It was of his speech regarding his book, "Dangerous Professors," and Q&A that follows, at Duke University on March 7. C-Span's got it on their Web site, I'm sure, if anyone is interested in watching it.
Amazon link to the book
I've seen it before and watched it again, mostly because I'm a geek, a political junkie and am sick of watching commercials during mindless TV shows when I'm in my Saturday, lawn-is-done, lazy-ass sofa mode, which happens only periodically in the RadioFan household.
At any rate, I think he's got some very good points about the culture of some university departments.
Probably the best part of his talk though is the Q&A. He had some people in the audience so flustered, they couldn't even ask him questions without huffing and puffing, literally.
I have no doubt that there are certain individuals teaching in universities who have a political agenda coming from the far Left. I saw it when I lived in Lawrence.
That being said, however, I don't think the problem of the "revolutionary" or "radical" Left in certain departments is as pervasive as Horowitz seems to believe.
Part of it may be that I finished school in '89, and that I attended OU, a fairly conservative public university to start with. Anita Hill, who was a law prof at OU when she testified in the Thomas hearings, was after my time there. But I do know the dean of the law school at OU at the time, David Swank, was crucified publically and damn near lost his job for defending her right to say what she thought and not firing or reassigning her, especially when she was called before Congress and took an oath to tell the truth.
Since I've left OU, David Boren, the former (moderate) Democratic senator, has become president, and he runs that campus like a corporation -- from the top down. Faculty peer committees? Bwah! Nothing happens at OU these days without the Boren administration's OK.
I guess living in Oklahoma with TU, ORU, OU and even OSU all being conservative to draconianally conservative universities in this area, I don't see Horowitz's warning call about all this "power" that faculty have, at least not around here. Sure, there's faculty/administration fights about the typical bullshit -- merit pay, health benefits -- that kind of thing, but not about only hiring people with certain views.
Anyway, I disagree with some of Horowitz's political and historical views "the far Left in this country, is responsible for the deaths of 2.5 million vietnamese" for example. That's a simplistic statement, and it's far, far more complicated than that, but I digress.
But I do enjoy hearing his arguments, as he is very well-spoken. And I agree with some of them (our current war, against Islamic extremists for example, and his argument that pulling out of Iraq now is the wrong thing to do.) Plus, his ability to make college students melt is hilarious, not to mention the big burly dude in a suit, who would occasionally appear in the C-Span picture behind him, arms folded, just standing there, looking like some kind of Number 1 for Boss Lucioni or something.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)