MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘Amy Wax’

Latest on UPenn Law’s effort to purge Amy Wax

Posted by M. C. on July 28, 2022

Let us be clear about what is happening in Amy Wax’s case.  This is not just an attack on her, though it is also that.  She is being attacked as the representative of a whole set of heterodox intellectual frameworks and bodies of research.  It is that set of ideas that Ruger and his ilk—indeed, all the academic purveyors of woke morality–want to destroy.  They will do it one individual at a time, as this is the most feasible and practical way to advance their agenda, but the goal is not just to remove the individuals. 

Alexander Riley

This was just posted yesterday at The American Mind. Slightly longer version, with a lengthier attack on the dubious moral integrity of the Southern Poverty Law Center, below.


The Anti-Intellectual Attempt to Fire Professor Amy Wax: Evidence of the Fraudulence and Professional Incompetence of UPenn Law Administration

The UPenn Law School campaign to purge Professor Amy Wax from their ranks for making public statements that challenge the emerging woke left orthodoxy in higher education is now reaching a fever pitch.  Just last month, that School’s Dean Ted Ruger made a formal charge to the faculty senate to bring “major sanctions” which could include stripping of tenure and removal from her position.  His bold assertion is that Wax has failed to adhere to the standards of her profession and therefore should potentially be removed from its ranks.

FIRE managed to obtain the letter Ruger sent to the faculty senate chair and posted it online.  It demonstrates, with stunning and depressing clarity, just how low the level of argument and analysis is at present at the highest levels of American academia.  Wokeism is destroying higher education, and it is nowhere clearer than in the astoundingly anti-intellectual rhetoric being emitted from high-level administrators such as Ruger when they are faced with perspectives with which they disagree and about which they patently know almost nothing.

People outside academia only occasionally have an opportunity to peer inside the walls of the university to see at the nuts and bolts level just what kind of foolishness is now being perpetrated there in the name of the woke revolution sweeping through American culture.  Ruger’s letter is a depressing document of this phenomenon.  A short tour through its contents gives insight into what higher education is becoming.

Ruger’s language is denunciatory at the most elevated level, accusing Wax of having failed utterly as an intellectual:  “Much of her public persona has become anti-intellectual: she relies on outdated science [and] makes statements grounded in insufficiently supported generalizations.”  But somehow, no examples of this outdated science or insufficiently supported generalizations are indicated in his letter.

The letter’s charge against Wax consists of two parts:  a list of student complaints against Wax, and a collection of brief excerpts from Wax’s public speech that purportedly show how unscholarly and bigoted she is.1

Let’s look a bit at this substance, to see precisely how little substance there is to be found there.

The Student/Classroom Complaints

The claims presented in Ruger’s letter about what she’s said in class are unverified by any objective evidence.  For this reason, those knowledgeable about such things must conclude that they cannot alone serve as the basis for any formal action against Wax.  Putting these comments into the general context of Wax’s teaching record raises real questions.  In 2015, she received a prestigious UPenn-wide Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, which involved a detailed examination of her record in the classroom and a broad solicitation of student comments.  So, just a few years ago, UPenn publicly recognized that Wax was not only not an incompetent teacher; she was an exemplar among her peers of excellent teaching.  What’s different now?  It seems clear that it is not Wax or her teaching style that have changed in the intervening years.

Anyone who teaches in higher education knows that students these days not infrequently have ideological axes to grind (which they have not uncommonly been provided by DEI institutions on their campuses), and they often mishear or misremember what was said in such a way as to be offended by things imagined that were in fact not uttered.  I have had students make claims to my superiors about things they allege I’ve said in class during Zoom meetings that were recorded, so fortunately I had objective evidence of what was said.  The difference between the claim and the reality was in every case remarkable.  I shudder occasionally thinking what might happen in such situations when there is no objective record to which to compare the interpretive efforts of students with hostile motives or careless attitudes to accuracy.

But it turns out that even if you take Wax’s students’ highly doubtful claims on their face, they still constitute no case for major sanctions against her.  A look at just the first three claims illustrates this.

The first example given by Ruger is a student claiming that in response to a question about whether Wax agreed that blacks are inherently inferior to whites, Wax responded:  “You can have two plants that grow under the same conditions, and one will just grow higher than the other.”  How this statement could be seen by any rational person as something objectively psychologically damaging to this or any other student is a mystery for the ages.  This is obviously not an affirmation of inherent racial inferiority in humans, as it is not even a statement about humans.  It is also a true statement.

Read the Whole Article

Be seeing you

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

College Destruction of Black Students – LewRockwell

Posted by M. C. on July 6, 2018

To admit these students makes white liberals feel better about themselves. It also helps support the jobs of black and white university personnel in charge of diversity and inclusion.

Like with most things political, you should follow the money.

College Destruction of Black Students

Amy Wax, a University of Pennsylvania law professor, has come under attack and scathing criticism because she dared criticize the school’s racial preferences program. In an interview with Brown University economist Glenn Loury, discussing affirmative action, Wax mentioned how racial preferences hinder the ability of blacks to succeed academically by admitting them into schools at which they are in over their heads academically. At Penn’s seventh-ranked law school, Wax said, she doesn’t think that she has ever seen a black law student graduate in the top quarter of his class, and “rarely” is a black student in the top half.

That got her into deep trouble. Penn students and faculty members charged her with racism. Penn Law School Dean Ted Ruger stripped Wax of her duty of teaching her mandatory first-year class on civil procedures. I’m guessing that Penn’s law faculty members know Wax’s statement is true but think it was something best left unsaid in today’s racially charged climate. Ruger might have refuted Wax’s claim. He surely has access to student records. He might have listed the number of black law students who were valedictorians and graduated in the top 10 percent of their class. He rightfully chose not to — so as to not provide evidence for Wax’s claim… Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »