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-Short Attention Span Theater-
I Still Blame the Communists
2015-06-10
[The Weekly Standard] Maybe American higher education was never all that serious about, you know, the education portion of its name. After more than a decade of teaching in the Ivy League, the philosopher George Santayana dubbed Harvard and Yale the nation's toy Athens and toy Sparta. He actually meant it as a compliment--as much a compliment, anyway, as he could muster. Santayana resigned his Harvard professorship in 1912 and moved to Europe.

But something especially odd does seem to be happening on American campuses these days. I confess to a little schadenfreude about the widely reported situation of Laura Kipnis, the Northwestern University professor whose feminist essay in praise of faculty-student dating prompted her school to investigate her for violations of the antidiscrimination provisions of Title IX. Kipnis is a widely published controversialist, and over the years she fanned the feminist flames that have now tried to burn her. The revolution, as the old story goes, devours its children.

Still, from symbolic mattresses and op-eds against Ovid at Columbia, to students interrogated about their Jewishness at UCLA and Stanford, to the stories of lawsuits filed by the undergraduates accused by their colleges of rape, to the reports of the Boston University teacher who used her Twitter account for anti-white-male messages, to the creation of "safe spaces" lest a public lecture trigger a bad memory in someone, to . . . On and on it seems to go, each fresh day bringing some fresh account of militant outrage at American colleges. "Only the dead have seen the end of war," Santayana once warned us. Certainly only the dead have seen the end of campus upset.

It wasn't always thus. I'm not thinking of some supposedly idyllic moment in the 1840s, or the 1910s, or the 1950s. I mean that 20 years ago, in the mid-1990s, at least a small sense of relief was felt by a number of people. Back in 1987, Allan Bloom had out-Santayana'd Santayana with his bestselling lament, The Closing of the American Mind. In the early 1990s Roger Kimball and Dinesh D'Souza added widely read books on the radicalism of college faculty--even as the collapse of Soviet communism from 1989 to 1991 deflated the hopes of the Marxist professors they wrote about.
Posted by:Besoeker

#1  The 'progressives' are simply the evolution of limousine communists. One set of rules for thee, another set of rules for me.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2015-06-10 08:18  

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