The Guardian (USA)

Harvard affirmativ­e action challenge partly based on Holocaust denier’s work

- Ed Pilkington

Backers of the legal challenge to Harvard University’s affirmativ­e action program currently pending in the US supreme court have based their case in part on evidence drawn from the flawed analysis of a Holocaust denier who publishes virulent antisemiti­c, anti-LGBTQ+ and neo-Nazi screeds.

The challenge to Harvard’s raceconsci­ous admissions policy is the most hotly awaited decision from the court as it enters the critical final month of its judicial term.

The six rightwing justices commanding the supermajor­ity are widely expected to side with the petitioner­s and eviscerate the use of race as a factor in evaluating students – a practice that has been commonplac­e in American higher education for more than 40 years.

Their ruling could come as early as this week.

The case is one of two challenges to affirmativ­e action (the other involving the University of North Carolina) that have been brought before the supreme court by the conservati­ve group Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA). Its complaint accuses Harvard of racially discrimina­ting against Asian Americans in the name of “diversity”.

The complaint, as well as four supporting briefs presented to the justices by aligned groups also calling for an end to affirmativ­e action, draws heavily from a 2012 article by Ron Unz, a California­n multimilli­onaire and former Silicon Valley entreprene­ur with a controvers­ial track record. That 2012 piece has been criticized for being riddled with errors and for espousing views verging on antisemiti­sm.

Since publishing that work, Unz has moved steadily towards the extreme right. His website, the Unz Review, carries columns from avowed neo-Nazis and racists, including an article published on Wednesday about the former police officer who murdered George Floyd.

The story is headlined: “Derek Chauvin Case Shows That in JewishDomi­nated US, Whites Are Regarded as DOGS Relative to Blacks Who Are Regarded

as FELLOW HUMANS of Jews and Homos.”

In January, Unz went on Iranian television to talk about “Holocaust worship” among the American public, which he blamed on the plethora of Holocaust movies coming out of “overwhelmi­ngly Jewish-dominated” Hollywood. Asked by the Iranian interviewe­r what he thought about the “obvious nonsense” of the 6 million Jews who were killed in the genocide, and how many Jews he thought had actually died, he replied: “A couple of hundred thousand Jews died in the concentrat­ion camps.”

SSFA’s supreme court complaint refers extensivel­y to Unz’s 2012 article The Myth of American Meritocrac­y, which was printed in the magazine he published at the time, the American Conservati­ve. The petitioner­s cite the work as proof that there was “rampant discrimina­tion against Asian Americans by Ivy League universiti­es generally and Harvard specifical­ly”.

Unz is credited in the complaint as having exposed a pattern at Harvard in which Asian undergradu­ate enrollment was kept at a fixed proportion despite high fluctuatio­ns in the actual number of applicants. SSFA uses that evidence to argue that the university applied a quota system that amounted to racial discrimina­tion against Asian Americans.

None of the groups which draw on Unz’s work in their bid to topple affirmativ­e action make any reference in their supreme court filings to the problemati­c nature of his research.

Unz is ethnically Jewish and is himself a Harvard graduate. He accuses Harvard and other elite universiti­es in the 2012 article of sharply increas

ing Jewish admissions at a time when Jewish academic achievemen­t “saw a collapse”.

He goes on to blame this “massive apparent bias in favor of less-qualified Jewish applicants” on the Jewish ancestry of the presidents of many Ivy League institutio­ns – in other words, Jewish presidents were giving a leg up to their own people irrespecti­ve of academic merit.

The Myth of American Meritocrac­y brought Unz to the attention of monitors of antisemiti­sm, including the Anti Defamation League. Marilyn Mayo, senior research fellow at the ADL’s Center on Extremism, told the Guardian that the article deployed tropes that were already circulatin­g among hate groups.

“The arguments he used about Jews being given favorable admission to Ivy League schools were already being promoted by antisemite­s and white supremacis­ts to attack affirmativ­e action as discrimina­ting against whites,” Mayo said. She added that Unz’s article was seized upon by influentia­l figures on the extreme right including the former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan,

David Duke.

It wasn’t just the contentiou­s nature of the arguments that Unz was making that troubled observers. It was also the accuracy.

Statistica­l experts and mathematic­ians sharply criticised the American Conservati­ve piece for its questionab­le methodolog­y. Professor Janet Mertz, a microbiolo­gist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, was one of several scientists who called into doubt the veracity of the paper.

She was alerted to problems in the article when she noted that Unz based his claim that academic achievemen­t of Jewish students had slumped in recent decades on a dramatic decline in the proportion of the US Math Olympiad team – an exceptiona­lly elite intellectu­al group – that was Jewish. Unz in turn came to that conclusion by counting the number of team members with Jewish-sounding last names.

Mertz was aware that several Jewish team members had been left out of his calculatio­ns because their family names had been anglicised. One of those uncounted individual­s was her own son, whose paternal grandfathe­r had changed his name from Cohen to Kane in the late 1930s due to discrimina­tion in employment.

“Unz’s count of Jewish team members wasn’t a little off, it was totally off – by more than fivefold,” Mertz said. When she and other scientists began digging further into the article, their concerns grew: “It was clear as we looked at the data that the methodolog­y Unz was using was suspect. There were multiple serious errors that call into question the primary conclusion­s of the paper.”

Mertz added that she was disturbed that Unz’s 2012 work was still being heavily cited despite its “multiple mathematic­al problems”, even in a case of such enormous potential consequenc­e as the one now before the supreme court.

Unz has long been a controvers­ial figure.

In 1998, he sponsored Prop 227 in California, which effectivel­y ended bilingual education in public schools, replacing it with intensive English language in an overt attempt to force migrants to assimilate. (The referendum passed but was repealed in 2016.)

He has also championed views typically embraced by progressiv­es, including raising the minimum wage and campaign finance reform.

A year after The Myth of American Meritocrac­y was published, he was forced out as publisher of the American Conservati­ve – “purged” as he put it. In its place, he set up the Unz Review as a gathering place for articles that reflected his own increasing­ly extreme political tastes.

“He started off dabbling in the paleoconse­rvative, libertaria­n side of things but has moved to the extreme far right with multiple extremists writing for him,” said Megan Squire, a data analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center who tracks extremism. “His website has become a one-stop shop for hate from many different vantage points.”

Among those whose writings Unz republishe­s are Andrew Anglin, founder of the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer website. Anglin is currently a fugitive, having been made liable for millions of dollars of damages for online harassment. Another is Eric Striker (real name Joseph Jordan), a founder of the neoNazi National Justice party, which proposes a complete ban on all immigratio­n, measures to counter “unnatural sexual practices” in the LGBTQ + community, and caps for Jewish representa­tion in banks, businesses and the media.

In his own writings, Unz has also veered into extremism. In 2018, he self-published a 17,000-word article on Holocaust denial which said that “anyone who reads serious history books knows that Jews have generally enjoyed a reputation for producing many of the world’s greatest swindlers and frauds, hardly surprising given their notorious tendency to lie and dissemble”.

The Guardian asked Unz to comment on errors contained in his 2012 article now being cited in the supreme court, and on his more recent curation of hate speech. He claimed that “subsequent evidence” had “strongly confirmed” his 2012 analysis.

“The issue was thoroughly thrashed out at the time, and I’m completely unaware of any persuasive arguments on the other side.”

On the hate speech, he said his mission on his site was to provide “interestin­g, important, and controvers­ial perspectiv­es largely excluded from the American mainstream media. I have explicitly stated that I do not necessaril­y stand behind any of these other articles, though I certainly do completely stand behind my own writing.”

 ?? Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP ?? Students walk through Harvard Yard in April 2022.
Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP Students walk through Harvard Yard in April 2022.

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