Ward Churchill has been the "enigma" of the 21st Century in terms of free speech/native rights etc. After reading about him (with an attached pro/con menu below), I think that I will never really understand who this man really is. Doesn't matter that he is a brilliant writer. My own innate "gut" tells me his in in conflict with self, Xavier.
I have to say that he was presented with a chance for discussion, debate in his own right via the University setting. As for any sort of right to be "correct" and keeper of the JOB, I don't know. Should he be fired? Should he be allowed to be able to protest that which as been an issue among the REAL Native American? I think, yes.
If anything, he has become a spokesperson for the "freedom of people" in general. The freedom to be who we are. The freedom to get pissed at the government. The freedom to say...I can speak up.
But has he lost his sights on the issue by slamming the point home in such a one sided rant? I don't really know. Time will tell and so will the essence of his intent. Will he really make a statement out of altruistic means and concern for his "brother", or will he just make a statement because he is angry. More evidence is needed to show that he is the one whom we will "Hear" and "listen to" in the end.
Who is the man? Yes, he's a professor. Yes, he's a man with solid and marxist convictions. But what mark has he really made on the world in terms of helping his so called "people".
There has to be more than ONE male(in this case, male) out there who is supportive of the Native people. I don't doubt his passion. I don't see a chance to understand the issue he presents beyond is own being. His ego keeps getting in my way.
I don't doubt his truth. I don't. I question his response to a bigger truth that is in scope beyond his own "being". 9-11 is his legacy? why? I see it as his slip up. I see it as his anger gone wrong. I see it as a chance for him to get some therapy, Xavier. sorry, but that's my take on this man.
IF a man or woman has something to truly offer society in terms of change through writing etc.....I feel strongly that there will not be a point where we are STUCK on one element of the voice. Rosie O'Donnell is an example. She has many good passionate points. Her "stuck" point is in the theory that tower 7 was an inside job.
Why the hell do people who have a valid point to begin with....find a point to rant on...that ends their beginning?
Thus the lesson of over kill.
Cynthia
This is the end of my point of view...lest you want to go for it more. Thanks, Xavier for the chance to learn more.
Ward Churchill holds a BA and MA in Communications from Sangamon State, an "experimental" school for student radicals in Illinois. His academic expertise is as an artist. Yet on the basis of his claim to be a member of the Ketoowah Cherokee tribe (it has since been revealed that the membership was "honorary" and has been revoked and that Churchill is not an Indian), Churchill was made a tenured Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder and head of the Department (though he does not possess a Ph.D.).
Professor Churchill is an Anglo-Saxon white man posing as an Indian. An in-depth genealogical investigation tracing Churchill's ancestry back over 100 years, conducted by the Rocky Mountain News, concluded that "there is no evidence of a single Indian ancestor in Churchill's long family history in America." Churchill nonetheless describes himself in the following way: "Although I'm best known by my colonial name, Ward Churchill, the name I prefer is Kenis, an Ojibwe name bestowed by my [Native American] wife's uncle." Far-Left presses have obligingly released books by the "Keetowah Cherokee" activist, Ward Churchill. In a recent speech in Vancouver, Churchill introduced himself thus, "I have to say, I have to bring you greetings from the elders of the Keetoowah Band of Cherokee, my people." But the Keetoowah Band, in which Churchill and Bill Clinton once had "honorary memberships" has disowned Churchill as an imposter.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=1835
It?s no surprise that this outrage against Professor Churchill occurs at this particular moment? a time of empire resurrected and unapologetic, militarism proudly expanding and triumphant, war without justice and without end, white supremacy retrenched, basic rights and protections shredded, growing disparities between the haves and the have-nots, fear and superstition and the mobilization of scapegoating social formations based on bigotry and violence or the threats of violence, and on and on. There?s more of course, and this isn?t the only story, but this is a recognizable part of where we?re living, and a familiar place to anyone with even a casual understanding of history. Here the competing impulses and ideals that have always animated our country?s story are on full display: rights and liberty and the pursuit of human freedom on one side, domination and war and repression on the other. The trauma of contradictions that is America.
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID={475980FF-48A9-45B1-ABAA-F3C209E90463}