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FEATURES: Diversity On Trial
By Nick-Anthony Buford, Heather McCormick and Joshua Rider
Three views from Boalt Hall
E DITOR'S NOTE: Boalt Hall,
universally regarded as one of the top law schools in the nation, is a crucible of this
countrys dispute over diversity. As a public institution, part of the University of
California at Berkeley, Boalt is subject to the provisions of Californias
Proposition 209, the ballot initiative passed in 1996 that banned preferential treatment
based on race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin. The effect of 209 on the Boalt
class of 2000 was noteworthy. One black student matriculated that year.
Proposition 209 has been much protested, by Boalt students and
faculty alike. It is safe to say that a substantial majority of students opposes the
post-209 admissions policies. The academic year 1997-98 saw widespread protests at the
school.
This in turn has led to concerns on the part of some students about
another kind of diversity at Boalt namely, the openness of the campus to diversity
of expression and point of view. Some student supporters of 209 felt their views were
unwelcome, to put it mildly.
In 1998 David Wienir, a student in the class, put out a call for
papers from his fellow students asking their views on diversity of expression at Boalt. He
formulated the questions as follows: "How healthy is the marketplace of ideas at
Boalt? Do you have a fair opportunity to share your ideas in the classroom? Does
expression flow freely in an environment of diversity, or does the climate of tolerance at
Berkeley paradoxically inhibit true diversity of opinion?" Wienir received more than
two dozen responses, which have now been collected into a book, The Diversity Hoax,
published by the New York-based Foundation for Academic Standards & Tradition (FAST).
In the words of the non-profits executive director, Marc Berley, FASTs mission
is "to empower diverse college and university students nationwide to restore both
high academic standards and humanistic study of liberal arts in the Western tradition to
their schools." Three of the law students papers follow. They are reprinted
with permission of FAST and the authors.
What Ever Happened to J.S. Mill?
By Nick-Anthony Buford
L aw school is perhaps the greatest invention ever devised for taking individual creativity and
free thought and locking it up in a box. Heres the idea of law school: Get a liberal
arts undergraduate education. Read Kant. Read Locke. Read Emerson. Read Frost. Read
Thoreau. Debate the meaning of life, and liberty, and culture. Travel to far-away places.
Study abroad. Immerse yourself in new friendships and experiences. Grow. Drink. Think
broadly about the meaning of something you love, and enjoy. Get an education that
personally fits you, and your interests.
Then stop. And throw it all away, and get a McLaw Degree one
size fits all. One opinion fits all. Or so it seems at Berkeley.
You see, at Boalt or at least to the vocal liberal
thought-police of students who think that they must police the law school for signs of
intellectual heresy and conservatism the only thing that the great lawyers do of
value is push the envelope of civil liberties law. Contrary thought is not encouraged.
Oneness is the rule.
Lets consider the lawfulness of homosexuality, for example.
Whereas sodomy is a crime in many places, a large number of students at Boalt evidently
think that homosexuality is, or should be, constitutionally protected as a part of
ones personal privacy. They have a right to think so. But precisely because everyone
is clearly entitled to their own opinions and expressing them publicly, the viewpoint of
the students at Boalt who have been agitating publicly for homosexual rights cant be
considered to be the only viewpoint that should be respected. Gay rights is, after all, an
issue over which reasonable people differ, sometimes heatedly. Perhaps homosexuals should
be granted special legal protection in a number of areas. Or perhaps homosexual activity
should not be protected at all, whether on constitutional grounds or to protect the
superior interest represented by the traditional family. Or perhaps something in between
is right. To say the least, a settled rule of law is unclear here; consensus is elusive.
But clearly and loudly, the raised voices in favor of homosexual rights at Boalt have
chilled contrary speech through intolerance of contrary views.
Where could the law possibly go on this issue? Well, existing trends
could continue. Its not unforeseeable, given recent judicial decisions, that in the
future the utterance of an opinion contrary to the majority opinion at Boalt in favor of
gay rights might be treated as the equivalent of racist hate speech. Or perhaps any
meaningful public discussion about whether the dominant opinion on gay rights is the
correct one would be treated as creating a hostile work environment in violation of sexual
harassment laws. Regardless of the future, the current situation is that already; students
who individually challenge the dominant paradigm with their own thoughts are ostracized by
many other students at the law school perhaps intentionally, perhaps
unintentionally.
Though I have kept my true feelings about the gay rights movement to
myself while at Boalt (talk about racial quotas is the topic du jour, it seems), I
have felt ostracized nonetheless when I have chosen to express my opinion on other topics.
And that shunning has been a direct result of what I have chosen to say in class: about
crime and personal responsibility; about affirmative action; about taxes; about
environmental over-regulation; about property rights being just that rights; about
the proper size and scope of government; and about law. And there are some folks that have
managed never to say a word to me or to say very little to me all year. In a
class of 273, however, that is kind of hard.
I suppose that that ostracization is self-imposed, in the sense that it
results from my own voluntary behavior in choosing to express my views. But it is also the
result of others others who are perhaps oversensitive, perhaps petty, or who
perhaps just cannot see that all coins have two sides. In my experience, other people at
Boalt choose to penalize you when you speak up, by choosing to ostracize you. And at
Berkeley once the great home of the "Free Speech Movement" this is
not what I had expected. My undergraduate institution was full of opinionated people
just like Boalt. But unlike Boalt, the disagreements were not taken personally. In
other words, even opinionated people recognized the right of other people to have contrary
opinions. At the California legislature, where I worked for a year as a staff member,
there were many disagreements, but by and large the disagreements were not taken
personally there either. At Boalt, however, disagreements far too frequently appear to be
taken personally. If you dont agree with the dominant liberal strain of thought at
Boalt, you must be a fascist. I know; I have heard this label used to describe me
here. Funny, Ive always thought of myself as a classical liberal the type
that defends vociferously the rights of people to disagree with me, and to say so, even if
I think they are wrong.
Once, at a reception of some sort, I was asked by a student of color,
whether, in spite of all the "agitating" at Boalt against the ethnic composition
of the mostly white Class of 2000, I felt welcome at the law school as a member of that
class? I didnt know what to say, because I hadnt expected the "I take
things personally" attitude of other people at Boalt. I forced the answer
"yes," but I meant no. I didnt see the point in trying to explain myself
to someone I perceived was making a tokenist effort to talk to me about how this
students agitating compatriots had made me feel. I am a minority. That doesnt
make me agree that everyone with brown or black or yellow skin must think alike. If that
point isnt self-evident, I didnt see how I could communicate it to someone who
didnt already understand.
Its undeniable that at Boalt, free speech and free discussion are
chilled. It affects all of us. And, ironically, the inspiring, "traditional"
1960s paradigm of Berkeley of respect for diverse opinions is subverted and
trampled by the new intolerance of the activist student thought-police who police the
discussions that take place daily in the classrooms and hallways. I remember one instance
in particular when I was practically reprimanded by a fellow student for having spoken my
mind. It struck me that this verbal, public, high-minded scolding it was like being
put in a New England-style pillory of sorts implied several things: (1) that this
is our turf, and youre not one of us; (2) that on our turf, youd better play
by our rules; and (3) our rule is to allow you only to say that which we can tolerate, so
fall in line. Unfortunately for any self-appointed censors, however, Ive decided one
thing for certain whatever it is that bothers others about what I say, I dont
plan on stopping. I wont fall in line. It is my prerogative to express myself.
Were he alive, John Stuart Mill, a libertarian, would not like the
Berkeley of today, because he valued freedom of expression and public debate as a method
of arriving at fundamental truth. Were he alive, Henry David Thoreau, a transcendentalist,
would not like the Boalt of today, because he appreciated that the freedom to express
unpopular views without retribution (the freedom to dissent, in other words) lies at the
core of a free society.
But the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., were he alive today, would in
fact like Boalt, because today, post-affirmative action, he would behold a truly
color-blind admissions policy which does justice to the dignity of individuals in the
Kantian sense the dignity that results from not treating people as means to an end,
but as morally significant entities in and of themselves.
Speak that last thought at Boalt and you will be ostracized, as I have
been. You will be ostracized because the thought-police at Boalt cant grasp the
importance of the preceding two truths about the value of public discussion
represented by Mill and Thoreau. One does not truly have the freedom to think, and grow,
however, if one cannot express ones thoughts without fear of retribution.
American culture glorifies the dissenting individual. That is in part a
direct consequence of Berkeleys 1960s legacy, the counterculture of that era, and
the Free Speech Movement that was its genesis. We value the road less traveled when two
paths diverge in the woods. We glorify the person who marches to the beat of a different
drum. We value those who have done things their way. Perhaps Boalt will learn this
valuable cultural lesson one day (after all, it once taught it) and stop ostracizing
dissenting individuals. Until then, I will continue to be the back-bench dissenter in the
classroom. I will continue to help expose the dominant paradigm for what it is just
one way of seeing the world.
In spite of the smothering political correctness at Boalt, I highly
recommend it to anyone who likes to think for oneself. The hostility of the
"audience" at Boalt to hearing your message can often be formidable. But press
on. Its worth it. There is, after all, no better place to preach the Gospel than in
the den of the devil. You see, it is the very hostility of the audience at Boalt that
makes your own personal viewpoint that much more worth expressing.
There are so many of us in law school each day, but how many are
actually heard from? Not many. I ask you, is that the idea of an education? Is that the
idea of law school? It shouldnt be, but it is the idea at Boalt.
The Unprofitable Monopoly
By Heather McCormick
I came to Boalt Hall with the optimism shared by many first-year students. If ever there
were a place where open-minded people would engage in dialogue and emerge for the better,
it would be uc Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall). Four years later, I no longer share
that optimism. For I have found that the "marketplace of ideas" at Boalt is
actually a monopoly.
My first big lesson in the silencing of dialogue happened in first-year
property class. The professor thankfully a visiting one showed a video on
housing discrimination. After the video, she called for an open dialogue, encouraging
everyone to express what they felt about what they had seen. As the exchange progressed,
one of my classmates raised his hand, with a hypothetical based on reverse discrimination.
(Granted, it was a bit peripheral, but thats not so uncommon for first-years and
their hypotheticals.) "How could you even bring that up?" the professor
demanded. "It just belittles everything youve seen here!" Her tirade went
on for a good two minutes, while my classmate sunk down into his chair, lowered his eyes,
and said nothing.
The professors response foreshadowed what too often passes for
"open dialogue" at Boalt. Those on the far left are entitled to say whatever
they want, without regard for simple civility or for restraint in levying accusations.
Those who disagree with them are to remain silent.
Of course this is a simplification of the situation at Boalt. In fact, I
believe that many Boalt students who lean toward liberalism nevertheless would like to see
a more balanced dialogue. But, frustratingly, not many will stand up for it. Nor will
those on the right. Why is it that we, as advocates in training, are nevertheless so
reluctant to stand up for our positions?
Like most monopolists, the liberal voice at Boalt has achieved its
position through unfair competition. One of the most powerful and destructive tools in
silencing dissenting voices at Boalt is the casual use of various "isms." I am
continually amazed by how easily certain students at Boalt will use one of their
classmates particular comments or political beliefs, without more context, in order
to label them racist or sexist. If you believe that disparate impact in and of itself
isnt enough to constitute an Equal Protection violation (i.e., if you agree with the
Supreme Courts jurisprudence), then youre a racist. If you, despite your
well-intentioned, fine-toothed combing of the Constitution, just cant find a legal
rule that says that veterans preferences are impermissible gender discrimination,
then that is sexism. If you think that these veterans preferences are acceptable as
a matter of policy for the liberals who are willing to concede that there is a
difference between constitutional permissibility and policy advisability then that
is extreme sexism. And woe to you if you believe that mothers on crack should lose
their babies, you poor racist, sexist loser.
Holding any of these beliefs does not, in and of itself, make one a
racist or a sexist. But expressing such beliefs in the classroom setting, with an acute
awareness that certain of your classmates will use them to infer such traits about you, is
really tough to do. When I say "infer," I dont mean to believe in a silent
way. I have heard all of the above beliefs expressly called racist or sexist in the
classroom. And if your classmate is publicly calling the beliefs that you hold racist or
sexist, then it doesnt take a great inferential leap to recognize that your
classmate is publicly calling you a racist or a sexist. No one wants to be called
or thought such ugly things by their peers. As a result, many who disagree with the
ultra-liberal viewpoint that dominates discussion at Boalt have learned to keep silent. I
have tremendous respect for those who are brave enough to risk this unfair labeling in
order to offer an alternative viewpoint, and I have tried my best to be among them. Still,
there are times when its just not worth it to speak out, and this is the much more
common response at Boalt.
The silencing of the conservative voice at Boalt is no trivial matter.
All voices deserve the chance to be heard and considered. Its a matter of respect
and dignity for the individual. This is an argument long advanced by liberals, yet
conveniently forgotten as applied to those who disagree with them.
The silencing of dissenting voices at Boalt also means that our
classroom discussions are much less rich than they might otherwise be. In reading this
article, maybe you have assumed that I am a conservative. I am not. I am a moderate
Democrat. That my viewpoints can pass for conservatism in the classroom (which they
sometimes do) appalls me and shows just how flat the debate is. Our expectations are
anchored far to the left at Boalt, and in most classes, we dont hear from true
conservatives at all, only less extreme liberals. This lack of exchange is not only
boring, it is antithetical to the educational mission of a university. The concept of a
marketplace of ideas is based on the benefits of competition, from which the most
meritorious ideas will emerge. But the liberal monopoly at Boalt has squelched the
competition, and as monopolists tend to do, has left us with a product that is both costly
and less than optimal.
During the Proposition 209 protest that took place on the first
day of school this year, I listened to a professor speak about how Boalts entering
class is less qualified than those of the past. She wondered how Boalt students could have
an informed discussion about interpretive concepts such as probable cause and reasonable
doubt without the input of African-American and other minorities who bring a unique
perspective to the debate. She was absolutely right. Yet we continue to ignore, even
silence, the conservative voice that is present at Boalt and which could also contribute
to the richness of the debate. How can we expect to have an informed discussion about
Proposition 209 when I have not heard not once anyone at Boalt publicly
admit to supporting it? How shall we talk about gender discrimination in a class with only
a few males? Once we leave Boalt, how shall we be effective lawyers, politicians, and
businesspeople, when we have spent three years completely isolated from the political tide
that predominates in our state?
The unfortunate result of this one-sidedness is that many Boalt students
are completely ignorant of the arguments put forth on the right, except in their grossest
generalities. Whether your agenda is liberal or conservative, it pays to understand the
other side. If the exchange were robust, we might even learn something.
Sadly, the liberal monopoly has made robust exchange a scarce good at
Boalt. This is disappointing, because most of us in law school are relatively young, still
trying out new ideas and testing the bounds of our beliefs. Yet this type of development
requires a tolerant, forgiving atmosphere, one that allows for the full exploration of
ideas, including directness, exaggeration, and even mistakes. But because no such
atmosphere exists at Boalt, students are rarely willing to put their necks on the line.
Knowing that what you say can and will be used against you makes students very careful
too careful about what they say. They cautiously state just enough to get a
point across, lest any passionate overstepping forever be ascribed to their belief system,
rather than viewed as what it was meant to be an exploration. So discussion is
couched, watered-down at Boalt. We have "debate lite." In our quest to all just
get along, we avoid the controversial, especially challenges to the liberal hegemony. Our
behavior is more like that of polite dinner guests than that of law students. This
self-imposed reservedness is every bit as inhibiting to our development as is the lack of
dialogue along the political spectrum.
In all fairness, some professors do try to encourage a more vigorous,
balanced discussion. For example, I am currently in a gender discrimination class with
Professor Linda Krieger. While she comes at the issues from a liberal perspective, she has
made clear from the beginning that alternative points of view are welcome. But so far, we
havent had many takers. This has to do with the composition of the class itself. We
have only three men in the course, and I dont think its going out on a limb to
say that none of them are conservatives. Any true conservative has long since been scared
away from even walking into any course at Boalt on discrimination, because the type of
tolerance Professor Krieger proposes is almost nonexistent at Boalt. As a
consequence, her offer of tolerance for diverse viewpoints falls flat on homogeneous ears.
Of course, its easy to say that men just arent interested in
a class on gender discrimination, whites just arent interested in a course on
critical race theory. But this doesnt ring true with my experience. Many men and
many whites at Boalt would like to take discrimination classes; it is an interesting and
evolving area of the law. Yet, the conservatives among these groups are fearful of
exposing themselves to an atmosphere in which their ideas, and sometimes even their
presence, is not welcome. So, while the vast majority of corporations and law firms are
headed by conservative males, we have none in our class on gender discrimination. Those
who could learn the most from the class never walk in the door. Professors teaching
discrimination law go on preaching to the choir, and the ideological gap at Boalt
continues to widen.
This brings me to my final point about why the lack of dialogue between
liberals and conservatives at Boalt is critical. It has created division where there might
otherwise be tremendous opportunities for alliances. For example, many people at Boalt
believe adamantly in the importance of having strong minority representation in the law
school. You would think that this would lead to coalition-building around the Proposition
209 issue. Instead, the most extreme at Boalt organized the movement and engaged in
activities that alienated most of their initial supporters, and I count myself among that
group. While I endorse efforts to increase minority enrollment at Boalt, there was no way
I was going to stand in the Deans office and shout down a woman who has devoted a
lifetime to defending the rights of women and minorities. Nor would I barge into
first-year classrooms asking white men to give up their seats. Such actions make
misguided, unfair accusations. But there was no room for dialogue between the extreme
voices and those of moderation.
This typifies the "either youre with us or youre
against us" attitude that characterizes the far left at Boalt. These monopolists have
bundled their practices, and either you buy them all, or you are not welcome to
participate. In this way, the same unwillingness to engage in dialogue, restraint, and
compromise that has hindered classroom exchange at Boalt has infected Boalts
political movements as well. Of course, all the blame cannot lie with the left. During the
objectionable protest activities, the moderates engaged in their usual silence, lacking
the guts to stand up and say, "No, that is wrong." Instead, they quietly
distanced themselves from the movement. A great opportunity for political alliance was
lost.
Currently, the divide between liberals and conservatives at Boalt causes
suspicion on the left, and resentment on the right. Yet imagine a Boalt where these
differences instead produced a rich exchange, fostering respect for individual viewpoints,
learning and enlightenment in the classroom, and productive political alliances. I have no
easy answers about how to get there, and I am quite certain that no easy answers exist.
Yet, there are steps we can take to change.
More conservatives must be willing to express their viewpoints in class,
in spite of their fears of being demonized. Should the debate become one-sided
nevertheless, more liberals and moderates need to offer alternative perspectives, even if
that means playing devils advocate.
In addition, we must all use restraint in our use of the various
"isms," and in our tendency to hurl accusations. I sometimes think that
activists at Boalt think they have succeeded when they have silenced the other side. I
have indeed learned much from liberal classmates at Boalt about unconscious racism,
about supposedly neutral legal and social standards, and about different perspectives in
general. But when I think about the moments that produced this learning, they were either
moments of dialogue or of quiet self-reflection. Never were they moments of racially
charged debate, for it seems to me that very little deep learning occurs from a defensive
posture. When you call your classmates views racist or sexist, he naturally becomes
defensive. Take on his viewpoints with counter-arguments, not with convenient labels. And
despite the fact that law school has instilled in us the litigators value of debate,
remember that discussion, not debate, is often a more effective tool for enlightening a
colleague.
I do not mean to suggest that enlightenment, or agreement, should be the
ultimate goal. One of the traditional, annoying, and arrogant aspects of conservatism is
the idea that liberals are naive idealists, who will see the wisdom of conservatism once
they learn the ways of the world. The far left at Boalt suffers from a similar annoying
arrogance. They seem to think that conservatives are ignorant of the perspectives of the
oppressed and would come around to a better view if only they were more enlightened
people. Perhaps that is why some Boalt liberals have deemed a "be silent and
listen" agenda appropriate. But just as liberalism is not necessarily a product of
naiveté, neither is conservatism necessarily a product of ignorance. Well-informed people
disagree. That is the richness of the marketplace of ideas, a richness we should
celebrate, not suppress.
Professors, you, too, have an important role. Make clear at the outset
of your courses that diverse viewpoints are valued, repeat the offer throughout the
course, and be sure you live up to it by encouraging those who do offer competing
perspectives. If you sense a dearth of discussion on one side of an issue, then play
devils advocate and prompt it. If you see a student engaging in the type of
accusations that will stifle debate, then discourage this behavior. Many of you have
learned to be effective moderators of discussion, but more of you could learn to be better
facilitators. You have colleagues for example, Professor Jesse Choper who
are masters of this art, so learn from their expertise.
I certainly do not mean to imply that every course or discussion must be
ideologically balanced. It would be ludicrous, for example, to expect that a course in
critical race theory would be so, since a political perspective is inherent in the
material. You as professors have your own perspectives, and by all means you should teach
from them. But the richness of your scholarship can only be improved by contrasting it
with competing assumptions, exposing its flaws, and highlighting its strengths. You
professors who teach courses that traditionally scare away conservatives (or liberals)
have a special duty to be proactive to recruit and welcome them. If nothing else, I
guarantee it will enliven your teaching experience.
We cannot rely on the bravery of conservatives or the self-restraint of
liberals to solve the problem in its entirety. Nor can professors play the facilitator
role alone. Each and every one of us has responsibility to maintain the conditions that
foster open dialogue conditions of civility and tolerance for diverse viewpoints,
including conservative ones. Maintaining these conditions includes admonishing those who
violate them. It isnt easy to censure your classmates when they make statements or
accusations that silence dialogue. Yet, we as Boalt students manage to enforce all kinds
of informal norms in the classroom. Witness the demise of most of the red-hots (those who
talk to hear themselves speak) after the first year. Lets add civility and tolerance
to the list of norms we demand of one another.
One of the biggest obstacles so far in accomplishing this goal has been
guilt white guilt, male guilt, whatever you want to call it. Because the voices of
women and minorities have been silenced for so long, and because these groups are feeling
attacked by Californias current political climate, we are reluctant to censure
members of these groups, even when they do cross the lines of civility. Perhaps we even
worry that those lines of civility are the ones drawn by the dominant culture, and that
they might not be the same for other groups. I believe that this reluctance and fear are
why some of the activities of the Proposition 209 protest, which offended many
peoples sense of fairness, nevertheless failed to draw much public criticism at
Boalt (though they drew a lot of criticism in hushed voices).
In short, at Boalt we tolerate more extreme behavior from women and
minorities and those advocating on their behalf than we do from other individuals. Maybe
this is right in some degree Im not sure but it is not right when
applied without bounds. Discouraging the incivilities and accusations that stifle
classroom debate while maintaining a healthy respect for our historical inattention to the
voices of women and minorities is a difficult balancing act. But we must not give up on
the task, allowing the voices of an extreme few to silence dialogue among many.
I hope that all groups at Boalt, including the far left, will view the
current situation as an opportunity for positive change. For unlike a monopolist in the
marketplace of goods, the monopolist in the marketplace of ideas suffers alongside those
whose voices have been silenced. A free and open marketplace of ideas benefits all without
regard to ideology.
Quibbles about the Margins
By Joshua Rider
M y initial reaction to being asked to contribute to a collection of thoughts on the state of
free discussion at Boalt was hesitance. While I looked forward to reading such a
collection, I felt that I had little to say that would be of interest, as my opinions on
this issue are neither particularly passionate, nor to my mind, exceptional among my
classmates. If anything, I feel I am more staid than many of my classmates. I am a bit
older than the average perhaps my fire for such things is somewhat abated.
Still, the invitation came from a friend, who swayed me with the desire
to make the collection as broadly representative as possible, reminding me that even the
mediocre need representation. Persuaded by this and by his chiding that a diary-like tone
was not only allowed but expected, I reluctantly agreed. I hope the result is neither too
obvious nor too boring to delay the reader from the rest of the tome.
The question before me is: "How open and free is the flow of
opinion at Boalt?" To which my immediate and considered answer is borrowed from my
constitutional law professor, his all-too-familiar refrain of "compared to
what?" Is the Boalt community as tolerant of dissenting voices and opinions as one
might ideally desire? Surely not. Is it as bad as anywhere else? Has this important
center of the Free Speech Movement paradoxically become a place where little is tolerated
except lock-step conformity? Hardly.
Boalt strikes me as freer and more tolerant than I expected of a law
school (even the law school at Berkeley), in most ways, and less so in but a few. I was
particularly struck my first semester by how genuinely curious and open-minded most of my
classmates seemed how willing they were to consider alternative viewpoints both in
the classroom and out. Far different from the enervated pre-professionalism I had been
warned of and had prepared for, at even the best of law schools.
Surely there were exceptions, students who seemed strident in pushing a
point upon both professors and classmates, and less than gracious with disagreement, but
they were just that: exceptions.
Admittedly, things have changed a bit as we have gone through the first
year. Some of the tolerance and civility of the first days seems to have been generated by
the uncertainty of new environs, and the lingering possibility that we might not succeed
here as we had done before. This wore off. The process accelerated after the
first-semester grades were released. Most students found that if they didnt do as
well as they wished, they certainly werent in danger of being run off campus.
The second semester has been less civil than the first. While Im
not sure political convictions are any more strongly held than before, they are certainly
expressed more openly, and difference of opinion is more likely to be thought of as error.
More students tuned out their classmates more readily. More whispered comments, giggles,
eye rolls, shoulder shrugs, sneers, etc., during class signal when a comment is unpopular
(I admit to being guilty of all this from time to time, although I do try to police myself
in such things). Appellations previously absent, like "fascist" and
"terrorist," are used by some, if only at the margins or among like-minded
spirits. I know not whether this trend will continue or accelerate throughout my stay
here, but I think not. The atmosphere has seemed to me to reach a stasis, and we seem no
more or less civil to one another than the second- and third-year students I know.
Whats the effect of the sort of minor incivility that
characterizes our classroom interaction on the real flow of ideas around here? Not much.
One thing that accounts for this is that the eye-rolling, shoulder shrugs, and sneers
during class seem equally directed toward students who feel the occasional need to voice
calls for the Revolution and those who suggest everything went wrong at the New
Deal. Also, most of those who have some real political conviction dont seem to be
anything but energized by the reactions they receive. While Im sure at times the
"micro-aggressions" (if I can borrow and probably misuse that evocative term)
that characterize our classroom and extracurricular behavior hurt those who are subject to
them, this pain doesnt seem to silence.
There are some exceptional examples of bad behavior: Boalt Hall building
walls spray-painted, fire alarms pulled, posters for certain groups pulled down. All I can
say to this is that no one is willing to claim responsibility, were not even sure
law students are involved, everyone seems willing to say its a bad idea, and the
targets of such actions naturally blame their political opponents, all of which strikes me
as pretty lame. No one here has been beaten, threatened, ostracized, or even seriously
snubbed, as far as I can tell, for their political opinions or actions. I dont mean
to suggest that an atmosphere is non-representative simply due to the absence of these
things, but I do mean to say that democracy does require a thick skin. The incivility at
Boalt is just that and nothing more. Being called a racist or a terrorist may not be much
fun, but, hey, anyone silenced by this doesnt have much interest in speaking.
If Im right and the discourse here at Boalt is occasionally
puerile but otherwise evenhanded in its civility, why all the complaining? Make no
mistake, there is a lot of complaining, as Im sure some of the other contributions
demonstrate. As seems all too common in our larger political discourse, everyone at Boalt
is a victim. Everyone is a target for the forces of (take your pick): the liberal bias of
established academia/cultural elite, the conservative backlash of the right-of-center, the
hopelessly politically correct, or the white, able-bodied, straight, well-to-do males (in
the interest of full disclosure: this last is an incomplete but nevertheless accurate
description of the author of this submission).
I think the explanation for this is perfectly simple: We are law
students, pursuing a career in, arguably, vindication of rights, slights, and yes, social
causes. We do not take slights gracefully, it is not in us. We are not selected (or
self-selected) for our stoicism. Law is the center of whiners, in the very best sense of
the word. Not Woody Allenesque, get-on-the-couch-and-bitch whiners, but the
"I-cant-believe-the-world-is-this-screwed-up" whiners. So it does not
surprise me when we all seem a little more ready to complain of the injustice of it all
than even the mainstream American victim. This explanation may strike one as glib, but
Im convinced it is a large part of the story.
Ive spent a lot of time talking about the student body. What about
the faculty, staff, administration? Im not really qualified to hold forth on these
things other than to say that I havent seen or heard a professor silence a viewpoint
in the classroom that was even tangentially related to the course of study with one
exception. On about the fourth or fifth day of my first semester, Professor Dwyer informed
the 120 first-year students in his property class that, while the view that could be
summarized "all property is theft" was perfectly coherent and could be argued
cogently, such a view would not allow one to score well on the bar exam. He discouraged,
but did not disallow, taking such a view as ones first premise in doing our reading
and our writing assignments for the class. He merely reminded us that one would be
accountable for the nuances of the rule against perpetuities regardless. He further
suggested that if one held that view seriously, one might be at the margins of the law
curriculum and might want to think about a joint degree of some kind. This approach seems
pretty typical of the faculty Ive encountered.
One final observation, put forward even more reluctantly than the rest.
There is one kind of silencing that pervades the Boalt discourse: admissions to the
community, both for faculty and students. In this Boalt is suffering. The
racial/ethnic/economic diversity of my class (and of the classes that preceded me, and
certainly of the classes to come during my time here) is not representative of that of the
state of California or of the nation. No one is silenced once they get here, its
getting here thats the gag. There are opinions and positions and voices in the
American debate that are not heard here. Not because those here dont speak them, but
because those who speak them are not here.
I dont know what to say about this. Here, this problem is
horrific, but only marginally less so throughout the rest of elite legal education. The
causes run far beyond Boalt. I believe, though Im willing to be convinced
otherwise, that the faculty and administration are not doing everything that could be done
to combat the re-segregation of this campus. I believe, though I would hope to be
convinced otherwise, that even were they doing everything within their power under the law
(and yes, somewhat beyond it) the situation would confound them they simply do not
have enough power to cure this. That, of course, does not excuse the insufficiency of the
efforts. Similar observations could be made of the diversity of the faculty itself. Given
the magnitude and scope of the problem of entrance to this community, the problems of
censorship once were here are quibbles about the margins.
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