Thoughtful article about the central problems in today's universities.

Comments-

  *   There is almost no hope for real change arising from believing Christians.

It has been said by many people in different ways but the gist of it is that

such people, when they attend universities, are found in, say, the engineering 
department,

maybe in the school of business, or dentistry, maybe medicine or the hard 
sciences,
but almost never in any of the disciplines that shape our culture. Hence there

is no serious "culture war" any more, what there is, is a full blown retreat 
from

the field of battle, with, at most, some rear guard skirmishing.


  *    Liberty U has the right idea but, again, where does it equip its 
students to confront

the world as it really is culturally?  It cannot because of its true believer 
mentality,

viz, a POV that takes the Bible literalistically, no serious questions about 
actual problems

in the text por favor,  that is uncritical about  everything that matters.  
This mindset about

the Bible filters down to everything else that falls under the rubric 
"culture."   Take it

at face value or forget about it.



  *    Where is there real interest among conservatives in reforming higher ed? 
 I just do not see

it anywhere  -minus a few rare exceptions like David Horowitz.  These are the 
same people

who majored in chemistry or petroleum geology or EE, all good things, to be 
sure,

but basically irrelevant to culture, viz Hollywood,  TV, music, literature, 
drama,

and so forth.  Christians devalue these things even though, as one talking head

once said, the future is entertainment, that is where the money is, or is 
heading

more and more, and that it where the public wants it to go.


What can change any of this?  Any ideas?


The other comment to make is that the writer made a huge mistake that is

all too common on the Right, conflating ALL "socialism" with Marxism.

That is a sure way to lose the contest over culture.  A lot of people know,

full well, that there was and in some  places still is "Christian Socialism"

and if you doubt that this has modern relevance, while he is now a little dated,

think of a modern era Christian Socialist like Tony Blair.


I'm a fan of Gustave Holst, best known for his tone poem, The Planets.

He came from Norway where, prior to his British years, he was a member

of a Socialist choir which sang musical classics.  Not exactly rioting

in the streets or calls to violent revolution.


But what can anyone expect of the current American Right, a population

with an abysmal understanding of history of almost any kind?



Suggestions?


Billy






________________________________

Subject: "death to the University as we know it"


The University Is Ripe for Replacement

BY DAVID SOLWAY<https://pjmedia.com/columnist/david-solway/> SEPTEMBER 7, 2018
CHAT 172 
COMMENTS<https://pjmedia.com/trending/the-university-is-ripe-for-replacement/#comments>

<https://pjmedia.com/trending/the-university-is-ripe-for-replacement/#comments>
"Education is a weapon the effect of which is determined by the hands which 
wield it, by who is to be struck down." -- Stalin, interview with H.G. Wells

Beginning in early K-12 and continuing to the highest levels of university 
education, Leftist indoctrination is the gravest dilemma that afflicts 
education in North America, rendering it perhaps the most powerful instrument 
of anti-Western bias and socialist propaganda of the modern era.

Here my concern is with the abandonment of genuine scholarship, fact-based 
historical research, familiarity with the “Great Books” and the development of 
critical thinking habits, particularly in the humanities and social sciences. 
The curriculum now in place is one of intellectual dysphoria promoting the 
circulation of false or unprovable narratives -- anthropogenic global warming, 
Islam as a religion of peace, the campus rape epidemic, toxic masculinity, the 
scandal of American history, the glories of “diversity and inclusion,” the 
benefits of socialism, to cite just a few among a veritable encyclopedia -- and 
furthering the revolutionary project of social and political deconstruction. 
Education has been transformed into a grooming operation for social justice 
warriors, radical feminists, anti-white vigilantes and budding socialists.

Moreover, to compound the septic plunge into calamitous absurdity, the 
self-contradictory adoption as a kind of state religion of postmodern thought 
and doctrine -- briefly, the suspicion of reason, the belief that reality is a 
conceptual construct, the rejection of fixed or objective truth -- has served 
to turn the university into a parody of its original purpose, the pursuit of 
genuine knowledge.

Defenders of the status quo need to be taken not with a grain of salt but an 
entire salt mine. Case in point: Globe and Mail columnist Doug 
Saunders<https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-the-real-campus-crisis-the-shoddy-work-of-those-who-cry-crisis/>,
 a rabid anti-conservative, an apologist for Islam, a believer in rampant 
immigration, and one of the shoddiest journalists in Canada, fully rejects the 
charge of university malfeasance. Rather, he claims, the campus is “less 
radical, more tolerant, more open and more politically moderate than ever 
before.”

The fantasy bubble that bullhorns like Saunders inhabit seems pretty well 
impermeable. You cannot reason with people who are immune to facts or, for 
whatever reason, consider countervailing evidence an offense against subjective 
conviction. They are either useful idiots or handy liars. Better to attend to 
an acclaimed historian like Niall Ferguson who, in an 
interview<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdeFJ4WCqhk> on Dave Rubin's show, 
pointed out that since the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, the Left has been busy 
replicating itself in the universities via targeted recruiting, to the extent 
that today “90% plus of faculty members are liberals or progressivists, if not 
outright Marxists.”
As H.G Wells said in a fawning 1934 
interview<https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1934/07/23.htm>
 with Josef Stalin, “There can be no revolution without a radical change in the 
educational system.” To which Stalin replied, “That is a correct observation.” 
The “radical change,” of course, is socialism, which a craven administration 
and a squalid faculty are assiduously promoting.

Innumerable authoritative books have been published and evidence-based articles 
posted on the corruption and virtual death of the university as an institution 
of higher learning, which interested readers can find with a click on the 
keyboard. Robert Nisbet’s 1971 The Degradation of Academic 
Dogma<https://www.amazon.ca/Degradation-Academic-Dogma-Egon-Friedell/dp/1138535079/ref=sr_1_14?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1534524398&sr=1-14&keywords=robert+nisbet>
 is a classic in the field. The more the university became a self-governing 
corporation, he wrote, “the less noble it proved to be in both purpose and 
bearing,” that is, in failing to concentrate on the pursuit of knowledge and 
the preservation its ancestral dignity. As a “community of mind,” it has 
surrendered to “its own hubris.”

Warren Treadgold’s recently released The University We 
Need<https://www.amazon.com/University-We-Need-Reforming-Education/dp/1594039895/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1534444533&sr=1-1&keywords=warren+treadgold+the+university+we+need>
 expands the argument, taking on the postmodern heresy that itself would have 
been sufficient to ruin education in the West. Given the university’s obsession 
with the paradigm of oppressors and oppressed, Treadgold writes, “Postmodernism 
meant that all contrary facts could be dismissed as attempts to enforce 
oppression. … The creations of leftist scholarship included the elements of 
‘multiculturalism’ … such as a feminist Africa, a pacifist Islam, and an evil 
United States and Western Europe.” His castigation of the curricular and 
programmatic direction the university has taken is irrefutably damning.

Treadgold, however, believes that the university can be reformed, and this is 
where we part company. Be it said, his recommendations are sensible, such as 
reducing university funding to a 20% budgetary limit and advocating for new and 
responsible leadership that would eschew mediocre ideas, books, students and 
professors. He concludes by stating: “If someone has better ideas for improving 
[the academy] than judging professors by the quality of their work or founding 
a new university dedicated to excellence, the time to share those ideas is 
now.” I suspect, though, that Treadgold’s “new university” is the present 
university rehabilitated and restored to its former glory. And the present 
university is not going away any time soon.

I agree that government funding should be selectively but drastically reduced 
-- and strict oversight procedures predicated on standards of disciplinary 
excellence and free inquiry set in place -- in order to render these de facto 
industries rational and culturally competitive. A parasitical administration 
should be lopped in half. The burgeoning numbers of noxious “diversity and 
inclusion” officers should be summarily dismissed, preferably without pensions. 
They have done enough damage. As in Hungary, gender studies departments need to 
be shuttered as non-scholarly and doctrinaire induction centers for social 
inadequates. Unqualified university applicants, regardless of politics, race, 
gender, creed or ethnicity, should not be admitted: all students should be 
judged solely on merit and desert, irrespective of parenthetical concerns. It 
should be acknowledged that social justice is not in the academic purview: 
truth and scholarship are its reason for being. Justice is the court’s domain.

But these are optative proposals. The chances that they will actually be put 
into cumulative effect strike me as bordering on zero. We should also consider 
that efforts to reform the university might only contribute to its endurance. 
It may conceivably permit a few reforms as a sop to its adversaries, but the 
situation will persist. After all, with the wavering exceptions of MBA programs 
and of STEM, the universities are no longer knowledge guilds, but 
self-regulating commercial and doctrinaire systems interested primarily in 
profit and social revisionism. They will double down to preserve their turf. 
The Academy is now enemy-occupied territory, defended by a formidable army of 
the ignorant, the corrupt, the vulgar and the perverse, and they are not about 
to surrender their sinecures.

It may be preferable for real scholars and concerned parties to begin planning 
for a parallel university structure, whether as online sites or physical plants 
or both. In the words of American Thinker editor Thomas Lifson, “fundamental 
change of the institutional map is necessary.” (Personal correspondence.) One 
can begin with Treadgold’s recommendations as applied to a fresh and separate 
institution embodying the measures proposed above, while seeking funding from 
alumni disenchanted with their alma maters, conservative organizations, 
crowd-sourcing, and a pragmatic and far-sighted government like the one 
presently in power in the United States. Culture-hero Jordan Peterson is 
already busy 
designing<https://mic.com/articles/188569/jordan-peterson-is-creating-his-own-online-university-to-destroy-college-indoctrination-cults>
 an online university to supplant the current “indoctrination cults.” There are 
features still to be worked out, but the process is underway. Start small, 
think big.

Insuperable as the task may seem, perhaps something truly new will emerge on 
which, with patience, experience and foresight, we can build. In a time of 
civilizational decline, a wholly new university may serve to prolong our 
historical tenure. The key is to resist despair, strategize effectively, remain 
prepared and remember the principles of moral reason and intellectual 
excellence on which restitution depends. The modern university it is a moribund 
institution and cannot be reformed. It is ripe for replacement.






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