The FBI and UC’s Katehi

   No straight line can be drawn from the pepper spray incident on the UC Davis campus but it does  make an interesting backdrop from which to read about the National Security Higher Education Advisory Board. Dave Zirin explains in The Nation:

In 2010, [scandalized Penn State’s  recently resigned President] Spanier chose [UC Davis Chancellor Linda] Katehi to join an elite team of twenty college presidents on what’s called the National Security Higher Education Advisory Board, which “promotes discussion and outreach between research universities and the FBI.”

The Advisory Board, started in 2005 has concerns that include violent acts by animal rights terrorists, research theft, acquisition or theft of technology and information sensitive enough to harm national security. Secrecy surrounds the meetings between university officials and the FBI and the contents are kept classified. Zirin writes:

As has been true with the FBI since Hoover, give them a foothold, and they’ll take off their shoes and get cozy. Their classified mandate has since expanded to such euphemisms as “counter-terrorism” and “public safety.” It also expanded federal anti-terrorism task forces to include the dark-helmeted pepper-spray brigades, otherwise known as the campus police.

After a week of images showing black helmeted body armored police on US streets and campuses and questions being raised (the National Lawyers Guild filed a FOIA request with DHS and FBI) about possible national “agency” coordination in the almost simultaneous break-up of Occupy encampments, Zirin’s closing questions are appropriate.  

Given the personal character on display by these two individuals, [former Penn President Spanier and UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi] why should anyone trust that the classified meetings have stayed in the realm of “cyber theft” and intellectual property rights? What did the FBI tell Chancellor Katehi about how to deal with the peacefully assembled Occupiers? Was “counter-terrorism” advice given on how to handle her own students?

4 thoughts on “The FBI and UC’s Katehi

  1. The divide between staff and faculty/students is getting wider by the minute.

    Why is college so expensive?  Because staff has taken over and is growing like a cancer on our institutions of higher learning.

    The faculty and students are seen as a distasteful evil that the staff has to begrudgingly put up with, and to be violently repressed if they dare to think that University is about them.

    The staff at any university or college see students as walking ATMs, and faculty as a waste of that very money being collected by their ATMs (students).  Universities would be so much better off if they could somehow fire all the faculty, and ban students fro campus, but they can’t figure out a justification for sucking money out of students…

    No wonder University staff are so eager to direct paramilitary armed forces against those evil faculty and student rabble that think the university has anything to do with them.

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