To Alan Garber & John Manning:
As
a member of the law faculty (and, not for nothing, a professor of the
First Amendment), I am writing you to express my strong opposition to
any "settlement" with the Trump Administration. Harvard has been a
beacon for academic freedom, and that means that even if Harvard's
administration believes that it is getting a "good" deal, any "deal"
will be used to extort more concessions and destroy academic freedom
elsewhere. This is not how the leading US university should behave.
Moreover,
as every trade partner has seen—as Columbia University has seen—as the
recission package passed by Congress despite promises to the contrary
has shown--there are no "deals" with authoritarians of this stripe. This
administration is both unwilling and unable to keep its word. Russ
Vought and his ilk are not going to release money, and even if the money
previously owed is released without a court order, there will be more
demands and less money next time.
Instead,
the administration's acts against George Mason's faculty suggests that
individual professors are next, and our students are already at risk.
Protecting Harvard requires protecting its faculty and students from
government thought control. This cannot be accomplished merely by saying
in a statement that the university has retained academic freedom, if it
is accompanied by concessions to people who hate higher education and
want to destroy it. If you sign an agreement with these people, will
appointments and admissions be actually free to follow the pursuit of
academic excellence according to the law on the books? Or will a threat
hang over every decision? If you sign an agreement, will it still be
likely that you'll wake up to find that we can't have international
students any more until we do just one more thing to root out whatever
they've decided is too "woke"?
I
understand you must be under a huge amount of pressure. If the US does
not retain its democratic institutions, let it be without your consent
and with your resistance. If the US does survive as a democracy, we will
all remember what side Harvard was on.
No comments:
Post a Comment