Articles by Malcolm A. Kline

Malcolm A. Kline is the Executive Director of Accuracy in Academia. If you would like to comment on this article, e-mail contact@academia.org.
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The Bones Demand Justice

Although independent scholars generally agree that the death toll from communism in the Twentieth Century runs a staggering 100 million, that sad historical milestone has yet to gain widespread acknowledgement in America’s public schools let alone in her universities.

Faculty Lounge

Ivory Curtain Opens Crack

Believe it or not, one of the University of California campuses is actually featuring some free market stalwarts in a conference.

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Academic Freedom For Who?

Left-wing radicals throughout history have at least one thing in common: They like to claim that their own freedom of speech is endangered while endangering the first amendment rights of others.

Faculty Lounge

Rounding Up Usual Suspects

The Education Establishment appears to be engaged in a similar exercise when it tries to explain dropout rates and other such problematic measurements.

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Rulers for Radicals

Truly the major media have only scratched the surface, when they have even felt the itch, of the influence of radical left-wing groups in academia.

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VAT or Crock

Believe it or not, we found an academic who doesn’t like a tax. Usually, the total number of such tenured scholars would fill…my office.

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Quotas on Common Sense

After saving the quota over merit system at the University of Michigan, Lee C. Bollinger went on to Columbia University to preserve its traditions. Unfortunately, he’s succeeding.

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Sleeping With The Enemy

A large chunk of the blame for the ever-deteriorating state of education goes to some of academia’s favorite targets.

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Importance of Being Elena

Accuracy in Academia executive director Mal Kline spoke on U. S. Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan’s extensive academic record at a rally sponsored by Young Americans for Freedom on July 1, 2010.

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Green Grow the Children

Green used to mean young, inexperienced and naïve. Arguably, it still does. “According to a poll by Habitat Heroes, one in three American schoolchildren fears that the earth will not exist when he grows up,” Ashley Thorne writes in the June 2010 issue of The Education Reporter.