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College Republicans to identify liberal professors

Published: Monday, August 31, 2009

Updated: Monday, August 31, 2009 03:08

UT College Republicans are compiling a list of liberal professors who they claimed have a bias against conservative students.

The list will include professors who students say have let their political views interfere with the way they interact with students in the classroom.

UT College Republicans President Matt Rubin, a junior majoring in political science and public administration, said the list is not an attempt to bash professors who have liberal ideas, but instead, it is an attempt to speak out for students who may have been victims of the bias, which was then reflected in their grade.

“We’ve been portrayed in the media, as well as comments from people in the community including College Democrats, saying that we’re creating a blacklist in order to smear the names of professors and that’s not true,” Rubin said. “We’re giving a voice to the students that have been harassed because of their political beliefs. It’s the same thing as bashing a student because they’re gay.”

Rubin said the list of liberal professors is important because of the many complaints he received from students at UT College Republicans meetings, concerning professors who made unnecessary political comments, including anti-Bush statements.

“At our weekly meeting, something we like to do is take time out for students to tell stories of any bias they have had in classes. What we’re doing is representing students who have had that experience. We’re trying to expose professors who have liberal bias and go against everything UT stands for,” Rubin said. “How is saying ‘President Bush is the dumbest president this country has ever had and should be hanged’ improving the human condition?”

The students who submitted and reported incidents such as these will remain anonymous, Rubin said.

“We had a student who said, in an ancient Greece class, Professor William O’Neal claimed that America did not liberate Europe in World War II. However; it was freed by Charles De Gaulle and the free French, not U.S. Soldiers,” Rubin said.

O’Neal, chair and professor of history at UT denied ever making the comment.

“To base this on the statement of a single student doesn’t seem as evidence to convict liberalism,” he said. “If you had a whole class come and say, ‘this guy is preaching his own gospel,’ that would be different, or if there was a substantial number of students from that class.”

Rubin said the list of dubbed liberal professors could also be beneficial to some students.

“We like to think of it as a liberal professor directory, not a list. Also, we’d like for it to be used as a resource for liberal students who are looking for like-minded professors that will positively affect their grade based on their bias,” he said.

Rubin added he and the UT College Republicans are not against professors who have liberal views.

“We realize that some professors are liberal, and that’s ok, it’s when they completely disregard a student’s opinion or they have a bias against them that might affect the way they are treated or graded, is what we think is wrong,” Rubin said.

O’Neal said although there may be some professors who let their political preferences affect the way they treat their students, it is not something he has witnessed as a common denominator at UT.

“We’re all human and there are some people who are totally committed to their own view points with very strong personalities, so I’m sure in our imperfect world this does exist,” he said. “But I do not know of anyone in this department who will base grades on hair color, eye color or political aspirations, and I have been the chair of the history department for three years and have been teaching here for 40 years.”

David Mann, a second year law student, said there are other important issues the College Republicans could be concerning themselves with.

“If I were a College Republican, I’d be spending my time trying to figure out why young people overwhelmingly support President Obama and the Democratic Party, and not waste it on this silly idea,” Mann said. “But if conservative students are afraid to defend their principles in the classroom, maybe they do need a list of professors to avoid.”

UT has an abundance of resources available to students to help them if they experience this sort of bias, O’Neal said.

“If the student feels abused, they should talk to their professor. If that doesn’t solve the problem, they should go to the department chair. If there is still a problem, they can even go to the dean or the Vice President [for] Student Affairs. There are so many places to go to avoid this type of thing,” he said.

Rubin said, though the directory of liberal professors is of high importance to the UT College Republicans, they have done many other positive things that people should focus on.

“We like to consider ourselves a well-rounded group. We’re not just a group of students sitting in a basement trying to slander these professors. We’re really doing a lot more this year. We’ve been helping out with several local campaigns and we also are having a school supply drive for students at Scott High School,” he said.

Rubin said the UT College Republicans are still working on compiling the directory of liberal professors, and expect it to be available on their Web site by Wednesday.

-The UT College Republicans Web site can be visited at www.utoledogop.com.

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311 comments

Jim
Wed Sep 2 2009 23:31
"In this case, a group of people who believe they are being selected unfairly for harsher treatment are doing something to identify those who, they believe, are perpetrating this unfair treatment. "

The problem is that they "believe" they were treated unfairly and they are identifying who they "believe" are giving them unfair treatment. If they "believe" this to be true then as was already pointed out why not report such concerns to the appropriate authorities and following the established procedures, rather then a black list with no supporting evidence and recourse for those named?

Civil Discourse
Wed Sep 2 2009 22:01
I am pleasantly surprised to find myself agreeing with a republican comment in here. "Your name" made a civil and rational comment about the issue of a list of liberal professors. I am quite liberal/progressive in my views. Some other points I have read in here that I also consider to intelligent are why not a list of gay or Catholic professors, professors who don`t believe in evolution,etc... Making a list puts a target on a group of people whether or not the author intends that group to be a target or not.
If a conservative student truly feels ridicule or unfair bias from a professor liberal or otherwise base upon the students views. Document the comments or instances or wrong doing, take the concerns you have and send them through the complaint system the university has in place to address student concerns. If you exhaust those options then post the facts and not just your own opinions publicly.
Civil Discourse
Wed Sep 2 2009 22:01
I am pleasantly surprised to find myself agreeing with a republican comment in here. "Your name" made a civil and rational comment about the issue of a list of liberal professors. I am quite liberal/progressive in my views. Some other points I have read in here that I also consider to intelligent are why not a list of gay or Catholic professors, professors who don`t believe in evolution,etc... Making a list puts a target on a group of people whether or not the author intends that group to be a target or not.
If a conservative student truly feels ridicule or unfair bias from a professor liberal or otherwise base upon the students views. Document the comments or instances or wrong doing, take the concerns you have and send them through the complaint system the university has in place to address student concerns. If you exhaust those options then post the facts and not just your own opinions publicly.
Bob
Wed Sep 2 2009 21:02
Side comment. Take videos or recordings of the profs and post them. Same goes for students then correct?
Dave
Wed Sep 2 2009 19:19
I have a quick question for some of you progressives out there, particularly the ones with the "poor baby!" comments. In this case, a group of people who believe they are being selected unfairly for harsher treatment are doing something to identify those who, they believe, are perpetrating this unfair treatment. Those with real institutional power (the professors) are accused not of openly debating these students, or simply expressing their perspectives; but of badgering and intimidating those who simply hold contrary views but do not have institutional power.

How is it that many of you can claim to be champions of freedom, liberal thought (in the classically liberal sense), and the free exchange of ideas, and then lack any empathy at all with those who differ in opinion and peacefully address perceived grievances in a manner that suits them?

I mean, this statement from the article cuts to the point: "'If I were a College Republican, I’d be spending my time trying to figure out why young people overwhelmingly support President Obama and the Democratic Party, and not waste it on this silly idea,' Mann said. 'But if conservative students are afraid to defend their principles in the classroom, maybe they do need a list of professors to avoid.'"

It is entirely possible that the young people Mr. Mann speaks of have learned that support of President Obama or progressive notions is rewarded scholastically. Additionally, it isn't about being able to defend principles in a debate in which both sides have equal footing. One group has power over the other. That makes the debate only as fair as those in power decide to make it.

It doesn't strike me as a position a free thinker would take.

karl marx
Wed Sep 2 2009 18:25
if only you capitalist would learn.

also it is literally impossible for Obama to be both a Nazi and a Communist. Just thought i would straighten that up before one of you Adam Smith lovers would mention it.

Amanda
Wed Sep 2 2009 16:52
The University of Toledo, like other colleges, already has in place formal procedures for student to file grade appeals or other compliments against faculty for students who experience discrimination or bias due to gender, race, language, religion, political and other issues or rude, threatening, demeaning, or inappropriate behavior and remarks in the classroom. If Conservative student have concerns, that is the means o have them fairly aired and addressed, not by making a list of named faculty without any supporting evidence and ability for faculty to defend themselves.
gungirl
Wed Sep 2 2009 15:29
we, as conservatives, are generally looked upon as hate-mongers, biggots, big fat liars...
the best thing to do is have proof - TAKE A RECORDING DEVICE with you to class and if you have a one-on-one with a prof who is berating you. it won't stop them from calling you a hateful right-winger or neo-nazi, but at least you can back-up your claim.
p.s. i have made some of these recordings myself because some of my friends who go to private, Christian colleges can't believe what i've told them that some profs will say in class.
Robert Jones
Wed Sep 2 2009 13:54
Yet many successful Conservatives and Republicans successfully completed college degrees (including many with high grades) even though they attended many of these colleges so dominated by liberal bias and influence. They do not appear to have been impacted, directed or influenced by liberal professors. So perhaps the problem is less with the professors and more with the students themselves?
Harry Selby
Wed Sep 2 2009 12:33
"Go to any Ivy L. School and listen. How about UC Berkley? Listen! How about University of Colorado? How about University of Illinois?"--Marine

How many Ivy League classes have you sat through? How many professors at Berkeley or at CU or at IU have discriminated against you because of your political ideology?

You made a claim. You failed to provide any evidence.

Just writing something doesn't make it true.

"Your saviour OBAMA . . ."

None of the rest of your rant has anything to do with the topic of this conversation.

Marine
Wed Sep 2 2009 12:01
Hey Liberal,
Resort to personal attacks! What else is new! How much proof do you need? Go to any Ivy L. School and listen. How about UC Berkley? Listen! How about University of Colorado? How about University of Illinois? Would you even except proof? For the record, I finished at a GPA of 3.74 in History and Biology! Where did you finish? I'm curious? Your saviour OBAMA is going on cable network to do what for students? HMMMMM? What networks are airing that for free and counter opinions are where? Proof? How about the open book on the Gov't that Obama promised? Let's see... new apointments that don't pay taxes, answer to know one but the President, and funding for Acorn and media matters? Can you say Pork? I thought he was above that?
If you what to get personal I can dish it out all day long!!!
Harry Selby
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:52
"I can not understand why "Progressives" consider highly biased actions from the liberals to be acceptable behavior. However, when a conservative group attempts to publicize the blatant behavior, they are chastized."--Bill

I don't consider witchhunts to publicize anything, rather an attempt to engage in character assassination based on association. Should we compile a list of gay professors? How about a list of Jewish or Catholic professors?

We are attacking this listing attempt because it is without any accountability: it's anonymous. If a professor has done something wrong, then report him/her to thier supervisors (their deans).

"But then Mr. Mann's suggestions were just sour grapes from a typical leftist tool. (And he wants to be a lawyer! Typical. The Democrats are a party of lawyers.)"--Dave

That last comment is nothing but a silly ad hominem from a typical right-wing tool. Seriously, does Dave not think that there are plenty of Republican lawyers? Maybe he's never heard of the Republican National Lawyers Association. Or The Republican Trial Lawyers Caucus.

Paul
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:41
Get these profs on video then post them on YouTube. The clips will end up on TV. The profs need to be the next victim of Tea Party rage, the first being the Democrats masquerading as representatives in townhalls. The election of Barack Obama is partly the fruit of decades of inculcation of students by educators such as these into liberal thinking. The libs have awakened a sleeping giant, a silent majority that is silent no longer. Keep up the great work, guys.
A humorist
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:39
Matt Rubin in 2012? It looks like the Republicans have found their "Great White (Whale of a) Hope."
Liberal
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:34
Marine--your assertion that your professors graded you more harshly because of your conservative viewpoints is laughable without proof. If they were taking off points for spelling I can understand why you had such a difficult time.

For future reference it is "gall" not "gaul", and "experts" not "experets."

Poor Republican Victims
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:31
"I have seen this first hand of marxist and other liberal teachers force their agenda down my throat and were shocked when I had the gaul to question them."--Marine

You poor, poor victim!

Marine
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:22
I have seen this first hand of marxist and other liberal teachers force their agenda down my throat and were shocked when I had the gaul to question them. They also tended to grade me more harshly. This is fact and is happening all over the country. I'm not sure why but a lot of these so called experets are in these institutions becuase the could not make it in the real world! I have absolutly no problem with these students doing this. I'll bet nearly 90% are radical liberals at that school. Bias, indeed! However, these kids are are in for a world of hurt becuase the far left media, teachers, and the administration will do everything in their power to beat them down, try to silence them, resort to personal attacks, and so on... This is the only thing they know how to do. God luck Kids. You are going to need it. Stand strong in the principles of our founding fathers. Their is great honor in your cause. never give in or give up. You are not alone. Not everybody in this country wants this nation to become The People's Republic of America!
GM
Wed Sep 2 2009 11:20
I appreciate having information about college professors (either liberal or conservative) who are so in love with their own political dogmas that they see fit to impose them on their students, I will not be recommending that our grandchildren attend schools that give asylum to a large number of teachers of this kind.
Your name
Wed Sep 2 2009 10:34
Dear College Republicans,

I myself am a Republican as well as a History and Philosophy major. However, being that I do know a couple things here and there about history, I have to add that what you are doing is extremely wrong. Blacklisting teachers by going on witchunts is awful and it embarrasses me to tell anyone on campus that I am a republican right now. What you are doing is McCarthyism in the first degree. Sure you say that there is no harm intended, but seriously, do you really think that will be the outcome? The Republican party already has enough negative PR right now, so I do not think that you could have picked a worst time to go about this. I agree that our campus is very liberal, but look at the area we live in, we are obviously Detroits shadow so that is expected. In my years of going here I have only had one conservative professor (who was willing to discuss his views) and the rest were either unknown or liberal to me. Those professors never cared what we were, but only that we backed up what we believed in. What you guys are doing are being bullies and it is very wrong. I can certainly suggest now that I will never ever come to any of your meetings and I'm sure neither will any of my conservative friends. There is a difference between speaking your mind and just being rude and inconsiderate. You guys are putting fears into professors now to speak their minds, which is effecting me because I love hearing other peoples opinions. You should really think this through.

Gil McLean
Wed Sep 2 2009 09:48
College professors have the same moral obligation as do journalists. Both must make a good faith effort to teach or report without allowing their own personal political or philosophical views to contaminate their presentations. Every issue has at least two sides. A professor or journalist has a moral obligation to present each side in such a way that both sides of the issue would judge the professor or journalist as having made a good faith effort to present both sides fairly. If the students or readers/viewers are anxious to know the personal views of the professor or journalist, the professor or journalist can respond to that request but must strongly identify his or her views as being that of himself or herself. Today there are too many anecdotal stories about both professors and journalists, who do not make a good faith effort to present both sides of a controversial issue fairly. It is a tragedy of our current world.






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