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| There are some
ideas so ludicrous and mischievous that only an academic would take them
seriously. One of them is diversity. Think about it. Are you for or against
diversity? When's the last time you said to yourself, "I'd better have a
little more diversity in my life"? What would you think if you heard a
Microsoft director tell his fellow board members that the company should have
more diversity and manufacture kitchenware, children's clothing and shoes?
You'd probably think the director was smoking something illegal.
Our institutions of higher learning take
diversity seriously and make it a multimillion-dollar operation. Juilliard
School has a director of diversity and inclusion; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology has a manager of diversity recruitment; Toledo University, an
associate dean for diversity; the universities of Harvard, Texas A&M,
California at Berkeley, Virginia and many others boast of officers, deans,
vice-presidents and perhaps ministers of diversity.
George Leef, director of the John W. Pope
Center for Higher Education Policy in Raleigh, N.C., writes about this in an
article titled "Some Questions about Diversity" in the Oct. 5 issue
of "Clarion Call." Mr. Leef suggests that only in academia is
diversity pursued for its own sake, but there's a problem: Everyone, even if
they are the same ethnicity, nationality or religion, is different. Suppose two
people are from the same town in Italy. They might differ in many important
respects: views on morality, religious and political beliefs, recreation
preferences and other characteristics.
Mr. Leef says that some academics see
diversity as a requirement for social justice — to right historical wrongs. The
problem here is that if you go back far enough, all groups have suffered some
kind of historical wrong. The Irish can point to injustices at the hands of the
British, Jews at the hands of Nazis, Chinese at the hands of Indonesians, and
Armenians at the hands of the Turks. Of course, black Americans were enslaved,
but slavery is a condition that has been with mankind throughout most of
history. In fact, long before blacks were enslaved, Europeans were enslaved.
The word slavery comes from Slavs, referring to the Slavic people, who were
early slaves. White Americans, captured by the Barbary pirates, were enslaved
at one time or another. Whites were indentured servants in colonial America. So
what should the diversity managers do about these injustices?
When academics call for diversity, they're
really talking about racial preferences for particular groups of people, mainly
blacks. The last thing they're talking about is intellectual diversity.
According to a recent national survey, reported by the American Council of
Trustees and Alumni in "Intellectual Diversity," 72 percent of
college professors describe themselves as liberal and 15 percent conservative.
Liberal professors think their classrooms should be used to promote a political
agenda. The University of California recently abandoned a provision on academic
freedom that cautioned against using the classroom for propaganda. The
president said the regulation was "outdated."
Americans, as taxpayers and benefactors,
have been exceedingly generous to our institutions of higher learning. That
generosity has been betrayed. Rich Americans, who acquired their wealth through
our capitalist system, give billions to universities. Unbeknownst to them, much
of that money often goes to faculty members and programs that are openly
hostile to donor values. Universities have also failed in their function of the
pursuit of academic excellence by having dumbed down classes and granting
degrees to students who are just barely literate and computationally
incompetent.
What's part of Williams' solution?
Benefactors should stop giving money to universities that engage in racist
diversity policy. Simply go to the university's website, and if you find
offices of diversity, close your pocketbook. There's nothing like the sound of
pocketbooks snapping shut to open the closed minds of administrators.