By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
What do widely diverse crises such as declining
demography, increasing indebtedness, Generation Z’s indifference to religion
and patriotism, static rates of home ownership, and a national epidemic of
ignorance about American history and traditions all have in common?
In a word, 21st-century higher education.
A pernicious cycle begins even before a student enrolls.
A typical college-admission application is loaded with questions to the
high-school applicant about gender, equality, and bias rather than about math,
language, or science achievements. How have you suffered rather than what you
know and wish to learn seems more important for admission. The therapeutic
mindset preps the student to consider himself a victim of cosmic forces, past
and present, despite belonging to the richest, most leisured, and most
technologically advanced generation in history. Without a shred of gratitude,
the young student learns to blame his ancestors for what he is told is wrong in
his life, without noticing how the dead made sure that almost everything around
him would be an improvement over 2,500 years of Western history.
Once admitted, students take classes from faculty who,
polls reveal, are roughly 90 percent liberal. According to one recent survey,
Democrat professors on average outnumber Republican faculty by a 12-to-1 ratio
on the nation’s supposedly diverse campuses. But such political asymmetries are
magnified by a certain progressive messianic self-righteousness that turns the
lectern into the pulpit, the captive class into a congregation. The rare
conservative professor is more resigned to the tragedy of the universe and, in
live-and-let-live fashion, vacates the campus arena to the left-wing gladiators
who wish to slay any perceived heterodoxy.
Campus activism has replaced the old university creed of
disinterested inquiry. Students are starting to resemble military recruits in
boot camp, prepping to become hardened social-justice warriors on the
frontlines of America’s new wars over climate change, gun control, abortion,
and identity politics. In Camp Yale or Duke Social Warrior Base, they learn
just enough about purported historical oppression to make them dangerous, as
they topple statues, demand the renaming of streets and buildings, and swarm
professors deemed politically incorrect.
No wonder that certain issues — abortion, global warming,
illegal immigration — are mostly off-limits to campus disagreement. Safe
spaces, racial theme houses, and censorship have replaced the 1960s ideals of
unfettered free speech and racial and ethnic integration and assimilation.
Today’s students often combine the worst traits of bullying and cowardice. They
are quite ready as a mob to dish it out against unorthodox individuals, and yet
they’re suddenly quite vulnerable and childlike when warned to lighten up about
Halloween costumes or a passage in Huckleberry Finn. The 19-year-old
student is suddenly sexually mature, a Bohemian, a cosmopolitês when
appetites call — only to revert to Victorian prudery and furor upon discovering
that callousness, hurt, and rejection are tragically integral to crude
promiscuity and sexual congress without love.
The curricula in the social sciences and humanities are
largely politicized. Culture, history, and literature are often taught through
the binary lenses of victims and victimizers, as a deductive zero-sum
melodrama. There is little allowance for tragedy, irony, and paradox or simply
the complexities of the human experience. That preexisting slavery,
imperialism, and atrocity were as common in the New World, Asia, and Africa as
in Europe is rarely mentioned in the boilerplate campus indictment of the West.
The reason that the Aztecs were in Mexico and Central America rather than
Madrid was not that they were morally superior. Nor was it that they lacked
imperial impulse. Rather, they lacked ocean-going technology, sophisticated
maritime navigation, gunpowder, horses, steel, and a military tradition dating
back to Rome. So they confined their genocidal sacrifices and imperial
conquests to their neighbors on the Mexican peninsula.
Stranger still, the actual structure of the university is
as reactionary as its governing ideology is radical.
In a society where almost no one has lifetime job
security, professors take for granted archaic ideas of tenure as a modern
career birthright. Yet they seem reluctant to extend such costly indulgences to
other part-time instructors who are less fortunate.
The dirty little secret on campuses is that a legion of
exploited, temporary lecturers, usually without multiyear contracts, are paid
far less than tenured professors — often to teach the same classes. In short,
an entire caste of low-paid faculty who lack the perks and benefits of their
liberal permanent superiors subsidize thousands of colleges and their
supposedly liberal agendas. The academic mentality is to feel angst about the distant
plight of the would-be illegal immigrant waiting to cross the border; the angst
is a sort of medieval penance for ignoring the exploited lecturer under one’s
nose who indirectly supports the perks of the tenured.
Progressive college administrators, in the abstract, love
unions and collective bargainers as long as they stay off campus and far away
from their own exploited teachers. Tenure was originally designed to protect
the sometimes unorthodox and even heretical views of the faculty. Today, however,
professors who preach “diversity” in lockstep do not want to hear diverse ideas
and values, among either students or faculty. Tenure has become not protection
for against-the-grain expression but a merit badge for the party faithful
coming up through the ranks. Try giving a public lecture on campus about the
ill effects of abortion, the inconsistencies of global-warming advocacy,
respect for the Second Amendment, or skepticism over identity politics. The
result would be a student version of the Jacobin Reign of Terror.
The federal government guarantees student loans to pay
skyrocketing tuition and room and board. That guarantee has empowered
crony-capitalist universities to hike their annual costs far above the rate of
inflation — without much worry over what happens to their customers when and if
they graduate.
Elsewhere in the real world, buyers receive guarantees
when they pay for services. Consumers are appraised of the risks of taking out
high-risk loans. But most colleges and universities are exempt from such oversight.
At first, students don’t seem to object — at least when they are in school and
still mesmerized by luxury apartments, latte bars, Club Med fitness centers,
and dreams of six-figure salaries upon graduation as payback for their
progressive fides. Apparently, campuses have adopted the logic of car dealers
who jack up the prices of their autos at buying time with all sorts of hip,
extra accessories that hypnotize consumers into taking out multiyear loans to
purchase luxury models beyond their means.
Eighteen-year-olds entering college are seldom warned by
campus financial officers exactly how long their debt obligations will last —
or which majors are likely to lead to better salaries after graduation. None
are given itemized bills that are broken down to show where their money is
going. Many who will remain in debt for years might have wished to know how
much they paid for the vast swamp of non-teaching facilitators and high-paid
administrators.
Colleges today can never assure students that after
graduation they will at least test higher on the standardized tests than when
they entered. If colleges could do that, they’d long ago have required exit
examinations to boast of their success. Instead, the higher-education industry
insists that almost any baccalaureate degree is a good deal, without worrying
about how much it costs or whether their brand certifies any real knowledge.
Again, the logic is that of consumer branding — as we see with Coca-Cola, Nike,
and Google — in which status rather than cost-benefit efficacy is purchased.
Does anyone believe that a graduating senior of tony Harvard, Yale, or Stanford
knows more than a counterpart at Hillsdale or St. John’s?
The net result is a current generation that owes $1.6
trillion in college loans to the federal government. And that debt is now
affecting the entire country, including those who never went to college, who as
taxpayers eventually may be asked to forgive some if not all the debt. An
entire generation of Americans has costly degrees; many cannot use them to find
well-paying jobs, and they increasingly forgo or delay marriage, child-rearing,
and buying a car or home until their mid-twenties or thirties. All that pretty
much sums up the profile of Antifa, Black Lives Matter, and Occupy Wall Street adherents
— or the environmental-studies major who is shocked that a skilled electrician
makes three times more than he does.
Colleges are turning out woke and broke graduates. They
are not up to ensuring the country that they will pass on to the next generation
an America that’s as prosperous, secure, and ethical as what they inherited and
have so often faulted.
Ignorance, arrogance, and ingratitude are now the brands
of the undergraduate experience. No wonder a once duly honored institution,
higher education, is now either the butt of jokes or cynically seen as a
credentialing factory.
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