ISN'T IT TIME TO TAKE BACK
OUR UNIVERSITIES?
by Murray Soupcoff
The
Iconoclast
September 25, 2002
More and more evidence continues to accumulate about the rot accumulating in
the ivory towers of academia in North America. And yet no-one seems inclined
to do a thing about it.
For example, ponder this typical factoid. About a half year before 9/11, one
of the mainstream media's favorite academic "experts" on the Middle East, Fawaz
Gerges, criticized what he called "the terrorist industry's" gross exaggeration
of "the terrorist threat to American citizens." Obviously trying to demonize
critics of Middle East terrorists, this noted academic -- who is educating future
leaders of America at Sarah Lawrence College in New York -- even accused anti-terror
experts of indirectly perpetuating an "irrational fear of terrorism by focusing
too much on farfetched horrible scenarios."
Considering the far-fetched horrible scenario that unfolded in New York City
on 9/11, one would be inclined to put a lot more faith in the prognostications
of America's anti-terror specialists than the wishful-thinking of this academic
ideologue; but of course it's the likes of Professor Gerges who dominate the
dissemination of "knowledge" about terrorism and the Middle East at universities
right across America.
Or how about this outrage? On September 11th, Colorado College invited Hanan
Ashrawi, the most visible defender of the Palestinian terror campaign against
Israel, to address its student body in order to "provoke critical and engaged
thought" among students on that solemn day (or that's how Colorado College president,
Richard F. Celeste, explained this insulting initiative anyway). And that's
just one of many similar inspiring commemorations of the 9/11 tragedy that occurred
on the nation's campuses. Not to mention the original ban on American flags
on the Berkeley campus that day (later rescinded under the pressure of public
outrage at the ban).
And finally the 9/11 ivory tower piece de resistance. Not long after 9/1l, the
student newspaper at San Diego State University (SDSU), the Daily Aztec,
reported that an SDSU student was accused of "verbal harassment" after he criticized
four Saudi students who were celebrating the Sept. 11th tragedy. Zewdalem Kebede,
a native Ethiopian and naturalized American citizen, says he overheard the conversation
in Arabic. "With that action they were very pleased," he told the newspaper.
"They were happy. And they were regretting of missing the 'Big House' " -- obviously
the White House, not the prison that some of the Saudi students' more overzealous
countrymen will soon occupy.
Kebede reported that he approached the four Saudis and said to them, in Arabic:
"Guys, what you are talking is unfair. How do you feel happy when those 5,000
to 6,000 people are buried in two or three buildings? They are under the rubble
or they became ash. And you are talking about the action of bin Laden and his
group. You are proud of them. You should have to feel shame."
The Saudis, who weren't named because they were designated as "victims" by the
university, filed a complaint of harassment with the university police; and
Kebede was summoned to the university's politically-correct Center for Student
Rights star chamber. After giving his side of the story, he got a letter from
the Center warning him "that future involvement in 'confronting members of the
campus community in a manner that is found to be aggressive or abusive' will
result in severe disciplinary sanctions." Just another sterling example of students
rights on today's American college campuses.
Yes, there they go again (and again and again and again, ad nauseum) -- the
post-modernist academic proponents of toleration, cultural understanding, American
self-loathing and national suicide -- continuing to give our kids the kind of
quality higher education which we know all the moms and pops of America have
scrimped and saved to provide their beloved progeny.
Talk about a fifth column. The universities of America have become an ideological
launching point for any international intellectual poison directed at the United
States, Western civilization, or the basic principles underlying most constitutional
democracies.
The saddest thing of all is that this nation-wide propaganda program in self-destructive
"critical thinking" and political correctness is being enthusiastically funded
by blissfully apathetic parents and state governments in the name of educating
our young. In fact, parents, politicians and educators are frantically endeavoring
to find new ways to expose more of America's budding youth to the glories of
higher education. And this is happening at the very time that most higher education
in the U.S. today -- especially in the arts and humanities -- has become a stealth
weapon for morally disarming America's young adults, robbing them of all faith
in the principles upon which the American republic was founded.
Whether it's elite private universities such as Sarah Lawrence College, Harvard
and Stanford, or publicly-funded state universities such as San Diego State
and Berkeley, America's centers of higher learning have been transformed into
politically-correct, left-wing propaganda centers, spewing out the far-left's
constant message of hate for America, glorification of its enemies and the need
to tear down the foundations of traditional scholarship, learning and morality.
Is this really what private donors expect from the academy when they make their
generous donations to Harvard or Stanford? Or taxpayers when their hard-earned
money is used to subsidize this kind of "education" in state universities across
the land?
Isn't it about time that someone said, "Enough!"
Isn't it time for Americans to take back their universities? ***
© 2002 The
Iconoclast
Murray Soupcoff is the author of 'Canada 1984' and a former radio and television producer with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. He also was Executive Editor of We Compute Magazine for several years, and is now the Managing Editor of the popular Canadian conservative Web site, Iconoclast.ca
COPYRIGHT © 2002 BY THE AMERICAN PARTISAN. All writers retain rights to their work.
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