The University of Austin Goes to Hungary
By: Jack McCordick
With techno music thumping faintly in the background, two infamously âcanceledâ American intellectuals drooled over Hungarian women, celebrated the way the countryâs favorable exchange rates have kept the cheap booze flowingâone of the two men announced that he was on his ninth drinkâand lampooned the mayor of Portland (â[Heâs] a lunatic, heâs got pronouns in his bioâ). They discussed the visiting manâs plans for his stay in Budapest, which naturally included a face-to-face with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor OrbĂĄnâs political director (âDude, heâs great, youâre gonna love himâ). And, serious students of vigorous debate and meticulous empiricism that they are, they capped off the evening with a probing discussion of some of societyâs thorniest questionsâincluding whether, as one of the men put it, âItâs the woke movementâs goal to, like, transition all gay people.â
The two canceled men in question were Ilya Shapiro, who abandoned his new job at Georgetown Law School last spring after an investigation spurred by a racist tweet ended with his sinecure not being taken from him by force, and Peter Boghossian, who left his position as a philosophy professor at Portland State in September 2021. Two months after Boghossian released a widely shared resignation letter arguing that âilliberalismâ had âfully swallowed the academy,â he became a founding faculty fellow of the University of Austin, an educational venture dedicated to restoring the âclassically liberal universityâ and âreclaiming a place in higher education for freedom of inquiry and civil discourse.â
Joining a time-honored tradition, both Shapiro and Boghossian have parlayed their sympathetic treatment in some quarters of the media into what can best be described as a âcancel culture speaking tour.â They made a joint appearance in March at a Princeton panel titled âMob Rule: The Illiberal Leftâs Threat to Campus Discourse.â Last week, they ran into each other in Budapest, and after Boghossian suggested Shapiro record their conversation as a podcast, the two settled downâBoghossian with a gin and tonic, Shapiro with a Hungarian dessert wineâfor a âfull, unvarnished discussion.â âIâd never [recorded a podcast] before, partly out of hesitation at the âprocessâ that might be involved, but then I threw caution to the wind, pressed the big red button on Voice Memo on my iphone, and here we are,â Shapiro tweeted on Wednesday.
Both Shapiro and Boghossian were in Hungary as guests of the Mathias Corvinus Collegium, or MCC, a small, private educational institution run by OrbĂĄn allies with a semi-explicit mission of training a cadre of future right-wing elites. The school, which OrbĂĄn recently granted more than $1.7 billion, now controls assets worth more than the countryâs entire higher education budget, according to reporting from The New York Times. It has wielded this windfall to attract high-profile figures in media and academia from across the Atlantic: Senior visiting fellows like Boghossian earn up to 10,000 euros (around $9,700) a month, or 11 times the average Hungarian assistant professorâs salary. Never let it be said that taking a blowtorch to democracy isnât lucrative.
In recent years, much ink has been spilled over OrbĂĄnâs success in courting many of the American rightâs explicitly post-, anti-, and illiberal intellectuals. But what about some of our countryâs soi-disant âclassical liberalsââthe sort of thinker whose stated enemy is the putative illiberalism of âcancel culture,â who claims to cherish free speech and open debate, and who starts entirely new universities dedicated to the âunfettered pursuit of truthâ as their cause cĂ©lĂšbre? That they too have been successfully wooed by a proudly illiberal state whose soft-authoritarian leader has presided over a precipitous decline in academic freedom and free speech is further evidence of the utter debasement of the species of intellectual that Osita Nwanevu, writing in these pages in 2020, called the âreactionary liberal.â
A self-described liberal who âcanât stand Republicans,â Boghossian considers the left-right divide to hold little explanatory power. âItâs no longer liberal versus conservative. Itâs become authoritarian versus anti-authoritarian,â he said during a recent interview with a representative of MCC. âItâs become people like myself, who value the liberty of others, and the people who want to rob us of that liberty.â Anyone with a passing familiarity with Boghossianâs work can tell you that the liberty-robbers he has in mind are those who embody the hidebound orthodoxies of wokeness and identity politics. Unlike the United States, Hungary, in Boghossianâs funhouse-mirror telling, is a country that actually values liberal freedoms. Itâs a place where, as he put it in a shamefully obsequious tweet, âall sides still value debate, argumentation across divides, & donât have stigmas around âplatformingâ political opponents.â Throughout the latest parliamentary election, the Hungarian opposition party was offered a total of five minutes of airtime on state television.
What does Boghossian make of OrbĂĄnâs 2018 decision to ban the countryâs gender studies programs? âWhat other alternatives would OrbĂĄn have? There is no alternative. You have to defund these ideologically driven programs,â Boghossian told Mandiner, a pro-government magazine whose publisher is also a managing director at MCC. âAnd if they donât like it, Iâd tell them to piss off.â Startling stuff from an alleged âopen debateâ ultra, to be sure.
As his conversation with Shapiro progressed, it became clearer that Boghossianâs affection for Hungary had less to do with a high-minded commitment to âthe liberty of othersâ and more to do with, well, his own feelings. âYou know when you go to a place and you can just feel it? It feels comfortable, safe,â Boghossian tells Shapiro. (In May, the chair of MCC, who is also OrbĂĄnâs political director, told The Guardian that American right-wingers âsee Hungary as a conservative safe space.â) As Boghossian describes it: âHungary is a place where people go if theyâve had enough and theyâre fucking sick of it, or they want a taste for where itâs like where they can say anything that they want without being accused of anything heinous. Iâve experienced nothing but freedom here.⊠This place is like paradise to me.â In vino veritas indeed.
Boghossian isnât the only intellectual involved with the founding of the University of Austin to have been fĂȘted by MCC. Last fall, Niall Ferguson, a founding trustee of the (unaccredited) university, addressed MCCâs opening ceremony, with OrbĂĄn himself in the audience. Ferguson, who had to step down from his position running a Stanford campus speaker series after he was caught plotting to do opposition research on a left-leaning studentâagain, an interesting sideline for someone committed to academic freedomâbreezily dismissed American criticisms of the Hungarian governmentâs crackdowns on academic freedom and free speech, which have included hounding Hungaryâs best university out of the country and placing other educational institutions under the control of OrbĂĄnâs Fidesz party or its allies.
âItâs becoming harder and harder to âdare to thinkâ in many of the academic institutions from which the criticism of Hungaryâs government most loudly emanates,â Ferguson said, referring to American universities. This he followed with a breathless, tired litany of âtrigger warnings, safe spaces, preferred pronouns, checked privileges, [and] microaggressions.â
Then thereâs Joshua Katz, an erstwhile Princeton professor whose tenure was revoked this spring following an investigation into his handling of a sexual relationship with a student. Katz, a Democrat and another self-described âclassical liberal,â is a founding member of the University of Austinâs board of advisers and taught at the schoolâs inaugural âForbidden Coursesâ program this summer. In February, Katz was brought to a conference at MCC and spoke on an all-white panel on âWhat We Teach About Race and Gender,â which included The American Conservativeâs Rod Dreher and the Manhattan Instituteâs Heather MacDonald. I have a hard time grasping what qualified Katz, a classicist with a background in linguistics, as an authority on the panelâs subject matter, other than his summer 2020 letter calling a group of Black student activists âa small local terrorist organizationâ and his prurient interest in female undergrads. But leave it to Katz to inform us that the panelâs conversation âwould be nearly unthinkable on any progressive (read: in many ways, regressive) American college or university campus today.â Perhaps thatâs because some U.S. colleges still employ actual gender studies scholars.
Summing up his sojourn in a chipper dispatch for The New Criterion, Katz admitted that the term âilliberal democracyââan arguably inaccurate label for what OrbĂĄn is doing, since his targets are both liberalism and democracyâpained his sensibilities. Yet any lingering doubts were quelled during his âeighty-minute (!) and wholly unscripted(!)â conversation with OrbĂĄn and Kaitlin Novak, Hungaryâs current president. OrbĂĄn and Novakâs arguments, Katz wrote, âwould not have surprised most Americans a decade or two agoâbefore Obergefell, the ubiquity of Critical Race Theory, and the daily moves of the progressive elite to trash civilization in the name of social justice, a concept that is often indistinguishable from antisocial injustice.â The New Criterion titled Katzâs article, âFree speech in an âilliberal democracyâ?â You can probably guess how he answered the question.
Whatâs so comic about Boghossian, Ferguson, and Katzâs credulous, historically illiterate P.R. for a would-be autocrat is its incongruity with their self-styling as embattled heirs of Enlightenment rationalism and critique. Ferguson began his convocation speech at MCC by quoting Immanuel Kantâs celebrated dictum âDare to know,â and at the end of Shapiroâs podcast, Boghossian argued that âthe West has undergone a radical departure from Enlightenment norms within the past 20 years.â (âWas 9/11 relevant to that process?â was Shapiroâs galaxy-brainedâand perhaps unintentionally poignantâresponse.)
Tucker Carlson painted himself in a similar light during a speech in Budapest at the 2021 MCC festival, claiming that âEnlightenment liberalismâ formed the basis of his politics. That all of these figures have identified themselves in this way exemplifies a phenomenon the writer John Ganz captured in a 2018 essay on Jordan Peterson, one of these menâs many ideological confreres and another notable guest of OrbĂĄnâs. âThe strange paradox we face today,â Ganz writes, âis that the Enlightenment is being invoked like a talismanic object to thwart the very questioning of political hierarchies and norms that, for Enlightenment thinkers, was necessary for humanityâs emergence from tradition and subordination.â
Given that the University of Austin was supposedly founded to restore âthe enlightenment values that made our civilization what it is,â whatâs to be made of these men and their fondness for Hungarian illiberalism? Itâs probably too early to tell. We did, however, get a glimpse in the form of a New York Post profile of three students who took part in the universityâs first âForbidden Coursesâ series over the summer. To hear the students tell it, the supposedly verboten topics included criticisms of Islam, support for Israel, and âother controversial issues, like whether transgender women are women,â as one put it.
Far from âforbidden,â these are relatively ubiquitous complaints, frequently expressed by some of the most powerful people and institutions in our society. Theyâve also been at the center of some of the most serious, nonphantasmagoric attacks on academic freedom in recent years, including Trump Education Secretary Betsy DeVosâs threat to withdraw federal funding from a Duke-UNC Middle East Studies program for its alleged emphasis on the âpositive aspects of Islam,â the Israel lobbyâs many successful attempts to marginalize or silence academic criticisms of Israel, and recent legislative pushes to defund or severely restrict teaching about gender and sexuality at the university level. Coincidentally, Islamophobia, Zionism, and transphobia also happen to be fairly popular in Viktor OrbĂĄnâs Hungary.
For decades, many right-wing criticisms of higher education were suffused with a kind of fevered bloodlust (âIf they donât like it, Iâd tell them to piss offâ). But now itâs inarguable that reckless nihilism has become the dominant strain. If Boghossian feels freest to speak his mind in a country that has systematically dismantled its democratic institutions, and if Katz feels freest speaking on an all-white panel on race and gender in a country that banned its gender studies programs, we should ask ourselves: What does the âfreedomâ in academic freedom and free speech really mean to its self-appointed defenders?
From The New Republic, October 16, 2022