15 February 2002
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=02021401.plt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


US Department of State
International Information Programs

Washington File
_________________________________

14 February 2002

Sixty Prominent U.S. Academics Say War on Terrorism is Just

(Response to "calamitous acts of violence, hatred, injustice") (5280)

Sixty leading U.S. intellectuals, in an open letter to Americans and
the international community, explain why they believe the war on
terrorism is necessary and just.

"There are times when waging war is not only morally permitted, but
morally necessary, as a response to calamitous acts of violence,
hatred, and injustice. This is one of those times," says the letter
entitled "What We're Fighting For: A Letter From America."

The Institute for American Values, a nonpartisan think tank which
issued the letter February 12, says it includes "a careful analysis of
international 'just war' principles, and has been endorsed by the
nation's leading just war theorists."

Signatories include former senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (Democrat,
New York), Francis Fukuyama of Johns Hopkins University, James Q.
Wilson of the University of California at Los Angeles, Samuel
Huntington and Theda Skocpol of Harvard University; and Amitai Etzioni
of George Washington University.

The letter describes those responsible for the September 11 attacks on
the United States as adherents to "radical Islamicism," a "violent,
extremist and radically intolerant religious-political movement that
now threatens the world, including the Muslim world." The movement
"claims to speak for Islam," but it "betrays fundamental Islamic
principles," which forbid the deliberate killing of noncombatants, the
letter says.

It concludes by expressing the hope that "this war, by stopping an
unmitigated global evil, can increase the possibility of a world
community based on justice."

"We wish especially to reach out to our brothers and sisters in Muslim
societies," the letter says. "We say to you forthrightly: We are not
enemies, but friends.... In hope, we wish to join with you and all
people of good will to build a just and lasting peace."

Following is the text of the letter and a list of the signatories:

(begin text)

What We're Fighting For: A Letter from America

Preamble

At times it becomes necessary for a nation to defend itself through
force of arms. Because war is a grave matter, involving the sacrifice
and taking of precious human life, conscience demands that those who
would wage the war state clearly the moral reasoning behind their
actions, in order to make plain to one another, and to the world
community, the principles they are defending.

We affirm five fundamental truths that pertain to all people without
distinction:

1.  All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.

2. The basic subject of society is the human person, and the
legitimate role of government is to protect and help to foster the
conditions for human flourishing.

3. Human beings naturally desire to seek the truth about life's
purpose and ultimate ends.

4. Freedom of conscience and religious freedom are inviolable rights
of the human person.

5. Killing in the name of God is contrary to faith in God and is the
greatest betrayal of the universality of religious faith.

We fight to defend ourselves and to defend these universal principles.

What are American Values?

Since September 11, millions of Americans have asked themselves and
one another, why? Why are we the targets of these hateful attacks? Why
do those who would kill us, want to kill us?

We recognize that at times our nation has acted with arrogance and
ignorance toward other societies. At times our nation has pursued
misguided and unjust policies. Too often we as a nation have failed to
live up to our ideals. We cannot urge other societies to abide by
moral principles without simultaneously admitting our own society's
failure at times to abide by those same principles. We are united in
our conviction -- and are confident that all people of good will in
the world will agree -- that no appeal to the merits or demerits of
specific foreign policies can ever justify, or even purport to make
sense of, the mass slaughter of innocent persons.

Moreover, in a democracy such as ours, in which government derives its
power from the consent of the governed, policy stems at least partly
from culture, from the values and priorities of the society as a
whole. Though we do not claim to possess full knowledge of the
motivations of our attackers and their sympathizers, what we do know
suggests that their grievances extend far beyond any one policy, or
set of policies. After all, the killers of September 11 issued no
particular demands; in this sense, at least, the killing was done for
its own sake. The leader of Al Qaeda described the "blessed strikes"
of September 11 as blows against America, "the head of world
infidelity." Clearly, then, our attackers despise not just our
government, but our overall society, our entire way of living.
Fundamentally, their grievance concerns not only what our leaders do,
but also who we are.

SO WHO ARE WE? What do we value? For many people, including many
Americans and a number of signatories to this letter, some values
sometimes seen in America are unattractive and harmful. Consumerism as
a way of life. The notion of freedom as no rules. The notion of the
individual as self-made and utterly sovereign, owing little to others
or to society. The weakening of marriage and family life. Plus an
enormous entertainment and communications apparatus that relentlessly
glorifies such ideas and beams them, whether they are welcome or not,
into nearly every corner of the globe.

One major task facing us as Americans, important prior to September
11, is facing honestly these unattractive aspects of our society and
doing all we can to change them for the better. We pledge ourselves to
this effort.

At the same time, other American values -- what we view as our
founding ideals, and those that most define our way of life -- are
quite different from these, and they are much more attractive, not
only to Americans, but to people everywhere in the world. Let us
briefly mention four of them.

The first is the conviction that all persons possess innate human
dignity as a birthright, and that consequently each person must always
be treated as an end rather than used as a means. The founders of the
United States, drawing upon the natural law tradition as well as upon
the fundamental religious claim that all persons are created in the
image of God, affirmed as "self-evident" the idea that all persons
possess equal dignity. The clearest political expression of a belief
in transcendent human dignity is democracy. In the United States in
recent generations, among the clearest cultural expressions of this
idea has been the affirmation of the equal dignity of men and women,
and of all persons regardless of race or color.

Second, and following closely from the first, is the conviction that
universal moral truths (what our nation's founders called "laws of
Nature and of Nature's God") exist and are accessible to all people.
Some of the most eloquent expressions of our reliance upon these
truths are found in our Declaration of Independence, George
Washington's Farewell Address, Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address
and Second Inaugural Address, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Letter
from the Birmingham Jail.

The third is the conviction that, because our individual and
collective access to truth is imperfect, most disagreements about
values call for civility, openness to other views, and reasonable
argument in pursuit of truth.

The fourth is freedom of conscience and freedom of religion. These
intrinsically connected freedoms are widely recognized, in our own
country and elsewhere, as a reflection of basic human dignity and as a
precondition for other individual freedoms.

To us, what is most striking about these values is that they apply to
all persons without distinction, and cannot be used to exclude anyone
from recognition and respect based on the particularities of race,
language, memory, or religion. That's why anyone, in principle, can
become an American. And in fact, anyone does. People from everywhere
in the world come to our country with what a statue in New York's
harbor calls a yearning to breathe free, and soon enough, they are
Americans. Historically, no other nation has forged its core identity
-- its constitution and other founding documents, as well as its basic
self-understanding -- so directly and explicitly on the basis of
universal human values. To us, no other fact about this country is
more important.

Some people assert that these values are not universal at all, but
instead derive particularly from western, largely Christian
civilization. They argue that to conceive of these values as universal
is to deny the distinctiveness of other cultures. We disagree. We
recognize our own civilization's achievements, but we believe that all
people are created equal. We believe in the universal possibility and
desirability of human freedom. We believe that certain basic moral
truths are recognizable everywhere in the world. We agree with the
international group of distinguished philosophers who in the late
1940s helped to shape the United Nations Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, and who concluded that a few fundamental moral ideas are
so widespread that they "may be viewed as implicit in man's nature as
a member of society." In hope, and on the evidence, we agree with Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., that the arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends toward justice, not just for the few, or the lucky, but
for all people.

Looking at our own society, we acknowledge again the all too frequent
gaps between our ideals and our conduct. But as Americans in a time of
war and global crisis, we are also suggesting that the best of what we
too casually call "American values" do not belong only to America, but
are in fact the shared inheritance of humankind, and therefore a
possible basis of hope for a world community based on peace and
justice.

What about God?

SINCE SEPTEMBER 11, millions of Americans have asked themselves and
one another, what about God? Crises of this magnitude force us to
think anew about first principles. When we contemplate the horror of
what has occurred, and the danger of what is likely to come, many of
us ask: Is religious faith part of the solution or part of the
problem?

The signatories to this letter come from diverse religious and moral
traditions, including secular traditions. We are united in our belief
that invoking God's authority to kill or maim human beings is immoral
and is contrary to faith in God. Many of us believe that we are under
God's judgment. None of us believe that God ever instructs some of us
to kill or conquer others of us. Indeed, such an attitude, whether it
is called "holy war" or "crusade," not only violates basic principles
of justice, but is in fact a negation of religious faith, since it
turns God into an idol to be used for man's own purposes. Our own
nation was once engaged in a great civil war, in which each side
presumed God's aid against the other. In his Second Inaugural Address
in 1865, the tenth president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln,
put it simply: "The Almighty has his own purposes."

Those who attacked us on September 11 openly proclaim that they are
engaged in holy war. Many who support or sympathize with the attackers
also invoke God's name and seem to embrace the rationale of holy war.
But to recognize the disaster of this way of thinking, we as Americans
need only to remember our own, and western, history. Christian
religious wars and Christian sectarian violence tore apart Europe for
the better part of a century. In the United States, we are no
strangers to those who would murder at least in part in the name of
their religious faith. When it comes to this particular evil, no
civilization is spotless and no religious tradition is spotless.

The human person has a basic drive to question in order to know.
Evaluating, choosing, and having reasons for what we value and love
are characteristically human activities. Part of this intrinsic desire
to know concerns why we are born and what will happen when we die,
which leads us to seek the truth about ultimate ends, including, for
many people, the question of God. Some of the signatories to this
letter believe that human beings are by nature "religious" in the
sense that everyone, including those who do not believe in God and do
not participate in organized religion, makes choices about what is
important and reflects on ultimate values. All of the signatories to
this letter recognize that, across the world, religious faith and
religious institutions are important bases of civil society, often
producing results for society that are beneficial and healing, at
times producing results that are divisive and violent.

So how can governments and societal leaders best respond to these
fundamental human and social realities? One response is to outlaw or
repress religion. Another possible response is to embrace an
ideological secularism: a strong societal skepticism or hostility
regarding religion, based on the premise that religion itself, and
especially any public expression of religious conviction, is
inherently problematic. A third possible response is to embrace
theocracy: the belief that one religion, presumably the one true
religion, should be effectively mandatory for all members of society
and therefore should receive complete or significant state sponsorship
and support.

We disagree with each of these responses. Legal repression radically
violates civil and religious freedom and is incompatible with
democratic civil society. Although ideological secularism may have
increased in our society in recent generations, we disagree with it
because it would deny the public legitimacy of an important part of
civil society as well as seek to suppress or deny the existence of
what is at least arguably an important dimension of personhood itself.
Although theocracy has been present in western (though not U.S.)
history, we disagree with it for both social and theological reasons.
Socially, governmental establishment of a particular religion can
conflict with the principle of religious freedom, a fundamental human
right. In addition, government control of religion can cause or
exacerbate religious conflicts and, perhaps even more importantly, can
threaten the vitality and authenticity of religious institutions.
Theologically, even for those who are firmly convinced of the truth of
their faith, the coercion of others in matters of religious conscience
is ultimately a violation of religion itself, since it robs those
other persons of the right to respond freely and in dignity to the
Creator's invitation.

At its best, the United States seeks to be a society in which faith
and freedom can go together, each elevating the other. We have a
secular state -- our government officials are not simultaneously
religious officials -- but we are by far the western world's most
religious society. We are a nation that deeply respects religious
freedom and diversity, including the rights of nonbelievers, but one
whose citizens recite a Pledge of Allegiance to "one nation, under
God," and one that proclaims in many of its courtrooms and inscribes
on each of its coins the motto, "In God We Trust." Politically, our
separation of church and state seeks to keep politics within its
proper sphere, in part by limiting the state's power to control
religion, and in part by causing government itself to draw legitimacy
from, and operate under, a larger moral canopy that is not of its own
making. Spiritually, our separation of church and state permits
religion to be religion, by detaching it from the coercive power of
government. In short, we seek to separate church and state for the
protection and proper vitality of both.

For Americans of religious faith, the challenge of embracing religious
truth and religious freedom has often been difficult. The matter,
moreover, is never settled. Ours is a social and constitutional
arrangement that almost by definition requires constant deliberation,
debate, adjustment, and compromise. It is also helped by, and helps to
produce, a certain character or temperament, such that religious
believers who strongly embrace the truth of their faith also, not as a
compromise with that truth but as an aspect of it, respect those who
take a different path.

What will help to reduce religiously based mistrust, hatred, and
violence in the 21st century? There are many important answers to this
question, of course, but here, we hope, is one: Deepening and renewing
our appreciation of religion by recognizing religious freedom as a
fundamental right of all people in every nation.

A Just War? We recognize that all war is terrible, representative
finally of human political failure. We also know that the line
separating good and evil does not run between one society and another,
much less between one religion and another; ultimately, that line runs
through the middle of every human heart. Finally, those of us -- Jews,
Christians, Muslims, and others -- who are people of faith recognize
our responsibility, stated in our holy scriptures, to love mercy and
to do all in our power to prevent war and live in peace.

Yet reason and careful moral reflection also teach us that there are
times when the first and most important reply to evil is to stop it.
There are times when waging war is not only morally permitted, but
morally necessary, as a response to calamitous acts of violence,
hatred, and injustice. This is one of those times.

The idea of a "just war" is broadly based, with roots in many of the
world's diverse religious and secular moral traditions. Jewish,
Christian, and Muslim teachings, for example, all contain serious
reflections on the definition of a just war. To be sure, some people,
often in the name of realism, insist that war is essentially a realm
of self-interest and necessity, making most attempts at moral analysis
irrelevant. We disagree. Moral inarticulacy in the face of war is
itself a moral stance -- one that rejects the possibility of reason,
accepts normlessness in international affairs, and capitulates to
cynicism. To seek to apply objective moral reasoning to war is to
defend the possibility of civil society and a world community based on
justice.

The principles of just war teach us that wars of aggression and
aggrandizement are never acceptable. Wars may not legitimately be
fought for national glory, to avenge past wrongs, for territorial
gain, or for any other non-defensive purpose.

The primary moral justification for war is to protect the innocent
from certain harm. Augustine, whose early 5th century book, The City
of God, is a seminal contribution to just war thinking, argues
(echoing Socrates) that it is better for the Christian as an
individual to suffer harm rather than to commit it. But is the morally
responsible person also required, or even permitted, to make for other
innocent persons a commitment to non-self-defense? For Augustine, and
for the broader just war tradition, the answer is no. If one has
compelling evidence that innocent people who are in no position to
protect themselves will be grievously harmed unless coercive force is
used to stop an aggressor, then the moral principle of love of
neighbor calls us to the use of force.

Wars may not legitimately be fought against dangers that are small,
questionable, or of uncertain consequence, or against dangers that
might plausibly be mitigated solely through negotiation, appeals to
reason, persuasion from third parties, or other non-violent means. But
if the danger to innocent life is real and certain, and especially if
the aggressor is motivated by implacable hostility -- if the end he
seeks is not your willingness to negotiate or comply, but rather your
destruction -- then a resort to proportionate force is morally
justified.

A just war can only be fought by a legitimate authority with
responsibility for public order. Violence that is free-lance,
opportunistic, or individualistic is never morally acceptable.

A just war can only be waged against persons who are combatants. Just
war authorities from across history and around the world -- whether
they be Muslim, Jewish, Christian, from other faith traditions, or
secular -- consistently teach us that noncombatants are immune from
deliberate attack. Thus, killing civilians for revenge, or even as a
means of deterring aggression from people who sympathize with them, is
morally wrong. Although in some circumstances, and within strict
limits, it can be morally justifiable to undertake military actions
that may result in the unintended but foreseeable death or injury of
some noncombatants, it is not morally acceptable to make the killing
of noncombatants the operational objective of a military action.

These and other just war principles teach us that, whenever human
beings contemplate or wage war, it is both possible and necessary to
affirm the sanctity of human life and embrace the principle of equal
human dignity. These principles strive to preserve and reflect, even
in the tragic activity of war, the fundamental moral truth that
"others" -- those who are strangers to us, those who differ from us in
race or language, those whose religions we may believe to be untrue --
have the same right to life that we do, and the same human dignity and
human rights that we do.

On September 11, 2001, a group of individuals deliberately attacked
the United States, using highjacked airplanes as weapons with which to
kill in less than two hours over 3,000 of our citizens in New York
City, southwestern Pennsylvania, and Washington, D.C. Overwhelmingly,
those who died on September 11 were civilians, not combatants, and
were not known at all, except as Americans, by those who killed them.
Those who died on the morning of September 11 were killed unlawfully,
wantonly, and with premeditated malice -- a kind of killing that, in
the name of precision, can only be described as murder. Those murdered
included people from all races, many ethnicities, most major
religions. They included dishwashers and corporate executives.

The individuals who committed these acts of war did not act alone, or
without support, or for unknown reasons. They were members of an
international Islamicist network, active in as many as 40 countries,
now known to the world as Al Qaeda. This group, in turn, constitutes
but one arm of a larger radical Islamicist movement, growing for
decades and in some instances tolerated and even supported by
governments, that openly professes its desire and increasingly
demonstrates its ability to use murder to advance its objectives.

We use the terms "Islam" and "Islamic" to refer to one of the world's
great religions, with about 1.2 billion adherents, including several
million U.S. citizens, some of whom were murdered on September 11. It
ought to go without saying -- but we say it here once, clearly -- that
the great majority of the world's Muslims, guided in large measure by
the teachings of the Qur'an, are decent, faithful, and peaceful. We
use the terms "Islamicism" and "radical Islamicist" to refer to the
violent, extremist, and radically intolerant religious-political
movement that now threatens the world, including the Muslim world.

This radical, violent movement opposes not only certain U.S. and
western policies -- some signatories to this letter also oppose some
of those policies -- but also a foundational principle of the modern
world, religious tolerance, as well as those fundamental human rights,
in particular freedom of conscience and religion, that are enshrined
in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and that
must be the basis of any civilization oriented to human flourishing,
justice, and peace.

This extremist movement claims to speak for Islam, but betrays
fundamental Islamic principles. Islam sets its face against moral
atrocities. For example, reflecting the teaching of the Qur'an and the
example of the Prophet, Muslim scholars through the centuries have
taught that struggle in the path of God (i.e., jihad) forbids the
deliberate killing of noncombatants, and requires that military action
be undertaken only at the behest of legitimate public authorities.
They remind us forcefully that Islam, no less than Christianity,
Judaism and other religions, is threatened and potentially degraded by
these profaners who invoke God's name to kill indiscriminately.

We recognize that movements claiming the mantle of religion also have
complex political, social, and demographic dimensions, to which due
attention must be paid. At the same time, philosophy matters, and the
animating philosophy of this radical Islamicist movement, in its
contempt for human life, and by viewing the world as a life-and-death
struggle between believers and unbelievers (whether non-radical
Muslims, Jews, Christians, Hindus, or others), clearly denies the
equal dignity of all persons and, in doing so, betrays religion and
rejects the very foundation of civilized life and the possibility of
peace among nations.

Most seriously of all, the mass murders of September 11 demonstrated,
arguably for the first time, that this movement now possesses not only
the openly stated desire, but also the capacity and expertise --
including possible access to, and willingness to use, chemical,
biological and nuclear weapons -- to wreak massive, horrific
devastation on its intended targets.

Those who slaughtered more than 3,000 persons on September 11 and who,
by their own admission, want nothing more than to do it again,
constitute a clear and present danger to all people of good will
everywhere in the world, not just the United States. Such acts are a
pure example of naked aggression against innocent human life, a
world-threatening evil that clearly requires the use of force to
remove it.

Organized killers with global reach now threaten all of us. In the
name of universal human morality, and fully conscious of the
restrictions and requirements of a just war, we support our
government's, and our society's, decision to use force of arms against
them.

Conclusion

WE PLEDGE TO DO all we can to guard against the harmful temptations --
especially those of arrogance and jingoism -- to which nations at war
so often seem to yield. At the same time, with one voice we say
solemnly that it is crucial for our nation and its allies to win this
war. We fight to defend ourselves, but we also believe that we fight
to defend those universal principles of human rights and human dignity
that are the best hope for humankind.

One day, this war will end. When it does -- and in some respects even
before it ends -- the great task of conciliation awaits us. We hope
that this war, by stopping an unmitigated global evil, can increase
the possibility of a world community based on justice. But we know
that only the peacemakers among us in every society can ensure that
this war will not have been in vain.

We wish especially to reach out to our brothers and sisters in Muslim
societies. We say to you forthrightly: We are not enemies, but
friends. We must not be enemies. We have so much in common. There is
so much that we must do together. Your human dignity, no less than
ours -- your rights and opportunities for a good life, no less than
ours -- are what we believe we're fighting for. We know that, for some
of you, mistrust of us is high, and we know that we Americans are
partly responsible for that mistrust. But we must not be enemies. In
hope, we wish to join with you and all people of good will to build a
just and lasting peace.

Signatories

Enola Aird Director, The Motherhood Project; Council on Civil Society

John Atlas President, National Housing Institute; Executive Director,
Passaic County Legal Aid Society

Jay Belsky Professor and Director, Institute for the Study of
Children, Families and Social Issues, Birkbeck University of London

David Blankenhorn President, Institute for American Values

David Bosworth University of Washington

R. Maurice Boyd Minister, The City Church, New York

Gerard V. Bradley Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame

Margaret F. Brinig Edward A. Howry Distinguished Professor, University
of Iowa College of Law

Allan Carlson President, The Howard Center for Family, Religion, and
Society

Khalid Durán Editor, TransIslam Magazine

Paul Ekman Professor of Psychology, University of California, San
Francisco

Jean Bethke Elshtain Laura Spelman Rockefeller Professor of Social and
Political Ethics, University of Chicago Divinity School

Amitai Etzioni University Professor, The George Washington University

Hillel Fradkin President, Ethics and Public Policy Center

Samuel G. Freedman Professor at the Columbia University Graduate
School of Journalism

Francis Fukuyama Bernard Schwartz Professor of International Political
Economy, Johns Hopkins University

William A. Galston Professor at the School of Public Affairs,
University of Maryland; Director, Institute for Philosophy and Public
Policy

Claire Gaudiani Senior research scholar, Yale Law School and former
president, Connecticut College

Robert P. George McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Professor of
Politics, Princeton University

Neil Gilbert Professor at the School of Social Welfare, University of
California, Berkeley

Mary Ann Glendon Learned Hand Professor of Law, Harvard University Law
School

Norval D. Glenn Ashbel Smith Professor of Sociology and Stiles
Professor of American Studies, University of Texas at Austin

Os Guinness Senior Fellow, Trinity Forum

David Gutmann Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Education,
Northwestern University

Kevin J. "Seamus" Hasson President, Becket Fund for Religious Liberty

Sylvia Ann Hewlett Chair, National Parenting Association

James Davison Hunter William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of Sociology and
Religious Studies and Executive Director, Center on Religion and
Democracy, University of Virginia

Samuel Huntington Albert J. Weatherhead, III, University Professor,
Harvard University

Byron Johnson Director and Distinguished Senior Fellow, Center for
Research on Religion and Urban Civil Society, University of
Pennsylvania

James Turner Johnson Professor, Department of Religion, Rutgers
University

John Kelsay Richard L. Rubenstein Professor of Religion, Florida State
University

Diane Knippers President, Institute on Religion and Democracy

Thomas C. Kohler Professor of Law, Boston College Law School

Glenn C. Loury Professor of Economics and Director, Institute on Race
and Social Division, Boston University

Harvey C. Mansfield William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of Government,
Harvard University

Will Marshall President, Progressive Policy Institute

Richard J. Mouw President, Fuller Theological Seminary

Daniel Patrick Moynihan University Professor, Maxwell School of
Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University

John E. Murray, Jr. Chancellor and Professor of Law, Duquesne
University

Michael Novak George Frederick Jewett Chair in Religion and Public
Policy, American Enterprise Institute

Rev. Val J. Peter Executive Director, Boys and Girls Town

David Popenoe Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the National
Marriage Project, Rutgers University

Robert D. Putnam Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy at
the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

Gloria G. Rodriguez Founder and President, AVANCE, Inc.

Robert Royal President, Faith & Reason Institute

Nina Shea Director, Freedom's House's Center for Religious Freedom

Fred Siegel Professor of History, The Cooper Union

Theda Skocpol Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology,
Harvard University

Katherine Shaw Spaht Jules and Frances Landry Professor of Law,
Louisiana State University Law Center

Max L. Stackhouse Professor of Christian Ethics and Director, Project
on Public Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary

William Tell, Jr. The William and Karen Tell Foundation

Maris A. Vinovskis Bentley Professor of History and Professor of
Public Policy, University of Michigan

Paul C. Vitz Professor of Psychology, New York University

Michael Walzer Professor at the School of Social Science, Institute
for Advanced Study

George Weigel Senior Fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center

Charles Wilson Director, Center for the Study of Southern Culture,
University of Mississippi

James Q. Wilson Collins Professor of Management and Public Policy
Emeritus, UCLA

John Witte, Jr. Jonas Robitscher Professor of Law and Ethics and
Director, Law and Religion Program, Emory University Law School

Christopher Wolfe Professor of Political Science, Marquette University

Daniel Yankelovich President, Public Agenda

(end text)

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