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AMERICAN
CAMPUSES GETTING INDOCTRINATION????
Wednesday, May 09, 2001
Wendy McElroy
Fox News
This fall, tens of thousands of bright-eyed and malleable young men and
women will descend on American campuses to begin their academic careers in
earnest. Most of them will face what we used to call freshman orientation.
More than anything, though, it's looking more and more like
indoctrination.
One of the main components of many of these orientations is diversity, or
sensitivity training. Attendance is usually mandatory and often
tax-funded. Students will watch films and participate in exercises
designed to shake the values they acquired from their culture and
families. Two of the most popular diversity-training films are Blue Eyed
and Skin Deep.
The 90-minute Blue Eyed documents an experiment conducted by Jane Elliott,
a $6,000-a-day sensitivity trainer. In it, a group of 40 people are
divided into blue-eyed and brown-eyed people. The former are
psychologically brutalized; the latter are psychologically empowered as a
lesson in white racism.
Hugh Vasquez's Skin Deep documents a workshop on race. One section of the
accompanying study guide — entitled White Privilege — declares that
white privilege controls all power in society and that whites must assume
their guilt.
Requiring attendance to sensitivity training has caused some critics to
make comparisons to Soviet psychiatry and the re-education camps of some
Communist countries, such as Maoist China. There, re-education attempted
to replace "bad" personal attitudes with ones that served the
purpose of the state.
In an article entitled "Thought Reform 101" (Reason, March 2000)
Alan Charles Kors, co-founder of The Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education, explicitly compares this diversity training to Communist
re-education camps. It is a comparison worth pursuing. The following are
merely a few of the parallels.
Alternate Ideologies Must Be Suppressed
Re-education camps often target religious groups because religion
represents a strong alternate value system. In similar fashion, diversity
training involves systematic denigration of alternate value systems such
as conservatism.
In Blue Eyed, Elliott tells a "white male" whom she has
humiliated into submission that "what I just did ... today Newt
Gingrich is doing to you every day ... and you are submitting to that,
submitting to oppression." Elliot explains her goal: "A new
reality is going to be created for these people."
Truth Requires Thought Control
In his book Enfer Rouge, Mon Amour, Lucien Trong wrote of the thought
control in the re-education camp where he was confined. Prisoners were not
permitted to read the words published in magazines and books from the
former regime, to sing the words of old songs or to have 'unauthorized'
political discussions. Pol Pot understood the power of words.
In the study guide to Skin Deep, Vasquez writes: "Language is
one of the institutions that serve to perpetuate racism ... Thus, language
is a critical element in eliminating the mistreatment of any group ...
Should we be 'politically correct?' Of course we should if what we mean by
this is eliminating language that is part of how mistreatment is
perpetuated."
Family Ties Must Be Weakened
Re-education camps break the loyalty that prisoners feel toward their
families who often offer an alternate system of values. A Vietnamese
prisoner wrote, "When making declarations about relatives, we had to
make mention of their guilt as well."
In Skin Deep, a student named Dane admits his family's racist guilt:
"No way I can step back and change that (his great grandparents
fighting for the Confederacy in the Civil War)." He comments,
"It's tough choosing what's right and choosing your family."
The Propagandists Have Noble Intentions
In the Los Angeles Times (January 9, 1998), journalist David Lamb reported
on a "re-education camp for women with 'social disorders'" —
that is, for prostitutes. The camp director was quoted as saying, "We
think of this as a humanitarian program."
The noble motive of Elliott and Vasquez is to end racism, sexism, ageism,
ableism, and heterosexism ... just about every type of non-PC 'ism' in
existence. The study guide describes the $6,000-a-day Elliot as a
courageous pioneer who has endured great personal pain for her stand.
The Effect Is to Heighten Anger and Division Among People
A re-education prisoner reported on the effect camp policy had upon the
cohesiveness and goodwill of inmates. "[To] turn prisoners against
each other by reading them [confessions] aloud to the group and asking
anyone who had knowledge of anything left out or of lies in the statement
to step forward." The prisoners came to suspect, resent and hate each
other, looking at those sitting to each side as "the enemy."
The guide to Blue Eyed describes Elliott as "unrelenting in her
ridicule and humiliation of the blue-eyed people [whites]" while
"the participants of color watch as white people" feel their
guilt for racism. Whites are admonished to "hear people of color, no
matter what tone or phrasing they use." At the same time, they are
warned, "don't expect people of color to
bleed on the floor for white people."
The goal of such vented hatred is also said to be noble. In order to
evolve into a society in which people love each other without 'isms,' it
is necessary to brutalize different classes into appropriate awareness.
All this can, understandably, be a bit much for your average 18-year-old
away from home for the first time. Helping kids to adjust to campus life
is one
thing. Political and cultural re-education, which the champions of the
"diversity industry" are peddling at $3,000 an hour, is another.
Taxpayers need to stop footing the bill for these exercises. Parents who
wish to nurture the values of their children must oppose the coercive
indoctrination of political correctness into their offspring. They must
exercise the most important aspect of freedom of speech: The right to say
"no."
McElroy is the editor of www.ifeminists.com.
She also edited Freedom, Feminism, and the State (CATO 1982, Holmes &
Meier 1992) and Sexual Correctness: The Gender Feminist Attack on Women
(McFarland, 1996). She lives with her husband in Canada, and can be
reached at mac@ifeminists.com |