It is quite a setting at the University of Virginia for this years 2011 graduation and interestingly enough it is not without a few wrinkles. Interestingly enough, the graduate students in engineering do not wear hoods if they are masters graduates. Personally, I like mine… both of them! However, this was my first time at the university and Kristin was kind enough to give me the grand tour. I particularly took interest on the many and varied restaurants surrounding the university, all worth a look! As a fan of President Jefferson, I found the history and atmosphere captivating. I was surprised at how ‘square’ Jefferson’s jaw was in his statues, but then maybe the artist took some liberties? đ
Now we are waiting for family to arrive and it seems like this might be a busy weekend after all as I hear the airports are already stressed from the increased traffic! Many congratulations to all the graduates, everywhere!
I made this heaping pile of BBQ’d Ribs for Karen’s graduation Party! Chef Kristin prepared Prime Rib Steaks, garlic Bread, Roosevelts Baked beans and plenty of goodies!
It is always exciting when someone we know achieves a milestone and our daughter Karen gained her doctorate at the University of Tennessee this week! In addition, even in this tough job market, she was offered and accepted a tenured track position at the University of Louisville! Congratulations!
The University of Louisville will be Karen’s new home
I guess going to the Kentucky Derby in Louisville may be in our future plans!
Is educational administrators really like private industry managers? If you think it is a typical labor vs. management squabble, think again! Visualize: teachers trying to budge immovable, hired-for-life bureaucrats and you have a better picture.
After some thought on seeing what is appearing to be okay to say and do on college campuses and in the media, I thought it might be important to talk about something that very few people seem to value anymore and appear to be willing to trade in for a little collegiality–I am speaking about our right to be heard and our right to express our opinion. Progress cannot occur if some opinions and ideas are viewed and treated as heresy and others are not.
âWe are not afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.â ~John F. Kennedy
REAL HATE
A recent news report about McGill University told the following story:
âA McGill University student is under investigation by police after he allegedly made death threats using his Twitter account. The student, Haaris Khan, was watching a documentary screened by the Conservative Partyâs campus arm, Conservative McGill, when he appeared to become increasingly agitated and expressed himself on Twitter using his BlackBerry. âIâve infiltrated a Zionist meeting. I feel like Iâm at a Satanist ritual,â he allegedly wrote at the March 8th screening. âI want to shoot everyone in this room,â another tweet said. âNever been this angry.â The tweets call the documentary a âZionist/Conservative propaganda filmâ and the gathering, which attracted about 20 students, âa secret Zionist convention.â Then: âI should have brought an M16.â
The article goes on to say that Khan continued tweeting the following day: âThe jihad begins today.â (thestar.com)
âINDOCTRINATE U. â â the movie
The movie they were watching at McGill University is called âIndoctrinate U,â which has â interestingly enough — nothing to do with Islam, Jihads or Pita Bread. What makes it interesting to us, is the fact that some local San Luis Obispo heroes, villains and our very own Cal Poly plays a part in this fun story that rivals the best old fashioned Melodrama. (BTW, you can see excerpts of âIndoctrinate U.â on YouTube and, if you look very closely, you can even see a clip or two of me providing wisdom.) The film is actually about the suppression of constitutionally protected free speech in academia. Are you confused? Why would anyone react so violently to a movie about free speech?
The answer to this question is very troubling. On college campuses today, the suppression of free speech has been used to freeze discourse, specify approved points of view, and indoctrinate students and faculty to the accepted truths as seen by those in charge. âAccepted viewsâ become a litmus test for any candidate being hired into academia. Then we get reports saying that American students are not very good at debate any more. Can you possibly imagine why, when all differences from the âapprovedâ opinions are suppressed?
THOUGHT POLICE
A common tactic of the âthought policeâ is to accuse someone of being âracistâ or as using âhate speech.â This is a way of maintaining power over any group. However, there are some groups that it is still okay to hate.
In American society today, there are two groups: those groups that are okay to hate and a second protected class that is not okay to hate, or criticize, or even âtolerate,â because âtolerateâ implies youâre putting up with someone instead of âcelebratingâ him or her. On the surface, most people can throw some candidates into each pile for discussion. It may be okay to say that you hate child molesters but you think hating a particular ethnic group is wrong.
The Supreme Court continues to rule in favor of ‘free speech’:
“Freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much. That would be a mere shadow of freedom. The test of its substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order. If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.” â Supreme Court Ruling West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624
WHO IS IT OKAY TO HATE? â U.C. Davis Case & Academia
I have a family of teachers and I have taught quite a bit myself and although there are many wonderful people in the profession; as a whole, it is a mess.
The two groups that are still okay to hate, particularly on college campuses, are Christians and conservatives.
Up until very recently, the University of California at Davis had a statement on its website that said:
âThe loss of power and privilege to those who do not practice the dominant culture’s religion. In the United States, this is institutionalized oppression toward those who are not ChristianâŚâ
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education said:
â⌠Even more shocking is the fact that under this definition, Christians cannot be the victims of religious discrimination. No, because Christianity is âthe dominant culture’s religion,â UC Davis maintained that Christians cannot themselves be subject to discriminationâŚâ
At Cal Poly, just ask a member of Campus Crusade for Christ how they are treated by professors when their membership is knownâŚ. Here is the data on who is okay to hate:
The majority of American professors admit to âhatingâ Christians (Profiles of the American University, by Gary A. Tobin and Aryeh K. Weinberg). Also on the list of people who are okay to hate are Republicans. Try to get a job in academia today if anyone knows you are a Republican. One Cal Poly professor told a classroom of students that the primordial ooze of evolution is where you would find Republicans. Substitute the name of any âprotectedâ group into that sentence, and the professor would be national news. As it is, nothing will ever happen to this person, except maybe a pat on the back. Another professor, soon after the Arizona shooting of Gabby Giffords, told his class that âeveryone would be happy if Dick Cheneyâs airplane crashed.â Iâm betting that these two professors are very likely to sport âHate: See it, stop itâ posters on their office doors.
WHO ARE WE ALLOWED TO BULLY?
âWhat progress we are making. In the Middle Ages they would have burned me. Now they are content with burning my books.â ~Sigmund Freud, 1933
I am sure you have heard how important it is to address bullying in the schools; however, it is the definition of who is protected and who is excluded that raises concern. Here is something surprising from the Washington Times:
ââŚHere is the catch. DOJ will only investigate bullying cases if the victim is considered protected under the 1964 Civil Rights legislation. In essence, only discrimination against a victimâs race, sex, national origin, disability, or religion will be considered by DOJ. The overweight straight white male who is verbally and/or physically harassed because of his size can consider himself invisible to the Justice Department. Apparently, the Justice Department is going by George Orwellâs famous Animal Farm ending: âAll animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.â
SUMMARY
The key to remember is that not all âhate groupsâ wear hoods or black or green masks, some just hide in the public sector, or occasionally put on doctoral robes and teach in our universities or they may have traded in their protest signs and gone into indoctrinating our young.
There is a long road ahead of us. We must protect free speech, ensure a diversity of ideas on campus and change the faculty climate.
 Karla has loved to shop at New Frontiers Market in San Luis Obispo… forever. She was very pleased when they built their new store very close to where we live and she wanted to bring her camera to celebrate the moment! Karla is holding a package of ‘Gogi Berries’… which as far as I can tell sontain some ‘charmed properties’ in Karla’s opinion… but they look like dried raisins to me with a lot less pulp. Karla wanted to take a picture of me… well… filling a bag up with steel cut oats. Health foods stores are great places to buy quality food… but usually not great prices. The steel cut oats at around $1.69 or so a pound are well worth the trip!
Oh yes, they have a nice take out sushi bar inside!