Trump’s victory and the college chaos that has followed
If one needed more
evidence of the steep decay in academia, Donald Trump’s victory provided it. Let’s
begin by examining the responses to his win, not only among our
wet-behind-the-ears college students, many of whom act like kindergarteners,
but also
among college professors and administrators.
The University of
Michigan’s distressed students were provided with Play-Doh and coloring
books, as they sought comfort and distraction. A University of Michigan
professor postponed an exam after many students complained about their “serious
stress” over the election results. Cornell University held a campus-wide
“cry-in,” with officials handing out tissues and hot chocolate. One Cornell
student said, “I’m looking into flights back to Bangladesh right now so I can
remove myself before Trump repatriates me.” The College Fix reported that “a
dorm at the University of Pennsylvania ... hosted a post-election ‘Breathing Space’ for students stressed out
by election results that included cuddling with cats and a puppy, coloring and
crafting, and snacks such as tea and chocolate.”
The University of Kansas reminded
its stressed-out students that therapy dogs, a regular campus feature, were
available. An economics professor at Yale University made his midterm exam
“optional” in response to “many heartfelt notes from students who are in shock
over the election returns.” At Columbia University and its sister
college, Barnard, students petitioned their professors to cancel classes and
postpone exams because they were fearful for their lives and they couldn’t take
an exam while crying. Barnard’s president did not entirely
cave, but she said, “We are, however, leaving decisions regarding individual
classes, exams, and assignments to the discretion of our faculty.” She added,
“The Barnard faculty is well aware that you may be struggling, and they are
here for you.” At Yale, it was reported that the “Trump victory (left) students
reeling.” Students exhibited “teary eyes, bowed heads and cries of disbelief”
and had the opportunity to participate in a post-election group primal scream
“to express their frustration
productively.”
Whether you are a liberal
or conservative, Democrat or Republican, you should be disturbed and frightened
for the future of our nation based on the response of so many of our young
people to an election outcome.
We should also be
disturbed by college administrators and professors who sanction the coddling of
our youth. Here’s my question to you: Does a person even belong in college if he
cannot handle or tolerate differing opinions? My answer is no. What
lies at the heart of multiculturalism, diversity and political correctness is
an intolerance for different opinions. At Brown
University, some students claim that freedom of speech does not confer the
right to express opinions they find distasteful. A while back, a Harvard University student organization
representing women’s interests advised law students that they should not feel
pressured to attend or participate in class sessions that focus on the law of
sexual violence if they feel that it might be traumatic. Such students will be useless to
rape victims and don’t belong in law school.
In a previous column, I
cited an article on
News Forum for Lawyers titled “Study Finds College Students Remarkably
Incompetent,” which referenced an American Institutes for Research study
that revealed that over 75 percent of two-year college
students and 50 percent of four-year college students were incapable of
completing everyday tasks. About 20 percent of four-year college
students demonstrated only basic mathematical ability, while a steeper 30
percent of two-year college students could not progress past elementary
arithmetic. NBC News reported that Fortune 500 companies spend about $3 billion
annually to train employees in “basic English.”
Many of today’s college students are not only academically
incompetent but emotionally so, as well, and do not belong in college.
These college snowflakes and their professors see themselves as
our betters and morally superior to ordinary people. George Orwell was absolutely right
when he said, “There are notions so foolish that only an intellectual will
believe them.”
Walter
E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University and a
syndicated columnist.
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