“Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown will never be uprooted.”
The new college academic year has begun,
and unfortunately, so has student indoctrination. Let’s look at some of it.
William
Penn, Michigan State University professor of creative writing, greeted his
first day of class with an anti-Republican rant. Campus Reform, a project of
the Arlington, Va.-based Leadership Institute, has a video featuring the
professor telling his students that Republicans want to prevent “black people”
from voting. He added that “this country still is full of closet racists” and
described Republicans as “a bunch of dead white people — or dying white people”
(http://tinyurl.com/lve4te7). To a student who had apparently displayed
displeasure with those comments, Professor Penn barked, “You can frown if you
want.” He gesticulated toward the student and added, “You look like you’re frowning.
Are you frowning?” When the professor’s conduct was brought to the attention of
campus authorities, MSU spokesman Kent Cassella said, “At MSU it is important
the classroom environment is conducive to a free exchange of ideas and is
respectful of the opinions of others.”
That
mealy-mouthed response is typical of university administrators. Professor Penn
was using his classroom to proselytize students. That is academic dishonesty
and warrants serious disciplinary or dismissal proceedings. But that’s not
likely. Professor Penn’s vision is probably shared by his colleagues, seeing as
he was the recipient of MSU’s Distinguished Faculty Award in 2003. University
of Southern California professor Darry Sragow shares Penn’s opinion. Last fall,
he went on a rant telling his students that Republicans are “stupid and racist”
and “the last vestige of angry old white people” (http://tinyurl.com/185khtk).
UCLA’s new
academic year saw its undergraduate student government fighting for
constitutional rights by unanimously passing a resolution calling for the end
of the use of the phrase “illegal immigrant.” The resolution states, “The
racially derogatory I-word endangers basic human rights including the
presumption of innocence and the right to due process guaranteed under the U.S.
Constitution.”
No doubt some UCLA administrators and professors bereft of thinking skills
helped them craft the resolution.
The New
York Post (8/25/11) carried a story about a student in training to become dorm
supervisor at DePauw University in Indiana. She said: “We were told that
‘human’ was not a suitable identity, but that instead we were first ‘black,’
‘white,’ or ‘Asian’; ‘male’ or ‘female’; … ‘heterosexual’ or ‘queer.’ We were
forced to act like bigots and spout off stereotypes while being told that that
was what we were really thinking deep down.” At many universities, part of the
freshman orientation includes what’s called the “tunnel of oppression.” They
are taught the evils of “white privilege” and how they are part of a “rape
culture.” Sometimes they are forced to discuss their sexual identities with
complete strangers. The New York Post story said: “DePauw is no rare case. At
least 96 colleges across the country have run similar ‘tunnel of oppression’
programs in the last few years.”
University
officials are aware of this kind of academic dishonesty and indoctrination;
university trustees are not. For the most part, trustees are yes men for the
president. Legislators and charitable foundations that pour billions into
colleges are unaware, as well. Most tragically, parents who pay tens of
thousands of dollars for tuition and pile up large debt to send their
youngsters off to be educated are unaware of the academic rot, as well.
You ask,
“Williams, what can be done?” Students should record classroom professorial
propaganda and give it wide distribution over the Internet. I’ve taught for
more than 45 years and routinely invited students to record my lectures so they
don’t have to be stenographers during class. I have no idea of where those recordings
have wound up, but if you find them, you’ll hear zero proselytization or
discussion of my political and personal preferences. To use a classroom to
propagate one’s personal beliefs is academic dishonesty.
Vladimir
Lenin said, “Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown
will never be uprooted.” That’s the goal of the leftist
teaching agenda.
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