By William Kristol for The Weekly Standard
From
Brandeis on the Atlantic to Azusa on the Pacific, an iron curtain has
descended across academia. Behind that line lie all the classrooms of
the ancient schools of America. Wesleyan, Brown, Princeton, Vassar, Bryn
Mawr, Berkeley, Bowdoin, and Stanford, all these famous colleges and
the populations within them lie in what we must call the Liberal sphere,
and all are subject in one form or another, not only to influence but
to a very high and, in many cases, increasing measure of control from
the commissars of Liberal Orthodoxy. . . .
How can one resist
the chance to echo Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech? Okay, it’s not a
precise analogy. It’s true that liberalism isn’t communism. It’s true
that today’s liberals deploy the wet blanket of conformity rather than
the clenched fist of suppression. It’s true that communism crushed
minds, while today’s liberalism is merely engaged in closing them. And
it’s true that most of the denizens of our universities, unlike the
peoples of Central and Eastern Europe, embrace their commissars. But
commissars they are.
On April 8, the admirable human rights
campaigner Ayaan Hirsi Ali had an honorary degree from Brandeis
University revoked because some of her criticisms of Islamism—and yes,
even (God forbid!) of Islam itself—were judged by that university’s
president “inconsistent with Brandeis University’s core values.”
Apparently two of Brandeis’s core values are cowardice in the face of
Islamists and timidity in the face of intolerance. Less than two weeks
later, on April 21, an appearance by the formidable social scientist
Charles Murray at Azusa Pacific University was canceled by its
president, two days before Murray was to have appeared. The
administration was afraid Murray’s presence on campus might hurt the
feelings of some Asuza students and faculty. The same day, at Eastern
Connecticut State University, a professor told his creative writing
class that Republicans are “racist, misogynist, money-grubbing people”
who “want things to go back—not to 1955, but to 1855,” and that
“colleges will start closing up” if the GOP takes control of the Senate
this November. If only!
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