By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 6.14.07 @ 12:08AM
But is it a surprise that colleges that no longer inspire and edify have nothing to say to their charges on first day of the rest of their lives?
WASHINGTON -- I think we can all agree that the most inane
speeches delivered nowadays in America are delivered at college
commencement ceremonies. Oh, to be sure, speeches intoned at
high-level meetings of the Loyal Order of Moose, the Rotarians and
the National Organization for Women, are also vacant, pompous, and
often delusory. Yet all such orations come off as Lincoln's Second
Inaugural when compared to the bloviations exhaled on almost any
American campus when it comes time for the students to don their
mortarboards and parade past their adoring parents and snooty
profs. Often the students wear funny shoes or carry things
subversive and possibly risque beneath their graduation gowns.
Helium balloons are attached to their caps, and occasionally
noisemakers -- borne surreptitiously on their persons -- make rude
sounds of bodily functions. Such are the antics of graduating
seniors at our great institutions of higher learning this season,
and frankly I support them in their obstreperousness.
The speechifying that they have to endure is usually
excruciating. A few weeks back I was forced to sit through
graduation ceremonies by a member of my family who insists on the
solemnity of tradition, and in his eyes graduation ceremonies are a
tradition. I wish I had brought an air horn. On the first day of
the ceremonies I was forced to listen to a supremely self-satisfied
"electric violinist" from some rock band exhort all within earshot
"to dream" and to make way for "change." Starting with President
Ronald Reagan my fellow libertarian conservatives have made
enormous "change," change unforeseen by two prior generations of
progressives. Apparently this is not the change that the oaf at the
podium was prescribing. Precisely what he did mean by change
remained vague but sounded frankly old-fashioned. The following day
I endured a popular novelist, employing the same thoughtless
platitudes. In addition, he condemned war conducted by politicians.
Possibly he favored military dictatorship. His was not a very
precise mind. From his remarks on the Vietnam War one might
conclude that it was raging in 1977, the year of his own
graduation. He insisted the war's casualties were all around
him.
My low opinion of commencement speeches was confirmed recently
when I read a summary of them in the New York Times. Yes,
of course, most of the speakers' truths were hackneyed and dubious.
America was widely compared to Imperial Rome in its last days. It
is a tired thought that has been reverberating through the Republic
for decades. Exhortations to do good were monotonous. Gandhi, the
Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., and Mother Teresa are frequently
held up to the graduates as role models, albeit without menacing
the division between church and state. Yet what struck me was how
passe and anti-intellectual the speakers were.
There was the aforementioned electric violinist and the popular
novelist. Both were sufficiently trite to make it into the
Times's summary. Angela Davis and Gloria Steinem also made
the cut. Davis, renowned for being the third women ever to appear
on the FBI's Most Wanted List, was once a communist and perhaps
still is. Could the faculty at Grinnell College where she spoke not
also find a flat-earther to complement her antique views? She
droned on with the utmost smugness, saying things that were at once
incomprehensible and clearly stupid. Quoth Comrade Davis, "For you
will never discover a scarcity of facts, and these facts will be
presented in such a way as to veil the ways of thinking embedded in
them." It got worse, but my space is limited. Steinem complained
about typing requirements imposed on her when she was a student at
Smith College back in the 1400s or whenever she matriculated there.
Such requirements were not imposed on her contemporaries at
all-male Harvard. Steinem is the same feminist famed such lines as
"A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle," and "In
my own mind, I am still a fat brunette from Toledo, and I always
will be."
Over the past three decades the politics of our democratic
republic have changed. So far have the values of libertarian
conservatives permeated the land and replaced the ideas of the
welfare state and of the social engineers that we can say America's
right has won the political battle. But the old liberal left won
the battle for the culture. The social and intellectual culture of
the country is polluted by ideas that are antagonistic to market
economics, deferred gratification, and civic responsibility -- all
being the values necessary for a prospering middle class. This
Kultursmog broods over commencement speeches as it broods
over the campus itself. It is very old-fashioned, but I think we
can all agree it is enormously amusing. An "electric violinist"
sending graduates off to the adult world of a global economy -- ha
ha ha.
topics:
Economics, Military