By Kayla Bartsch
Saturday, August 03, 2024
At the risk of waxing autobiographical, I have found
myself in a strange place since J. D. Vance’s VP nomination and the media’s
subsequent focus on his academic pedigree.
Vance’s childhood and mine were hardly parallel, as my
family was not beset by substance abuse, domestic violence, or anything of that
sort. But our backgrounds share certain broad plot points: Heartland kid from a
conservative community attends elite East Coast institution — in Vance’s case,
Yale Law School, in mine, Yale College — and receives a culture shock.
Most of what I knew about the culture of Yale (or
old-money Connecticut WASPs) came from Hollywood — as is the case for many Yale
students who do not come from, say, a Northeast boarding school. The TV shows Gossip
Girl and Gilmore Girls (similar both in theme and name) formed my
imagination of Yale’s culture and student body before I arrived.
In the summer before I left for college, I distinctly
remember running around the Mall of America with my mom in a feverish state,
looking through racks of pleated pants at Banana Republic and blazers at J.
Crew as we attempted to add “professional” clothing to my Minnesotan wardrobe
of jeans, T-shirts, and flannel.
Like many other incoming students, I was afraid of being
underdressed, underprepared, and uncultured. When I got to campus, however, I
quickly realized that my fears were overblown. Although it is true that alumni
from Northeast boarding schools are well represented on campus, Yale’s student
body hails from across the U.S. — and the globe. As for clothing, jeans and
T-shirts were the norm, though students were regularly skewered in the pages of
the Yale Daily News for wearing brand items like Canada Goose jackets or
Patagonia quarter-zips. Even America’s most elite universities are allergic to
their own elitism.
I realize “defender of the Ivy Leagues” is not a title
many would desire — but the times demand what they may. Vitriol has lately been
spewing from the New Right, denigrating the very foundations of the university.
This is a dangerous trend.
Now, of course, many universities do not live up to their
name. Instead, they’re pay-for-play degree mills that entice students to go
into debt for a degree in something like organizational psychology. Liberal
education or civic learning is rarely on the menu. This reality demands
university reform — not annihilation.
For starters, the purpose of a university is not to
ensure that a graduate gets a well-paying job. That is oftentimes a secondary
effect of receiving a good education, but it is decidedly not the goal. In a
democratic republic, where the citizens are the sovereign, the fate of the
nation relies on the education of the people. A true liberal education —
“liberal” as in “the basis of a free society” — fosters critical thinking, the
ability of an individual to think for himself, while it familiarizes the
student with the underpinnings of Western civilization. Well-educated citizens
are a republic’s first line of defense against demagoguery and
authoritarianism.
National conservatives, however, seem more interested in
demagoguery and authoritarianism than in the preservation of liberal education.
The NatCons’ anti-university rhetoric has dovetailed with a fierce
anti-intellectualism among the populist New Right.
Yes, the progressive takeover of the Ivy Leagues is a
huge problem. Anti-intellectualism is not the way to fight it.
These two statements can be simultaneously true:
1. A
hydra of progressive ideology has twisted itself around campuses across
America.
2. The
mission of a university is good in itself and a boon to civic society.
With regard to Yale, I could offer a litany of criticisms
of administrative bloat, the political tilt of the faculty, and the values
prevalent on campus — but this does not negate the fact that there are still
excellent professors and bright minds on campus. Many leaders, including
leaders on the right, emerged not that long ago from Ivy League universities.
Florida governor Ron DeSantis, one of the most effective “anti-woke” warriors,
graduated from Yale and Harvard. Ben Sasse, former U.S. senator and outgoing
president of the University of Florida, where he spearheaded the restoration of
liberal education, graduated from Harvard and Yale. Along with the Supreme
Court’s most conservative justices, Justice Brett Kavanaugh received his J.D.
from Yale Law School. Senator Tom Cotton graduated from Harvard, former
congressman Mike Gallagher from Princeton. And let us not forget, Donald
J. Trump received his BA from an Ivy League school, the University of
Pennsylvania.
The way to fight an ideology is to put forth better
ideas. To put forth the truth. Where does this battle of ideas happen? In the
university.
At the second annual National Conservatism Conference in
2021, Vance said as much in his speech, “Universities
Are the Enemy”:
Why, ladies and gentlemen, are our
school children learning from schoolteachers that America is a fundamentally
racist and evil country? Because those same schoolteachers learned it from some
progressive professor at a university 10 or 15 years ago. That is the
fundamental problem of American truth and knowledge. Today we have created a
system where to work in the modern economy, to live a middle-class life, you
have to go to a university. That is what our elites tell our young people. And
yet, at those universities, they are told that working with your hands is
looked down upon. They are told that America is a fundamentally racist and evil
country. They are taught — the children who go through this university system —
that this country built by our fathers and grandfathers is an evil and terrible
place.
What Vance argued against in his speech is not
universities themselves but prominent ideas that have seeped into university
curricula across the country. Here Vance is deriding a certain species of
critical race theory, but he conflates that particular ideology with
universities on the whole.
Conservatives’ concern over the progressive tilt of
universities is nothing new. William F. Buckley Jr. famously got his start
criticizing his alma mater for embracing leftist ideas at the expense of real
education. In God and Man at Yale, Buckley says he wants to see the
college reformed because he still loves the essence of the place and his
experience there.
Buckley’s paternal concern for Yale is a different beast
altogether from the right-wing wrath of the NatCons, who believe our elite
universities are beyond repair and must be dismantled. If conservatives want to
curb the rise of critical theory in higher education, they must fight it head
on, on its home turf.
While “anti-woke” efforts at the K–12 level and beyond,
like those spearheaded by Governor DeSantis in Florida and Governor Glenn
Youngkin in Virginia, have effected real change for the better, these efforts
are necessarily limited. The policy initiatives they’ve led treat the symptoms
of bad ideas, not their cause.
A sizeable number of conservatives are in fact working to
address the source of education’s ills. Sasse made strides in the establishment
of the Hamilton Center at Florida, a civic center dedicated to forming civic
leaders and advancing the intellectual tradition of liberty. Although he is
stepping down as president to care for his wife, who is seriously ill, his
legacy — and that of the Hamilton Center — will remain influential as several
other state universities dedicate resources to civic education.
Conservatives should be more energized than ever when it
comes to reforming our nation’s universities. The universities are not the
enemy. Bad ideas are.
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