By George Leef
Sunday, December 04, 2022
The diversity, equity, and inclusion mania continues to
sweep through American higher education, with fresh offensives launching almost
every week. Unscholarly administrators who are full of rage against everything
that has made Western civilization so successful are constantly pressuring
faculty members to put more “woke” blather into their courses.
At least a few, however, don’t care to go along. In
this North State Journal article, English
professor Nan Miller (retired, and thus safe to speak her mind) writes about a
dissident she knows.
She writes, “My informant, who, for now, identifies only
as Professor X, was among those who sat poker-faced in a workshop as the new
DEI director justified her involvement in academics on the grounds that, left
alone, university professors would not understand ‘the psychological processes
that impact the ways people interact with each other’ — implying that, left
alone, professors might band together in a cabal of bigots.”
Professor X is keeping his head down while gathering
information that, he hopes, will enable the school’s leadership to do an
about-face and return to just teaching real academic subjects.
Miller continues, “The dissenters were struck first by
the contrast in the czarina’s $300K-plus salary and her mission to have
classroom instruction reflect her claim that capitalism is ‘a major driver of
systems of oppression in the United States’ and ‘continues to be the beating
heart behind inequity, discrimination and income inequality.’ What the
dissenters heard instead was that a Sharpie with a degree in Human Resources
could make anti-capitalism a highly profitable sideshow in higher
education.”
The “czarina” is a mis-educated zealot who has no
business dictating to real scholars what they are expected to believe, but this
sort of thing is common throughout our education system.
Miller concludes, “While students are sharpening their
‘self-censoring’ skills, soon-to-be former Professor X is quietly making plans
to transition into whistle blowing. At the close of our off-campus session, my
new hero quoted Charles Dickens’ appraisal of the type whose ‘glorious vision
of doing good is so often the sanguine mirage of many good minds.’ My source has
a far, far better plan to end the worst of times in our public
universities.”
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