Posted on 01/03/2016 7:02:33 PM PST by moneyrunner
Ann Althouse is a college professor who runs an eponymous blog. She recently blogged about a Chinese professor at Vassar, Hua Hsu, who believes: âthere is a naïve idealism at the heart of student protest, which might be desperate or loud but never as cynical as the world that necessitated it."
She goes on to say: âI â who went to college in 1969 â think they are a lot less weird than we were. But if you think they are weird â entitled, oversensitive, whatever â you should look to your own mind and ask why it has created the character you believe in:â
She's saying that we've created imaginary students based on an unrepresentative sample and amplified by the media. Perhaps, but the things that have been reported are not isolated instances. Mizzou's disruption ws based on lies but was followed by other campus disruptions across the country. I believe in introspection, but I suggest that Ann is not introspective enough. No, the students that have gotten our attention are not weird; theyâre the product of a certain culture. Annâs culture perhaps. I donât really know her outside of her blog. I donât know what weird things she did and donât particularly want to know. For all I know she âentertainedâ the football team, mainlined heroin and burned down the chemistry lab.
But sheâs asking the wrong question. Iâm surprised that the students are not more weird. Some kids will always experiment and test their boundaries while others, like me, were grateful for the opportunity to get academic scholarships, attend college and have an opportunity to have a better life than their parents. I recall that it was the kids whose parents were âcomfortableâ or well-to-do who came back to lecture us about protesting and âfinding ourselves.â âFinding themselvesâ was a luxury for the rich, the rest of us wanted to get a degree in science or engineering because that was the route to a job that did not involve assembly lines in a muffler factory. So we listened to the rich bitches and mentally told them to f***k off because our daddy didnât have the money to pave the path to the middle class like theirs did.
The difference between then and now is that now the administration and faculty is weird. Kids were rebelling when I went to school, but there was at least some push-back by the grownups. You only have to see the mewling apologies and/or wholehearted agreement of modern academic leaders with the most outré demands of our yoots to wonder why they donât take over the Presidentâs residence and live for the next four or five years. The President of Smith College apologized for saying that all lives matter. The President of the University of Louisville apologized for wearing a sombrero at a costume party. Dartmouthâs vice provost for student affairs, Inge-Lise Ameer, apologized to Black Lives Matter protesters who invaded the library calling one student a âfilthy white bâ-â-â-âhâ and chanted âFâ-â-âk your white privilege!â and âFâ-â-âk you, you filthy white fâ-â-âks!â
Where do they get the idea that they are idealists possessed of moral superiority? Hereâs a little test. Who said this?
âYesterday, America was a land of slavery, segregation, lynching and the Ku Klux Klan, and tomorrow it will be a land of religious discrimination and concentration camps.â a. Charles Blow â Op-ed columnist for the NY Times b. Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr. â Publisher of the NY Times c. Christina Paxton â President of Brown University d. Carolyn Martin â President of Amherst e. Quentin Tarantino â famed screenwriter, director, producer and actor f. Lena Dunham â actress and political activist g. Bernie Sanders â U. S. Senator, Socialist, Presidential candidate. h. al-Shabaab (see below for the answer)
The answer is that any one of the above could have given us that quote. Based on reports in the press and on the internet, the sentence I quoted would not raise eyebrows in the faculty lounge and would form the basis for a full year of pedagogy in any number of âstudiesâ courses at virtually any university in the country with the possible exception of Hillsdale and Liberty University.
She quotes Hua Hsu: âThe imaginary college student is a character born of someone elseâs pessimism.â
Perhaps. But I think that the actual college student, like the one at Yale who began screaming at the professor âWhy the fuck did you accept the position?â is born of a certain culture. One that views America as a land of slavery, segregation, lynching and the Ku Klux Klan. One that sympathizes with rowdies who chant âFâ-â-âk your white privilege!â and âFâ-â-âk you, you filthy white fâ-â-âks!â knowing that they will be praised for their courage and speaking truth to power. They are confident that if they want to intimidate someone there will always be a professor who will come to their aid by calling for âsome muscle here.â
I am beginning to think that Hua Hsu may be on to something when he says â ⦠the reason that college stories have garnered so much attention this year is our general suspicion, within the real world, that the system no longer works.â If by âthe systemâ heâs referring to Big Academia, I think he has a point. Its utility is questionable, itâs sold by hucksters with out-of-date statistics about its value, promising results that canât be delivered, its cost is outrageous and its product is defective.
As Glenn Reynold would say: WHY ARE UNIVERSITIES SUCH HOTBEDS OF RACISM, SEXISM, RAPE, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS, LIES, OUTRAGEOUS PRICES, BIGOTRY AND ELIMINATIONIST RHETORIC?
We should think about scrapping it and starting over. After all, this is the 21st Century.
The answer is h. al-Shabaab
American Taqiyyaist
And you Ann should look into your own mind and ask why you persist in denying reality.
Perhaps you should seek medical help.
Ah yes the ever-classy leftists trying to make that oh so important first impression.
From the article:
The difference between then and now is that now the administration and faculty is weird. Kids were rebelling when I went to school, but there was at least some push-back by the grownups. You only have to see the mewling apologies and/or wholehearted agreement of modern academic leaders with the most outre demands of our yoots to wonder why they don't take over the President's residence and live for the next four or five years.
False. She is an eponymous blogger.
First and foremost, the average college student today is not prepared for college-level academics. They are typically the product of the public school system, which has devolved from an academic process to a political and anti-social indoctrination center.
A college student is lucky to have math and English skills at the 8th Grade level. Problem solving and critical analysis ...forget it.
And Black students have been indoctrinated the worst, after being stripped of the benefits of the nuclear family, thanks to the Great Society. They are the perpetual victims.
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