Nick Gillespie | February 4, 2003
"Now that [baby boomers are] in charge of the university, the rules have changed. As students, they were members of free-speech movements; now that they've earned tenure, they have become advocates of speech codes. Radicals when they were on the bottom, they've become censors when they're on top. And they see no discrepancy in their actions."
That's the University of Massachusetts' Daphne Patai writing in the Chronicle of Higher Education about the response to Web sites that invite students to talk about politicized classrooms. Well worth reading the whole thing...
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Of course they see no discrepancy: there is no discrepancy.
"Freedom," in the minds of '60s radical leaders always meant,
"freedom to do it my way." It was never cool to disagree with the
"free speech" of the vanguard, and hippie culture subtly, but
powerfully, enforced strict conformity upon its members.
The _true_ hippie felt no great urge to impose his views on others,
and thus failed to rise to the top of the great hippie hierarchy.
Eventually he graduated and got a real job, where he daydreams
about his groovy days back in college...
The rules only appear to have changed if you define the rules as
"free speech." If you define the rules as "I'm all that matters"
then the rules remain pretty consistant.
The Boomers are living up (down?) to the predictions Straus and
Howe made in their book "Generations."
Goat, I think you're being a little harsh toward us boomers. Yeah, there's a significant number who have taken over academia and enforce their morality (while at the same time telling the rest of us not to push ours) with speech codes, but on the whole, most of us go to jobs and raise our kids and live our lives pretty much the way our parents did and pretty much the way the next generation will.....
Reason readers would do well to check out Alan Kors &
Charles Silvergates "The Shadow University". It chronicles the rise
of so-called "political correctness" on campus, and strips it naked
so we can see exactly what the trend is comprised of.
Not surprisingly, Kors & Silvergate trace the roots back to
Frankfurt School philosopher Herbert Marcuse, who was all the rage
among 60s radicals. The fundamental tenet of Marcusian philosophy
is that the hegemony of dominant culture is all wrong, and only by
championing the "oppressed" can we build a free society. "Free
speech", therefore, requires the silencing of society's majority,
and the propagation of "disenfranchised" voices -- racial, sexual
and political minorities, criminals, the insane. As long as it
ain't mainstream, it's holy to the Marcusians.
This explains a lot about the so-called multicultural movement, and
that touchstone of college admissions, "diversity". It also
explains why it's considered a hate crime on some campuses to voice
opposition to the black jewish transgendered student union's
position on animal experimentation -- while at the same time
conservative leaning campus newspapers are burned without comment,
and jews are beaten up by pro palestinian protestors. Nothing short
of the inversion of the values we hold dear is the goal.
I would have thought the incidents on NoIndoctrination.org to be
exaggerated if not for having had a worse experience in a Sociology
101 class. The scathing evaluations by students of his Marxist,
conflict-theory, "whites are all inherently racist," "guns cause
violence," "CEOs are greedy", "capitalism causes poverty by
creating a miserable substratum of unemployable people" teachings
have (I've heard) only redoubled his efforts to beat his views into
his students. As the only black professor in the department, he
couldn't think of stepping down, he informed us, because "White
teachers are too lazy to diversify themselves." (Direct quote, like
all others in the paragraph.)
Worse, I don't know of anyone who quite had the guts to put their
names on the evaluations, thanks to the college-wide Bias Report, a
series of posters which announce "bias-related activity" all over
campus. Latest report? A student overheard another make a
"homophobic remark" in a private conversation and "felt
uncomfortable."
And yet, my parents don't understand why I want to transfer
somewhere else ...
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