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Friday, March 07, 2008
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Crime and Punishment for Reading
by Kathleen Parker
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WASHINGTON -- If an author can't make the Oprah cut, the next best thing may be getting censured by a university.

Ever heard of Todd Tucker?

Didn't think so. Obviously, some have because he has books and readers. But he's not Michael Crichton or John Grisham.

Yet.

Tucker's name recently surfaced beyond Amazon's pages when one of his books sparked an investigation at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) because a janitor was reading it.

So you're thinking, this book must have been pretty bad. Something like "Poached Puppies and Other Pet Recipes" or "What's So Wrong With Necrophilia?"

No, the book was a nonfiction account of a real incident in American history -- "Notre Dame vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan" (Loyola Press).

The current controversy began last fall when Keith John Sampson, a student and university employee in his 50s, was reading Tucker's book during a break from his janitorial duties.

Wrong place, wrong time, wrong book.

On the basis of the cover alone, a co-worker sitting across from Sampson complained that the book was offensive. The cover shows the Notre Dame dome and two burning crosses amid a crowd of robed and hooded Klansmen.

The pages inside tell the story of a 1924 street fight between Notre Dame students and Klansmen, who had gathered in South Bend purposely to terrorize the university's Catholic students. The clash lasted two days, during which the fighting Irish prevailed, and is recognized as a turning point in Klan history.

But never mind. The co-worker apparently wasn't interested in the content. The cover art was deemed traumatizing enough to prompt the shop steward to reprimand Sampson, saying that reading a book about the Klan was comparable to bringing pornography into the workplace.

A few weeks later, Sampson heard from the school's affirmative action office that a racial harassment complaint had been filed against him. In a November 2007 letter, affirmative action officer Lillian Charleston told Sampson that he demonstrated "disdain and insensitivity" to his co-workers.

"You used extremely poor judgment by insisting on openly reading the book related to a historically and racially abhorrent subject in the presence of your black co-workers."

The letter also noted that by the "legal 'reasonable person standard,' a majority of adults are aware of and understand how repugnant the KKK is to African-Americans." Sampson was ordered not to read the book in the presence of his co-workers.

Charleston is right that reasonable people know how repugnant the KKK is to African-Americans. But reasonable people also know how repugnant the KKK is to people of all races. Reasonable people also know that history is what it is. Reading about it isn't an incitement to riot or an endorsement of the bad guys. Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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Subject: Gonzo, as a recognizer of brilliance...
How brilliant is this? We acknowledge a measurably failing school system several decades ago, which we also recognize is deteriorating, and we try to solve its problems by throwing more money at it, adding additional layers of bureaucracy each and every year for decades, and yet it continues to worsen. Go figure.

And what's the democrat solution to this national disgrace? More taxpayer money down a black hole, with decreasing rates of return.

I could be wrong (there's always a first time), but I don't think the D.C. public school system (or any other inner-city district) would garner a lot of support from Thomas Jefferson today.

Many inner city kids are trapped in government warehouses, just trying to survive, with little hope of substantive learning. These are the kids you liberals are supposed to care so much about, so why won't you support vouchers for private school?

Oh right, because most of that money would be spent on parochial schools, where kids actually learn. Can't have that, can we?

Meanwhile, the suffering continues. But you can rest easy knowing your political considerations (teacher unions, building trades unions, government worker unions, etc.) have carried the day. That's the important thing, right Gonzo?

CHR3354
"...are you one of thous (sic) who think that enforcing immigration laws is racist?"

There is nothing racistt about enforcing immigration law, but much of rhetoric on the subject is racist. What seems to be lost on those most rabid about illegal immigration is that crossing the border illegally is no more serious than a traffic ticket. It is a misdemeanor, not a felony. The problem doesn't require the level hysteria that is being generated.
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