Peter Octavian said:
Not really.
There are links all over google to the entire transcript of the tape, so you know exactly what the guy said. And he was out of line. There's no doubt where this guy's politics lie. His caveats toward the end of his speech are, at best, disengenuous.
Oh, "caveats," you call them.
Jay Bennish said:
Alright, and so this becomes very, very muddled. And I'm not in any way implying that you should agree with me. I don't even know if I'm necessarily taking a position. But what I'm trying to get you to do is to think, right, about these issues more in-depth, you know, and not just take things from the surface. And I'm glad you asked all your questions, because they're very good, legitimate questions. And hopefully that allows other people to begin to think about some of those things, too.
Except his "caveats towards the end of the speech" are prefaced by similar caveats earlier in the lecture.
Whenever a student asks a question, he says things like "that's a good point."
Bennish hates the current political status quo.
That's fine....except when you've got a captive audience of kids in a classroom for which taxpayers are footing the bill.
And so if he didn't hate the status quo, it would be OK for his political views to come out?
What I'm saying is that, just as there's no room in the classroom for sanctioned religion, there's no room for the personal politics of an instructor, whether it's left or right.
And what I'll tell you is that if you're trying to engage your students as an instructor in political science, history, geography, or current events, your views
are going to come out.
You'll notice Bennish doesn't commit to anything. He just points things out, and asks questions. "Did you know this? Did you know that? What about this?" He's taking care not to say "these people are right and these people are wrong, and you should believe this."
This sort of provocative presentation of views works in the history class. When I was a wee laddie in high school, I had a good history teacher who, throughout his lectures, maintained a staunch party-line conservative Republican viewpoint as far as his discussion in class was concerned. I didn't agree with much of what he said from that view... but he certainly made sure everybody was engaged.
And between the views he was willing to express and explain and the ones I was willing to express and explain as a loudmouthed student somewhat less moderate than I am now, everybody got
quite an education (well, the array of loudmouths also included a young man whose father was a Party mover-and-shaker, a young anarchist, a norwegian exchange student, and a reactionary young anti-feminist, which gave everybody a pretty complete overview, as I was flexible enough to pretend to move to the right far enough to cover a more or less Leninist approach now and then). I can't say that really any of his students were indoctrinated as conservatives as a result of taking his class, not that I'm aware.
It seems pretty clear to me, going over the twenty minutes, that Bennish is simply trying to get students engaged. The tape covers about twenty minutes out of what's probably an hour long class. In the course of this, he says that Iraq had WMDs and that Osama attacked us as a response to what Bill Clinton did.
Party line liberal, huh? Do you even listen to what's being said?
If you read carefully, you'd realize the guy has managed to tuck in a lot of relevant historical information into twenty minutes of lecture while somehow keeping a kid who apparently videotapes his lectures in order to make sense of them engaged.
And you know what everybody said he was put on leave for?
Making anti-Bush comments. Which all boil down to this in particular:
Jay Bennish said:
Now, I'm not saying that Bush and Hitler are exactly the same. Obviously, they are not. Ok. But there are some eerie similarities to the tones that they use. Very, very "ethnocentric." We're right. You're all wrong.
He's saying they use similar rhetorical/oratory techniques.
...
And for this, you think the guy should be fired. Unbelievable. At best a passing comment that's been
said a few million times already by other people who've watched both speak.