More Summersiana
The anti-Summers ideology is, in many ways, not a commendable one. Last week, the New York Sun obtained a copy of the original no-confidence motion against Summers, which attacked not only Summers’ statement about women in science but also the president’s defense of Israel, his policies while at the World Bank, and his generally positive attitude toward ROTC. As Alan Dershowitz noted, the no-confidence resolution’s sponsor got smart and “took out those three specifics in order to try to cobble together a coalition of angry feminists, angry anti-Israeli people and angry leftists in general.” Concern about Summers’ management style was nowhere to be found in the resolution.
Yesterday, meanwhile, the Harvard Crimson published the transcript of a September speech delivered by Summers to a September 2004 conference entitled “On Our Own Ground: Mapping Indigeneity within the Academy,” which dealt with Native American studies at Harvard. (The transcript was prepared from a video of the address taped by Harvard’s ethnic studies program.) The Post story quoted an anonymous Harvard professor who attended describing Summers’ speech: “It was wrong, it was hurtful, it was unnecessary, and it was offensive." The Crimson article quoted three attendees terming Summers’ remarks “quite problematic”; “really, really insulting”; and leaving her “appalled.” According to Tara Browner, associate professor of ethnomusicology and American Indian studies at UCLA, “What Larry Summers said, and this is an *exact quote*, was that ‘The genocide of American Indians was coincidental.’ As in it was an accidental by-product of Western European and Euro-American expansion.”
It turns out that Summers never even used the word “genocide” in his remarks. When asked to retract her recollection of Summers’ “exact quote,” however, Browner argued that the president’s remarks were “essentially” as she recalled. These remarks, however, seem wholly innocuous. Summers expressed his support for establishing a Native American program at Harvard; pointed with alarm to public health data showing low life expectancies on Indian reservations; commented on how, as Treasury Secretary, he had worked hard to try to lessen deep-seated poverty on reservations while avoiding having the reservations become permanently dependant upon federal aid; challenged the conference attendees to work toward “defining both identity and assimilation”; noted how far more Indians had been killed by disease than through warfare waged against them by whites; and concluded by affirming that Harvard “has an obligation to promote discussion on the vital issues that today's vexed relationships with the Native American community pose.”
Several items in these comments angered conference participants. Kansas University professor Yellow Bird faulted Summers for discussing the dangers of Native American “dependency” on the federal government, since, according to the Crimson’s paraphrase of her remarks, “the U.S. owes tribes hundreds of billions of dollars under treaties that have largely been abrogated by federal officials.” (The vast majority of court decisions on this question have held otherwise.) Summers also was criticized for mentioning the fact that more Indians died from diseases brought to the Western Hemisphere by Europeans than from any other cause, a comment that Oklahoma professor Robert Warrior claimed “helps perpetuate a myth of American innocence.” That Summers cited as a source Jared Diamond’s Pulitzer-Prize winning Guns, Germs, and Steel aroused further controversy: “Oh my goodness,” commented Professor Kay K. Shelemay, a member of Harvard’s Committee on Ethnic Studies, “this is not a nuanced source on Native American history.” Regardless of its nuance, of course, Diamond’s claim about Indian deaths is factually correct.
To review: Summers advocated more federal aid to reservations, expressed support for a Native American studies program, and was factually correct in all of his statements. His critics made at least one demonstrably false claim about his speech (the “genocide” charge) and based other criticisms on legal theories that don’t enjoy anything close to mainstream support and the president’s failure to cite sources they considered sufficiently “nuanced” when relating facts whose accuracy they themselves don’t dispute.
During the no-confidence debate, Harvard professor Stephan Thernstrom commented on how many of Summers’ critics seemed intent on creating a university barricaded by a “mental Maginot Line,” in which ideas that challenged the majority’s worldview—regardless of whether those ideas might have intellectual merit—would be excluded. That certainly seems to be the case with the critics of Summers’ Native American conference speech.