By Ben Stein on 8.28.03 @ 12:01AM
Fighting through the webs of left-wing academia. An excerpt from Ben Stein's (latest) Diary.
There is a great scene in "Richard II" in which the imprisoned
monarch paces in a cell. He has only one companion, a spider. He is
thinking of how he got into that mess of getting deposed by
Bolingbroke. He says he will do something like make his soul the
mate to his brain and try to produce the thoughts that will answer
his crisis.
The reason I am thinking of this is that I am down in my office
in my house in Malibu. I came out here late last night. As always
happens at least once a year, there was an attack of house flies.
They always congregate in one place right next to my desk, swarming
against a floor-to-ceiling window. They are young and dumb, and it
takes me a while to kill them all, but eventually I do. Then I
sweep them up and flush them down the toilet. But in the meantime,
a group of spiders has usually come along to eat the flies, and I
have to kill them, too. It is a lot of work being a homeowner.
Anyway, I am thinking about thinking because I have a question
that is perpetually going through my brain, and like the imprisoned
Plantagenet, I am trying to figure it out in my spidery cell. This
is roughly how it goes: Why are universities in this country so
determinedly left-wing and anti-American? How did this come about?
Who made it come about? What are the psychological and sociological
factors that led to this dismal state?
I recently heard a story about a man who taught at a school in
North Carolina who was so anti-American that although he was
assigned to teach American history, he simply refused to do it.
Instead, he selected two big black students to be his bodyguards
like in the famous photo of Huey Newton, and they stood guard in
his classroom while he paced back and forth inveighing against
America.
Then I think of other teachers who talk about how they are
rooting for al-Qaeda or for Saddam Hussein. Then I think of how
when I was at UC Santa Cruz, in the election of 1972, in the campus
polling precinct, there were something like 1,500 votes cast, of
which 1,497 went for McGovern. The remaining three were yours
truly, my girlfriend Pat Kane (who has not spoken to me in about
twenty-eight years) and a friend who was a returning Marine going
to school on the GI Bill. Why was there such a powerful left-wing
monolith? Why is it even more pronounced now?
I start with a scholarly article I read back in 1971 when I was
a government lawyer. A psychologist, I do not know who, had studied
government lawyers and lawyers in the private sector, as well as
businessmen and professors. His findings were fascinating.
Generally, and with certain exceptions, the government lawyers were
more close to their mothers than the private lawyers, more fearful
than the private lawyers, and less inclined to take risks.
This immediately struck me as true. We were a timid, careful,
frightened lot. Why else attach ourselves to the big Mama
government who would nurture us, pay us a modest wage, and never
expect very much from us? Why shelter ourselves with tenure and
lifelong employment instead of going out into the big wide world
and looking for the bucks?
My own mother, no dummy, read the same article and drew a smart
conclusion. This, she said -- I am paraphrasing -- explains why
government people and professors are so angry and resentful toward
the society at large. Frightened people are angry people. And, she
added smartly, envious people are weak, frightened people.
Now, at the time, I was a bit angry at her because of course I,
her son, was a government lawyer. But I soon left that vale of
tears and went out into the big wide world, where I still am. And
it is true. People out here in the big wide world are a lot less
angry and less jealous than people in government or the
academy.
This, in a nutshell, I think, explains a lot about why
professors and their students are so militantly left-wing and
anti-American. They are sheltering in the academy from the
chanciness and difficulty of the big wide world. They fear that
world. And so they express their anger at it, the way frightened
people often do.
The students pick it up from the faculty, and since there is no
group more conformist than most college students, they all conform
as if Stalin, and not just a professor, were laying down the
rules.
The big question I often ask myself is why, oh why, did all of
this happen in the past say, thirty-five years? I was a student my
own self at Columbia in 1962-66, and you expect that Columbia would
have been a hotbed of anti-American thoughts and action. But it was
not at all. Many of my professors were patriotic, even extremely
patriotic. This was true of my great economics professor, Lowell
Harriss, and of my fine government teachers, and even of my superb
English teachers.
At Yale Law School from 1967 to 1970 ( I dropped out to be sick
and to work for a year in 1966-67 ) there were many patriotic
teachers such as Mr. Alex Bickel and Mr. Robert Bork. How did they
get to be such rara avises?
I think it has to do with tipping points and co-optation. At a
certain point, when the radicals took over the student bodies and
made major inroads into the faculty recruiting process, they took
over recruiting committees. They made it clear that only other
frightened, angry, Marxist types such as they would be admitted or
allowed to teach, and lo and behold, soon the old patriots were
marginalized or learned to keep their mouths shut so they would not
get mau-maued at faculty meetings.
This was sad, but all too real and all too much a standard part
of organizations: when a certain density of one militant type
becomes apparent, the rest of the group takes on the coloration of
the militant group and soon you have a Stalinist monolith.
The big difference between the anti-American, left-wing dominant
group at the schools and the old guard at the schools is this: the
old guard permitted, even welcomed dissent. The new left (now the
old left) simply hates dissent and will not allow it.
Thus you get a faculty that Stalin would be proud of, and a
student body that follows their lead.
Out in the wide world, the students often shed the influence of
their faculties and go on to become all kinds of things, even
Republicans. Especially when students enter the labor force, their
lives change remarkably. Once someone has to get up in the morning,
clean up, get dressed, spend the day at work, and live off the
pittance he makes, the whole world becomes different. You look at
loafers and bums totally differently. You look at taxes
differently. You look at a country that gives you opportunity
differently. In the workplace, a very rapid maturation takes place
for most. Back at the university, where professors have tenure and
only have to teach a few hours a week, the situation worsens. The
faculty becomes like a black hole in space, a death star that gets
ever darker and denser. The faculty is a leisure/intellectual class
that never has to grow up and can cling to its fear and its
childish loathing of the grownups out in the big wide world
forever. But like all black holes, it threatens to crash in upon
itself constantly.
Helping it to crash in on itself, I am happy to say, are my pals
at the Young America's Foundation, who send conservative speakers
to resurgent, fearless College Republicans, Right to Life, and
other groups on campus who have finally had enough and are fighting
back. But they have a helluva row to hoe. It ain't gonna be easy
and the dominant powers on campus will need fighting against for a
long, long time.
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