A Big Mouth With A Bigger Nose: Proof That We
Are Committed on this Site to Accuracy and That the Left Will Accuse Us of
“Distortion” Anyway
By David Horowitz and John Perazzo
June 17, 2005
Leftwing race activist (and
self-flagellating white male) Tim Wise is a piece of work. On Tuesday,
FrontPage editor Jamie Glazov received an email from Wise pointing out what he
felt was an injustice done to him in the profile
we posted of him on DiscoverTheNetworks.org. As it happens,
DiscoverTheNetworks.org is the only database of political figures on the
Internet that actually invites its subjects to submit complaints and also
responds to them. (The invitation is posted on the site.) By contrast, the
databases operated by Wise’s leftwing friends at MediaMatters and
RightwingWatch do not make changes in the interest of the truth – either on
matters of fact or interpretation – when their subjects email them or call
them to point out their errors. (We have tested this proposition in both
cases.)
Compiling a database with thousands of profiles is not a simple matter. No one individual is an expert on such a vast array of subjects. Many of the subjects, like Mr. Wise, are too insignificant to justify the allocation of substantial resources to track down everything they have written or said. While we make every effort to check and double check our entries, occasional factual errors are inevitable. In addition, interpretations of indisputable facts are often debatable. Leftwing watchdog sites like MediaMatters and RightWingWatch, to take two examples, regularly portray policy differences with the left (opposition to racial preferences is a good example) as racism, which it is not. Tim Wise is virtuoso at this. Yet if a target of such a smear, posing as a judgment call, should email these sites to complain, they would get no redress.
On Tuesday, Tim Wise discovered that we adhere to a higher standard and are willing to make adjustments in our judgment calls, even for political opponents who have smeared us in the past and (as it turned out) are about to smear us again.
The correction which Mr. Wise was seeking
through his email – and the only
correction he asked for (an important point, as we shall see in a moment) --
was a matter of judgment, not fact. We had referred to Mr. Wise’s “meager
academic credentials” for the heights he had attained as a public speaker and
recently as an adjunct professor at Smith College. Mr. Wise characterized our
comment as “rather snide.” We looked at the text he was complaining about and
within minutes gave him the call. The change was made on DiscoverTheNetworks
within an hour or so and the offending phrase eliminated from the profile, along
with the characterization of Mr. Wise as a “failed academic.”
.
Since our generosity to Wise became the preface for a full-scale attack on us by him the very next day on CounterPunch.org, we include here the full text of Wise’s email to us the afternoon before. The email was sent to FrontPagemag.com managing editor Jamie Glazov because Wise had previously been invited by FrontPage to participate in a symposium edited by Jamie (on the other hand, no similar invitations have come from leftwing sites to FrontPage writers):
Hi Jamie,
I was just wondering about something. Given the rather snide reference in
my DTN entry, to my "only" having a B.A., I would like to know the
terminal degree of each of the principal writers/editors who contribute to DTN,
including but not limited to Perazzo and Tremoglie. Since having a B.A. and
nothing more, apparently disqualifes [sic] one from being capable of uttering an intelligible
thought, I am certain FPM would never publish the words of anyone with such
"meager academic credentials" (the exact wording from my entry as I
recall)...credentials which are, of course, more extensive than those of
Limbaugh or Hannity, and equal to D'Souza, but well...I think you know where
I'm going with this. I thank you for your prompt response to my request, in
advance. Hope you're well (really)...
take care
tim wise
As already pointed out, we removed the
phrase to which he objected immediately and sent him an email equally friendly
in tone (although not so smarmily friendly since, unlike him, we were not
preparing any unscrupulous attacks). Wise was notified of these changes in an
email that read, “Your point about your DTN profile is well taken, and we have
corrected it”; in the “Corrections” section of DTN, we noted the changes that had been made.
Wise responded to these gestures with a vitriolic three-thousand word attack on DiscoverTheNetworks and its creator David Horowitz. Subtitled “David Horowitz and the Politics of Ad Hominem Distortion,” the attack’s length made clear that the previous day’s email was made entirely in bad faith on the assumption that we would fail the test and reject his request for a correction. Then he could include that in the indictment he had already written while wishing us well (really).
The vicious tone of the
CounterPunch barrage was in stark contrast to the puling appeal of his email to
Jamie Glazov. Moreover, none of the factual errors he now claimed to have found
in the DTN profile -- even as minor as that he was born in 1968 rather than
1969 – had been mentioned in the original email. Obviously he didn’t want
to take the risk that we would correct them all and thereby undermine his claim
that we practiced “the politics of distortion.” In other words, not only was
Tim Wise not interested in the truth about our standards and intentions, he
actively feared the truth and wanted to suppress it. That is why he was
included in the first place in a database on the left.
Here is
how Wise acknowledges, in the midst of his diatribe against us, the fact that
we made the aforementioned changes which he requested: “The very next morning,
to Glazov’s credit, but also indicating the sliminess of the enterprise (given
that I had to point out the irony of the critique myself before anything was
done about it), the ‘failed academic’ reference was gone.” In other words 1) we
should have agreed with his judgment of himself in the first place, and 2) by
acknowledging that we may have been hasty in disagreeing so rudely with his high
opinion of himself we confirmed (in his eyes) our “sliminess.” This is called
damned if you do and damned if you don’t. Which is exactly the way leftists see
everyone they oppose.
Like every other intellectually
challenged leftist from Michael
Berube to Salon’s Josh Gorenfeld who has criticized
DiscoverTheNetworks.org, Wise accuses the site (falsely) of “painting everyone
to the left of Joe Lieberman as some kind of subversive.” “Thus,” he adds, “the
utterly demented inclusion as ‘leftists,’ such persons as reactionary fascist
and al
Qaeda operative, Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, Arnold Schwarzenegger supporter Jay
Leno, Tom
Brokaw, Katie
Couric, and film critic Roger
Ebert.”
As
anyone who reads the profiles of Leno, Brokaw, Couric, or Ebert can plainly
see, none of those individuals is presented as anything resembling a
“subversive,” or as having some type of relationship (clandestine or otherwise)
with Zarqawi. They are merely included in a picture grid that is meant to be
nothing more than a tiny sampling of the contents of an enormous database, a
sampling designed to give readers some idea of the breadth of profiles that can
be found. In the picture grid itself, Couric, Ebert, and Leno are described as
“Affective (or emotional) Leftists,” Brokaw as a “Moderate Leftist” and Zarqawi
as a “Totalitarian Radical.” Those are big enough differences for any honest
browser of the site to understand. Moreover, the definitions of these categories
are explained in
painstaking detail on the DTN site. Wise either read them and didn’t understand
them or – more likely – simply ignored them. As we have seen, when facts get in
the way of his argument, his impulse is to bury them.
If Wise
has an argument challenging our characterization of the spectrum that includes
all these individuals, he should make it. Three leftists have already tried
and, in our view, failed. The fact that leftists like Wise continue to
misrepresent the photo grid as though we hadn’t devoted tens of thousands of
words and three debates with leftists explaining it to them is a testament to
their most resorted-to ideological creed: My
mind is made up, don’t confuse me with the facts.
The grid does not imply that there are necessarily any connections
between all of the individuals whose photos appear, any more than it implies
that all of the nearly 2,000 individuals, groups, and funders currently in the
database work together or share the same opinions on every issue. It only means
that they all belong in a database about the left, much as a database on
personalities from the sports world would include basketball players, football
players, boxers, bowlers, golfers, marathoners, weight lifters, jockeys, and
racing car drivers; or a database on the right would include libertarians like
Friedrich Hayek, entertainers like Dennis Miller, conservatives like Russell
Kirk, and authoritarians like Augusto Pinochet. That does not make these
gentlemen buddies, or even allies. It just makes them members of what is
loosely referred to as the political right. Perhaps Wise thinks Katie Couric
and Tom Brokaw are Republicans. If they are not, they are somewhere on the
political left. The political left, like the political right, is characterized
by a certain diversity of ideas, goals, methods, and degrees of extremism (or
moderation). None of this is the least bit complicated, except for those whose
ideology commits them to denying the obvious.
In
attacking DiscoverTheNetworks, Wise climbs a high horse to pretend outrage at our
association of Zarqawi with some factions of the left. Yet the article is
posted on a leftwing site that supports
the “Fallujah resistance” – Zarqawi and friends – as the “liberators” of Iraq.
Such are the standards of the critic himself. His objection to linking American
leftists with Islamic radicals would be more credible if he had explained George
Galloway’s proclamation that such an alliance exists and is desirable, or
the rantings of Nicholas
DeGenova, Robert
Jensen, Ward
Churchill and other heroes of CounterPunch.org calling for America’s defeat
in the war on terror and calling that “just desserts.”
Like most
leftists, Wise does not understand the meaning of accountability, as in being
accountable for one’s actions. Thus his little profile on
DiscoverTheNetworks.org mentions that he opposed the toppling of Saddam
Hussein, a fact which he doesn’t deny but nonetheless objects to our
revealing. “Never missing an opportunity to smear by association,” Wise
writes, “DTN notes that I opposed the war in Iraq, which of course they
characterize as my opposing the toppling of Saddam Hussein. They then insert a
link to Hussein in my bio, as if to imply a connection between us . . .” No, in
fact, we inserted the link to a profile of Saddam for people who may have
forgotten what a monster Saddam was (easy enough when Wise and his friends are
obliterating the meaning of language by describing America’s cozy set-up for
terrorists at Guantanamo
as “today’s gulag.”
Wise objects that his profile in DiscoverTheNetworks describes him as someone who believes the U.S. is “rife with racism,” a “public denouncer of white people everywhere,” and one who “views the United States as a nation overrun by white racists ever-eager to ambush blacks and other minorities so as to vent the cauldron of bigotry that allegedly boils inside of them.”
He responds to this accurate portrayal of him as follows: “I view the U.S. as a nation in which racism has been interwoven from the beginning, and in which it continues to operate. But this racism is not principally the individual racism of ‘evil’ white people, let alone those out to ambush people of color due to some kind of boiling hatred, but rather the more impersonal racism of institutions, whose actors perpetrate unequal treatment often without deliberate intent to harm. If anything, it is my argument that white people are far less individually culpable than the institutions in which we find ourselves dominant, the policies and procedures of which continue to advantage whites to the detriment of people of color.”
Nice
try. Let’s not even take on the issue of whether institutions are capable of
what Wise accuses them of. Because he is simply not being honest about what he
has said and written. Wise’s writings are rich in assertions that whites harbor
deep-seated hatred of blacks in their hearts; he condemns
“the seeds of pure evil planted deep in every one of us [white people] by our
culture.” “Better to blame the
dark-skinned for our [whites’] hardship,” he has written,
“since we can take it for granted that they’re powerless to do anything about
it. Whites, as it turns out, take most everything for granted in this country;
which makes perfect sense, because dominant groups usually have that
privilege.”
On another occasion, Wise lamented “just
how shallow white America’s commitment to racial equity really was.” He decried
“the process of ‘white bonding’ that goes on when white folks who don’t know
each other that well are in an all-white setting, and issues of race come up.
Whether it’s in a cab, a bar, a park, a restaurant, or a college dorm room,
whites almost instinctively assume every other white person in the room thinks
just the way they do, and proceed to cut loose with any number of racial
diatribes: about ‘those people’ on welfare; ‘those people’ coming across the
border; ‘those people’ who will shoot you at the drop of a hat.” In sum: “[B]y
and large, white America doesn’t really want racial equity.”
Wise
supports race preferences because he believes that whites’ inherent bigotry,
and their natural impulse to oppress minorities, is so profound that proactive
steps must be taken to neutralize it, lest it run amok. “Indeed,” he says, “persons
of color know well that they will likely have to work twice as hard to get half
as far or be considered half as good as whites; and they have known that since
long before affirmative action came around. But at least with affirmative
action they get the chance to work twice as hard and demonstrate their
capabilities.”
He says that whites must work
hard “individually and collectively to overcome that which is always beneath
the surface; to overcome the tendency to cash in the chips which represent the
perquisites of whiteness; to traffic in privileges--not the least of which is
the privilege of feeling superior to others--not because of what or who they
are, but rather because of what you’re not: in this case, not a nigger. . . .
Fact is nigger is still the first word on most white people’s mind when they
see a black man being taken off to jail on the evening news. The first thing we
think when we see Mike Tyson, Louis Farrakhan, or O.J. Simpson (as in ‘that
murdering nigger’).” Well, maybe Tim Wise thinks this way. We don’t.
Wise
objects to the fact that his profile states the following: “In an e-mail
exchange with David Horowitz, Wise maintained that the increase in the
prosperity of the black middle class, when compared to the white middle class...is
essentially a meaningless statistical trick.” Retorts Wise: “This is nonsense.”
But then he goes on, apparently unwittingly, to prove the assertion accurate.
He states:
“…David also insisted in our e-mail exchange, that, ‘The black middle class is
growing faster and increasing its income faster than the white middle class. .
. .’ As I explained at the time, the
fact that the black middle class is growing faster than the white middle class
means little, since that would naturally be the result of having started out as
a smaller sub-set of the black population, and having more room to grow,
relative to one's overall population size. The white middle class has been
entrenched longer than the black middle class, and has been a larger share of
the white population than its black counterpart, so its growth rate is going to
be smaller, but its relative position to the black middle class will still be
far better, mostly for reasons of past wealth accumulation. Similarly, if you
stick your kid in a closet at age two and feed them nothing but bread and water
for six months, and then CPS rescues the child and places him or her in a
loving home where they receive three squares a day, that child's growth rate
will no doubt outpace the growth rate of the loving family's other two year
old, who had always been fed well. So what? The newcomer will still be far
worse off and face serious obstacles in absolute and relative terms, not faced
by his or her sibling.”
In other words, it is impossible, in Wise’s
view, not to conclude that the prosperity of the black middle class,
when compared to that of the white middle class, is essentially a meaningless
statistical trick.
Wise
also objects to the DTN reference to his “rabid anti-Catholicism.” Yet this is
what he himself wrote on May 31, 2004:
“Finally, it appears as though the official Catholic Church has lost its mind.
First, a Bishop in Colorado announces (and is followed by several others around
the country) that the sacrament of the eucharist should be denied to any
Catholic who supports reproductive freedom for women (i.e. is pro-choice).
Then, the dottering pontiff himself (through his spokespersons) announces that
the Church is moving to beatify some hallucinatory nun named Emmerich, who, in
the 18th century and early 19th century, claims to have ‘experienced’ in
visions the crucifixion of Jesus. She then proceeded, in her writings, to add
to the already contradictory Gospels, her own spin on the Passion narrative,
replete with a devil figure encouraging the ‘evil’ Jews (of course) to kill
Christ, and the ‘evil’ Jews gladly doing just that. Emmerich was, as it turns
out, the source of most all of Mel Gibson’s most controversial parts of his
latest film--not the Bible, but a crazed nun, who had apparently ingested too
much acid, or whatever they were taking at the convent back in those days. Then
today, there is this. Apparently, Gays and Lesbians in Chicago who
make clear their opposition to institutional Catholic and Christian
heterosexism are now to be denied the eucharist as well. One wonders when
Catholic churches will also begin denying communion to members of their flock
who support war, support the death penalty, or who are insufficiently committed
to ending poverty. . . . On the positive side, 5 dozen Catholic churches in the
Boston area have been forced to close. Not enough money. Pity. Maybe if the
Pope would sell some of his art in the Vatican, they could take care of that
little problem...ah, priorities.”
Wise: “DTN then claims,
derisively, that I have compared America’s founding fathers to the Afghan
Mujahadeen, which of course was not my work, but that of Ronald Reagan, who had
a habit of labeling terrorists (like the Muj or the Nicaraguan contras)
‘freedom fighters,’ and then likening them to Washington crossing the
Delaware.”
Was DTN wrong in stating that
Wise holds this view? Not at all, as he
himself acknowledges in his very next sentence: “I merely noted that indeed
both forces -- the founders and the Muj -- killed a lot of people in defense of
their particular vision of the good, so that I suppose Reagan's analogy wasn’t
so far off after all.”
Wise: “DTN then issues several drive-by statements, devoid of any specificity.”
“[F]or example,” he writes, “the reader learns that I ‘loathe capitalism,’
‘think the prison system is racist,’ support an ‘overhaul’ of the criminal
justice system, ‘support reparations,’ and am an ‘incessant critic of Israel.’”
But by his own admission,
all of these statements are accurate. “As for the first three of these, I plead
guilty,” writes Wise, “and am more than happy to debate the points with anyone;
to number four I also assent, but only if done systemically, as community-based
repair and investment (like with the Marshall Plan or GI Bill), not as separate
checks sent to individuals to buy off suffering; and to number five, well, I don’t
know what ‘incessant’ means to the folks at DTN, but given that I have written
exactly five articles about Israel in almost twenty years of authoring
political essays, and have given one speech on the subject, I’m pretty sure
that to the intellectually honest, ‘incessant’ would seem like a stretch.”
Okay. We’ll drop the word
“incessant.” Will this elicit an acknowledgment and thank you from Wise? Don’t
hold your breath. On second thought, we won’t. A cursory Web search of Wise’s
writings turns up six lengthy assaults on Israel he has composed since
September 2001 alone. Moreover, the Web record also contains reports of debates
and speeches in which he has represented Israel as a repressive, “apartheid”
state.
Wise makes only two points
that merit consideration by us, neither of which involves any misrepresentation
of his political views or activities, which is what DiscoverTheNetworks is
about. First, he claims that he has not earned more than $1 million in speaking
fees during his career; second, as already noted, he informs us that he was
born in 1968 rather than 1969. “So, I'll be waiting for a series of
corrections, though not holding my breath,” writes Mr. Wise. Actually, it’s we
who will not be holding our breath. We’ll give him the birth date. We’ll wait
for some documentation on the fees he was paid for the 350 odd speeches he
claims to have given on college campuses. If he got $3,000 per speech – not a
stretch by any means for a featured leftwing speaker – then we’ll keep the
profile as is. (Incidentally, apart from his campus lectures, Wise has also
spoken to hundreds of community groups;
he has trained labor, government, corporate, and law-enforcement officials on “methods for
dismantling racism in their institutions”; and he has been a consultant for
plaintiffs’ attorneys in federal discrimination cases in New York and
Washington State. Such work, of course can be very lucrative.)
Although we don’t expect any thank you from Wise for all this effort to set the
record straight, we do thank him for creating an occasion for us to show just
how accurate DiscoverTheNetworks is.