A law perfesser, Andrew Fraser, who had been banned from teaching at one university for making racist remarks, wrote an article called "Rethinking the White Australia Policy," which was set to be published in an academic law journal. The White Australia Policy was a law or series of laws akin to the US's Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which excluded all Chinese from entering the US and was eventually expanded to include immigrants from any country in Asia. The Exclusion Act was repealed in 1943 and immigration quotas restricting Asian immigration effectively removed in the US in 1965. The White Australia Policy began similarly in the 1800's with the exclusion of Chinese laborers and was expanded to include "Asiatics" or "coloureds". The Policy was dismantled between 1949 and 1973.
"Rethinking the White Australia Policy" supported white supremacist ideas and policies and claimed that blacks were dumber (yawn, again) and Asians were gonna take over (something about "--peril", was it?) The University defended the publication by reminding folks that the journal is an academic one, and all articles are "peer reviewed", i.e. vetted by reputable academics in the same field, the idea being that any article that isn't up to academic standards will be kept from publication.
Here is the article himself, if ya wanna read it. So There. It's actually quite readable, kinda like the less syphilitic passages of Mein Kampf.
Ennyhoo,a Sudanese Australian group threatened to sue the Deakin University (where the journal is published) if they went ahead with publication. After some back-and-forthing and a lot of editorials, the University caved to pressure and ordered the journal not to publish the bad, bad article. Fraser accused the University and everyone else of censorship.
Additional background information: Australia, and certain states within the country in particular, have recently proposed laws permitting draconian measures against Muslims suspected of terrorism. This is accompanied by some incidents of racist speech from certain politicians and a revival of ideas about bringing back racial restrictions to immigration among right wing politicians. Fraser seems to be the ever-necessary academic wing of a white supremacist movement that appears to be stronger in Australia than the one/s we have in the US. Critics have also challenged Australian ivory tower self-criticism, claiming that students may be expelled for calling an academic "racist" or a "bigot". In addition, in his article Fraser calls upon some suspect racial "science" that he doesn't discuss at all or cite adequately, and that isn't his field anyway: he's a law professor writing for a law journal (and reviewed by fellow law professors), not a biologist or anthropologist.
So, given all that, here's my question: Where do we draw the line between social pressure and censorship?
It's hard to imagine something like this happening in the United States -- not because we don't have our kooks, quacks and klansmen, but because American Universities have set up their barricades of social pressure so effectively, that it would be difficult for one o' dem to get the stupid paper anywhere near an academic journal. But let's suppose for a moment that it did happen, that some white supremacist got past a dissertation committee, the tenure process, the peer review, and was about to publish an article so unrepentantly, openly racist. Imagine this is happening in America right now, especially given what was revealed about race by the Katrina disaster. How much would you want to silence this guy? Would you want to argue him down or just shut him up? How much and what kind of social pressure is acceptable at this point? When does ethical social pressure fall off into censorship?
Let me remind you guys, the Sudanese Australian group hadn't threatened the University with boycott, a student/teacher strike, picketing, letters to the editor and the administration, various protests and public humiliation and all other ethically unquestionable methods of social pressure ... no they had threatened the University with legal action, i.e. using the mechanism of the state to force the journal to silence this professor. Personally, I've always drawn the line of "censorship" between actions of social pressure and actions of state enforcement. When the state steps in to silence someone by law -- that's censorship, plain and simple. And when someone threatens to use the mechanism of the state to enforce silence, well, that's censorship, too. Anything short of that, that's still legal and ethical, is fair game to me.
This man's ideas are stupid and repugnant, and they should be repugnant to anyone who wishes to participate in the multicultural reality that is the US, or the one that is Australia. I understand that the political landscape in Australia is highly volatile right now (this is not to say that ours isn't.) However, how strong is a consensus on that multicultural reality that can't stand to be questioned? Fraser clearly intended to create controversy and discussion. But will that discussion result in a reinstitution of the White Australia Policy? Hardly. Will that discussion weaken public consensus on immigration policy? Maybe. Will that discussion align the public behind racist "anti-terrorist" legislation? Quite possibly. But if there is a groundswell of support for ideas like Fraser's, isn't it better to have them discussed and repudiated publicly, rather than supressed and allowed to fester and grow? Doesn't censorship tacitly support the ideas it attempts to suppress?
Is legal action against what is essentially free expression censorship? Should repugnant ideas expressed in a volatile atmosphere be censored?
And one more thing: if Fraser's article had simply been published in its obscure little academic journal without all the fanfare and lawsuits and been quietly, academically put down, do you suppose it would get even one hit on google news instead of 39?
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