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Perry Link: another scholar subjected to DEI inquisition

Perry Link is an 79-year-old distinguished professor with decades of service to his university

December 15, 2024 - 4:30pm

Perry Link’s op-ed in Thursday’s Wall Street Journal gives the reader an uncomfortable sense of déjà vu. Professor Link, a long-tenured comparative literature professor at the University of California, Riverside (UCR), is the latest in a long train of academics subjected to years of quasi-legal harassment at the hands of university administrators for an act of ideological heresy.

Link’s specific offence was to suggest in a private email to fellow members of a faculty search committee that the committee might be unfairly exaggerating one candidate’s fitness for the job and elevating him over others due to his skin colour. Far from being guilty of “discrimination,” as UCR’s chancellor alleged, Link was simply observing a phenomenon that many who have served on university search committees will unfortunately recognise, even if they’ve lacked his courage to call it out.

Two aspects of Link’s ensuing court martial are by now painfully familiar: university authorities’ refusal until very late in the process to identify the exact statement or words of Link’s that were being investigated, and the fact that after a year of sound and fury — threats of pay-cuts, loss of tenure, and termination — Link was found to have done nothing wrong.

Link’s treatment is particularly egregious considering his background which, likely out of modesty, he omits from his op-ed. Not only is Link an 79-year-old distinguished professor with decades of service to his university, as well as to Princeton and UCLA, but he helped facilitate the 1989 escape of Chinese pro-democracy dissident Fang Lizhi to the United States, away from the near certainty of long-term political imprisonment.

In 2001, Link also edited The Tiananmen Papers, a book of translated primary-source documents on the Chinese Communist Party’s decision to use military force against its citizens in the Tiananmen Square Massacre — vital scholarship in the West’s continuing fight to expose CCP human rights violations. Professor Link is therefore something that few current American academics can claim to be: a true American hero.

From his treatment by UC Riverside, one could be forgiven for assuming that Link was a new hire with few accomplishments to his name. But in the context of similar cases of the long-term harassment of heretical professors by administrators (and student mobs, allowed by administrators) — Nicholas and Erika Christakis at Yale, Roland Fryer at Harvard, Brett Weinstein at Evergreen State, and Peter Boghossian at Portland State, to name a few — Link’s treatment starts to look dispiritingly normal.

Link’s experience is reminiscent of Boghossian’s. After the Portland State assistant professor of philosophy participated in the “Grievance Studies Affair,” writing several “intentionally deranged” articles and submitting them to peer-reviewed journals in a range of humanities disciplines in a (successful) effort to show how far academic publishing standards have fallen, he was investigated by Portland State’s Institutional Review Board (IRB), for “experimenting on human subjects.”

That research ethics panel never demonstrated how Boghossian had run any sort of “experiment” which the IRB would be responsible for monitoring, but found him guilty nonetheless. Boghossian would endure years of harassment from both students and faculty, with the threat of denial of tenure. In the end, Boghossian quit.

It’s easier for witch-hunters to justify their actions to others (and to themselves) if they aren’t constantly confronted with evidence of their own injustice. This is the reason why so many campus inquisitions have consisted of harassing or bullying faculty members into resigning of their own volition, rather than firing them. With faculty disciplinary bodies being of virtually a single ideological mind, revoking heretical professors’ tenure is not as difficult as some on the outside might assume. What is difficult is living with the shame of knowing that you railroaded an innocent man or woman. Far easier to tell yourself that in the normal course of “due process,” a colleague simply chose to resign because they didn’t need the aggravation.

It is a credit to Professor Link for sharing his story. Because it may be that our best hope for protecting other academics from Professor Link’s fate is public pressure — pressure from university donors, alumni, and the broader public — to return our universities to being tolerant forums of open inquiry, not seminaries of ideological orthodoxy.


John Masko is a journalist based in Boston, specialising in business and international politics.

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Mrs R
Mrs R
1 month ago

Mao would be proud to see his work being put into action with such ruthless diligence in western universities. I think we should start calling them as the writer implies, centres for ideological indoctrination as that is unquestionably what they have become.

John Tyler
John Tyler
1 month ago
Reply to  Mrs R

At least Mao acknowledged the Red Guards as carrying out a ‘Cultural Revolution’. The culture warriors today pretend that the notion of a culture war is pure fiction from bigoted right-wingers.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
1 month ago

Come back Senator McCarthy, all is forgiven.

Alphonse Pfarti
Alphonse Pfarti
1 month ago

If you work in HE in the UK and don’t subscribe to all the DEI rubbish then joining the Free Speech Union is a very wise move.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
1 month ago

Everyone should join the FSU. It needs to be bigger and better financed than the Labour Party.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

Absolutely. Many people don’t know that you can join the FSU even if you’re retired. It’s a way of supporting their work.

S Wilkinson
S Wilkinson
30 days ago
Reply to  Judy Englander

Over 65s pay a reduced fee.
Many women supporting women’s rights over the privileges of cross dressing men have waited until retirement to speak out due to hostility and discrimination in their workplaces.
They are now finding they need the FSU as a bulwark against the over zealous policing of ‘hurty words’. One notable occasion was a police visit to a campaigner’s home for the non-crime of being “untoward about paedophiles”.

Graham Bennett
Graham Bennett
1 month ago

Having worked in a number of Western universities, in different countries, for more than 30 years, I can absolutely assure you that universities in the West are without doubt in a state of managed decline. Standards have fallen across the board, in terms of hires, in terms of grades (massive inflation), and in terms of admissions. Now, for the first time ever, I have students who cannot speak English, but claim to have at least a 7 score on their ELTS test. Unbelievable! The universities don’t care because they can’t afford not to take these students. Their overt politicisation is just another symptom of their decline.They’re rotting from the inside from bureaucratic and EDI bloat. Take my own place of work: I work in a top 5 UK university, but I would not send my own children to it. This tells you a lot!

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
1 month ago
Reply to  Graham Bennett

Just as a matter of interest, what percentage (in rough terms) of your colleagues would you say hold similar views as yourself?
I ask, because this situation just can’t continue. At some point, those involved in academic pursuits/teaching must acquire a way to stand up to all this, and if it’s a majority, you have the whip hand (which is probably a phrase that couldn’t be used on campus!)

Hugh Jarse
Hugh Jarse
1 month ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Agree, but be prepared for it to continue for some time. According to James Lindsay, a co-author of Boghossian, academia will be one of the last DEI hold-outs. While reality will, and is already intruding in many other areas to push DEI to the margins and eventually consign it to the list of failed sociological fads, it’s easy to see how this will persist within the academia bubble.
China’s cultural revolution ended abruptly on Mao’s orders. This current version has no single leader to call time. Its demise is inevitable but it’s likely our young will have their minds poisoned for another generation or so.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
30 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Jarse

DEI in the universities will die when the donations dry up because people become more and more fed up with this lunacy.

Peter Johnson
Peter Johnson
30 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Jarse

I think the Trump administration is going to show the world how to reform universities. Support for EDI is weak outside the humanities and is enforced with fear. Once the money spigot is turned off and key proponents are fired I think it will collapse in the administration. If a few institutions are publicly punished severely for allowing this to happen it will also make people less inclined to go along with it. Alternatively they could all be punished by losing some or all of their tax free status. For example in Canada the Conservative Party have promised to get rid of the CBC – which they truly deserve. This to me would be important to remind normal people in civic institutions to never let these idiots take over again.

Graham Bennett
Graham Bennett
22 days ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Not many, but more than you might think. A lot of people just keep their heads below the parapet. The university where I work is developing a free speech policy, which I’m involved with. So, there are some sensible folk beginning to push back. Let’s see how it goes.

Kiddo Cook
Kiddo Cook
1 month ago

Racial prejudice by totalitarian administrators, their day will come. DEI ; the new institutional racism….

Victor James
Victor James
1 month ago

I used to use this style language myself – witch hunters, inquisition, regressive, etc. But it’s actually just race hate – against white people.
Start pointing fingers directly at the non-white race haters who clearly are motivated by anti-white race hate. They are the problem and they have to go from their positions of power in our sacred institutions. Nothing will change until anti-White hate is treated like anti-Semitism or any other form of hate.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
1 month ago
Reply to  Victor James

The latter-day robber baron plutocracy that finances US universities is terrified that the rest of the population will unite against them, creating a new coalition across racial lines. Their solution to the problem is to create more division. That’s really what’s going on here. Class war.

As the movement that has made Trump President expands to include an ever wider spectrum of people disgusted by the behaviour of the corrupt elite so their response will become more extreme.

My fear is that Trump won’t deal with this with sufficient ruthlessness. US education needs to be reformed from the bottom up.

Victor James
Victor James
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

“The latter-day robber baron plutocracy that finances US universities is terrified that the rest of the population will unite against them”
Well, I’m not sure about that. I think the issue is very, very simple – anti-white-race hate. Up until this point, no one has said anything because of the superstitions surrounding race – anti-white racists simply scurry behind their skin privilege, and conservatives shut up. I don’t think there’s some grand conspiracy; the woke is just an expression of the hate and supremacy of human beings who don’t have white skin. There’s nothing special about these people; their motivations aren’t ‘pure’ just because they are black or brown or whatever.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
30 days ago
Reply to  Victor James

Well, it can’t ONLY be anti-white race hate, first because there are other issues “progressives” obsessed about, such as “trans” – and that the majority of perpetrators of this garbage are actually white! It’s a big mistake the Right sometimes makes, that this is all about race, rather than a quasi religious ideology.

Stephen Feldman
Stephen Feldman
1 month ago

If Trump does nothing about education other than to stop thesep witch trials, he will have done more than the hapless Presidents who poured trillion into ed with failed results.

Josef Švejk
Josef Švejk
1 month ago

We live in an intolerant age where fascism is the go to brush for the right and left to daub the canvas of knowledge and it’s attainment. This treatment of Prof. Perry Link makes me so angry. How can one expect the uneducated to behave and rationally discriminate fact from propaganda if this is what their so-called “betters” do?

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
1 month ago

If state legislators could shut down university Sociology and English departments and eliminate all DEI appointments, most of the harassers would be gone — and universities could get back to teaching and practicing free inquiry.

Michael Layman
Michael Layman
30 days ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

The process has started in the more enlightened states. However, Democrat states will never relent. Ultimately the solution is to boycott these universities.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
30 days ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

I respectfully disagree about English literature. Eng. Lit. is a critical component of British heritage, and needs to be rescued from the woke scum rather than consigned to the dustbin.

Lone Wulf
Lone Wulf
1 month ago

The system has to be purged of DEI. Intolerance
cannot be tolerated. The Western education system has been infiltrated by a destructive virus. Some members of these highly educated minorities seem to focus on revenge not on truth. We must get rid of them.

William Cameron
William Cameron
1 month ago

I cannot understand the feeble mindedness of Academia. If they have no other purpose it is to consider ideas. Not censor them.

Graham Cunningham
Graham Cunningham
1 month ago

In order “to return our universities to being tolerant forums of open inquiry, not seminaries of ideological orthodoxy” it would be neccessary to fire around maybe 75% of their current non-STEM academic and administrative staffs https://grahamcunningham.substack.com/p/how-diversity-narrows-the-mind….in other words effectively shut them down and start again from scratch.

Paul Thompson
Paul Thompson
1 month ago

I have been a member of several faculties in a STEM discipline over a number of years. In several faculties, we had black male members. These had lower bars to tenure and promotion. They did not publish in most cases.
In today’s world, if you are a black male, you can succeed in almost any faculty, and will have a low bar to success.

Chipoko
Chipoko
1 month ago

Is it naively to hope that perhaps one day the tide will turn in the general population and this terrible Woke evil that has soaked into every nook and cranny of our existence will eventually be replaced with reason and enlightenment again? I really am sick of this never-ending shit!

Mark epperson
Mark epperson
1 month ago

Easy, no more federal funding for any College or University. I have a feeling the “Administrators” are starting to shake in their immaculately decorated offices.
I certainly hope sol

A J
A J
1 month ago

The Sunk Cost Fallacy offers a useful means of understanding why these DEI-crazed academics will never be able to admit they were wrong. They simply can’t afford to lose face. They won’t be able to bear the shame and humiliation of acknowledging their sins. It’s not just that they’ve hounded good people out of their jobs, but they’ve egregiously misled an entire generation of college students. They’ve failed to teach critical thinking skills, failed to protect freedom of speech, and instead encouraged mob rule. There may be a way to fix all this, but it won’t be easy, at least at the start. Eventually when enough momentum has been gained, there’ll be a sudden collapse of Discrimination, Exclusion and Intolerance and a restoration of academic rigour.

Andrew Holmes
Andrew Holmes
30 days ago
Reply to  A J

The ones you’re referring to will never feel shame. They are utterly convinced of their superior intellect and the transcendent morality of their biases. They are impervious to reality.

Michael Layman
Michael Layman
30 days ago

These stories need to be shared across the mainstream media as well. Though half the population will refute them, it is imperative we soldier on to tell the truth. DEI and affirmative action has long dictated hiring practices in the U.S. As a minimum, one needs to question their effectiviness and impact.
Another common thread here is the states in which this oppression occurs. These are all “forever” Democratic strongholds and it is easy for university administrators to force their will upon the faculty. Portland State is a low-level university with no clout regionally or nationally, yet all professors deserve equitable treatment. It is almost inconceivable how universities have come to promote their bias rather than be an exchange of knowledge, creative thinking and an environment where the student thinks freely. Fortunately in the U.S. there are still many instuitions that do not adhere to the woke agenda.
In the end, money talks. Alumni should be encouraged to withdraw support as in the instance of Ivy League schools promoting anti-Semitism.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
29 days ago

If US universities won’t deal with this sort of thing let’s hope that the Trump administration does.