Posted on 11/24/2008 11:46:26 AM PST by fanfan
I was going to accuse Queens University of treating its students as though they were all mildly retarded (the term used by the American Association on Mental Retardation until 2006) but I decided not to risk offending anyone. Instead, I will merely observe that the school must think its students all suffer from a disorder characterized by below average cognitive functioning and deficits in two or more adaptive behaviors such as living skills, communication skills or social skills. Put another way, Queens University must think its students are all stupid. How else do you explain its new intergroup dialogue program?
For those who dont know, the intergroup dialogue program is part of a broader initiative by the university to foster diversity and encourage students to think about their beliefs. What could be more benign?
To accomplish these objectives, however, the school will be deploying student facilitators whose job it will be, in part, to monitor private conversations on campus and to jump in when they hear someone using terms that could be interpreted as homophobic, sexist, or otherwise bigoted. These facilitators will also be responsible for initiating spontaneous conversations about issues and organizing discussion groups and other activities for the same purpose.
So far, critics have focused their attention almost exclusively on the possibility that the reactive aspect of the program intervening in private conversations might impinge upon the freedom of speech or freedom of expression of students, a not unreasonable fear. Im more worried about the proactive aspects of the project the so-called spontaneous conversations and discussion groups on issues that the program envisions.
Clearly something of this nature must have a set of standards to determine whether or not a conversation is offensive enough to warrant an intervention by facilitators. What are those standards, and how will they be applied to the spontaneous conversations and discussion groups the facilitators are also mandated to initiate, particularly if these conversations and discussions deal with controversial subject matter? The war in Iraq, abortion, the gay agenda, radical feminism its not hard to imagine a list of topics where feelings run high and where dissent is rarely tolerated these days, let alone respected, especially on university campuses. Will facilitators create an environment where dissent is welcome, or will they use their quasi-authoritative positions to try and convince the dissenters of their sins and persuade them to return to the warm and friendly embrace of neo-orthodox opinion? I for one am not optimistic.
The explanation offered by representatives of Queens University that this program encourages diversity and independent thinking simply makes no sense. By challenging and effectively suppressing non-conformist behaviour and opinion, it seeks to induce uniformity of thought and expression, otherwise there would be no purpose in intervening in private conversations in the first place.
Dont get me wrong, there are plenty of examples of stupid and offensive ideas out there, and Im all for confronting those who express those ideas, but any confrontation ought to be spontaneous and it ought to be limited to truly private individuals rather than agents of the state posing as private individuals. That is what I object to, and what Queens students should be outraged by. Dont think that the experiment will end with interrupted conversations either. Eventually someone will resist the counsel of a student facilitator by telling them to take a hike, probably in words that will themselves be offensive. What will happen then? Will the student facilitator simply respect the right of his interlocutor to have a different opinion and desist, or will the offender be subject to further investigation and sanction, perhaps even expulsion?
The intergroup dialogue program instituted by Queens University, and more particularly the ease with which it and other initiatives like it are accepted these days even defended is symptomatic of a deeply anti-intellectual and undemocratic malaise infecting Canadian society. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, we are becoming a police state, where passions rule and reasoned debate is disdained; where thoughts are crimes and common sense is dismissed as the petty prejudice of the ignorant or naïve. The danger in this is not the intent, which is more often than not worthy, but the habituation to being told what and what not to say, think and do that sets in, and the construction of an apparatus of power to enforce those rules. No-one should suppose that democratic procedure can be an effective check on such arbitrary power. As Friedrich Hayek pointed out in his classic essay The Road to Serfdom Its not the source, but the limitation of power which prevents it from being arbitrary.
Indeed, the exercise of arbitrary power confirmed by democratic process is more insidious and more difficult to restrain precisely because its garbed in the robes of democracy.
Students at Queens University are not children theyre adults who can control their own private conversations without the benevolent hand of an omnipresent, omniscient, and inevitably omnipotent thought police. They would be doing themselves and the rest of us a great favour by saying so quickly, before expressing objection to the policy is added to the list of offensive speech.
I’m offended by the name of Queen’s College. I demand they change it! (Oh, and send me $25,000 in damages by the way - it’s for the children)
This is closer to Orwell’s “1984”, than to Huxley’s “Brave New World” or Sinclair’s “It Cant Happen Here”..........
I predict the words “Butt-out F***-face!” will be heard more often on campus.
The stench of "Big Brother" is all over this.
Baby brown shirts, coming to a university near you.
The faculty at most universities are now at least 90% liberals conformists, and no one who thinks differently is likely to be hired or get tenure.
So, now they will send out their Hitler Youth Corps to make sure that the students are kept in line as well.
Section 13, the controversial hate speech provision in the Canadian Human Rights Act, should be repealed, according to an independent review by University of Windsor law professor Richard Moon.
Very 1984.
:-(
This is a line from Shakespeare's The Tempest, delivered by the monster Caliban with clueless irony about some people who are in fact quite ordinary indeed. [Huxley's "Brave New World" was never properly titled.]
Given that context, and given that the adolescents who populate our universities -- at the student, faculty, and administrator levels -- from time immemorial have been little more than a thundering herd of conformist busybodies who prattle mindlessly about "diversity" and "academic freedom" the title seems quite appropriate.
Actually, Miranda says that line when she sees a young man among the recent shipwrecked people. The Tempest is my favorite Shakespeare play(note my screen name)
Thanks for the link. I saw that article earlier.
Yes, it should be repealed. If Muslims want to live among free peoples (vice attempting to subvert their institutions and make them second class citizens in their own countries), they are going to have to grow much thicker skins.
And their Western enablers are going to need to have the heat turned up on them at every opportunity.
You’re welcome.
This lunacy will only stop, if we stop it.
Bump!
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