[AISWorld] Question: do we really want to risk turning AIS into a political lobbying organization?

Hossein Seif Zadeh hossein.work at icloud.com
Thu Feb 2 21:51:14 EST 2017


I am familiar with that phrase, and I would respond by “the horse is just getting warm up”.

Having said that, may I humbly suggest we refrain from using local phrases to prove a point (whether sarcastically or directly), as they are very prone to mis-interpretation and misunderstanding.  I think the topic is important enough to warrant our clearest form of communication.





> On 1 Feb 2017, at 3:13 am, Kappelman, Leon <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu> wrote:
> 
> Here in Texas, the cowboys have a saying "when your horse is dead, get off it."
> 
> That said, I feel obligated to point out that the members of all the persecuted people in the history of mankind take serious offense at your trivialization of that word.
> 
> - From my Swiss Army knife - Please excuse typos -
> Leon A. Kappelman, Ph.D., Professor of Information Systems
> Director Emeritus, Information Systems Research Center
> College of Business, University of North Texas
> Voice: 940-565-4698<tel:940-565-4698>   kapp at unt.edu<mailto:kapp at unt.edu>
> 
> 
> On Jan 31, 2017, at 7:56 AM, Prashant Palvia <pcpalvia at uncg.edu<mailto:pcpalvia at uncg.edu>> wrote:
> 
> Dear Leon,
> 
> Thanks for writing again.  Your emails are motivating others to write about this topic.  I am grateful to you for keeping this discussion alive.
> 
> I suggest that AIS leadership take a vote of its members denouncing the President's executive order - just like ACM has done.  We cannot keep silent at this time of national crisis which threatens the American values.
> 
> In fact, I urge all AIS members to write on this forum asking AIS to take a vote.
> 
> And Leon, protesting persecution is not political.
> 
> Prashant Palvia
> 
> On Mon, Jan 30, 2017 at 11:49 PM, Kappelman, Leon <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu<mailto:Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu>> wrote:
> You said “We should all speak up when politics interferes with these basic human rights.”  Protesting a government policy is political by definition.
> 
> PS, legally speaking, I’m not too sure anyone’s “academic freedom and basic human rights” have been infringed upon anyway.  No doubt, some folks were inconvenienced over the weekend and the bureaucracy fumbled a bit as it often does, but all the problems appear to have been resolved.  Yes, some uncertainty remains, but exception processes are being worked on.  Sure, some reacted fearfully (and understandably so given the abundance of hyperbolic media, politicians, and special interest groups), but many felt safer by these actions too.  Should we be vigilant?  Of course, very much so.  We remain a nation of laws with, thanks to the wisdom of our founders, a relatively weak executive kept in check by the courts, legislature, free albeit biased press, and a vocal citizenry.  But I see only downside for AIS if we drag it into the political arena, risking its tax exemption and reputation.
> 
> 
> From: UNCG [mailto:pcpalvia at uncg.edu<mailto:pcpalvia at uncg.edu>]
> Sent: Monday, January 30, 2017 9:21 PM
> To: Kappelman, Leon <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu<mailto:Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu>>
> Cc: AISWorld <aisworld at lists.aisnet.org<mailto:aisworld at lists.aisnet.org>>
> 
> Subject: Re: [AISWorld] Question: do we really want to risk turning AIS into a political lobbying organization?
> 
> Leon keeps making it a political issue when it is not. I don't understand why. If there was curtailing of academic freedom during previous administrations, I am sure AIS members would have spoken up.
> 
> In any case, I am thankful to Leon as he raised the subject and started the conversation. It brought to light that, in general, AIS members value academic freedom and human rights. Perhaps, discreetly it was his intention.
> 
> Thank you, Leon.
> 
> Prashant Palvia
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> On Jan 30, 2017, at 9:01 PM, "Kappelman, Leon" <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu<mailto:Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu>> wrote:
> It is wonderful that we as individuals have the freedom to protest and speak freely.  I’m simply saying that it’s best that we all keep our political and religious beliefs out of AIS official policies and actions.  But if we think doing otherwise is a good idea, I strongly suggest we get a legal opinion or two before we do something that will jeopardize our tax exemption.
> 
> BTW, was it an AIS issue when President Obama banned Iraqi immigration to the US for six months?  Seems political preferences are somewhat at play with the current brouhaha.  And I’m all for every AIS member’s political preferences.  My point is simply that we should not use AIS to further them.
> 
> Watch out for that confounding, hyperbole-prone camel with the big nose too (-‘
> 
> "He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." – John Stuart Mill
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Leon A. Kappelman, Ph.D.
> Professor of Information Systems<http://www.cob.unt.edu/profiles/112>
> Director Emeritus, Information Systems Research Center
>   College of Business, University of North Texas
>   Voice: 940-565-4698<tel:(940)%20565-4698>   Email: kapp at unt.edu<mailto:kapp at unt.edu>
> Primary Investigator, SIM’s Annual IT Trends Study<http://www.simnet.org/?ITTrendsStudy>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail
> 
> From: Prashant Palvia [mailto:pcpalvia at uncg.edu]
> Sent: Monday, January 30, 2017 7:45 PM
> To: Kappelman, Leon <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu<mailto:Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu>>; AISWorld <aisworld at lists.aisnet.org<mailto:aisworld at lists.aisnet.org>>
> Subject: Re: [AISWorld] Question: do we really want to risk turning AIS into a political lobbying organization?
> 
> I sent this message earlier. Somehow, it only went to Leon.
> 
> ------------
> Excuse me, Leon.  This is absolutely non-political. Please do not confuse the issue. The freedom to conduct research and teach are academic issues.  We should all speak up when politics interferes with these basic human rights.  So there should be no attempt to suppress our voices. And yes, AIS is absolutely the right forum to talk about it; AIS represents all of us academics.
> In fact, this is the time to speak up.  This is not the time to be shy or be intimidated.  I urge the entire AIS community to band together and peacefully oppose the breach of academic freedom and basic human rights.
> 
> Thank you all,
> 
> Prashant
> ----
> 
> Prashant Palvia, Ph.D., Joe Rosenthal Excellence Professor, https://baelearn.uncg.edu/people/palvia/
> Bryan School of Business and Economics
> The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
> 426 Bryan Building, Greensboro, NC 27402, USA, Ph: 336.334.4818<tel:%28336%29%20334-4818>
> Editor in Chief, JGITM, http://www.tandfonline.com/UGIT
>  Submit papers to JGITM at http://www.editorialmanager.com/ugit
> Associate Editor, Information & Management
> The World IT Project http://www.WorldITproject.com<http://WorldITproject.com>
> 
> 
> On Sun, Jan 29, 2017 at 1:29 PM, Kappelman, Leon <Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu<mailto:Leon.Kappelman at unt.edu>> wrote:
> Question: do we really want to risk turning AIS into a political lobbying organization or are there already other venues for the political activities in which AIS members may wish to engage?
> 
> Seems to me we should keep AIS focused on the issues that concern us as academics - our research and teaching - and keep government policies on immigration, healthcare, gun rights, taxes, abortion, tariffs, and everything else in the venues where they belong.
> 
> "Let us be men, not monkeys minding machines, or sitting with our tails curled, while the machine amuses us." - D. H. Lawrence
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Leon A. Kappelman, Ph.D.
> Professor of Information Systems<http://www.cob.unt.edu/profiles/112>
> Director Emeritus, Information Systems Research Center
>   College of Business, University of North Texas
>   Voice: 940-565-4698<tel:940-565-4698>   Email: kapp at unt.edu<mailto:kapp at unt.edu><mailto:kapp at unt.edu<mailto:kapp at unt.edu>>
> Primary Investigator, SIM's Annual IT Trends Study<http://www.simnet.org/?ITTrendsStudy>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail
> 
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