Posted on 09/19/2017 5:09:49 PM PDT by DeweyCA
RUSH: What essentially happened here at the University of Pennsylvania, Penn, a couple of professors, one of them working at the University of Pennsylvania, the other one University of San Diego, wrote an op-ed suggesting that what might be needed in the United States is a return to some of the nations values and moralities of the 1950s. And what happened after that op-ed ran is the story.
To the list of forbidden ideas on American college campuses, add bourgeois norms.' In other words, the old advisories of hard work, self-discipline, marriage, respect for authority. When people talk about going back to the fifties, when people talking about reemerging with values from the fifties, theyre basically talking about what?
Well, Im 66, people my age and one generation younger grew up with certain undeniable truths: hard work, studiousness, seriousness, self-discipline, self-reliance, and patience, those were the values that were rock solid, that had the best chance of leading to a happy, healthy, productive life with the likelihood of an expanding, increasing standard of living. Those were time-honored values, and people would think and theyve been time-honored for generations. They have been time-honored since days prior to this country.
Those were active ways of living that led to the best life: seriousness, studiousness, hard work, no cutting corners, no cheating, no pacing yourself, self-discipline, telling yourself no, self-reliance, dont have kids before you get married, respect for authority. Thats what we all grew up with. Im sure most of you in this audience did as well.
Well, last month, two law professors published an op-ed in the Philadelphia Inquirer calling for a revival of that cultural script that prevailed in the fifties and still does among affluent Americans. Affluent Americans still live by those philosophies: hard work, self-discipline, self-reliance, no cutting corners.
Affluent Americans still live by those values, and they still try to inculcate those values in their kids. Get married before you have children, strive to stay married for their sake. Get the education you need for gainful employment, work hard, avoid idleness, dont delve into a life of crime. All of these things that were just common-sense ways to grow up, common-sense ways to live.
Anyway, they write an op-ed suggesting that a revival of all of that would be beneficial for our country and everybody. They said, The weakening of these traditional norms has contributed to todays low rates of workforce participation, lagging educational levels and widespread opioid abuse, the professors argued.
They made the point that getting away from these values has led to a raft of people unable to support themselves, single-parent homes, and all of these things which create disadvantage and obstacle after obstacle for people to have to overcome, which could have been avoided with a different set of values.
Well, this op-ed triggered an immediate uproar at the University of Pennsylvania. Remember this op-ed was in the Philadelphia Inquirer. One of the authors of the op-ed, Amy Wax, a woman that teaches at the University of Pennsylvania. The dean of the Pennsylvania law school, a guy named Ted Ruger, published an op-ed in the student newspaper noting the contemporaneous occurrence of the op-ed and a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.
In other words, those values were attributed to white to white supremacy by the dean of the law school at the University of Pennsylvania. Hard work, self-discipline, self-reliance, dont have kids til you get married, try to stay married, all of those things to pursue were called white supremacy in an op-ed by the dean of the law school. His name is Ted Ruger. He suggested that Amy Waxs views shes one of the authors were divisive and even noxious.
Half of Ms. Waxs law-faculty colleagues signed an open letter denouncing her piece and calling on students to report any bias or stereotype they encounter at Penn Law (e.g., in Ms. Waxs classroom). Student and alumni petitions poured forth accusing Ms. Wax of white supremacy, misogyny and homophobia and demanding that she be banned from teaching first-year law classes. Because the 1950s is when racism and slavery and bigotry and homophobia were the definitions of the day. They ruled the day. The white supremacist, the white majority of the 1950s were indeed racist and sexist and misogynistic. It was the fifties that all of the modern-day -isms had to overcome. Feminism, all of these other things. It was the dreaded evil, the horrid 1950s. Where all of the modern ideological and philosophical ideas have to overcome.
So the point of this is is that two professors advocating a return to basic human philosophy of hard work, self-reliance, self-discipline, respect for authority, dont cut corners, dont become slothful, dont become a welfare state dependent, take care of yourself, strive to be the best person you can be, thats nothing more than white supremacy. That is misogyny and its homophobia.
Now, the coauthor of this piece, Larry Alexander, teaches at the University of San Diego. That is a Catholic school. University of San Diego seemed to be taking the piece in stride in other words, they didnt react one way or the other until last week. The dean of USDs law school, Stephen Ferruolo, issued a school-wide memo repudiating Mr. Alexanders article and pledging new measures to compensate vulnerable, marginalized students for the racial discrimination and cultural subordination they experience, today as noted in the op-ed.
Now, the response, according to Heather Mac Donald here, the response at the University of San Diego is more significant than the University of Pennsylvania because its more surprising. While USD has embraced a social justice mission in recent decades, the law school itself has been less politicized. It has one of the highest proportions of non-leftist professors in the country University of San Diego overall and the law school, about 25% of the faculty is conservative there. Mr. Ferruolo, a corporate lawyer with strong ties to the biotech industry, presented himself until recently as mildly conservative. If USD is willing to match Penns hysterical response to the Wax-Alexander op-ed, is there any educational institution remaining that will defend its faculty members against false accusations of racism should they dissent from orthodoxy?
Im sharing this with you now because we had a caller in the first hour reacting to Trumps speech suggesting that Trumps speech is gonna bring a lot of people who are ambivalent roaring into Trumps side. And while that may happen, there are also gonna be people like this, law school professors and law school deans who are gonna hear this speech is and theyre gonna equate it with, if youre talking American greatness, if youre talking American primacy, youre talking white supremacy.
Thats the definition for it, apparently. The definition of white supremacy is American greatness. And thats why American greatness is illegitimate. Because it was brought about and derived from a majority white population, which was, they claim, a bunch of supremacists, who were also bigots, who were also anti-gay, anti-woman, and anti-trans. Thats what white supremacy has come to be an umbrella for. And so any element of American history that shows a predominant American greatness must be ascribed to white supremacy and white privilege and therefore is disqualified as legitimate.
And any op-ed such as this that suggests a return to the timeless values for humanity all over the world, I mean, theres some things you hear that are distinctly American, but were basically talking human values: hard work, rugged individualism, self-reliance, those are things were born with. They have to be beaten out of people. They have to be raised out of people. Those kind of things have to be actively suppressed in people, because those things are the natural inclination of human beings, most of them.
Not all, because, I mean, some people are born to be helpless and incompetent and incapable, but that is more than canceled out by the number of people who are just filled with get up and go, self-reliance, desire, ambition, unstoppable desire and confidence. Those are two primary ingredients that most Americans are born with, and they have to be beaten out of people. Life has a way of doing that. You can show up your first day of school confident and so forth and face hazing, any number of things, and those things can be beaten out of you. It happens to people. I acknowledge this.
But two aspects of this op-ed have generated the most outrage. The authors, Amy Wax and Larry Alexander, observed that cultures are, quote, not all equal in preparing people to be productive in an advanced economy. In other words, some cultures are not as good as other cultures at helping, at preparing, at teaching, at inspiring people to be productive in an advanced economy.
Their critics pounced on this statement as a bigoted, hate-filled violation of the multicultural ethic. In his response, Penns Dean Ruger proclaimed that as a scholar and educator I reject emphatically any claim that a single cultural tradition is better than all others.'
But thats not what they said. You see how this happens? They didnt say anything or anybody was any better than anybody else. They said all cultures are not equal in preparing people to be productive in an advanced economy. They argued that the bourgeois culture is better than an underclass culture. I hate the word bourgeois thrown in here. Some people think it means what it doesnt. Basically were talking the middle class here. Middle class, work-ethic culture has far more value than an underclass dependency culture does. Thats all theyre saying.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: The other offense in this op-ed, according to all the professors at the University of Pennsylvania law school and the dean, the offense of extolling the 1950s as something worthwhile. Nostalgia for the 1950s breezes over the truth of inequality and exclusion.
This was written by five faculty members at Penn reacting to the op-ed. But Mr. Alexander and Ms. Wax expressly acknowledge that eras racial discrimination, limited sex roles they talked about all that in their piece. They were talking about cultural values that were timeless and successful, regardless what other things might have been wrong.
The thing about this is, in all of the reaction, in all of the hyperbolic, paranoid, negative reaction among peers, law professors and the dean, there wasnt one attempt to actually engage with any of the arguments.
Just like the critics of this program. Never, never engage in an argument. They just call me names. They just call me racist, sexist, bigot, homophobe, in an effort to discredit me so that what I say has no value to people that hear it. And thats exactly what the reaction to this op-ed is: an attack on the two authors as racists, bigots, transphobes, homophobes, white supremacists.
The dean at the University of Pennsylvania announced that Larry Alexander, who was a cowriter of the op-ed and also a professor there, the dean said that his views were not representative of the views of our law school community and suggested that they were insensitive to many students who feel vulnerable, marginalized or fearful that they are not welcomed. He did not raise any specific objections to Mr. Alexanders arguments.
He just reacted with the usual left wing narrative spin diatribe. And the overall reaction, People are hurting. Theres insufferable pain. And theres marginalization over the inequality. And students are just scared, and its horrible, and its hard. Its hard enough to get through the day without having to read that we need to return to the days of white supremacy to make America great when the teachers are trying to get everybody not to believe that. Its incredible. This piece, you read it and think weve lost this. Were not in the process of losing; its gone.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Ill tell you what this op-ed proves, folks. I cant tell you the number of people asking me, When did this happen? How long have students been this helpless and scared on campus that we call em snowflakes? When did all this focus on white supremacy and white privilege, when did this stuff begin? When did all this liberalism hit?
Now, I made the point, people are not born thinking this way. Theyre not born thinking anything. Thats the thing about human beings, they have to be raised, inculcated, educated, propagandized, you name it, and this story is as instructive as anything I could give you to show you what is happening to kids at college and that the college faculty, academe, is one of the large homes of this massive, extreme move to the far left. Tenured liberal communist professors who have unfettered access to the children that are in their classrooms. And depending on how those kids arrive, meaning how theyve been raised and what they already think, they are probably easy marks for these professors.
Get the reaction from the law school dean. Now, all thats happened here Im gonna wrap this up and Im gonna get back to your calls. All that happened was two law school professors, one from University of Pennsylvania, one from University of San Diego, wrote a piece claiming that one of the fixes for whats wrong with America would be a return to values that many grew up with in the 1950s that rewarded hard work and discipline and self-reliance.
You know, figure out what you want to do and being serious about it, dont make the mistake of having children before you get married. Dont make any of the other cultural mistakes that are there to make that people can avoid with the right kind of motivation, instruction, and fear. Dont become part of the dependency class. Dont become part of the lower middle class or even lower where you become dependent, where youre incapable of taking care of yourself. Do just the opposite. Do what youre born with, be what youre born to be. We were all raised this way.
In fact, one of the things thats in trouble today, just the simple philosophy: work hard, be devoted, be patient, and you will have the future you desire, even that is under assault. And you know why? Because so many young people are becoming instant billionaires writing software programs that major corporations then buy for a billion here, $800 million over there.
Im not criticizing it. I run into a lot of people that do. I wish I could remember where it was. Oh! It was on the guy golf trip to Hawaii. One of the guys playing golf has a friend whose son is 14 and just became a millionaire writing a video game that somebody bought, and he couldnt get over it. The guys worked all his life and still hasnt earned a million dollars and the kid, whos 14, and he was livid by it. He was unbelieving. Theres something about that that wasnt right.
I said, You cant look at it that way. The kid has a talent thats being rewarded by the market. Yeah, but 14? A millionaire at 14? Yeah. But the fact is that this is happening, and when it does, its one of the biggest arguments against patience and work hard and all that stuff. Back in the fifties, you werent, quote, allowed to be a success until you were 40, meaning the adult cultural back then. You werent gonna be rewarded with a big vice presidency or big responsibility with big compensation til youd lived long enough to prove you could be trusted with it, to prove that you were valuable and worthwhile. It took time to prove these things.
Well, today, there isnt that patience. Thats what these two op-ed writers were suggesting, that for the vast majority of people, that philosophy is still applicable, its still workable, its still doable.
Not everybodys gonna become an overnight millionaire writing a video game, for example. So how are you gonna get there? If you dont have a talent writing video games, if youre not an athlete, how you gonna get there? Hard work, find out what you want to do, stay on the straight and narrow, all these things. They wrote an op-ed about it, and the university faculty went nuts claiming thats a return to white supremacy. And these two professors that wrote it are being ostracized. And listen to what the dean of the University of Pennsylvania law school has done. His name is Ruger, and he has promised more classes, more speakers and workplaces on racism, more training on racial sensitivity and a new committee to devise further diversity measures, stronger racial preferences will most certainly follow. The implication of all of this is that the law school faculty is full of bigots and that we didnt know it until these two wrote this op-ed. And so we need to go even harder in our opposition to white supremacy and racism and bigotry.
All because an op-ed in a newspaper, not might have, it did literally upset psychologically the dean of the law school and presumably all the students are simply not tough enough to deal with this. So we are raising a bunch of snowflakes. We are raising a bunch of people that are becoming totally dependent on authority. Were not raising people to be courageous and bold. We are accommodating silly, invisible, nonexistent fears about silly, nonexistent behaviors.
You couldnt put the number of white supremacists in this country in a phone booth. Its a long answer to the question. You think a lot of people that dont like Trump are gonna turn around and be woken up by some will. But just as many are gonna be scared to death. By the time the professors get through with Trumps U.N. speech, the kids on many university campuses are gonna think, Oh, my God, nuclear war! Oh, my God, cause Trumps making em mad.
It's not where they met, however; they were friends since junior high school.
The inmates really are running the asylums in the universities.
Rush is shilling for amnesty.
Well yea. They want to kill every white person on Earth. They are winning in Europe. Who doesn’t already know this?
My dad did his post doc specialty at Penn...that was a loooong tome ago
I left the University of Dayton in 2016, partly because I could/had the money to do so, but also because I saw this stuff coming . . . soon . . . to even “Catholic” universities. I knew as a history professor very soon you would not be able to teach honestly about such things as the Crusades (for offending Moslems), the Civil War (for legitimately explaining both the role of slavery and the concerns over states’ rights), or Indians (for bringing up the fact that they murdered each other as much as they did the whites.
more trivia: the Columbo character is based on GK Chesterton’s detective, Father Brown.
You're hilarious and
If people follow this advice, they will escape the underclass (or won’t be in it at all), and progressives cannot allow that. They need — must have — a permanent underclass, ever expanding and ever more dependent, so they will do and say whatever it takes to keep the underclass under and to shove more people into it.
Progressives lack compassion and tolerance. Only their self-aggrandizement matters.
“The definition of white supremacy is American greatness.”
If that’s their outlook, then I’m a white heterosupremacist. Now, what are you shitty little snowflakes going to do about it?
Save
Big problem with the 50’s too many democrats in Congress. I’ll take the 20’s.
Their outlook is the very definition of insanity. We’ve been saying for years that liberalism is a mental disease. The snowflakes of today have set out to prove that proposition beyond all reasonable doubt.
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