For a few weeks, I've watched this insane atmosphere at several universities.
Of course, we are willing to hear legitimate grievances from students. There is a way and a place to present complaints.
However, I don't believe that most adults in the US want to watch brats acting like brats or mobs take over institutions of higher learning.
Furthermore, I know that many of us are tired of college administrators who will not stand up to bullies.
My friend Barry Casselman, The Prairie Editor and guest on our show, posted something very important today about this movement and the damage it is doing to itself:
Of course, we are willing to hear legitimate grievances from students. There is a way and a place to present complaints.
However, I don't believe that most adults in the US want to watch brats acting like brats or mobs take over institutions of higher learning.
Furthermore, I know that many of us are tired of college administrators who will not stand up to bullies.
My friend Barry Casselman, The Prairie Editor and guest on our show, posted something very important today about this movement and the damage it is doing to itself:
The current spectacle of campus upheaval in so many U.S.colleges and universities is a dark omen for what has becomein recent years a “liberal” education. (Please notice that I donot say “liberal arts” education.) Unfortunately, U.S. highereducation on very many campuses, including virtually all ofthose which have traditionally held the most prestige, hasbecome overwhelmingly politicized to the far left, aconsequence of the views and impositions of manyprofessors at these institutions.Campus life began to change dramatically in the 1960s asmany students and professors joined a national antiwarmovement protesting our involvement in Viet Nam. This wasthe time that I was attending both undergraduate and graduateuniversities, one in the East and the other in the Midwest. (Infull disclosure, I participated in some of those protests.After Viet Nam, campus life in most institutions of higherlearning “quieted down,” only to re-heat following the end ofthe Cold War in the early 1990s when aggressive U.S.radicalism and neo-Marxism, having no power base in thethen-defunct Soviet Union and the turning-to-state-capitalismof China, went into political hibernation on American campuses.During the administration of President George W. Bush, thisradical impetus was revived on campuses across the nation,and was accompanied by the rise of “political correctness”and various “hot button” issues such as global warming andracism.The attempt to intimidate college administrations by studentand professor protest, of course, is not new, but one mightthink that college presidents today would have learnedsomething from the past. The shameful spectacle of collegepresidents now pandering to these protesters indicates thatthey have not learned much from the past.In the 1960s, the most expensive college education (at an IvyLeague university, for example) was about $2500 per year. Today,that price tag is approaching $70,000 per year! By paralyzingcampuses, destroying a true “liberal education,” and wreckingthe value of higher education in the work place, the currentupheaval, it would seem, is sowing the seeds of its owndestruction. How many parents, regardless of their own views,are willing to shell out between $10,000 and $70,000 per yearper student for a degree that will have reduced or little value?Colleges and universities will survive, but the current sadspectacle will likely only hasten the demise of traditional campuslife. For the first time in history, there is a credible alternative,and that is quality online higher education.In their quest to destruct American higher education, the radicalstudents and professors only hasten the exhaustion of their ownunstable and self-annihilating movement.
The bad news is that we are watching college and university administrators acting like cowards. The good news is that the country is taking a close look at our dysfunctional colleges and universities.
The left will lose this temper tantrum and regret the day that the whole country saw what is really going on in many of these classrooms.
Let me bring back a popular phrase from the left: "The whole world is watching".
Yes, the whole world is watching and the people paying the taxes, and tuition, are not liking what they see.
P.S. You can listen to my show (Canto Talk) and follow me on Twitter
The left will lose this temper tantrum and regret the day that the whole country saw what is really going on in many of these classrooms.
Let me bring back a popular phrase from the left: "The whole world is watching".
Yes, the whole world is watching and the people paying the taxes, and tuition, are not liking what they see.
P.S. You can listen to my show (Canto Talk) and follow me on Twitter
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