Table of Contents
Russia-linked Twitter account helped Drexel professor's âWhite Genocideâ tweet go viral, prompting university investigation
Last week, political science professor George Ciccariello-Maher on involuntary leave and barred him from campus, citing a ââ directed at him over his personal political views. (As of yesterday, he was allowed to resume teaching his undergraduate courses â but only by âsynchronous online instruction.â In other words, via video.) Ciccariello-Maherâs suspension was the culmination of months of outrage over his tweets, beginning with a tweet that first drew anger from before the mainstream media picked it up â with, apparently, help from @TEN_GOP, the âUnofficial Twitter of Tennessee Republicans,â which, it turns out, operated by the Russia-based and Kremlin-linked .
In other words, Drexel University launched an investigation into a professorâs off-campus speech, then suspended him, after a Russian âtroll farmâ helped send his tweet viral.
âWhite Genocideâ
At first, the tweet didnât get much .
â,â tweeted from Ciccariello-Maherâs personal Twitter account (âMy views, not those of Drexel U,â reads the bio.) on Christmas Eve, seemed unlikely to get more than a laugh from his followers.
To most of the tweetâs eventual audience, happily divorced from the terminology deployed by white nationalists, âwhite genocideâ would sound like a call for the systematic murder of white people. But Cicciariello-Maher was, in fact, mocking âwhite genocide,â referencing a theory espoused by white nationalists. The phrase, as it, is âa watchword among white supremacists for immigration and fertility trends that could lead to whites losing their majority status in U.S. and European populations in the coming decades.â (One early of Ciccariello-Maherâs tweet described it as âthe genocide of the white race by immigration and other measures⊠.â)
Ciccariello-Maher , saying that ââwhite genocideâ is an idea invented by white supremacists and used to denounce everything from interracial relationships to multicultural policies⊠. It is a figment of the racist imagination, it should be mocked, and Iâm glad to have mocked it.â
Going viral
By mid-Christmas Day, attention to Ciccariello-Maherâs tweet picked up.
A shows how the tweet went viral â beginning with a by author Lauren Southern that garnered 182 retweets. A freelancer the story early in the afternoon, with a gathering just north of 200 retweets. Jason Kessler, one of the organizers of , told the Breitbart author that he was making it part of his âagendaâ to â.â In a , Kessler called on his readership to contact Drexel administrators and demand âintellectual diversity on college campuses so that sociopathic Marxists aren't given free reign to indoctrinate our youth.â
But one side of this Christmas Day skirmish soon got a boost from some Tennesseans. Or did it?
At 4:59 p.m., Twitter account @TEN_GOP of Ciccariello-Maherâs tweet to its , ultimately garnering 2,100 retweets â about ten times the retweets that Breitbartâs tweet had gathered:
From there, the tweet took off, gathering steam in . @TEN_GOPâs tweet even found its way into a on the kerfuffle.
Before midnight, Drexel would respond to the Twitter firestorm with a Yuletide of its own, including a declaring Ciccariello-Maherâs tweet âdeeply disturbing,â but adding that Drexel ârecognizes the right of its faculty to freely express their thoughts and opinions in public debate.â But in the months that have followed, Drexelâs steps in private continue to depart from its public declarations of support for academic freedom and freedom of expression.
Indeed, in this weird case, there are many things that are not what they claim to be.
@TEN_GOP
@TEN_GOP, was not, as it claimed to be, the organic anger of Republicans from Tennessee. Rather, @TEN_GOP was the product of the Internet Research Agency, a Russia-based âtroll farmâ not heretofore known to employ many Americans hailing from the Volunteer State. Instead, it was, as in 2015, âemploying hundreds of Russians to post pro-Kremlin propaganda online under fake identities, including on Twitter.â According to first made by Russia-based RBC, citing documents and both current and former employees of the agency, @TEN_GOP was one such fake account. Reporters with the Daily Beast â Betsy Woodruff, Ben Collins, Spencer Ackerman, and Kevin Poulsen â , citing a source familiar with the account and evidence purporting to show that the account was linked to a Russian cell phone number.
FIRE has no special insight as to the ultimate purpose of @TEN_GOP and similar accounts, or why it would draw attention to Ciccariello-Maherâs tweet. Although alleged Russian efforts to shape the 2016 U.S. presidential election dominate the news, the âWhite Genocideâ tweet occurred well after the election, and other efforts ascribed to the agency include . But if @TEN_GOP was in fact a product of the Russian âtroll farm,â it represents a foreign effort to shape American discourse â an effort that involved stoking the anger of white nationalists and people who didnât understand the context of mocking âwhite genocideâ theories.
Thatâs not to say that Americans might not have picked up on this tweet in similar fashion (as did Breitbart News), or ultimately managed a similar cascade of results. And, obviously, an argument does not automatically lose its validity simply because it comes from Moscow rather than Memphis. But it does indicate that a foreign government not only understands the divisive power of efforts to silence dissenting voices on campus (and therefore may continue to promote such efforts) but has also demonstrated a concrete ability to negatively affect free expression and academic freedom in the United States.
Although Drexel has publicly told faculty members that they enjoy freedom of expression, its actions behind closed doors and in the months since have not reflected that commitment.
âExtremely damaging conductâ
In February, Drexel informed Ciccariello-Maher that it was forming ââ in order to âinvestigate [his] conduct,â with the goal of providing âfindings and recommendations . . . concerning [his] extremely damaging conduct.â
Launching a special committee to investigate âconductâ (words) is chilling in and of itself, but especially so when the expected conclusions are contained within the committeeâs charge: It was conduct, not speech; it was Ciccariello-Maher who was responsible for the âvolume of venomous callsâ and threats, not the callers or threateners. Too often, such committees end up taking the attitude of ââ
FIRE asked Drexel to abandon its investigation and got a perfunctory response, criticizing FIREfor âmisunderstanding,â while providing no information that would explain what we misunderstood. There has been no public indication that Drexel â nearly nine months later â has abandoned or concluded its investigation.
The threats, however, continue.
Each time Ciccariello-Maher writes, media outlets again publish the âwhite genocideâ tweet, and threats begin anew.
Following the shooting in Las Vegas, Ciccariello-Maherâs tweets â questioning whether mass shootings had a racial component â again made waves in , which often repeated the âwhite genocideâ tweet.
âIf youâre that incompetent and hateful,â Bill OâReilly, âshouldnât the university remove you from the classroom?â
Drexel did.
On October 11, citing a ââ directed at Ciccariello-Maher, Drexel placed him on involuntary leave. The American Association of University Professors quickly , perhaps leading the university to permit him to resume teaching â albeit only by video.
In an email to Ciccariello-Maherâs students following the AAUPâs criticism, Drexel provost M. Brian Blake : âAs provost, I am perhaps the most present advocate for academic freedom . . . In my role, I defend George's academic freedom on a daily basis. As such, our latest action had absolutely nothing to do with the content of his extramural speech."
The first line of defense
Ciccariello-Maherâs removal from the classroom, which was premised on threats of violence against him sparked by his extramural speech, obviously has everything to do with the content of his speech. Drexelâs move here places it on a disastrous course for two reasons.
First, wherever there is anger at the expression of a view, there is a possibility of threats against the speaker. If authorities can restrain the speaker by reciting the existence of threats â and citing a need for security often arouses sympathy â then few viewpoints are safe, on campus or off. Universities must not allow anyone, including white nationalists or foreign interests, to determine who can speak or teach on campus by issuing threats.
Second, behavior that gets rewarded will be repeated. If university administrators are quick to launch investigations, exile speakers, or mete out punishment as an expedient tool to deter threats of violence, it will incentivize threats.
For purposes of freedom of expression, it doesnât matter which group was angered by Ciccariello-Maherâs views, nor whether their anger was even sincere or organic. What matters is that Drexel University succumbed to the anger and threats, launching an investigation and setting in progress a path which now leaves Ciccariello-Maher exiled from his academic community.
University administrations are the first line of defense protecting the independence of the academy from the censorious impulses of others, whether those calls or efforts originate from social media, , legislators, the federal government, or foreign entities.
As we explain a letter sent to Drexel today, so long as it maintains its current posture, Drexel remains unwilling to bear that burden.
Recent Articles
FIREâs award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.