This week in bigoted academia
Since October of last year I have been posting weekly reports listing the variety and frequency of intolerant actions by college administrators, facility, and students on American campus. This week, I want to highlight the bigotry that now runs rampant on these campuses, all centered on the bad idea to create entire departments and fields of study focused expressly on race, ethnicity, or gender, rather than ideas.
- Professors at San Diego State University:: Farmers’ markets are “insidious white space”
- Controversial ‘Problem of Whiteness’ course reintroduced at UW-Madison
- Professor at Diablo Valley College in California calls for overthrow of ‘white democracy,’ violate laws of ‘white man’s Constitution’
- Masters thesis by student at SIT Graduate Institute in Vermont claims that teachers must prevent ‘assimilation’ of ‘whiteness’
- ‘White Genocide’ prof leaves Drexel, takes role as ‘Visiting Scholar’ at NYU
- University of Hawaii prof demands that colleges ‘stop hiring white cis men’
- Prof at Morgan State University says ‘white Christians’ facing an ‘existential crisis’
- Year in Review: 17 campus hate crimes that turned out to be hoaxes in 2017
The last story highlights how the hate and bigotry against whites has gotten so bad at colleges that minority students and teachers are now frequently faking hate crimes against themselves in order to prove how evil whites are.
As I said above, the problem here is the focus on race, ethnicity, and gender rather than ideas. Any one from any race, ethnic group, or sex, can come up with a great idea. In fact, it is irrelevant what their race, ethnicity, or sex is. What matters is the idea. Unfortunately, colleges have become obsessed not with ideas but with race and gender diversity, and so the teachers teach students to see everything in that light, and that light only. It is bigotry and hate, at its worst. And it is poisoning the American intellectual community, preventing it from doing what we need it to do, to think deeply, thoughtfully, and maturely, and to do it without hate or rancor.
Since October of last year I have been posting weekly reports listing the variety and frequency of intolerant actions by college administrators, facility, and students on American campus. This week, I want to highlight the bigotry that now runs rampant on these campuses, all centered on the bad idea to create entire departments and fields of study focused expressly on race, ethnicity, or gender, rather than ideas.
- Professors at San Diego State University:: Farmers’ markets are “insidious white space”
- Controversial ‘Problem of Whiteness’ course reintroduced at UW-Madison
- Professor at Diablo Valley College in California calls for overthrow of ‘white democracy,’ violate laws of ‘white man’s Constitution’
- Masters thesis by student at SIT Graduate Institute in Vermont claims that teachers must prevent ‘assimilation’ of ‘whiteness’
- ‘White Genocide’ prof leaves Drexel, takes role as ‘Visiting Scholar’ at NYU
- University of Hawaii prof demands that colleges ‘stop hiring white cis men’
- Prof at Morgan State University says ‘white Christians’ facing an ‘existential crisis’
- Year in Review: 17 campus hate crimes that turned out to be hoaxes in 2017
The last story highlights how the hate and bigotry against whites has gotten so bad at colleges that minority students and teachers are now frequently faking hate crimes against themselves in order to prove how evil whites are.
As I said above, the problem here is the focus on race, ethnicity, and gender rather than ideas. Any one from any race, ethnic group, or sex, can come up with a great idea. In fact, it is irrelevant what their race, ethnicity, or sex is. What matters is the idea. Unfortunately, colleges have become obsessed not with ideas but with race and gender diversity, and so the teachers teach students to see everything in that light, and that light only. It is bigotry and hate, at its worst. And it is poisoning the American intellectual community, preventing it from doing what we need it to do, to think deeply, thoughtfully, and maturely, and to do it without hate or rancor.