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Poisoned Ivies

In an article entitled "Exposing Poisoned Ivies," Washington Times columnist Kevin Vance delivers a detailed profile of Indoctrinate U, director Evan Coyne Maloney, and MPI:


On more than one occasion while making the film, campus police escorted Mr. Maloney out of campus buildings after administrators refused to speak on camera. During the making of "Indoctrinate U," the filmmakers made more than 200 attempts to contact administrators involved in various campus incidents. None of the administrators was willing to speak on camera.

Mr. Maloney says he was astonished by how few administrators were willing to defend their policies.

"One thing that shocked me is that these people know what they're doing is wrong, and they keep doing it," he said. "Rather than stop, they just do everything they can to make sure that the public doesn't find out."

For Mr. Maloney, directing films is a relatively new endeavor. He was a software developer until the company he worked for went out of business in the collapse of the dot-com bubble. In early 2003, he was looking for other things to do. He noticed that television and press coverage of antiwar protests was very different from what he was seeing in New York.

Mr. Maloney recognized that many of the protesters were Marxists and from other extremist groups. He made a video of interviews with protesters and posted it on his blog, Brain-Terminal.com. The video then made its way to the Fox News Channel.

He then joined forces with Stuart Browning and Blaine Greenberg to form a film production company, On the Fence, that produced two short documentaries, "Brainwashing 101" (2004) and "Brainwashing 201" (2005).

Those early films caught the attention of Thor Halvorssen, founder of the Moving Picture Institute (MPI). "I saw a lot of potential, and I wanted to help [Mr. Maloney] in other ways," Mr. Halvorssen said.

MPI, founded in 2005, "exists to nurture aspiring filmmakers who care about American freedom," said Mr. Halvorssen. MPI has generated support and publicity for "Indoctrinate U."

Already the movie has been praised as "excellent" in the Rocky Mountain News, and gotten noticed by several conservative publications, with National Review's Stanley Kurtz calling it "fun and powerful" and the Weekly Standard describing it as "free-wheeling.

"Indoctrinate U" follows Mr. Maloney to different campuses, where he chronicles the stories of students like Steve Hinkle, who was prosecuted for posting flyers for an upcoming College Republicans event at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, Calif.

Because neither campus administrators nor university trustees are protecting individual rights on campus, Mr. Maloney said, someone must. "It's time for us as taxpayers and as citizens to exercise some oversight on our own," he said.

His hope is "that by people seeing this film, there will be enough people out there to hold professors and administrators to account," Mr. Maloney said.

Mr. Halvorssen called the film "a vitally important contribution to higher-education reform" that "shines the light of public exposure on the assault on civil liberties that occurs on a daily basis on American college campuses."


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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on June 9, 2007 1:22 PM.

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