David Noble: Peer Review, Where Are The Scholars?By SUZAN MAZUR
"Because findings published in peer-reviewed journals affect patient care, public policy and the authors’ academic
promotions, journal editors contend that new scientific information should be published in a peer-reviewed journal
before it is presented to doctors and the public. That message, however, has created a widespread misimpression that
passing peer review is the scientific equivalent of the Good Housekeeping seal of approval." – Lawrence K. Altman, M.D.
No, passing peer review is not the scientific equivalent of the Good Housekeeping seal of approval. . . I confess that
decades ago as a Hearst Magazines fledgling I would on occasion pass by, and with some curiosity, peek in the glassed-in Good Housekeeping Institute where the coveted seal of approval was given to mattresses able to withstand umpteen thrusts, to pantyhose, pots and
other utilitarian items. And how can I forget running into Johnny Weissmuller in the hall one day? The seal meant
something – even Tarzan wanted to be associated. But to help me flesh-out what scientific peer review IS exactly, I
contacted the Tarzan of science and technology historians, David F. Noble.
David Noble is currently a tenured professor in the Department of Social and Political Thought at York University in
Toronto. His activism about matters involving the politics of science first surfaced in the early 1970s when he says he
was "coerced" by the University of Rochester to sign away rights to his doctoral thesis in history in order to get his
PhD.
Noble's undergraduate degree is in history and chemistry from the University of Florida. On and off for 10 years he
worked as a biochemist at Tufts, Purdue and the University of Rochester Medical School.
Noble went on to teach at MIT in the Science, Technology and Society department, beginning in 1978; he was denied tenure
in 1984, fired "for his ideas and his actions in support of those ideas". Noble's ideas were at odds with the escalating
corporatization of universities and MIT was a university with tight corporate ties. He said the reason he was denied
tenure was political and described MIT's tenure process as "ad hoc".
MIT Institute Professor Noam Chomsky commented at the time that Noble was "too radical for MIT". Nevertheless, Noble
sued MIT for $1.5 million and although he later dropped the suit, he did manage to get the court to make public the case
documents and order MIT to review its tenure practices. The American Historical Society rallied to Noble's side,
condemning MIT's decision to dismiss him.
Noble moved next to the Smithsonian, where as curator of industrial automation he was fired again, this time for
including the only extant hammer used by the Luddites in the 19th century -- which also exposed his Luddite leanings
(Noble does not communicate by email, for example). At Drexel Institute he was tenured but chose to snip the ties after
five years and take a position at York University where he's been for almost 20 years -- although not without
controversy.
In fact, he's been a champion of social justice throughout his career. Acts of courage (partial list) include:
co-founding the National Coalition for Universities in the Public Interest with Ralph Nader in 1983 to address the
nightmare of universities selling out to corporations; attention to the issue of science and misogyny; and challenging religious bias in academia.
Regarding the latter, Noble, a Jew, protested York University's policy of cancelling classes on Jewish holidays by
cancelling his own classes on Muslim holidays, noting that to be fair, classes for all religions should really be
cancelled on respective holidays if Jewish holidays were observed. In 2004, Noble took the matter to the Ontario Human
Rights Commission, and York University was forced to get rid of its policy.
A second action involved Noble's grievance over reprisals from the first action, i.e., his academic reputation was damaged because he had challenged York University over its religious bias. In 2008, he was
awarded $2,500 as a settlement.
In a third action, still before the court, Noble says he suspects "money laundering" by various pro-Israel lobbying
organizations. He also says that if he wins the $19 million lawsuit, he will feel that he has "made a difference".
And then there was the lawsuit Noble brought and won regarding his being denied an endowed chair at Simon Fraser
University, established in the name of the founder of Canada's Social Democratic party -- an email was uncovered from
SFU's president to vice president saying, "I'd avoid this appointment like the plague." The humanities department at SFU
and the Canadian Association of University Teachers thought Noble was THE GUY for the job and stood by him, with CAUT
attesting that Noble's "academic freedom had been violated". Noble sued for "damages for loss of income, past and
future; damages for loss of reputation; aggravated damages and punitive damages and costs". In 2007 he received a public
apology from SFU plus an undisclosed sum of money.
David Noble is the author of these books: America by Design; Forces of Production; Smash Machines, not People; Digital Diploma Mills; A World Without Women; Progress Without People; The Religion of Technology; and Beyond the Promised Land.
Click to enlarge
My conversation with David Noble follows.
Suzan Mazur: I’ve been focusing on abuse inside the peer review system in recent articles, which has spiraled out of control – to the extent that at the low end we now find virtual death squads on Internet
blogs out to destroy scientists who have novel theories. They pretend to be battling creationism but their real job is
to censor the free flow of ideas on behalf of the science establishment. The science establishment rewards bloody deeds
like these by putting the chief assassin on the cover of The Humanist magazine, for example.
But you’ve written in "Regression on the Left" that the problem IS the peer review system itself. Why do you think so?
David Noble: When you say THE problem is the peer review system – the peer review system in my view is doing what it was designed to do -- censor. And filter. Peer review is a system of prior censorship, prior review – prior meaning prior to publication. So the
idea of abusing the peer review system sort of adds insult to injury, because the peer review system itself is
injurious.
Suzan Mazur: The first scientific journal was published in 1665 by the Royal Society of London. Would you briefly timeline events
from there, highlighting what the original plan was for a postwar National Science Foundation?
David Noble: My understanding is that peer review in its modern form is very recent, dating from World War II. The participants in
what we now call science were people with resources, usually independent wealth. When we go back to the Royal Society
we’re talking about a very small community of people.
What happens with World War II, for the first time, the taxpayer is underwriting the bulk of scientific research. That
never happened before. During WWII – this is in the United States – the government set up an operation called the Office
of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD), headed by Vannevar Bush, vice president of MIT. The government did this
to essentially enlist the support of non-governmental institutions, such as universities – private universities as well
as private corporations – to do research and development for the war effort.
The government’s own research laboratories were clearly inadequate for that task. So what they did was magnify the scope
of the state’s research and development efforts by bringing in these extra-governmental institutions.
The government invented the contract system. They contracted with private actors, private institutions to do the work
for the state for the war
Suzan Mazur: Prior to WWII scientists worked within the military and then after the war the government agreed to finance scientists
working out of their own labs.
David Noble: Right. Before the war most research was funded by private foundations. And there were many people in the scientific
community. . . I make very little distinction between the scientific community and the corporate community. Those are very close links.
Vannevar Bush, for example, was the vice president of MIT but he was also a director of AT, Raytheon, etc. Bush et al. didn’t want the government involved in funding of research because they understood correctly that if the government
was involved, then the government, and through the government, the taxpayer would have some say about what was done with
that money, what the research agenda would look like, etc. There was real resistance throughout the 1920s, 1930s to the
state funding research precisely for that reason.
Suzan Mazur: You already had the National Academy of Sciences.
David Noble: In terms of the scale of operations, that was very small. WWII was the watershed. What happened was the invention of
the contract system by the OSRD and there was almost immediately controversy over who was getting grants for these
contracts. Since the makeup of this committee was pretty much representative of the elite universities and also the
largest corporations, they got the lion share of contract work.
Many outside that charmed circle said this was unequal, a privileged allocation of resources, etc. University of
Nebraska said: Why don’t we get some of this money, why does it all go to Harvard and Stanford and Chicago? And small
companies who were not in that charmed circle made the same complaints. This controversy raged during WWII.
The second question had to do with patents, and I’m not going off on a tangent here. This is all related. What the
companies did – and this is extortion – they said yes, we will build the tanks for the government but we want the patents on the work we develop. And if you
don’t give us the patents, then we’re not going to do it. And so the OSRD say fine, we’ll give you the patents. That was
another very, very contentious issue.
Again, they were getting patents, monopoly rights to products developed by the taxpayer. So all of this is raging.
By about 1943-1944, there was discussion about what the postwar scientific establishment would look like. By this time,
the corporations and the universities and the scientists who had been reluctant to take federal funds for fear of
taxpayer involvement were now so enamored of the largess that they didn’t want to give it up. And they said, we can't go
backwards -- this is the new game -- we are going to be taking taxpayer money. But we don't want the taxpayer involved
in what we do. This is a fundamental challenge to the whole. . .
Suzan Mazur: And this is what exists today.
David Noble: Yes, but what happened first is that Harley Kilgore, a senator from West Virginia, set up a plan for a
"National Science Foundation" whereby the taxpayer -- an ordinary citizen, a non-scientist -- would sit on committees
and panels overseeing the allocation of research funds.
In response to that, Vannevar Bush and his friends put together a counterproposal calling for a "National Research
Foundation" -- which became more or less what we have in today's National Science Foundation.
The Vannevar Bush et al. legislation said essentially that science would be funded by the taxpayer but controlled by scientists. Again,
scientists – this is important to emphasize – are not simply scientists, but scientists and the corporations they work
for.
Suzan Mazur: Also, to get this government funding scientists have to agree to do a few things for the government. Ensure
national security and the health and economic security of the nation. There's a quid pro quo. It's a way of further silencing scientists.
David Noble: Well it's certainly been used that way. What I'm saying is something simpler. There was a problem with the
way the committees and panels overseeing the allocation of research funds would be set up. The problem had a name and
the name is DEMOCRACY. The fundamental tenet of the democratic system is that the taxpayers funding something have
control over what's done with the money.
Harry Truman said it was the most undemocratic piece of legislation he'd ever seen and vetoed it. It went through minor
changes and became what we have today -- a scientific establishment run by scientists with very little political
oversight. The key thing is how they kept the taxpayer out was through peer review.
Suzan Mazur: It wasn’t until the 1960s that science journals were turned into a money-making racket when the federal government
gave its blessing to a per-page fee for publication. Scientists were not only writing articles for the journals for free but now there was a per-page fee for publication.
Then the number of science journals increased leading to competition between journals and to mediocre science.
Are you saying such a system should be scrapped? Should the peer review journal system be scrapped?
David Noble: I think so. Oh yeah.
Suzan Mazur: Should anything replace it?
David Noble: If the taxpayer is paying for the research, why shouldn't there be a representative array of citizens on
all scientific panels? And again, going back to your first question, the purpose of peer review is prior censorship and
I believe very strongly that if people want to criticize something that you write or I write, they have every right to
do that AFTER it's published not before it's published. To me that's the critical issue.
Suzan Mazur: People have a right to have their views out there
David Noble: Right. Now what happened with peer review that began within this establishment to keep democracy out then became the
gold standard for everything. So, for example, I’ve published seven books, I’ve published countless articles, but I’ve never ever nor will I ever publish in a peer-reviewed journal or a peer-reviewed publication ever.
According to my university I have no publications. This is literally true. The only thing now that is reviewed are
peer-reviewed publications. And the fact that none of my work is peer reviewed -- it might be considered, but
secondarily.
Suzan Mazur: Do you have tenure? Does that make you ineligible for tenure?
David Noble: No, fortunately for me I’m close to the exit. I’m a tenured full professor. But that’s the situation now in every
field.
Suzan Mazur: Has it affected your salary?
David Noble: No no no. What I’m saying is for the people coming through now, this is the game.
Suzan Mazur: Getting back to the current dilemma, a secretive peer review system with hundreds of thousands of private for-profit
and professional society journal editors, editorial board members and reviewers of scientific publications -- none of
whom get paid. And a scientific journal publisher like Wiley, for example – a publicly listed company – with $1.6
billion in revenue for 2009.
Elsevier, the science publisher -- also publicly-traded -- puts out 2,000 journals and describes itself as "a global community
of 7,000 journal editors, 70,000 editorial board members, 300,000 reviewers and 600,000 authors". All working for free?
Isn’t it strange that so many busy scientists write these staggeringly complex journal papers for free, that they pay
for their articles to be published and thousands of dollars extra if they want the public to read them, even though it’s
the public who funds the research? And that journals continue to operate in secrecy about revenues and operating costs,
with some of them now making millions of dollars? Isn’t it strange? They work as slaves, basically.
Is there a gaming of the system going on?
David Noble: What I’m saying is these commercial interests have insinuated themselves into the professional evaluation system. Why
do people publish? They publish primarily to promote their own careers. Because that’s the measure.
Most of what’s published shouldn’t even be published. It’s published for that purpose. And very few people read it.
Suzan Mazur: Very few people can read it.
David Noble: Or have any interest in reading it. Let me go back to something really simple. When I got my PhD in 1974 from the
University of Rochester, I was required to give my dissertation to University Microfilms – a private company that
processes and sells dissertations of theses.
Suzan Mazur: Did you have to pay for this?
David Noble: No. I didn’t have to pay, but in order to get a PhD from the University of Rochester I had to sign a commercial
contract with University Microfilms giving them my dissertation, and I received nothing from them. And they were going
to sell it.
Suzan Mazur: Incredible.
David Noble: So I said to the University of Rochester, I’m not going to sign the contract. And the University of
Rochester said to me -- then you cannot get your degree.
Suzan Mazur: Incredible.
David Noble: This was in 1973 and 1974.
Suzan Mazur: And how did that play out?
David Noble: What we're talking about is the insinuation of a commercial enterprise into the credentialing process. It
turned out that that was standard in every institution of higher education in the United States.
Suzan Mazur: You got the PhD.
David Noble: Anyone who has gone through that gauntlet – you’re done, you’re finished with the thesis. The margins are correct.
You’ve got the right font. You’re done. You’re out of there. And they say: "NOW SIGN THIS".
And I said, "NO. I’M NOT GOING TO SIGN IT."
And they said, "IF YOU DON’T SIGN IT, YOU DON'T GET THE DEGREE."
Well, that's called coercion. So I signed the contract.
Pressure was brought to bear on University Microfilms that they should at least be forced to give royalties. And that
did come to pass.
I've never gotten any royalties, but the point is, that’s the way they finessed it. The university said this is an aid to us because of bibliographical
control – that this private company is doing this. A private company had insinuated itself in the credentialing process.
And that’s what you’re talking about.
Suzan Mazur: Isn't even stranger that bankers run the boards of these big scientific publishing companies, like at
Wiley, for example, where the CEO of Moody's and the former CFO of Dow Jones, etc., etc., are on the board? The content
of the publication is left up to the journal editors and reviewers, meaning, in essence, the corporate publisher is
passing along to the public information directly untested by it and endorsed by the bankers.
Here’s a note from Wiley’s website:
"We are responsible to our shareholders, who should realize a fair return on their investments. Investors can rely on a
highly capable leadership team and an independent Board of Directors distinguished by their commitment to effective
governance, ethical behavior, and integrity in all that we do."
Wiley also says:
"We are responsible to our authors and partners who collaborate with us to create high-quality products and services,
and who deserve appropriate recognition and compensation for their efforts. We are responsible to our colleagues whom we
respect as human beings first, professionals second."
BUT THEY DON’T SAY THEY DON’T PAY THE SCIENTISTS!
David Noble: Right. That’s the system. Just like they didn’t pay people who were producing PhDs, which became the commodity,
essentially, that was being sold.
Suzan Mazur: But don’t you see that as a real problem, where the board of directors of these major scientific publishers making
billions of dollars -- publicly-traded companies – are bankers?
David Noble: What people would say is, well, these commercial enterprises publish our work. And the reason they get away with it is
because they’ve implicated themselves, insinuated themselves into the credentialing and professional evaluation process.
So that every academic, every scientist has to publish.
Suzan Mazur: But these bankers don’t know the content and they’re passing it along to the public. That’s the problem.
David Noble: It’s one of the problems. You say these editors are saying we don’t get paid. What I would say to you is, the way they
get paid is in their career advancement. That’s what we’re talking about. The insinuation of these commercial interests
into that process. That’s how it works.
Suzan Mazur: Some think that as hard copy journals begin to go extinct in the Digital Age, peer review complications will also fall
to the wayside. But even online open-access journals are peer reviewed. And authors who get rejected without
satisfactory explanation will still have no recourse but to submit to another journal.
Would you say this constitutes a violation of public forum law – content-based speech restriction – because journal
editors and reviewers are publicly funded scientists?
David Noble: I don’t know about law – a specific statute.
Suzan Mazur: Is this a First Amendment issue, something Congress might need to investigate? Because scientists are publicly funded.
To not give a proper explanation for why a paper is being rejected. . .
David Noble: Let’s put it in a larger context -- 90% of research done in universities, even private universities – is
paid by the taxpayer. Any company can come to the university, lay down some lunch money and leverage that 90% and in
exchange get contractual obligations for prior review before publication. Non-disclosure agreements. Licensing rights.
That’s the whole system.
Suzan Mazur: It’s all for sale.
David Noble: IT’S ALL FOR SALE.
In 1980, the Birch Bayh-Robert Dole amendment to the Patent Act
was passed. This is another watershed. The Bayh-Dole amendment laid to rest the controversy that began in WWII over the
patenting of publicly-funded research. Up until 1980, it remained ambiguous.
What the Bayh-Dole amendment said was that the universities automatically now own all patent rights on publicly-funded
research. What that meant was that universities were now in the patent-holding business and they could license private
industry and in that way give them the rights over the results of the research funded by the taxpayer. It was the
biggest give-away in American history.
Most scientists work for universities. Universities from 1980 on established intellectual property policies which said
that they universities as institutions, as corporations, own the research done by employees. This is what private
companies had been doing since the turn of the 20th century.
You’re a researcher at a university. You do some research and you decide that there’s something in there that’s of value
– the university owns it. And you can maybe cut a deal with the university. The university wants to sell the rights and
maybe they’ll give you a little piece of it.
If a private company has put in some money to that research effort, they have a contract that gives them rights. One of
the rights is PRE-PUBLICATION REVIEW. They want to see the research, check it out for anything that's commercially
viable and they can censor. They can say, we don't want you saying anything about that. THIS IS ROUTINE. THIS IS THE
STATE-OF-THE-ART RIGHT NOW.
Suzan Mazur: Incredible. Is there a way of breaking up the "academic mafias" so that discovery and the free flow of ideas prevails
and individual researchers have a shot at being funded and having their ideas taken seriously?
David Noble: Well, you'd have to revoke the Bayh-Dole amendment.
One stop shopping on this is a book by Jennifer Washburn called Universities Inc. – it’s a good chronology of this whole sea change with Bayh-Dole, etc. This is an important part of the story. From
every angle, the journals, University Microfilms, all of the commercialization of research – from every angle there’s
commercial usurpation of the whole scientific enterprise.
Suzan Mazur: The Wall Street Journal ran a shocking piece in 2005 discussing the fact that scientists were spending even more money hiring ghostwriters to write their papers in an
attempt to "pile up high-profile publications, the main currency of advancement". According to the WSJ, these ghostwriters whipping up journal articles for the scientists were sometimes employed by communications firms
charging $30,000, and the firms were part of larger companies like Thompson Corp. and Reed Elsevier. Would you comment?
David Noble: Well, it doesn’t surprise me at all. The pharmaceutical industry, they write the articles. There’s a guy named David
Healy, a very well known, he’s a psychiatrist. He’s an expert on SSRIs – antidepressants. He’s written a lot about this.
What happens is the pharmaceutical companies actually write the articles and then put the academic’s name on it – which
is similar to what you’re saying. How can they get away with that? Well, the academic gets a publication out of it, even
though it’s not anything they wrote.
Suzan Mazur: Right. But the nuances are very important in these papers and so this is a very dangerous practice.
David Noble: Well of course. I’ll tell you the story about my attempt to get my first book published. I’m a historian not a
scientist. I wrote a book about the corporatization, the commercialization of science called America by Design. I sent it to Princeton University Press, MIT Press, Oxford University Press and a number of others. They ALL rejected it
after sending it out to anonymous peer reviewers who had this to say and that to say. Then I sent it to an editor of
historical works at Knopf, a private company, who liked the book and made a contract with me – no peer review. The book
was published by Knopf. After the book was published, the same academic presses put in bids for the paperback rights and
it was published under the imprint of Oxford University Press.
I did four books like that with Knopf. Knopf published the hardback and Oxford published the paperback. Knopf published
without any peer review. The lesson for me was learned very early. Peer review would have blocked the publication of my
book.
Suzan Mazur: You’ ve said "[I]t is perhaps time for the Left once again to put science in perspective." That the Left criticizing
the informed critics of science as participating in "anti-science" is a sign that the Left really needs to "return to
the revolution". Would you comment further?
David Noble: What I mean there is, and this is what I outline in that article, the Left grows out of a critique of religion in the
beginning of the 19th and end of the 18th century. And science was the substitute. They substituted science for
religion.
Suzan Mazur: You also say those roots are intertwined with mysogynism.
David Noble: Ok. That’s another issue. Let’s keep it simple. The point here is that science became like God. But since WWII, in
part because of Hiroshima and other events, other products of science, critique of science became a very serious matter.
And the Left was very much involved in looking anew at looking at science as political. And scientists as human beings
and as people with interests, etc. So they de-mythologized science.
It went by many different names. Social construction of science, whatever. For decades people were, and still in some
quarters are, looking very critically at this whole enterprise. And then along comes this global warming campaign. And
you have these people like George Monbiot and others acting as if there had never been any critical examination of
science.
Al Gore – his whole theme is propaganda. A consensus of scientists. Well, when you have a consensus of scientists, that
should set off alarms. That scientists shouldn’t be consensual. There should be all sorts of controversy in science.
Suzan Mazur: You’ve also got scientists in evolutionary biology who pound on the creationists because they don’t have fresh
discoveries themselves. What they’re doing is making an industry out of bashing the creationists – instead of improving
the science. That’s what’s happening on the science blogs, where you get these virtual death squads opposing any science
that veers from Darwin orthodoxy. Characters purporting to be atheist scientists who are actually violent Darwin
religious cultists censoring the free flow of ideas. Making statements like, "I'm always happy to see a fellow hang
himself"
That’s the peer review that’s now popular. It’s degenerated into a bloody massacre.
David Noble: Tribalism is rampant. The idea that people still hold is that science is this community of inquirers and that they
review one another’s work has never been true. It’s always been mythical. . . .
The peer review thing, the reason why it works is because people’s careers are implicated in it. Anyone who wants to be
promoted or get a job has to SUBMIT to this regime. I never did But I’m the exception. And I come out of a different moment in time perhaps. There’s no way
I could probably get a PhD today. There’s certainly no way I could have become an academic. No way. That’s what’s going
on now. People might have concerns about this, but they have no choice but to SUBMIT.
That’s what they’re told. So those anonymous peer reviewers have absolute decisive power over people's professional lives.
Suzan Mazur: So you're saying that one way we can change this is to get the public onto the National Science Foundation
and government science panels.
David Noble: Yes.
My criticism of peer review, which for me is no big deal, turns out to be unique. Nobody’s talking about this. When
George Monbiot attacks Alexander Cockburn by saying that the stuff Cockburn is referring to was not peer reviewed, and I say what kind of an idiot is Monbiot.
David Dixon was a writer for Science and Nature. . . There was a time when there were science journalists who were alert to this and understood the politics of
science. But when this whole climate change thing came down the pike, all of these self-interested people – Monbiot had
a book to sell. All the environmentalists are getting probably millions of dollars in foundation money to peddle this.
And they’re still doing it even though the whole thing has collapsed. And it’s completely disqualifying the public by
saying it all depends on the IPPC. It all depends on peer-reviewed journals. That’s what they were saying.
When you look at all this sordid stuff at East Anglia University about climate change. People begin asking: And this is the foundation of the whole game? It's like the Left just went to sleep.
Suzan Mazur: People have been bought off.
David Noble: Right. And when Alex Cockburn and I and Denis Rancourt raised questions about it, we were just pilloried by the Left,
which is mindboggling.
Suzan Mazur: It continues. The attack by the so-called Left regarding the questioning of science and peer review. They
say this is the system we have – you think we’re going to throw away thousands and thousands of papers and start from
scratch?
David Noble: Well the whole thing’s corrupt.
Suzan Mazur: Yes. We’d better pull out of the nose dive as soon as we possibly can. No scientist I’ve spoken to thinks that is
doable or a good idea.
David Noble: Peer review makes things so easy for people who are evaluating. All they have to say is that’s a peer-reviewed
article. End of story. Gold. They don’t have to actually read the stuff.
So, suppose I’m up for promotion and the dean says, oh look he’s got six peer-reviewed publications. Well they’ve been
peer-reviewed, I don’t have to read them. You see what I’m saying? Takes them off the hook.
Suzan Mazur: It’s frightening, very dangerous.
David Noble: Let me tell you this, you’ll be amused. York University is the third-largest university in Canada. This past year they
amalgamated a number of different faculties into The Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies, which is the
biggest academic faculty in Canada. And they hired this guy with much fanfare from outside to become the new dean.
The president announced his appointment with a lot of trumpets. And he’s described as a renowned scholar of Chinese
history. Well, I said that’s interesting. I wonder who this guy is. And I start looking. A renowned scholar of Chinese
history – let’s see what he’s written. I couldn’t find anything. And I said, this is strange.
I happen to know some real historians of China. I called them up and asked, have you ever heard of this guy? They said
no. The long and the short of it is – the guy is virtually unpublished in the field of Chinese history. He’s unknown in
the field.
So a group of faculty took out an anonymous Gmail account called York Faculty Concerned About the Future of York
University and exposed the fraud, accused the president of fraud. Here’s what happened – NOTHING.
He was made the dean anyway without faculty opposition. Meanwhile, the university hired outside lawyers to sue Google,
Bell and Rogers, the main Internet Providers, to try to get the identity of the people who did the expose. That’s what
happened.
But the most important thing is there was no outcry. That was it. The most egregious academic fraud I’d ever
experienced. Why was there no outcry? It was all confirmed. The university said well it was a mistake by the media
relations people, acknowledging that the guy had no publications. He’s still the dean. He’s the guy who’s reviewing
everybody else’s CVs and dossiers for promotion and hiring.
Suzan Mazur: Did they put him in charge because he’d be compliant?
David Noble: I think there are other reasons, but the point is he has no scholarly credentials.
Suzan Mazur: Incredible.
David Noble: It is incredible. But the point is he’s the dean. That’s it. Why was there no uproar? And here’s the reason. Because
all the faculty have no scholarly credibility either. There’s no other explanation. They’re all playing these games.
WHERE ARE THE REAL SCHOLARS? There aren’t any. Everyone’s either broken or bought. There’s complete conformity within the community.
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Suzan Mazur is the author of Altenberg 16: An Exposé of the Evolution Industry. Her interest in evolution began with a flight from Nairobi into Olduvai Gorge to interview the late paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey. Because of ideological struggles, the Kenyan-Tanzanian border was closed, and Leakey was the only reason authorities in Dar es Salaam agreed to give landing clearance. The meeting followed discovery by Leakey and her team of the 3.6 million-year-old hominid footprints at Laetoli. Suzan Mazur's reports have since appeared in the Financial Times, The Economist, Forbes, Newsday, Philadelphia Inquirer, Archaeology, Connoisseur, Omni and others, as well as on PBS, CBC and MBC. She has been a guest on McLaughlin, Charlie Rose and various Fox Television News programs. Email: sznmzr @ aol.com