By Franklin
Einspruch
Monday, June 18, 2018
Noah Berlatsky is a herpes lesion on the lip of cultural
criticism. This is someone who thinks Janis Joplin’s music is racist. He thinks
the show “Altered Carbon” is racist. He can probably find racism in cloud
formations and wood grain.
After several years of politicizing culture to within an
inch of its life, he turned to politics. There, his attitude—that the world is
divided into white supremacists, and people who agree with him—has guaranteed
him an audience as a progressive journalist.
Berlatsky’s mendacity and sloppiness are known to a wide
political swath. Jonah Mix, writing for Feminist Current, called him “the
Platonic Ideal of cartoonishly worthless liberalism.” Jesse Singal’s 2017
article for New York Magazine, “There
Have Been So Many Bad Lefty Free-Speech Takes Lately,” featured an excerpt from
a Berlatsky essay, about which he said, “The level of wrongness contained in
these two paragraphs is astounding.”
Berlatsky, then, is the man for the difficult job of
carrying water for George Bridges, the disgraced (but for some reason, not yet
fired) president of The Evergreen State College who stood by impotently while
former professor Bret Weinstein was threatened with bodily harm for daring to
contradict a social justice mob. We’re talking students carrying bats,
searching cars, shutting down school, and holding university administrators
prisoner after Weinstein merely expressed in a private email that he objected
to a “Day of Absence” to exile white students from campus based solely on their
race.
A ludicrous Evergreen analysis pinned blame for their
campus mobs on Weinstein. In that analysis he is unnamed but easily
recognizable as the “faculty member [who] took advantage of this situation to
make a national news story out of it through high-profile interviews with
national media, including the FOX News Network, that were used to make a
political point, magnify the events’ significance, and ended up drawing to
campus radical groups from the left and right, intent on causing further
disruption and attracting more media attention to the Evergreen events.”
The “Independent External Review Panel” that authored the
report consisted entirely of Bridges nominees.
If Weinstein Got
Beaten, He Woulda Deserved It
That’s the background you need for Berlatsky’s recent
missive for Pacific Standard, a hit
job on Weinstein that does not recognize the slightest wrongdoing from social
justice activists at Evergreen, nor the college’s spineless leadership. This,
of course, is part of the larger project to rehabilitate the progressive brand,
since progressivism has been the source of one frightful attack on free speech
after another around the country.
Berlatsky has built a writing career out of redirecting
accusations rightly directed at progressive targets back at the accusers. It’s
basically “I know you are but what am I” for the college-educated. He is keen
to present the Evergreen debacle as a conservative ploy to advance their agenda
using free speech as a cover. Therefore he says they are the “real” threat to
free speech.
“‘Free speech,’ wielded in bad faith by right-wing media,
can turn into a gag to silence student protests and activism,” he says. Note
the scare-quotes around “free speech.”
Days after Pacific
Standard published his hit piece on Weinstein, NBC News posted a Father’s
Day essay in which Berlatsky claimed that the crisis in masculinity is not the
fault of feminism, but masculinity. This insipid table-turning is the utter
extent of his analytical powers, and he does it over and over again.
His narrative about the “real” threat to free speech
requires an attitude about the truth akin to a dog’s attitude about a fire
hydrant, and Berlatsky delivers. A full account of the misstatements, lies of
omission, and faulty reasoning would be longer than the article itself, but
here are some highlights.
The Carlson Smear
By Association Is Nonsense
Berlatsky elides one of the most important parts of the
saga: “Though Weinstein calls himself a progressive,” he writes, “he went on
the rabidly right-wing, anti-immigrant Tucker
Carlson Tonight on Fox News shortly after the protests.” On Twitter,
Berlatsky refers to Carlson as “a white supremacist asshole spouting false
conspiracy theories.” In his article, he leaves the appearance unexplained, as
if there were no explanation except that Weinstein should perhaps stop
referring to himself as a progressive.
Berlatsky continues, “Weinstein’s appearance on Carlson
alerted the far right to the anti-racist protests at Evergreen, unleashing a
flood of hate mail and a credible far-right terrorist threat that led to
administrators evacuating the campus for three days in June.” This media
appearance is central to Bridges’ complaint as well. It seems to be Bridges’
main objection, and Berlatsky’s, that had Weinstein not gone to Fox with his
story, then the Right would not known of his situation, and its trolls would
not have targeted Evergreen.
In an interview with Glenn Loury from last June,
Weinstein explained that when Carlson invited him on the show, it was clear
that he intended to run a segment on the state of free speech at Evergreen with
or without Weinstein’s interview. Weinstein hoped his appearance would provide
the report a “nuanced view, rather than have a caricature portrayed.” Besides,
he noted, “the degree to which the nominally left-leaning press has still not
dealt with this story is amazing to me.”
Weinstein went on to say that, rather than his interview
baiting alt-right types, his inbox was flooded with emails from Fox News
viewers expressing appreciation of his willingness to engage intelligently and
how much they respected him despite their differences in politics. He added
that if Chris Hayes or Rachel Maddow had invited him appear on MSNBC at the
time instead of Carlson, he would have preferred to do so.
Rule 5,692: Don’t
Tell About Bad Things the Left Does
People on the Right would have found out about this
free-speech fiasco one way or another. While nothing excuses a harassment
campaign, laying responsibility for one at Weinstein’s feet is absurd. We could
just as easily pin culpability on MSNBC for ignoring the story instead of
airing it with the journalistic probity of which it is allegedly capable.
If the Berlatsky-Bridges position is that Weinstein
should not have gone on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” while no liberal-sympathetic
news outlet was interested the story, the obvious conclusion is that they think
that he should have remained silent about the impossible and dangerous
situation that he, his wife, their children, and Evergreen students trying to
defend him were in. If that doesn’t “turn into a gag,” as Berlatsky puts it,
it’s hard to imagine what does.
Berlatsky tries to make hay out of Weinstein not
contradicting Carlson’s statement that the protesters outside of his classroom
were demanding that all whites leave campus. Carlson had conflated that protest
with the demand from a separate social justice effort for whites to leave
campus for the school’s upcoming, annually observed Day of Absence. In the video, you can
see Weinstein trying to keep up, in the midst of a slight audio lag, with
Carlson’s question about what Bridges was doing in the midst of the mayhem,
which was a more important issue to address.
But in describing the video, Berlatsky writes, “Carlson
claimed that white people had been forced off campus, which was not true.” That
statement is itself not true. At no point in the video did Carlson report that
white people had been forced off campus. For all the culpability Berlatsky has
tried to pin on Weinstein for allowing Carlson misrepresent the protesters,
it’s clear that Berlatsky has no problem with misrepresentation per se.
The Threats Were
as Real as a Baseball Bat
In Berlatsky’s tendentious retelling, “Evergreen became a
crucible for the campus wars in March of 2017, when evolutionary biologist Bret
Weinstein spoke against anti-racist protests and activities on campus. As a
result, Weinstein claims, he was targeted with physical and verbal harassment.”
Later he drops this doozy:
Weinstein also tweeted several
pictures of college students who he claimed were involved in violence. For
example, he claimed that students with bats were roaming campus, and used as
evidence a clearly staged photo, unlinked to the protests, with no evidence
that the students pictured were involved in any violence.
The “clearly staged photo” was this one.
You can see some of the same students, with the same creative hair, some
wearing the same outfits, in this
video. Note that bat at the 1:40 mark.
You would think one might question how one’s student-led
social justice movement is going when your school’s Residential and Dining
Service director is obliged to advise you, “Community patrols can be a useful
tool for helping people to feel safe, however the use of bats or similar
instruments is not productive. Some members of this group have been observed
carrying batons and/or bats. Carrying bats is causing many to feel unsafe and
intimidated. The bats must be put away immediately in order to protect all
involved.”
To recap, social justice types wielding bats appeared
proudly in an Instagram photo and were filmed walking the campus, armed, as
credible reports emerged that vigilante social justice posses had taken to
patrols. This is after the school’s police chief at the time, whom Bridges had
ordered to stand down, told Weinstein that she could no longer guarantee his
safety, and had witnessed student patrols looking from car to car in the
faculty parking lot for who knows what. At that point, Weinstein had already
been shouted out of his classroom and obliged to teach in a park.
Berlatsky’s complaint here is, seriously, that Weinstein
illustrated his tweet about credible reports of Evergreen protesters with bats with a picture of Evergreen protesters with
bats—one that they had taken themselves and posted to social media. Again
Berlatsky implicitly blames Weinstein for the online abuse of the students
posing in the Bat Patrol photo. It’s as if Weinstein had violated some kind of
standard of evidence, as if it would have never occurred to anyone else to pair
the photo with the circulating stories of marauding SJWs, and as if nobody
would have targeted the subjects of that already widely circulated image if not
for Weinstein.
The students in the photo were possibly not the same who
screamed at him, “You’re useless, get the f-ck out of here, f-ck you, you piece
of sh-t” when he approached them for rational dialogue, but Weinstein never
said they were. I repeat that nothing justifies harassment campaigns, but the
case against them overlaps heavily with the case against pursuing social
justice with blunt weapons and shoving around people who don’t take you
seriously enough for your liking, as has happened with Evergreen protesters.
Is Pacific Standard Doing PR for Evergreen?
Quite a few people have noticed that Berlatsky’s account
is so flattering to the Bridges administration that Evergreen’s public
relations staff could have written it. This is an appropriate thing to wonder
about.
Benjamin Boyce, a former Evergreen student who has been
covering its mismanagement and intellectual breakdown, broke the news that a
self-evaluation Bridges recently submitted to the college’s Board of Trustees
listed among administrative accomplishments that “a team of four staff and five
student writers wrote more than 50 online stories highlighting achievements by
students, faculty, staff, and alumni.” This effort “inaugurated new
partnerships with NPR member stations and alternative weekly newspapers
throughout the West Coast and Alaska.”
Does this “partnership” with West Coast media include the
Santa Barbara-based Pacific Standard? If not, it would be easy enough to say
so. Instead, when Boyce proposed that possibility to Berlatsky, the latter protested
too much. “F-ck off -sshole,” he replied, then blocked him.
But whether Berlatsky’s alliance with the Bridges
administration is official or tacit, it’s clear that Evergreen has the
sympathies of precipitously slanted journalists who are eager to obscure a sad
reality: that the majority of the attacks on free speech, free thought, due
process, and academic liberty are coming from progressivism.
That’s too bad for them, because Weinstein, a progressive
even conservatives respect, is far more likely to advance progressive goals
than a college student throwing a brainless tantrum at a professor. Berlatsky
never considers, or perhaps cannot comprehend, that some efforts to fight
prejudice and inequity are better than others.
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