparently the larger part of the threats came after Bill O’Reilly publicized the college’s phone number on his show. Nothing angrier than a couch potato watching Fox News, apparently.)

Update, redux: Looks like Mr. Churchill has resigned his position as head of the Ethnic Studies department at Colorado.

Update, redux, again: A compendium of Colorado Governor Bill Owens’ letter to the College Republicans at CU (because the College Republicans were the most important people to write to, apparently?), Mr. Churchill’s statement from yesterday about his essay, and the infamous essay itself.

And again: The Chronicle of Higher Education carries a good synopsis of the controversy.

Related Bloglines Blogs

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 11:54 am

I was reading alexking.org and ran across this meme:

  1. Go to bloglines (don’t think you need to have an account).
  2. Find your own blog on bloglines (if it’s not there you can sign up and add it I guess, if you don’t have a blog this one’s not for you).
  3. Click related feeds (each time you click they may change slightly).
  4. Post the top 5 (or more) on your blog.

Here are mine:

  1. Spinsanity
  2. Enigma
  3. A Better Career Articles by itotalsearch.com
  4. A .NET Developer’s Guide to Windows Security
  5. John Battelle’s Searchblog

The odd thing is, I only subscribe to one of these blogs (Spinsanity), and that one has left the building.

January 27, 2005

“This match is over!”

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 5:54 pm

Excerpt from “Play-by-Play of Classic Sports Rivalries If the Team Names Actually Represented the Combatants. And Also, Instead of Playing the Sport, They’re Fighting to the Death”

Giants vs. Dodgers

“It’s a classic David vs. Goliath matchup as an old-fashioned trolley-dodger from turn-of-the-century Brooklyn takes on—this match is over!”

Browns vs. Steelers

“Now what are we looking at here?”

“I couldn’t tell you.”

Check out more McSweeney’s Lists.

My New Stick-Fighting Technique is Unstoppable

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 4:46 pm

From 1901, when everyone carried a cane or umbrella — for defensive purposes only, of course — a Pearson’s Magazine article on stick-fighting moves for the well-dressed assailant.

Link courtesy of Boing Boing

Counterproductive spam subject line

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 4:12 pm

You’d think, when putting together the dictionary for random spam subject lines, they’d get rid of certain words that spam filters won’t like:

[thrusting] 84% off Vicodin. asteroids shadowy

I got this one today, and I still don’t know if the first verb is supposed to have something to do with the 84% off part. :)

January 26, 2005

Gonzales recommended for AG

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 1:01 pm

Despite Alberto Gonzales’ role in the attempted justification of torture by this Administration, Republicans still voted for him in a straight party-line vote after his confirmation hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

You know, I used to be Republican. I’ve found I can’t call myself that anymore without being ashamed when loyalty to the party means condoning torture. How are the Republicans — the party of “patriotism” — becoming so unpatriotic as to tacitly accept an un-American value as torture in the name of retaining power in Washington?

January 25, 2005

UNC 56, Duke 51

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 6:01 pm

Great game, particularly seeing it from the sixth row. Duke was #1, and UNC had lost twelve straight games to them.

Women’s basketball tickets at UNC are a very good buy.

January 24, 2005

Not very tall at all

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 3:57 pm

I appear to be shorter (5′6″) than almost every famous modern male. Makes me feel like a hobbit.

Of course, I have to wonder about some of the reported heights. Bea Arthur is only 5′9″? For that matter, Cher is 5′4″? That’s the same height as Alan Ladd. (Seriously. They used to have him stand on things to look taller than his female costars. Except for Veronica Lake. 4′11″. The Glass Key. Good movie.)

I personally think the best height is for Charles Schulz. They report him as 5′12″. :)

Link courtesy of Pop Culture Junk Mail

Nerd Score

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 2:28 pm

Not as bad as it could have been. :)


I am nerdier than 87% of all people. Are you nerdier? Click here to find out!

Slam Bradley

Filed under: — Shane Thacker 1:39 pm

So how were Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster paying the bills when they were coming up with that revolutionary idea? Why, drawing the comic adventures of Slam Bradley, private detective and racist thug, of course! Ben-San Arizona shares a few choice panels from his collection of old Detective Comics (before Batman took over).

Courtesy of Daily Scans

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