The Times' Distorted Professor Obama

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Today's New York Times features a lengthy story by Jodi Kantor about Obama's time as a teacher at the University of Chicago Law School. Since I took a class from Obama in the mid-1990s on "Race, Racism, and the Law," I thought I could offer some insights into Obama, and what this article gets wrong. Although the article offers some interesting insights, it also distorts Obama's past and tries to attack Obama's candidacy by using his experiences at the University of Chicago as a way to confirm many of the false assertions made about Obama: that he's a politician who doesn't stand for anything, that he's an aloof elitist, that he only pretends to listen to opposing viewpoints.

The author even tries to smear Obama as someone who taught law school with an eye toward his own political ambitions:

Mr. Obama’s years at the law school are also another chapter — see United States Senate, c. 2006 — in which he seemed as intently focused on his own political rise as on the institution itself.

It's not even clear what this means, but it seems to suggest that Obama's careful, thoughtful approach as a teacher and colleague in the law school was all a guise he used to avoid taking positions which, presumably, he feared might be dug up a decade later by reporters investigating his presidential campaign. This notion is, of course, thoroughly insane. What the author should have concluded is that Obama's years at the University of Chicago Law School show without a doubt that Obama's careful, thoughtful approach to issues today is not a centrist political cop-out; instead, it's a fundamental intellectual approach that Obama followed long before he ever sought political office.

According to Kantor:

Now, watching the news, it is dawning on Mr. Obama’s former students that he was mining material for his political future even as he taught them.

This is a particularly odd comment, suggesting that Obama was simply using his students as a way to prepare for his political ambitions. In reality, Obama as teacher and Obama as politician was inspired in both roles by certain values and thinkers, and it's no surprise to see similarities.

There's a particularly offensive attempt to dismiss Obama as an affirmative-action hire given a job solely because of his race:

Mr. Obama had impressed Mr. McConnell with editing suggestions on an article; on little more than that, the law school gave him a fellowship, which amounted to an office and a computer, which he used to write his memoir, “Dreams From My Father.” The school had almost no black faculty members, a special embarrassment given its location on the South Side.

Let me assure you, it takes a lot more than that to embarrass most of the University of Chicago faculty. They have been thoroughly comfortable with the idea of an overwhelmingly white faculty teaching overwhelmingly white students about the law in an impoverished black neighborhood. Obama wasn't hired because he was black; he was hired because he was smart, and having been the president of the Harvard Law Review is a major qualification. It's routine for hiring to be made based on a personal connection, and Obama was given some office space with the hope that he would teach there in the future. I've taken classes with Michael McConnell, and although I disagree with his very conservative views, he's not somebody who goes around making cynical quota hires. The University of Chicago faculty hire whomever they want, and there is no real pressure to create diversity.

The New York Times article also tries to dismiss Obama's willingness to listen to other viewpoints as just an act:

The Chicago faculty is more rightward-leaning than that of other top law schools, but if teaching alongside some of the most formidable conservative minds in the country had any impact on Mr. Obama, no one can quite point to it. “I don’t think anything that went on in these chambers affected him,” said Richard Epstein, a libertarian colleague who says he longed for Mr. Obama to venture beyond his ideological and topical comfort zones. “His entire life, as best I can tell, is one in which he’s always been a thoughtful listener and questioner, but he’s never stepped up to the plate and taken full swings.”

Epstein is someone who regards intellectual debate as a physical sport, and Obama's thoughtful personality is the exact opposite of Epstein. I think the problem was that too many of the faculty, including Epstein, never really listened to Obama, or many other people who didn't shout their views out.

There are plenty of ways that Obama was influenced by the University of Chicago faculty. One is understanding that laws with noble intentions can have unintended consequences. A second is the complicated view of rationality that more modern aspects of the Chicago School have embraced. Unlike the Milton Friedman origins of the Chicago School of Economics, which turned every datum into an argument for the unregulated free market, the newer version of the Chicago School emphasizes the role of irrationality and the place of government in addressing these flaws. Obama has been influenced by its liberal (Sunstein) and centrist (Goolsbee) proponents.

However, there are many other ways in which Obama recognized the limitations of the University of Chicago approaches. As someone who was out in the trenches, he never accepted the ivory tower theorizing as superior to the facts on the ground.

Indeed, Obama probably learned a great deal from recognizing the flaws of his colleagues rather than swallowing their ideas wholesale. Obama embodies the University of Chicago ethic of asking "What's your evidence?" far better than most Chicago professors.

According to Kantor,

he was always slightly apart from it, leaving some colleagues feeling a little cheated that he did not fully engage.

To the contrary, Obama greatly benefitted the law school by being someone who was engaged, with the real world. The problem was that his ivory tower colleagues weren't very interested in the world of politics.

Yet Kantor writes,

Because he never fully engaged, Mr. Obama “doesn’t have the slightest sense of where folks like me are coming from,” Mr. Epstein said. “He was a successful teacher and an absentee tenant on the other issues."

I very much doubt this. Richard Epstein is an over-the-top libertarian, and his views are very consistently, and loudly, expressed at every opportunity. I think Obama, like me and everybody else, figured Epstein out very quickly. Personally, I enjoy Epstein and his machine-gun-mouth spewing out oddball ideas all the time. But Epstein is never really interested in finding out where other people are coming from, and certainly not interested in changing his mind about anything. He's exactly the kind of person Obama would tend to ignore, the ideologue with a passion only for hearing himself. Epstein was annoyed that Obama never played his intellectual mind games, and instead sought to make real changes in the political world.

The article is also insulting toward Obama's students, calling some of them "groupies" and declaring that "Liberals flocked to his classes, seeking refuge."

Refuge? Maybe some liberals like the idea of a professor whose ideas weren't as crazy as the usual right-wingers, but the truth is that there were many progressives teaching at the law school when Obama was there, and most of the conservative professors were very tolerant of liberal thinkers, too. The appeal of Obama, more than any other professor, was his ability to listen to different points of views in a serious way, and yet still move students in the direction of understanding the law. That's precisely what makes Obama so powerful as a politician: He has the ability to listen to people who disagree with him, and yet still move people in a more progressive direction. That may be the most important skill Obama honed in his years at the University of Chicago.

I don't want to give the impression that this article is entirely negative. There are many positive aspects of Obama reported in the article.

Mr. Obama had a disarming touch. He did not belittle students; instead he drew them out, restating and polishing halting answers, students recall.

But overall, Kantor takes the overwhelmingly positive comments about Obama's years at Chicago and tries to twist them into a negative portrayal. Consider this quote:

In what even some fans saw as self-absorption, Mr. Obama’s hypothetical cases occasionally featured himself. “Take Barack Obama, there’s a good-looking guy,” he would introduce a twisty legal case.

Here the author of the article misinterprets Obama's self-deprecating humor as arrogance and "self-absorption," part of the "elitist" motif being used against Obama, and uses some anonymous "fans" to justify it. I find it hard to believe that multiple students brought up these jokes by Obama to attack him. Obviously, you can see why Obama has been forced to play down his sense of humor in the campaign, because the mainstream press simply can't understand a joke with this kind of subtlety.

The article hints at Obama's "budding political caution" as a reason why he didn't loudly proclaim his views in class, once again pushing the narrative of Obama as a typical politician unwilling to stand for anything. Kantor's article repeatedly tries to falsely smear Obama as indecisive and political:

When two fellow faculty members asked him to support a controversial antigang measure, allowing the Chicago police to disperse and eventually arrest loiterers who had no clear reason to gather, Mr. Obama discussed the issue with unusual thoughtfulness, they say, but gave little sign of who should prevail — the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposed the measure, or the community groups that supported it out of concern about crime. “He just observed it with a kind of interest,” said Daniel Kahan, now a professor at Yale

Really? Perhaps it was a case of Obama trying to be polite and listen to two faculty he disagreed with, or simply his willingness to hear about a novel proposal. But it's simply false to suggest that Obama never took a stand. To the contrary, in the Illinois Senate Obama did the opposite of what a pandering politician would be expected to do: He refused to accept the attack on individual rights in the name of going after gangs.

Obama voted against a proposal to criminalize contact with a gang for any convicts on probation or out on bail. And in 2001, Obama opposed making gang activity eligible for the death penalty: "There's a strong overlap between gang affiliation and young men of color.... I think it's problematic for them to be singled out as more likely to receive the death penalty for carrying out certain acts than are others who do the same thing." Defending the violation of rights of gang members hardly fits with the story of the wavering Obama being created in this article.

The New York Times article concludes with this dismissive comment:

So even some former students who are thrilled at Mr. Obama’s success wince when they hear him speaking like the politician he has so fully become. “When you hear him talking about issues, it’s at a level so much simpler than the one he’s capable of,” Mr. Rodriguez said. “He was a lot more fun to listen to back then.”

This seems to be an attempt to attack Obama by dismissing him as just another elitist politician speaking down to the American people. During the campaign, Obama often spoke at a serious intellectual level. But whenever he did so, the media ignored him, or attacked him. It's because of the dumbed-down press coverage of issues that Obama has to simplify what he says. But if Obama wasn't running a University of Chicago law class at a higher intellectual level than what the general public hears from the press, he wouldn't be doing his job. Far from being a reason to condemn him, this should be the clearest evidence yet of Obama's skills as president. The current guy in the Oval Office turned out to reveal all of his intellectual abilities in his folksy campaigning style, and the result has been a disaster for the country.

We desperately need a president who's smarter than the average American. And we desperately need a media willing to report the truth about candidates without trying to spin the story against them in a way that badly distorts reality.

Read more at John K. Wilson's Daily Kos Diary.

 
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- SD61 I'm a Fan of SD61 permalink

I admire your writing skills, Mr. Wilson. Subtle, intelligent, and persuasive. I'm guessing the Republican-Hominid tribe will request a translator, unfortunat­ely...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:24 PM on 07/30/2008
- harriscrl3 I'm a Fan of harriscrl3 191 fans permalink

I wish they would make up their minds about Obama. I mean they say that his politics is hard to pin down yet they say that he is hard left. I mean which is it if someoen is hard to pin down they likely reason is that he is middle of the road. If he is hard left shouldnt he be easy to pin down.

I'm still waiting for a paper to dig up McCains important paper that he is written that wow us with his military and foreign affairs brilliance.

Carol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:23 PM on 07/30/2008
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Carol - you'll be waiting until hell freezes over (although that could happen sooner than we think)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:08 AM on 07/31/2008
- jenaimarre I'm a Fan of jenaimarre 2 fans permalink

Thanks for deconstructing this ridiculous article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 07/30/2008

Thankyou Mr. Wilson

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 07/30/2008
- benne I'm a Fan of benne 10 fans permalink

There's a lot of assertions made here, but I think you'll find, for example, that law professors at University of Chicago and similar places are not hired because they head a law review, even Harvard's, as a student, but because they have some outstanding record. What Obama has never had -- or never allowed himself to have -- is a record that would allow someone to peg him as this or that. Certainly, he didn't have a publishing record as his colleague do, but I guess we're supposed to ignore that as a credential, even though that is one of the basis upon which faculty are evaluated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 07/30/2008
- jOke I'm a Fan of jOke 2 fans permalink

what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 07/30/2008
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So your assertion is that Obama had to have an outstanding record as a law professor before he could get a job as a law professor? How assinine is that? Beyond the flimsy and ideological underpinnings of your presentation, what you conveniently disregard is the FACT that Obama had an extensive history a candidate fo office, and as a state senator in Illionois, and as a U.S. senator. You could know these things, but you choose to regurgitate regressive Republican talking points instead of doing actual RESEARCH before you spew your tripe. Which is actually typical for people like you, and exactly what the Republican party expects and hope that you will do.So yes, Obama is as experiecned as anyone else to be president, as you can't get experience to be president until you are president. Unless there's some class or egree you can take, which I'm definitely not aware of.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:23 PM on 07/30/2008
- siberia9 I'm a Fan of siberia9 2 fans permalink

What you point is true, if the faculty is looking to hire for a tenure position. But Obama was an adjunct lecturer - to be that, you don't necessarily need a huge publishing record.

Why not consider, however, another angle? Obama, even without much of a publishing record in terms of law articles, was still being courted by the U of Chicago faculty for a tenure position after U of C began to realize 1) how intelligent and non-ideological Obama is 2) what a good teacher Obama was. But Obama turned down such an offer because he wanted to focus on public service.

Why not consider that? That would then to lead the conclusion that Obama was indeed quite exceptional as a legal mind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 07/30/2008

I know a lot about academic publishing. One of the strange things about law journals is that articles are reviewed and decided upon (accept, reject, revise, etc.) by law students who know the name and affiliation of the author(s); they are not "blind" peer reviewed, as is the case and expectation in the social sciences, humanities, and sciences. (There are a few law journals in the U.S. whose articles are anonymously peer reviewed, but they are the exception.­) What and where it gets published can often be very political as well, depending on the law school and name of the submitter. It is also ironic that law journal articles (often meandering, poorly edited, and too long) analyze laws and policies _made by lawyers, legislators, and policy makers_. From these perspectives, it is much more interesting and taxing to write (and read) laws, legal briefs, and policies than it is to have a law article published.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 07/31/2008
- qwr I'm a Fan of qwr permalink

The NYT has some really lazy, sloppy journalists. I wasn't too offended by the article, but I knew that it had no relation to the truth. It's main points could very well be true, but no evidence was offered, and Jodi Kantor claimed an insight into Obama's motivations. Based on what? I think a lot of the Times's lower-level columnists are producing shoddier and shoddier work. I don't know if this is the result of the internet, but the internet and greater access to other news sources make the NYT appear as network television: the paper has power due to its sheer size and place, but doesn't produce the best work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 07/30/2008

Thank you!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 07/30/2008

Thank you Mr. Wilson, a truly well written piece from someone who WAS there and was one of those students that Senator Obama did not belittle, or didn't consider himself to be a "groupie" when Senator Obama was simply a teacher and not running for any elected office. Too bad we don't see articles such as these from those that are supposed to be professional journalists with names that are well known.....­.you know who you are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 07/30/2008

As a law professor myself, I can assure your readers that professors frequently use themselves in hypothetical questions. In my first class every year, I ask one of the women in the class to assume that she and I are getting married the next day. That doesn't make me a bigamist; nor does it indicate that I have the slightest interest in the woman whom I select. That is called the Socratic method and ,if handled properly by a knowledgable professor, is probably the most exciting way to teach any subject.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 07/30/2008

Excellent article, Mr. Wilson. A powerful first-person testimony to the character and intellect of Obama, that so many like Jodi Kantor - for whatever motivation - seem so desperate to impugn.

I think we will get the awesome president that we need, in Barack Obama.

With the typical "newsman" being soundbite hacks like Wolf Blitzer, I think we can just about give up on ever getting the kind of media (MSM anyway) that we need and deserve...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 07/30/2008

Thanks for this very interesting and insightful piece!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 07/30/2008
- BlueZoo I'm a Fan of BlueZoo 44 fans permalink

Mr. Wilson, thank you for stepping up to set the record straight on this. It's greatly appreciated.

I was struck by one quote from the article: "He did not belittle students." That says a great deal about the man and is direct contrast with McCain. Every speech McCain gives is peppered with "My friends...­" and that's so condescending. I've read his aides have tried, unsuccessfully, to make him stop using this phrase but he soldiers on - as usual - not heeding his advisors. OMG! Another President who won't listen to his advisors? I think NOT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 07/30/2008
- Freesia2 I'm a Fan of Freesia2 332 fans permalink

Oh thank you John K. Wilson.

For some reason, today has been a media feeding frenzy with the main course being Obama. How great to not only read good things about him, but someone also going to the trouble of correcting a media distortion (hatchet job?) of a part of his life and career he seems to have excelled at.

And the NY TImes is rapidly turning into a rag sheet. I never read a thing in it that I don't get a 2nd opinion. And Jodi Kantor is just one more participant in their slide into tabloid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 07/30/2008

Not surprising that the "facts" don't fit reality. Because of my job I have often known, first hand, about matters reported in the news sections (not editorial pages) of the Times, the WSJ and other major news outlets. Never once have they failed to make errors and, almost without exception, those errors were serious ones.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 07/30/2008
- Freesia2 I'm a Fan of Freesia2 332 fans permalink

Well that's reassuring. :-)

Seriously though, it seems that you can no longer turn on the news channels you grew up with, turn the pages of a newspaper whose brand recognition was earned by good journalism in the past - and trust it.

That must be frustrating for you. To know something for a fact and then read what they distorted it into. My sympathies. But not just for you. For all of us. How did this happen? Were we asleep?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 07/30/2008
- GuyFawkes I'm a Fan of GuyFawkes 28 fans permalink

I hope you sent this to the NYTimes. I started reading that article, then stopped, as it was becoming clear that it was just another hatchet job by the Clinton loving Times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 PM on 07/30/2008

Thank you John! I too am sick of the spin the media puts on things. Hopefully more students of Obama's will speak out on their experiences, so we don't have this distorted view from the NYT.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 07/30/2008
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