By Robert Tracinski
Monday, January 04, 2016
In last year’s roundup of the top stories of the year, I
argued that 2014 was the year we were all drafted into the culture wars. “This
is the year when we were served noticed that we won’t be allowed to stand on
the sidelines, because we will not be
allowed to think differently from the left.” The signature story of the year
was the comet shirt guy, a mild-mannered scientist caught wearing the wrong shirt on television. That case served notice that
“To be targeted by accusations of misogyny, you don’t have to be a
beer-chugging ‘bro’ who spends his Spring break judging wet T-shirt contests.
Now they’re coming after the geeks and yes, even the hipsters.”
Everyone is a combatant in the Great Social Justice War.
This past year saw some interesting follow-ups to that
story, including a rebellion among science fiction fans, who upset the Hugo
Awards in a briefly effective counterattack against political correctness, only
to be repulsed when the leftist establishment decided it had to burn down the
Hugos in order to save them.
But the big new development in 2015 is that the left’s
culture war came back to attack the very institutions that hatched it.
Early in the year, I remarked on the irony of leftist
writer Jonathan Chait whining about political correctness. He is absolutely
right about the stultifying, totalitarian nature of the demands for conformity
and the injustice of accusing people of racism merely for saying something you
don’t like. But the system he’s complaining about is one he helped bring into
existence and which he has used to smear his opponents as racists.
So you can see Chait’s dismay at seeing good white “liberals” have their
Not Racist credentials challenged by those who are farther out on the left.
Don’t they know how the system is supposed to work? Appeals to race, class, and
gender are supposed to be used to grant moral authority to (mostly) white,
male, heterosexual, “cis-gendered” folks like himself, no questions asked. He
is not supposed to find himself on the receiving end and have his moral
authority threatened by a bunch of uppity non-binary POCs….
In short, the mainstream left wanted to have its racial politics and not
get eaten by it, too. But once a system is in place and its basic principles
are established, it tends to keep operating to the logical end point of those
principles. And the logical end point is exactly what Chait is whining about:
Binary Persons Without Color on the left now face being summarily labeled and
dismissed as bigots — the very same treatment they have so eagerly applied to
the right for so many years.
This new round of political correctness has also turned
on the Democratic Party. In July, they began to expunge two key founders of the
party: Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson. But as I pointed out, by the same
reasoning hardly any Democratic Party icon would be safe, counting down
everyone from Woodrow Wilson to Jimmy Carter. And one part was prophetic:
students at Princeton University are now demanding that the school expunge its
revered former leader Woodrow Wilson.
That’s where the chickens have really come home to roost
this year: on college campuses.
In the middle of the year, I ticked down a list of
old-fashioned “liberal” pieties that have long since been abandoned by the
left. This includes the value of a liberal education.
The “liberal arts” did not originally refer to a political leaning. The
phrase referred to the kind of education in the humanities that was considered
appropriate for a free man. But the mid-20th-century political liberals
embraced a liberal education and regarded the liberal arts departments of the
universities as their natural home. Young people were encouraged to get a
liberal arts education to open their minds and broaden their horizons,
requiring them to understand the great historical debates and confront
unfamiliar ideas.
It all seems so hopelessly antique. There is a debate currently going on
about whether a liberal education is worthwhile, and whether anyone should
bother to get one any more. But the wider context for this debate is that the
liberals are the ones killing liberal education.
They’re killing it economically by means of the Paradox of Subsidies —
the decades of subsidized student loans that have made a college education so
outrageously expensive, and leaves young people with such enormous piles of
debt, that most students can’t afford to dabble in any field that doesn’t
promise an immediate economic payoff.
But they’ve also killed it off by stamping out all of the challenging
and unfamiliar ideas. This started in the 1990s when students protested for the
elimination of courses in Western Civilization, on the grounds that being asked
to think about great ideas produced by “dead white European males” is racist.
Today, this closed-mindedness has become a full-blown system, with “trigger
warnings” and “safe spaces” designed to quarantine students from contact with
uncomfortable ideas. As one student explained to a reporter, she needed to seek
the isolation of a safe space because, “I was feeling bombarded by a lot of
viewpoints that really go against my dearly and closely held beliefs.” Way back
when, liberals told us that this was the whole purpose of college. Then they
built a system that was intended to prevent precisely such encounters. It’s
almost as if they never really meant it — as if they meant that you were only
supposed to encounter ideas that challenge the beliefs of the right, not ideas
that challenge the dearly held beliefs of the left.
It is on campus that the left has created a
quasi-totalitarian system of social conformity — as the base from which they
have tried to impose those rules on everyone.
One of the examples this year is the war on comedy, in
which even revered figures like Jerry Seinfeld are taken to task for making
politically incorrect jokes, lest anyone become amused inappropriately. For
this reason, Seinfeld says he won’t perform at college campuses. But it’s no
use, because the
campus will come to him.
But the universities can’t escape having the same
quasi-totalitarian system imposed on themselves, and that’s what came to a head
this fall at the University of Missouri, Yale, and Claremont McKenna College —
with many other campus activists itching to get in on the revolution. The
universities, those utopias of multicultural tolerance, have found themselves
accused of being shot through with “systemic racism,” and protesters have
demanded the firing of administrators, all the way up to the presidents of
universities, for such crimes as daring to question the Halloween Costume
Inquisition.
All of which is a mortal danger the universities have
created for themselves.
This is higher ed’s time for choosing. If this is the new purpose of the
universities — to nurture a crop of activists trained at whipping up angry
mobs, and a generation of college graduates conditioned to submit to those mobs
—then there is no longer any purpose served by these institutions. There is
certainly no justification for the outrageous claim they are making on the
economic resources of the average family, which sends their kids to schools
whose tuition has been inflated by decades of government subsidies.
The universities have done this to themselves. They created the whole
phenomenon of modern identity politics and Politically Correct rules to limit
speech. They have fostered a totalitarian microculture in which conformity to
those rules is considered natural and expected. Now that system is starting to
eat them alive, from elite universities like Yale to Mizzou and on down.
And if they don’t fight back, they are facing the
steamroller of university office politics.
Everyone who has ever spent time around a university or with academics
knows that beneath all the high-flown ivory tower stuff, there is a constant
scramble for money and authority. Every department’s job is to expand itself,
to hire more faculty and administrators, to expand its budget, to get bigger
offices in a nicer building. Now the “social justice” faction among the faculty
has found a way to club everyone else into submission and win departmental
office politics once and for all. Accuse the university of systemic racism,
force its nominal leaders into groveling apologies, and then dictate terms to
the rest of the system. Emboldened and seeing that no one wants to stand up to
them, they’re even attempting to take over every other department of the
university by foisting mandatory courses in “social justice” on the math
department.
So what looks from the outside like a student protest movement looks on
the inside like an administrative coup by a small faction of the faculty, using
naive and ill-informed students as their shock troops.
It’s almost as if this were a pitched battle over money
and power, after all.
But there is a much deeper sense in which the campus protesters
are pawns of their professors. That figure of speech about chickens and roosts
is one that I borrowed from Ayn Rand, who used it about 50 years ago to
describe the first round of leftist campus protests and to make the point that
the student “rebels” were just dutifully parroting the ideas of their elders.
Taking a cue from her — and from presidential candidate Marco Rubio — I argued
that we can blame the philosophers.
[T]here is a reason the field of philosophy has fallen so far into
disrepute that it has become the butt of presidential debates. It ends with the
current campus insanity, but it begins with that scoundrel Immanuel Kant….
At the heart of Kant’s system, there is a radical skepticism: perception
is inherently distorting, so there is no indisputable reality we have access
to. There’s only the truth as it appears to you, filtered through your own
consciousness…. [T]here is no truth, only people’s perception — well, I think
you can begin to see how we get to Yale, Mizzou, and the current grievance
culture….
We had to add racial differences to the things that distort our
perception, then we had to accommodate the feminists (and the LGBTQ) by adding
gender, until we got to the modern (or postmodern) holy trinity of “race,
class, and gender.” But the key Kantian assumption remains: that there is no
universal truth, just your “perspective,” as a trans person of color or a left-handed
lesbian tugboat worker, or whatever. And no one else is entitled to question
your perspective. It’s true because it’s true for you. If you are aggrieved,
the very fact of your grievance validates itself.
If that’s the case, what’s the point of discussing any of it? It’s not
for others to question or for you to explain. You just scream out your rage and
frustration, and they have to cave….
This is the universities expressing the final, consistent form of their
own ruling philosophy.
There are two centuries of chickens coming home to roost,
because that’s how long ago academic intellectuals began toying with the idea
that ideas don’t matter and everything is just a raw power struggle.
But while the new political correctness may seem
irresistibly strong — at least when it is employed against soft targets like
university administrators — that masks an underlying weakness, what I called
the Paradox of Dogma: “If you try to shut down public debate, is this a way of
ensuring that you win — or an admission that you have already lost?”
If I were to come up with one idea for how the left could cripple itself
over the long term, it would be: teach your young adherents that ideological
debate is an abnormal trauma and that it is a terrible imposition to ever
expect them to engage in it. It is a great way of raising a generation of
mental cripples. And that is exactly what they have set out to do….
The most powerful historical precedent for this is the totalitarian
creed of the Soviet Union — a dogma imposed, not just by campus censors or a
Twitter mob, but by gulags and secret police. Yet one of the lessons of the
Soviet collapse is that the ideological uniformity of a dictatorship seems
totally solid and impenetrable — right up to the moment it cracks apart. The
imposition of dogma succeeds in getting everyone to mouth the right slogans,
even as fewer and fewer of them understand or believe the ideology behind it.
And that brings us back to a question I started the year
with: have we reached Peak Leftism?
[I]ts very dominance of cultural institutions means that the left is up
against a couple of big unfavorable factors…. [W]hat happens if our culture
reverts to the mean? Even a small change in that direction would be experienced
as a massive cultural swing to the right.
When a field swings back from 95-5 dominance to just an 80-20 majority,
that would be experienced as a quadrupling of the number of right-leaning
voices in the field. Moreover, any such shift is likely to have a snowballing
effect. Those who are sympathetic to the right but were afraid to speak out
would be more likely to declare themselves. Many people would be exposed to and
convinced by pro-free-market arguments that they might not have heard under the
old groupthink. People who might have given up on careers in academia or the
mainstream media, on the assumption that their politics limit their career
prospects, would be encouraged to persist and would find employers and mentors
who share their views. Eventually, a critical mass of prominent right-leaning
achievers in these fields would chip away at the automatic assumption that
certain cultural markers — being young, being educated, being sophisticated,
being artistic — are inherently associated with being on the left.
The problem for the modern left is that it has bet everything on those
associations.
A swing back to the right, I concluded, is not at all
inevitable. Rather, the fragility of the left’s dominance presents us with an
opportunity. And given the number of people who thought their moderate
liberalism made them safe from political correctness but who are now
discovering how foolish that was, there is plenty of fuel for a backlash.
If 2014 was the year the politically correct left tried
to impose its orthodoxy on everyone, and 2015 was the year it turned against
its ideological home in universities, then it is possible that 2016 will be the
year when some of its targets begin to fight back.
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