Posted on 02/07/2015 6:21:39 AM PST by Kaslin

Charles Blow is the gift that keeps on giving. In this weeks roundup of the inane and ridiculous from the op-ed pages of the New York Times, we return to Blow and by a not surprising coincidence, to Yale University. Last week Blow was fuming at Yale, where his son is a third year student. For reasons soon to be apparent, it is supremely ironic that in his column accusing Yale of institutional racism, Blow doesnt even know his sons major. He wrote that his son was majoring in chemistry, a notoriously tough discipline. Well, it turns out that Blow Junior is majoring in ecology, a much softer subject.
This week, in a column titled A Future Segregated By Science?, Blow starts off with a story of how he won first prize in a science fair. And he freely admits, I hadnt actually done an experiment. Instead he submitted a plywood model somehow representing the Reagan-era Star Wars project. I will leave unsaid my gut instinct exactly on what criteria Blow was awarded a blue ribbon.
So Blow want to talk about a distressing disparity. Few women and minorities are getting STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) degrees, although STEM jobs are multiplying and pay more than many other careers.
Blow meanders around pointlessly, observing that women and minorities are underrepresented in STEM majors in college and in science and technology related jobs. In fact, African-Americans earn only 2% of PhDs granted in STEM fields in a typical year.
Blow cites an old AP article, asserting that the problem is a complex equation of self-doubt, stereotypes, discouragement and economics and sometimes just wrong perceptions of what math and science are all about.
Well, based on my five years in graduate schools, I believe affirmative action is the real problem, one Blow would never even reluctantly admit is a factor. At elite universities, minorities are given significant preferences in the admission process. The inevitable result is that many of them simply arent as qualified as their classmates.
And one consequence of this is the explosion of African-American studies. I have no doubt it is an academically valid subject of study. But for Ivy League schools and other elite institutions, African-American studies departments have grown to outsize proportions because it is a notoriously easy subject. Given a choice between the rigors of, say, physics on the one hand, or reading some claptrap by Cornel West or a Maya Angelou novel, the latter is all too tempting an easy path to a degree. This is a thorny problem which people like Blow simply refuse to acknowledge exists.
And what is it about Ivy League schools like Yale? A Yale student with the ludicrously upper class name of Spencer Bokat-Lindell deals with his complicated emotional and moral dilemma when his dog dies. in #RIP: Greiving My Dog Offline. Bokat-Lindell describes in agonizing detail his overwrought feelings when his dog Ginny dies while he is away in Paris for his year abroad.
This is the kind of thing the NY Times editors love, first person accounts by Ivy Leaguers of how they deal with their monumentally tragic problems. Spencer struggles with an existential problem: whether or not to put a RIP testimonial to Ginny on his Facebook page. I, like a lot of people I know, have a bad habit of fussing over how I appear on Facebook in ways that would be impossible in real time. Would people think I was overemotional or, even worse, fishing for pity? I was so used to curating a persona, to tinkering with statuses and comments and profile pictures how was I supposed to post about Ginny without getting tangled in my own self-absorption?
So Spencer eventually decides it would be too self-indulgent and public to post on his FB page about his beloved pet. Though I didnt receive the public condolences that might have validated my sorrow, there was something refreshing about experiencing a significant event in my life on my own terms rather than in a virtual panopticon of my peers.
Yes, Spencer finally decides he will grieve in private for dear ole Ginny. Oh, and write a 1256 word op-ed piece for the New York Times about how difficult it was for him to reach this painfully difficult decision.
Well, thanks for reading Cheap Laughs, I have zero doubt the Times will oblige with ample material for next weeks installment.
Ha!
I had to look twice to see if this were a piece from The Onion or even Mad magazine.
Who could suffer through such pretentious, self-absorbed op-ed type writing from the NY Times?
Blow-hard better be careful what he spouts off about - there is a lot of checking going on after the Brian Williams fiasco.
“Your science fair project was making sun tea.” - King Of The Hill
This is the result of affirmative action. Absurdity is twice compounded. No logic, no real achievement, just more demands.
Based on the title? Perhaps. But the reality of African-American studies is that they are nothing but how-to classes in grievance mongering. As the author says, they are undemanding, unrewarding and unenlightening forced marches in praising the mediocre, celebrating the banal and, as always, fomenting anger against the innocent.
If anything, such legitimate studies of history, sociology, etc. are appropriate only as components of a larger curriculum and/or department. This would remove or sharply blunt their political power (in the campus and electoral sense) as well. Bonus!
Sounds like basically he used his NYT column to tell the world that his kid is going to Yale.
I have doubts, lotsa doubts.
Ecology? What a joke... 'Softer'? That's being kind... it's fake science - - doesn't require knowledge of higher math... It's a 'feeling' science. Worthless.
African-American studies are the Madrasses of black racism.
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