Blame college trustees for campus insanity: columnist

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It is tempting to place all of the blame for modern campus madness—the protests, the violence, the ruthless ideological conformity—squarely at the feet of the students who perpetrate it. One might also place some blame with liberal professors and administrators who enable and encourage this behavior.

Not so, argues one writer: consider the role that trustees have played in the decline of the American campus environment.

Long-time columnist Walter Williams has argued for years that college trustees could do more to counteract the chaos and ugliness by which so many colleges are known these days. In a recent column for The Daily Signal, Williams notes that “colleges have become islands of intolerance, and as with fish, the rot begins at the head.”

Williams examines the “general trend” of such intolerance, noting the well-documented degeneracy of Evergreen State College, for instance, as well as the phenomenon of “administrators permitting students to conduct racially segregated graduation ceremonies,” a movement he claims “makes a mockery of the idols of diversity, multiculturalism, and inclusion, which so many college administrators worship.”

“Or is tribalism,” he asks, “part and parcel of diversity?”

Highlighting instances of racist and hateful behavior from professors, Williams wonders: “Who is to blame for the decline of American universities?”

The primary blame for the incivility and downright stupidity we see on university campuses lies with the universities’ trustees. Every board of trustees has fiduciary responsibility for the governance of a university, shaping its broad policies.

Unfortunately, most trustees are wealthy businessmen who are busy and aren’t interested in spending time on university matters. They become trustees for the prestige it brings, and as such, they are little more than yes men for the university president and provost.

If trustees want better knowledge about university goings-on, they should hire a campus ombudsman who is independent of the administration and accountable only to the board of trustees.

The university malaise reflects a larger societal problem. Mansfield says culture used to mean refinement. Today, he says, it “just means the way a society happens to think, and there’s no value judgment in it any longer.”

For many of today’s Americans, one cultural value is just as good as another.

Williams admits that trustees are no the only problem: “Many university faculty members are hostile to free speech and open questioning of ideas,” he points out. “A large portion of today’s faculty and administrators were once the hippies of the 1960s, and many have contempt for the U.S. Constitution and the values of personal liberty.”

Read the whole piece here.

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