The Shot Heard Around the
World
"Arming America"
and the battle for our history
by David Rostcheck
Executive Director, North
Bridge Training Institute
"Who controls the past controls
the future: who controls the present controls the past"
- slogan of The Party, "1984", George Orwell
On Friday October 25, Emory University
announced the resignation of professor Michael Bellesiles. Bellesiles'
prizewinning book Arming America purported to prove the radical
assertion that guns were rare and unimportant in early America and that our
"gun culture" was a later invention grafted on to a bucolic,
relatively gun-free country. An instant runaway success, Arming America
gathered praise from most newspapers and major reviewers, eventually winning
Columbia University's Bancroft Prize for History, and was cited before the 5th
Circuit Court of the United States in the "U.S. v. Emerson" gun
control case.
But historians from outside academia soon
exposed Arming America as an academic fraud, a tome of revisionist
history cobbled together from snippets of truth rearranged and rewritten to
say the opposite of what they actually said. Worse still, its meteoric rise
came while academic historians turned a blind eye to work they all knew to be
historical falsehood. The success of Arming America represents a
crime in which academia itself stands stained with guilt, and for which all
academic historians will pay the price. The real legacy of Arming America
goes far beyond exposing one academic as a revisionist liar. We are at the
beginning, not the end, of the scandal's reverberations. The handling of Arming
America may well mark the beginning of the end of the credibility of
modern academia, the fall of the ivory tower, and the beginning of a new era
of solid research.
Throughout the last decade, the great
education reformer Camille Paglia predicted this outcome. Paglia warned that
academia had become an Orwellian horror, robbing students of their education
and substituting relativistic brainwashing instead. Speaking in Cambridge,
almost in Harvard's backyard, she delivered a call to arms urging students to
flee the Ivy League and its post-modernist influence and pursue a solid
education in classical subjects that would reinforce, not cripple, their
thinking. Many who loved learning and could have remained in the universities
heeded Paglia's warning and pursued careers in industry. In their spare time
they kept studying and researching, picking their way through primary data
sources and classic works instead of the flighty post-modern tracts used in
the universities. Now, with the research power of the internet at their
disposal, historians and researchers from outside academia are beginning to
produce works that are often more powerful and credible than those coming from
inside universities.
For example, at the website constitution.org,
the Constitution Society has developed an online Liberty Library of materials
that puts university textbooks to shame. Driven by their desire to understand
the Constitution and the historical development of the great ideas in it, they
tracked down and digitized works that influenced the Founders. They compiled
writings by William Penn, plays about Cato the Younger, essays by John Locke,
and documents developing the theory of natural rights. Many of these materials
have never before been accessible without significant effort (if at all). In
over two hundred years of prior scholarship, no academic assembled a
comparable resource for public education about the foundations of our law.
By comparison, the credibility of
professional academics diminishes further every day. The publication of Arming
America by the Alfred Knopf Co. saw historians, reviewers, and media
personalities shower praise on a book whose radical premise should have raised
intense skeptical inquiry. Those of us familiar with our nation's early
history were shocked not only by the book's naked revisionist proposition, but
also by academic historians' breathless praise for a view of history they all
had to know was completely false. The presence and importance of guns in early
America is so well defined that it is impossible to conduct any significant
study of our early history at all without encountering it. Any professor at
Harvard could literally have walked out of her office at lunchtime and read
half a dozen plaques describing events whose history demolishes the book's
propositions. Every history professor in the country should have had, and
raised, serious concerns about the book's veracity. Yet, in academia's most
shameful hour, tenured professors stood silent instead of expressing their
reservations about the book. Many academics, like historian Gerry Wills,
soiled their credibility by uncritically accepting the book's highly dubious
premise and incorporating it into their own research.
The scandal over Arming America
marks the first public conflict between the independent, internet-savvy
libertarian researchers and their revisionist post-modernist academic
counterparts. Despite all the haughty power and media bias the academic world
could bring to bear, the libertarian historians scored a knockout - and
they're just getting started.
A look at the official record of Emory's
investigation of Bellesiles' research shows the insular academic world at
work. Scholarly challenges in the William and Mary Quarterly led to Emory
convening an internal committee, which then asked for a panel of outside
researchers to review certain select areas of Bellesiles' work. The panel's
damning results drove Bellesiles to resign. But Emory's official record is
itself a work of revisionist history. Left unmentioned are the comprehensive
challenges to Bellesiles' research published widely by non-academic historians
and investigative reporters that forced Emory to account for Bellesiles
falsifications. The academic system worked only because the enormous clamor of
independent voices outside the university left Emory no other choice but to
address the problem.
In an honest accounting of the exposure of
the Bellesiles scandal, we find the true challengers to be independent
historian Clayton E.
Cramer, flanked one on side by National Review
investigative reporter Melissa Seckora and on the other by Emory's student
newspaper, the Emory Wheel. Academics like Joyce Lee Malcolm and
James Lindgren followed later and a host of internet commentators and plucky
reporters relayed the action. Denied access to the academic journals, the
independents fought their battle across the internet, with ground zero being
the online discussion forums of the History News Network (hnn.us).
The principal challenger, Clayton E. Cramer,
presents a figure Camille Paglia would find familiar. Working outside academia
as a software engineer, he nevertheless published 5 books, including 4
scholarly works on early American history. Cramer's original historical
research includes the groundbreaking scholarship establishing the origins of
gun control legislation in Jim Crow laws designed to disenfranchise blacks.
When Bellesiles published a precursor article to Arming America,
academic journals rejected Cramer's critique of Bellesiles' research. Cramer,
despite his impressive scholarly record, lacked the Ph. D. pedigree necessary
for respect by university historians. The man whose work was later cited
opposite Bellesiles' by the United States District Court would find himself
unable to gain access to any academic forum.
But while scholarly journals ignored Cramer,
his solid work won admirers on the internet. Snubbed by academia and incensed
at the obvious revision of history, he began checking footnotes and primary
sources on Arming America and soon had uncovered hundreds of errors.
In many cases, Cramer found deliberate fraud. Bellesiles had rewritten key
passages from historical documents, altering their meaning to support his
premise. Assisted by feedback from internet readers, Cramer eventually
fact-checked Bellesiles' entire book, producing a 300-page study repudiating Arming
America's controversial claims.
National Review reporter Melissa Seckora
began investigating Bellesiles' sources and found that she could not locate
them, after which he continually revised his story. In the most recognizable
example of Bellesiles' duplicity, Seckora found that the San Francisco probate
records Bellesiles claimed to use did not exist, having perished in that
city's great fire. Reporters from the Boston Globe, dispatched to Vermont to
check probate citations, could not find those records either. Soon the story
bubbled up from the internet to other skeptical reporters and appeared in
major media outlets. Bellesiles could not produce any of his research data,
claiming he kept his notes as tick marks on legal pads rather than in a
database, and that the legal pads had been "pulped" in a flood.
Retired CUNY professor Jerome Sternstein investigated this story and found it
dubious. The students at Emory, who were markedly less gullible than their
administrators, used their newspaper (the Emory Wheel) to continually
pressure their stonewalling administration to address the serious allegations
of academic fraud.
Yet even after the mainstream media had
recognized Arming America's false conclusions, the academic world
remained staunch in its defense of the unlikely tome. Bellesiles' book won
Columbia University's Bancroft Prize, the most prestigious award for a work of
historical research. While Columbia held its ceremony awarding Bellesiles the
prize, Clayton Cramer delivered a lecture on campus presenting examples of the
book's altered quotations to the Columbia students. Bellesiles won a Newberry
Library federal fellowship of $30,000 to produce another book on guns at
taxpayer expense. The angry National Endowment of the Humanities later
stripped its name from the fellowship (but Bellesiles kept the funding).
Bellesiles' response to the N.E.H.'s action alleged Orwellian censorship.
Ironically, a central theme of Orwell's 1984 involves researchers
assigned to rewrite history for political gain.
Bellesiles charged his critics with
conducting a witch hunt, and claimed he was being harassed by threatening gun
owners who were hacking his website to alter his data. Like his research,
these claims never proved credible, but several associations of historians
dutifully passed resolutions condemning the harassment. At present, the online
discussions of the History News Network remain full of career academics
arguing in support of the book's conclusions, long after any reasonably
objective observer would have understood it to be fraudulent. Columbia
University has no plans to revoke the Bancroft
Prize, and the unaccountable
publisher Knopf still passes the book off as a work of history rather than
fiction. And, of course, taxpayers continue to foot the bill for Mr.
Bellesiles' next suspect work.
Long before Bellesiles' forced resignation, I
booked Clayton Cramer to give a keynote speech on the Arming America
affair at the upcoming gun rights conference CounterAttack 2003. I knew the
implications of Arming America go far beyond simply rewriting our
history on guns. Bellesiles is no aberration; he is the logical result of an
academic system where everything is for sale to the right political bidder.
The system that produced him cannot produce anything better. But free thought
and logical inquiry have fled the university, grown up on the internet, and
returned for the reckoning. Academic historians, paralyzed by fear that a
politically incorrect inquiry could stunt their careers, failed to challenge
an obvious revision of the history they are charged to protect. Our academic
institutions have abdicated their responsibility - but in doing so, they may
have become irrelevant. A new type of independent scholar, supporting himself
and beholden to no one, has risen from the internet to take up the challenge.
And the next generation, represented by the students at Emory University,
clearly understands the difference and has voiced their angry insistence on
truth in their education
When the most credible and insightful
research comes from outside the university, the academic system must reform or
simply be replaced. Truth in scholarship is back, and it is spoiling for a
fight. From the internet comes a powerful sound, and Paglia's cry for reform
resounds in its reverberations. Even in the ivory towers, this shot will be
heard.
Libertarian activist David Rostcheck is
the Executive Director of the North Bridge Training Institute, which produces
the CounterAttack 2003 gun rights training conference. For more information,
see http://www.northbridgetraining.com/counterattack2003.