July 28, 2008
“Debate Community” Organizes To Silence Critic—Me!
By
Nicholas Stix
The academic "debate community"—the teachers
and professors who run high school and college debating
teams—is increasingly devoted to
suppressing debate, in the service of
multicultural totalitarianism. The argument many of
its leading members implicitly advance on behalf of such
suppression—that only members of the
community may criticize it, and only those who
uncritically embrace the
community's reigning political dogmas may be
members—is a self-contradictory
loyalty oath requiring blind faith.
I found this out the hard way: My June 26 VDARE.com
article,
Towson Debaters Mau Mau Liberal Judges, was
about how a pair of incompetent black debaters won the
Cross Examination Debate Association's (CEDA) national
college tournament by refusing to debate the assigned
topic, and by instead accusing the “debate community”
of "racism". Although a few “debate
community” e-mail and message board responses to my
article were supportive, most were not. There were five
types of responses:
1. “The best team
necessarily won”—which implied
that the “debate community” is perfectly just.
Had the judges used this criterion against Towson, which
insisted that the “debate community” is racist,
they would have had to give the tournament championship
to the University of Kansas squad (UT-Dallas student
Wes Dwyer, aka Startop , e-mailing me
anonymously as
theouterheavenproject@hotmail.com);
2. Ignoring my
arguments, and repeating rationalizations
for Towson that I had refuted in my article: Max
Williger. [email]
3. Obfuscation:
"Fairness is not the most important issue in the
round; first, we must address questions of the
structural integrity of debate" (Max Williger
again). What the heck is "structural integrity"?
This sophism reminds me of the "structural racism"
charge, where someone implies a factual claim, but
has no evidence to support it. Translation: “It's
o.k. to be unfair to white guys, but it's metaphysically
forbidden to hold blacks to the rules.”
4.
Reason and logic mean
fundamentally different things to whites and blacks—therefore,
it's wrong to hold blacks to our concepts of them (Chase
Burton; [Email]).
If this claim were true, it would likewise be the case
that we cannot hold whites to "black" standards
of reason and logic. However, this argument ultimately
entails
incommensurability, i.e., whites and blacks cannot
possibly debate each other.
5.
Ad hominem attacks
against me and VDARE.COM—including guilt by association.
By far the most common response. ("Ignorant
hate-monger", Dwyer again, anonymously; "ignorant
f-k", Dwyer again, this time openly; "a
writer with ties to the KKK", successful
University of Wyoming debate coach ,and
blogger, Matt Stannard[Email]);
("VDare
is a white supremacist journal", Stannard again).
Ultimately, led by CEDA message board moderator and
debate coach
Ankur Aggarwal,
the dominant group there resolved to "respond"
to my arguments with a letter-writing campaign to any
media outlet that had ever published me, demanding that
it never publish me again. ("There is nothing
like a grassroots war of economics to change someone's
mind",
Aggarwal).
It apparently never occurred to Aggarwal that his
statement and conduct were the antithesis of debate.
(Readers may wish to play
count the fallacies in my opponents' responses.)
Peer group pressure in the “debate community”
is obviously serious. Otherwise sensible Golden (CO)
High School debate coach Tammie Peters was so frightened
that the totalitarians would see that she is not with
the program that she desperately triangulated,
alternately between ritual denunciations of me ("vitriolic
rhetoric") which had nothing to do with my
arguments, rational support for them, and throwing
herself into the campaign to silence me by providing
e-mail addresses for
many outlets that have published my work. She wrote:
“1) I personally don't
get the issue of racism as inherent in debate…. This
topic came up last summer and I remember noting a number
of students of African decent [sic]
receive trophies at Nationals in CX, LD, PF, and Student
Congress (as well as the non-debate events). I can't
think of anything specifically racist about what we do,
some policy or belief that states or implies that kids
of color cannot do what we do.
“2) I do understand the
financial strains top-notch debate can demand of
students…. But it can be (and is) outside of the realm
of possibility for white kids as well as those of other
ethnic decent.
“3) The claim that debate
is not accessible to young African Americans because of
the language also perplexes me. Even my
white students from
million dollar+ homes don't come in talking about
Foucault,
counterplans, political capital, etc….
“4) There are many of us
old-schoolers on this forum who have bemoaned some of
the changes that have happened in CX debate over, say,
the past 10 years. One reason some folks (I think of my
father here, especially -- a coach for 40+ years) hate
kritical debates [sic, but this isn't just a
spelling error, but a
whole phony-baloney intellectual movement] is
because they CAN diverge SO far from the original topic.
The actual topic has become, seemingly, in some cases,
an excuse to debate everything else. That, I supposed,
is part of what disturbs me a bit about the approach of
Towson, Long Beach Jordan, and the Louisville Project.
The arguments about the state of debate have no
connection (and don't even try to create a link) to the
topic at hand….
“I am not defending the
method in which this author chose to make these points.
A more civilized discussion could have been done. But,
underneath the vitriolic rhetoric, this author brought
up some issues very close to the bone in our
community….” [Link]
How, then, could I be so "ignorant" of the
"debate community," as my opponents raged? Why did
no one on CEDA's board condemn Tammie Peters as being
equally "ignorant"?
Given the ad hominem attacks of most of my
critics, including leading coaches like Matt Stannard,
and the
racist and dishonest statements by the Towson debaters
in the first place, for Tammie Peters to charge me
with "vitriolic rhetoric" is absurd. What
Stannard and others are unwittingly saying is that they
are intellectually unable to defend their support for
black racial privilege.
The CEDA group claimed that its primary complaint was
my lack of "journalism ethics". But they
provided no supporting evidence. They were too cowardly
to admit that they sought to destroy me merely for
criticizing them.
Who is worse—a Matt Stannard, who coaches debate in
order to suppress it, or a Tammie Peters, who believes
in debate, but triangulates against her natural allies
in order to buy peace from her enemies?
By the way, the reference to
VDARE.com as a "White Supremacist Website" came
from The Pretend Encyclopedia, as I call
Wikipedia, whose entry for
VDARE.com had only hours earlier been conveniently
vandalized—doubtless by a member of the "debate
community"—to reflect my critics' prejudice.
As bad as the students are, the coaches are the worst
part of this story. Debate coaches do not stand high in
academia's pecking order, but they play a crucial role
in encouraging intellectual freedom. As I demonstrated
in my Towson story, however,
the tape of the CEDA final round—particularly the
pro-Towson judges' rationalizations quoted at the
end—and the coaches' responses show that many of
America's leading debate professionals have betrayed
their calling. Instead of promoting intellectual
freedom, they promote the
Platonic-Marxist notion of an
educational dictatorship that would limit what
people can say, in the belief that that would limit
what people can think.
My naysayers call themselves "critical"
thinkers (see also: "tolerant").
But that is merely a leftwing code phrase for being
bigoted against America, and against
white, heterosexual, able-bodied males.
PC bullying, and anti-intellectualism have long
dominated academia, the schools, and the socialist MSM.
Doubtless PC perpetrators would prefer to imprison,
torture, and murder their critics, as their comrades
abroad have done. But until they are in a position to do
so, destroying their critics professionally will have to
do.
And that is why I have long emphasized the
importance, for private individuals who write honestly
about politics, of using
pseudonyms.
We live in an
increasingly post-intellectual world.
As a boy in a racially fraught New York area
neighborhood, I lived surrounded by violence and madness
that seemed to be spread like airborne plagues. I sought
a refuge of sanity and order, first in
the Army, and when I flunked my physical, in
academia.
Initially, I found that refuge, cherished it,
embraced it.
But
today's academia is itself a purveyor of
violence and
madness.
There is no more refuge.
Nicholas Stix [email
him] lives in New York City, which he
views from the perspective of its public
transport system, experienced in his
career as an educator. His weekly column
appears at
Men’s News Daily
and many other Web sites. He has also
written for Middle American News, the
New York
Daily News,
New York Post, Newsday,
Chronicles, Ideas on Liberty
and the Weekly Standard. He
maintains two blogs:
A
Different Drummer and
Nicholas Stix, Uncensored.