Stuart Reges' brave jeremiad opposing the modern feminist orthodoxy in STEM fields (computer science particularly) comes from someone whose work in mentoring young women in the field is, apparently, unimpeachable. Having spent his life as an academic teaching computer science, first at Stanford, and later at U. Washington, he describes himself as "a champion of using undergraduate TAs in introductory programming classes" who has "helped hundreds of women to learn to love computer science". He writes that he is a "a strong advocate of many aspects of the diversity agenda."
He digs in:
When I tried to discuss [fired Google employee James] Damore at my school, I found it almost
impossible. As a thought experiment, I asked how we could make someone
like Damore feel welcome in our community. The pushback was intense. My
question was labeled an “inflammatory example” and my comments were
described as “hurtful” to women. When I mentioned that perhaps we could
invite Damore to speak at UW, a faculty member responded, “If he comes
here, we’ll hurt him.” She was joking, but the sentiment was clear.
One faculty member gave a particularly cogent response. She said, “Is
it our job to make someone with those opinions feel welcome? I’m not
sure whether academic freedom dictates that.” She argued that because we
know that women have traditionally been discriminated against, perhaps
it is more important to support them because the environment will not be
sufficiently inclusive if they have to deal with someone like Damore.
She said it “is up to us” to decide, but that, “choosing to hold a
viewpoint does not necessarily give you the right to feel comfortable.”
Which is to say, the
faculty doesn't understand the whole point of academic freedom, and its relationship to tenure. Reges then covers the same ground Damore did, and with similar reactions to Damore's. The official response was, more or less,
hang the science, we have a diversity agenda to promote. Luckily, being a
tenured professor, he has somewhat greater protection than Damore did, and so continues to pull a paycheck.
So now
Gideon Scopes peers into the abyss. Can we talk the diversity mavens off the ledge? He observes, rightly, that people like Milo Yiannopoulos inflame and degrade the standard of discourse. But is a more neutral tone enough? What of Damore's well-researched paper that got him fired? (
Emboldening mine.)
[D]espite its scientific validity, the document in its present form was
unlikely to persuade anyone who wasn’t already at the very least
skeptical of the politically correct narrative. Given the degree to
which emotions ran high around this issue, simply presenting the factual
evidence could be perceived as hostile.
This has been going on for some while. Scopes cites the appalling misrepresentation of Larry Summers' 2005 remarks on the subject:
When the story broke that that Dr. Summers had attributed the STEM
gender gap to a lack of aptitude on the part of women, I was puzzled.
What was he thinking? Wasn’t he accusing certain people of being
incapable of doing something that they had been doing for decades? It
wasn’t until two years later than I finally read his speech in full and
came to understand that what he had actually said was far different from
what I had believed he had said.
What
he said was radically different from the funhouse mirror version that made the press headlines; using Scopes' paraphrase, "he was saying that the small percentage of the population with the
highest levels of aptitude in science might contain more men than women."
But will it move the opposition? I doubt it. The Upton Sinclair axiom applies: "It is difficult to
get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not
understanding it!" The
commercial feminists have strong reason to downplay actual research, as much as the DEA has reason to
ignore and impede drug research. They will need to be fought to ground over this, and more.