I had decided to take a break from reading articles about education. But, since I have been sending emails to these reporters for several years suggesting that they follow the money more carefully before reporting, I can't resist.
My heart really isn't in this NRU, but I haven't been able to avert my eyes from the protests on campus -- particularly my alma mater.
The demands these students are making, twenty plus years after I graduated, are some of the reasons why I do not contribute as an alumni - even a nominal amount.
My story, my recollections, are not as fraught as this young woman's. But that the same nonsense persists sickens me. I am sorry that these students have lived through this, continue to put up with blatant racism and the microagressions I know all too well. Here is a great piece by Joshua Rothman (not Black at Princeton, not a contemporary of mine) on the un-naming of Wilson on Princeton campus...if you read nothing else on this, this quote struck me:
"The
problem with the slippery-slope argument, however, is the slope. Even
if you don’t want to slide down it, you still have to deal with the fact
that it exists. To the extent that Wilson’s racism was typical, America
was racist. Ultimately, his views are emblematic of the way that, for
hundreds of years, Americans could have it both ways, regarding
themselves as egalitarian even though they were also white supremacists.
This way of thinking has shaped universities, too, from admissions
policies to curriculum design."
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