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Magazine 24...
The
Trap of
Minority Studies Programs
By John
Ellis
June 16, 2012
When Naomi
Schaefer Riley was fired by the Chronicle of Higher Education for her
trenchant
remarks on Black Studies programs, most of those who criticized the
firing saw
in it a display of the campus left’s intolerance. Fair enough, but this
episode
also has a much broader meaning.
In the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, large populations of poor
immigrants
arrived in the U.S.--Irish, Italians, and Jews from Russia and Poland.
Their
extreme poverty placed them at the bottom of the social ladder, and
they were
often treated with contempt. Yet just a few generations later they were
assimilated, and their rapid upward social mobility had produced
mayors,
senators, judges, and even Presidents from among their ranks. None of
this
could have happened without first-rate public education.
To be sure,
they worked hard to get ahead, but they were not obstructed by
something that
afflicts the have-nots of today: as they walked through the school
gates they
were not met by people intent on luring them into Irish or Italian
Studies
programs whose purpose was to keep them in a state of permanent
resentment over
past wrongs at the hands of either Europeans or establishment America.
Instead,
they could give their full attention to learning. They took courses
that
informed them about their new land’s folkways and history, which gave
them both
the ability and the confidence needed to grasp the opportunities it
offered
them.
When we
compare this story with what is happening to minority students today,
we see a
tragedy. Just as Pinocchio went off to school with high hopes, only to
be
waylaid by J. Worthington Foulfellow, minority students are met on the
way to
campus by hard-left radicals who claim to have the interests of the
newcomers
at heart but in reality prey on them to advance their own selfish
interests. Of
course, what black students need is the same solid traditional
education that
had raised Irish, Italians, and Jews to full equality. But that would
not serve
the campus radicals’ purpose. Disaffected radicals wanted to swell the
ranks of
the disaffected, not the ranks of the cheerfully upward mobile. Genuine
progress for minority students would mean their joining and thus
strengthening
the mainstream of American society--the mainstream that campus radicals
loathe.
Faculty
radicals worked hard to put the kind of coursework that had served
others so
well out of the reach of minority students. They stigmatized those
courses as
Eurocentric, oppressive, and dominant-class oriented, and they worked
successfully
to remove them from curricular requirements. The very idea of upward
mobility
was made to appear a capitulation to the corrupt value system of the
dominant
class.
As
thinkers, campus radicals are poor role models for students. Their
ideas are
simple and rigid, and they rely heavily on conspiracy thinking that
infers far
too much from too little. They are powered by emotional commitments
that are
highly resistant to the lessons of experience. As a result, their
cherished
ideas are now virtually obsolete, and strike any reasonably
well-informed
observer as downright silly. The minority students that they attract
into their
orbit are dragged down to this low intellectual level.
This
background is the key to the fury that Naomi Schaefer Riley’s
criticisms of
Black Studies dissertations unleashed. Radical leftists have achieved
considerable influence on campus in part because they were able to add
substantial numbers of incoming minorities to their numbers. They need
those
students in self-destructive Black Studies courses that keep them
resentful and
under-educated. But that is only possible if they can maintain the
illusion
that they help and support black students, rather than exploiting them.
Ms
Schaefer Riley was a threat to that illusion, and that is why she was
attacked
so vehemently.
Black
Studies does have one thing right: black students are indeed oppressed.
What
they have wrong is who is doing the oppressing. People of good-will on
both
sides of the political aisle should join together to insist that black
students
be given the same chance that other groups got to join the mainstream.
This
latest version of the plantation ought to be abolished.
Source:
mindingthecampus.com
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