May 7, 2008
May 6, 2008
Professor William Drummond
Chair, Academic Senate, Berkeley Division
Stephens Hall
University of CaliforniaDear Professor Drummond:
As we discussed this morning, I write this as a consequence of reading what Boalt Dean Chris Edley calls the “Torture Memo” of Professor John Yoo—which horrified me. I write to ask you to appoint a special committee to examine the matter of Professor John Yoo–the matter that Boalt Hall Dean Chris Edley has named “The Torture Memo and Academic Freedom”—the role played by John Yoo in the Bush administration’s policy of subjecting to torture not high-ranking Al Qaeda members with information about ticking bombs but low-level prisoners irrespective of their guilt or innocence or of any information suggesting their guilt or innocence.
I ask you to appoint to this special committee members of the faculty with expertise in moral philosophy, the role of the university, international relations, human rights, and constitutional law. I ask you to instruct this committee to write of a public report to the Academic Senate no later than this Labor Day, advising the Senate of the pros and cons of actions that the Academic Senate might or might not take in the matter of Professor John Yoo, including but not limited to:
(I) no action, as Professor Yoo’s actions while on leave at the Office of Legal Counsel have been misrepresented in the press and on the internet, and he has been defamed.
(II) no action, as Professor Yoo’s “Torture Memo” and related work while on leave at the Office of Legal Counsel are protected under academic freedom or are otherwise not germane to his status at Berkeley.
(III) a complaint to Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost George Breslauer calling for the censure of Professor Yoo for actions while on leave at the Office of Legal Counsel that amount to one or more of:
(A) a breach of professional legal ethics, with respect to the duty that a lawyer and above all a law school teacher who educates future lawyers owes his clients to inform them truthfully and completely of the state of the law;
(B) work performed for the Office of Legal Counsel sufficiently misleading to rise to the same level in a professional school as work that violates the principles of scholarly integrity reaches elsewhere in the university;
(C) participation in a conspiracy to violate U.S and international law by torturing detainees, detainees whose guilt in the acts of or even association with Al Qaeda was not only not proven but not even likely.
(IV) a complaint to Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost George Breslauer calling for the dismissal of Professor Yoo for actions while on leave at the Office of Legal Counsel that are, et cetera.
If you have not read John Yoo’s recently-released “Torture Memo,” and have not been as horrified and appalled as I am, I strongly urge you to read it in full.
However, after reading the “Torture Memo” I found myself frozen, with no firm or settled judgment as to what appropriate action is in this context. I lack sufficient knowledge of the facts. I lack sufficient expertise on the issues. Thus I want you to appoint a special committee to write a report because I am enough of a liberal and enough of an academic to believe that discussion of these issues will help.
On the one side there are the claims of academic freedom, enunciated most strongly by our own medieval historian Ernst Kantorowicz just before his resignation from the faculty in protest. He said:
There are three professions which are entitled to wear a gown: the judge, the priest, the scholar. This garment stands for its bearer’s maturity of mind, his independence of judgment, and his direct responsibility to his conscience and his god. It signifies the inner sovereignty of those three interrelated professions: they should be the very last to allow themselves to act under duress and yield to pressure. It is a shameful and undignified action, it is an affront and a violation of both human sovereignty and professional dignity that the Regents of this university have dared to bully the bearer of this gown into a situation in which–under the pressure of bewildering economic coercion–he is compelled to give up either his tenure or, together with his freedom of judgment, his human dignity and responsible sovereignty as a scholar…
In Professor Kantorowicz’s view, a Berkeley faculty member should be allowed to state whatever his or her judgment leads him to state–even if it is that the government of the United States should be overthrown by force and violence–and that no pressure or threats of any kind should be applied to discourage him from saying what he or she decides to say.
On the other side there are at least four interrelated considerations.
The first consideration is that Professor Yoo is professor at a professional school, Boalt Hall, and thus must teach and model professional behavior that will be expected of his students as lawyers. Professor Yoo failed in his Torture Memo to make any reference to the Korean War case of Youngstown, an essential part of any good-faith contemporary analysis of the war powers of the executive branch. This failure to analyze and other deficiencies in the memorandum make it, I have been told, a serious breach of professional ethics–misconduct in failing to fulfill his professional duty to provide his clients with a complete and truthful statement of the law. Writing legal arguments that ignore (not find some way to distinguish, but flatly ignore) controlling precedent is misconduct. Students learning to be lawyers need to be protected from coming to believe that it is an acceptable part of lawyering.
The second consideration is that the work product for others outside the university performed by faculty who teach at professional schools plays a role analogous to that of academic research in other branches of the university. I am informed by some that the argumentative omissions and misrepresentations in the Torture Memo and in other work by John Yoo for the Office of Legal Counsel amount to misconduct that rises to a level equivalent to that of falsifying evidence in a scholarly work. As one attorney observed, “while outside legal work isn’t formally scholarship, it has its own ethical obligations.” The absence of relevant Supreme Court precedent from the Torture Memo is a “failure to meet the standards of practice required by the legal profession [that] appears… close enough to a failure to abide by the standards of the scholarly profession that it can be treated as an equivalent level of scholarly misconduct.”
The third consideration is that some claim that Professor Yoo was not just an advisor, informing those whom Boalt Dean Chris Edley calls the “deciders”–George W. Bush, Richard Cheney, George Tenet, and Donald Rumsfeld–his view of what the law was. Professor Yoo was an implementer. The decision had already been made to torture detainees of unknown but probably low value who there was no reason to think had any knowledge of any possible “ticking bomb.” Attorneys at the CIA and the Department of Defense were protesting that this policy of routine torture was illegal: contrary to U.S. and international law and treaty, and exposed them to potential criminal sanctions. Professor Yoo was asked not to provide an opinion but to write a document to override objections to an already settled-upon course of action, making wrongful use of the opinion-issuing power the Attorney General possesses within the executive branch to silence lawyers who had correctly evaluated the legal framework–and so cramdown the torture policy by issuing what was essentially a “get out of jail free” card in the guise of an OLC opinion. This, I am informed by some, may be a crime. I am informed that the standard, under treaties that are the law of the land in the U.S., is that an act of legal advice that materially contributes to the perpetration of acts of torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment is a criminal act if the actors were at minimum reckless as to the consequences of their advice: it is necessary only that the actors have accepted that their conduct could possibly and forseeably lead to the commission of a crime, not that they have known the exact crime that was contemplated and was to be committed.
The fourth consideration is that it is a key part of our society that our lawyers in the common-law tradition have no association with torture–that it is part of their professional identity to know nothing of the rack, the thumbscrew, the strappado, induced hypothermia, and the water torture. So William Blackstone wrote centuries ago. A rack had been set up in the Tower of London by the Duke of Exeter under Henry IV, and had been used by Queen Elizabeth to torture Jesuits, and by King James I to torture conspirators in the aftermath of the Gunpowder Plot–a true ticking bomb. But, William Blackstone proudly stated, this rack had always been “an engine of state, and not of law.” Some inform me that John Yoo’s role in making the strappado and the water torture–which Bush administration members of the twenty-first century speak of in euphemisms as “severe interrogation methods,” just as the Elizabethans of the sixteenth century would speak of taking prisoners to embrace “the Duke of Exeter’s daughter”–routine bureaucratic policy is enough of a breach of professional ethics to make him unsuited to teach in a law school.
I cannot evaluate these considerations. The facts are unclear. I have no special expertise in moral philosophy, professional ethics, the role of the university, international relations, human rights, or constitutional law. I am out of my depth. But I do know that these are vitally important issues–and I firmly believe that Berkeley as an institution does itself no good service if it does not publicly address the matter of John Yoo, and does not face us with an extraordinarily sharp conflict between powerful principles.
And so I ask that this matter be referred to a committee that has the proper expertise: a committee that can properly weigh the considerations of moral philosophy, professional ethics, the role of the university, international relations, human rights, and constitutional law, and publicly set out its conclusions and our options. I do this in the classical liberal belief that argument and discussion are good, and will make us see these issues more clearly.
Sincerely yours,
J. Bradford DeLong
They get replies:
Dear Brad,
Although you and I disagree, our talk this morning was a good one. Thank you for your thoughtful memo. Prof. Yoo has agreed to testify before a Senate committee. More details of what he did while on government service are likely to surface at that time.
The actions you urge on the Senate are therefore premature. Nevertheless, nothing I’ve read in the bylaws that convinces me the Senate has any standing in the matter.
If there’s a showing of any illegal act or actionable breach of professional ethics, the campus administration would have the responsibility of filing a complaint.
Creating the panel you recommend to examine Prof. Yoo’s conduct would be defamatory on the face of it. Besides that, there’s the practical problem of finding committee members with the expertise you outline.
Yours,
Bill
I am left with a puzzle: I have little clue as to what counts as an “actionable breach of professional ethics” or as serious scholarly misconduct. Hence I want a fact-finding committee. But it seems that the creation of a committee to find facts is ipso facto defamatory, and so cannot be contemplated unless there is already “showing of any illegal act or actionable breach of professional ethics.” But if there is already a “showing of any illegal act or actionable breach of professional ethics” then there is no need for a fact-finding committee…
Sounds like you need to break out the waterboard.
A matter of little consequence to the average American: whether Prof. Yoo picks up his paycheck from Berkeley or Liberty University, or whatever Home for Temporarily Inconvenienced Wingnuts would happily scoop him up. But probably a matter of consequence to the administration, who - unless they want to rebrand their university as Liberty West Coast Satellite Campus - might not want their most recognizable faculty member having as his primary field of expertise “concocting legal sophistries to undermine the foundational values of western civilization.” Perhaps also of concern to alumni, who might feel less inclined to cut large checks to their alma mater if their Golden Bears sweatshirts started inviting questions about whether they played home games at Abu Ghraib (football fans can be very cruel). The student body might have an interest in this matter, as would, I imagine, faculty and staff at other UC campuses, and even the taxpayers of California, who might wonder if they wanted to be so openly associated with aperson who scuttled around the dark corners of an administration whose human rights record invited comparisons to the Soviet Union - asserting, for example, that the President had the right to crush the testicles of children in order to compel or punish their parents. So it could matter to more people than you might think whether Prof. Yoo gets to practice his craft in decent society, or whether he has to join the other crackpots and undesirables in the shadow reality of wingnut academia, where Jesus rides a dinosaur and the Moonies pick up the tab and the vast liberal fascist secularist conspiracy doesn’t give a fuck what utter bullshit you get up to so long as you stay down in your fucking hole. The thing about the Universe is that it likes to align itself harmoniously. I suspect there’s a way of putting things in order here.

May 7, 2008 at 6:28 pm
Amen.
May 7, 2008 at 6:46 pm
I’m imagining a Stanford halftime show “Tribute to Berkeley Law” at the Big Game, starting with a pincer movement to a pair of testicles…
And ending with a seminude dogpile on the Cal mascot while the pine tree gives a boughs-up.
Tasteless, yes, but it gets the point across.
If they actually did this, I would personally buy all the beer for the next Stanford Band kegger. I am entirely serious.
May 7, 2008 at 7:16 pm
With a majority (2) of founding members and seniorest hereisiarchs on board, it seems that fire Yoo is the official policy position of the Ancient and Hermetic Order of the Shrill.
Is Tyler Cowen on board, or did the motion pass by a bare* majority ? Lets ask the Google . I get “1. Don’t fire John Yoo.” Sad to say seems clear.
*not a reference to agum’s proposed half time show.
May 7, 2008 at 7:42 pm
Translation: “Don’t take it personally if I treat you like a moron and brush you off. Thanks for writing, but please lose my number.”
May 7, 2008 at 8:30 pm
The irony is, if we used the techniques that John Yoo approved on John Yoo, he would tell us everything we could possibly want to know about government malfeasance with regard to interrogations.
Of course, everything he would tell us would be untrue, but even he would be unaware that he was lying.
May 7, 2008 at 9:46 pm
[...] See also the Editors. This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 at 10:46 pm Categories: Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. [...]
May 7, 2008 at 10:46 pm
Hey Agum,
I’ll split that beer bill with you.
May 7, 2008 at 10:59 pm
Whammer Says:
I’ll split that beer bill with you.
Aw yeah. According to Wikipedia the Stanford Band is off suspension and has recovered their beer privileges.
The Editors, save your IP logs so we can all get back in touch next November.
May 7, 2008 at 11:18 pm
There’s only one thing left to do.
Anyone got Jeff Gilooly’s cell #?
May 8, 2008 at 7:19 am
Asking a Faculty Senate to do anything is a serious mistake. They are toothless, cosmetic structures with the very serious power to recommend -shudder- and advise the university administration. There can be few more pointless uses of one’s time as actually attending a Faculty Senate session; these wasted hours, you will never get back. I bet Prof. De Long knew that too.
May 8, 2008 at 9:45 am
“Of course, everything he would tell us would be untrue, but even he would be unaware that he was lying.”
But if we removed his testicles before hand, we could use tham as corroborating little witnesses, yes?
May 8, 2008 at 10:49 am
As the expert on the Moonies picking up the tab for conservatism, I’m just dropping by to say that William Drummond is a legendary member of the journalism school faculty who required people to come to class dressed to the nines.
May 8, 2008 at 11:16 am
Yeah. You all might want to relocate the Hoover Institution first. UCLA, maybe?
May 8, 2008 at 1:04 pm
OT: Cole’s callin’ you out.
May 8, 2008 at 2:01 pm
Hilarious. This is going to be just like the old days.
May 8, 2008 at 2:51 pm
Hilarious. This is going to be just like the old days.
I’m enthusiastically eager for the both of ya’s to start lobbing insults and outrages over each other’s blog walls. Perhaps a little of the taunty-taunty, in the form of a Brady video, would be in order? Mm?
If you can keep it going, with feeling, until this primary nonsense is over, I’d sure be grateful. I think there’s a whole bunch of Americans who would be too.
Thank you both in advance. Good luck, we’re all counting on you.
May 8, 2008 at 2:56 pm
Editors, you have a point about the Hoover thing, I was wondering if we could just look the other way on that……..
One nightmare that I have is that somehow Condi comes back to the Farm proper (not Hoover). If that happens, I’ll need to start boycotting in the alum donation department. Not that they’ll notice………..
May 8, 2008 at 2:57 pm
I’m sortof intrigued by the notion that it is possible to further defame John Yoo, a man who has made his name synonymous with American torture. Calling a committee together could somehow insult him further?
This is sad for Edley and Drummond. No one wants history to show up and make demands, but they were on watch when this dilemma arose. They got the chance to choose, and chose cowardly avoidance. What a shame for them and their families that they found out who they are like this.
May 8, 2008 at 3:30 pm
“Besides that, there’s the practical problem of finding committee members with the expertise you outline.”
I think he’s got you there. First, you’d have to find people at Berkeley who have backgrounds in moral philosophy and con law. Then, even if you could find those people, would they be non-wingnut crazies who wouldn’t just rubber-stamp Yoo.
Maybe they could import some libertarians from George Mason.
May 8, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Yoo, Friedman, Scalia…the GOP has a knack for finding hacks that will rationalize the GOP’s obtuse policy choices. If your MD read the PDR like these guys read the constitution, you’d be double plus un-good.
May 8, 2008 at 5:10 pm
Good old fatuous Brad DeLong. It looks as if he’s just as gassy and pompous when he writes as he is when he shows up in class. What a blithering jerk, not to mention fat ass.
May 8, 2008 at 8:39 pm
Well, we’ve hit the point where the question of whether we should torture POWs is a really confusing and controversial question.
I love that you can’t even make the “torture is always wrong” argument and even expect an American Professor to hear you out.
Instead you have to hedge about how, of course torturing high level Al Qaeda operatives is a perfectly sensible idea, but Yoo wanted to torture people who probably didn’t have much information.
What the fuck happened to this country? At least ten years ago we had the decency to pretend we weren’t operating on medieval moral values.
May 9, 2008 at 1:00 am
I tend to believe the CIA on orders from the executive branch have been torturing people since its inception. The secret budgets out there for various special operations is expended with very limited oversight.
When your country has been over throwing countries by using its “intelligence gathering” apparatus and in short manipulating the sovereignty of other nation states your country is inconsistent with it’s expectations for the inherent natural rights of your people.
The imagined loophole Yoo argues is that during “war time” the executive branch has preferential powers to all anything except perhaps heroic acts of democracy like a constituional amendment and a three-fifths majority in congress, you know things that will never happen since we broke off into red and blue teams, (lame.)
When a fascist seeks to restict your natural rights by changing the geometry of your balance of powers they are going to hide behind claims of “democracy” as they set their bars ever higher for the requirements for popular support for any progress. They jive, hustle and spin. They piss on your head and tell you it’s raining. FOX-News is like a 24/7 golden shower. They gum up the works of the machine and hopefully get it rolling backwards.
Yoo’s assertions are convenient loopholes masquerading as heroic intellectualism that begs the other two sides of the triangle to respond with equal ferocity to protect their power. That would be a natural expression of the reality of our checks and balances in action. Cal, like all the UC’s, specialize in the theoretical world of political science, while the State University System in California tends to feature the practical applications of political science for jobs outside the ivory tower. At Sonoma State in 1992 if your idea wasn’t feasible given the current political landscape, you better not raise your hand. Politics was taught with the real world in mind and people like Alice Rivlin was our pin-up girl. Sure you got as much theory as you wanted, but for example my thesis was a construction of a “winning” political campaign for then Gov. William Weld. I didn’t like William Weld, but in 1996 that was a fun challenge. My “internship” was as the Universities Commissioner of Student Elections, (just like Jimmy Carter.) At the UC’s the emphasis isn’t on application as much, that’s all.
Problems with correction: The judiciary favors the retention of GOP power, as appointments tend to follow. The public, those who are supposed to crack the whip of their representatives, don’t even know the name of their representatives in large enough number to counterbalance.
Yoo’s inclusion of the War Powers Act and laws that certainly aren’t declarations of war as the original founders intended. First the desire for war must imminent from the people in a democratic republic, not from the executive, down. The manufacture of consent for the Iraq War is text book, yet still invalid due to all the straight faced lies. I could only imagine Yoo’s powers being granted to POTUS in a case where congress declares war for realsies and it’s a serious muthafuckn’ war. Maybe The PRC invades in twenty years and cyborgs rule the night.
In the end it’s the people who must act, shout, demand, freakout, work, educate themselves, and act in a manner more shocking then a poll number. That’s what drives all the action. We forget the Civil Rights success, the labor law success, etc, or I suppose not enough people are willing to go take their lumps. blogs are great, but I’ll be first to admit that they are a passive aggressive way to vent frustration, instead of actually doing what it takes to make the major gains we did in the past towards the reaching the totality of what real representative democracy fully actualized could be.
Thanks for reading my book.
May 9, 2008 at 8:16 am
Megan:
Good one. The man who wrote the Torture Memos would be defamed by virtue of an inquiry into whether that ‘legal advice’, and I do put that in quotes, exceeded the constraints of professional responsibility. I assume for the sake of argument that such a finding would be sufficient, not being sure what ‘actionable breach’ of professional ethics means.
Actually now I wonder what showing would be required? Anyway I doubt the charter and by-laws provide much in the way of guidance.
Interesting that he asserts the charter and by-laws do not provide him with standing, yet this actionable breach later is admitted as sufficient for the administration to file a complaint, and indeed he seems to acknowledge an active duty to file a complaint once such wrongdoing is known.
So it sounds like he is saying “Make the case first”. Which of course Delong wants him to make the case in the first place.
At the same time Delong made his point and focused a great deal of negative attention towards Yoo, which is a great thing, although any sort of like death treats or whatever are not. But he should be shunned. That he would be able to retreat safely to his right-wing sinecure after what he has done is just wrong.