Hamilton Journal News

SB 83 attempts to strong-arm what can be addressed in public

- Ray Marcano’s column appears on these pages each Sunday. He can be reached at raymarcano­ddn@gmail.com.

Lawmakers sometimes craft bills that leave voters shaking their heads in astonishme­nt. In the case of the horribly unjustifia­ble Senate Bill 83, voters could very well shake their heads so hard they’d break their necks.

Judging from the title, the “Ohio Higher Education and Enhancemen­t Act” doesn’t seem so threatenin­g. In reality, the proposal would prevent Ohio’s public colleges from engaging in wide-ranging intellectu­al debate, embrace Orwellian values of obscuring history and create a policy to make Asian xenophobia the official policy of the state.

Those aren’t even the worst parts. Under SB 83, universiti­es could not mandate diversity, equity and inclusion training, the latest boogeyman on the right.

These lawmakers want to tell institutio­ns what they can and can’t discuss publicly by creating a haphazard list that reflects their own bias. The bill would prohibit universiti­es from taking a position on any “controvers­ial belief or policy,” including diversity, immigratio­n policy, or climate change. But it’s OK, the bill says, to take a position during war.

The bill would mandate specific college readings like the Constituti­on, five essays from The Federalist Papers and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”

The bill doesn’t explain why students must read just five of the 85 Federalist essays or read MLK instead of, say, James Baldwin’s epic essay, “Many Thousands Gone.” Maybe King seems “safe” to them?

The bill’s anti-Asian (i.e, racist) xenophobia would prohibit Ohio’s four-year institutio­ns from entering into academic partnershi­ps with their counterpar­ts in China, a blatantly political act that attempts to capitalize on anti-Chinese sentiment. That proposed prohibitio­n ignores the beneficial research among scholars in programs like Ohio State’s China Gateway project.

And if China’s so bad, why aren’t there prohibitio­ns on institutio­ns in Russia, North Korea, Afghanista­n and any other country a politician might find unnerving?

The bill is full of contradict­ions. It says students should read King’s letter, but does it also mean they can’t talk about the systemic racism King raises? Read The Federalist Papers, but maybe ignore Federalist 54 since it addresses enslaved people as property, a conversati­on that could lead into places the Orwellians don’t want to go? Read about the Constituti­on, but don’t discuss how the Ninth and 14th amendments have taken center stage in the debate over abortion, which is a prohibited topic.

The bill’s sponsor, the freshman Senator Jerry Cirino (R-Kirtland), issued a nonsensica­l statement about ensuring students get a world-class education. He didn’t return phone calls to this newspaper seeking additional comment, par for the course for lawmakers who don’t want to defend the indefensib­le.

This bill comes down to this: Cirino and the few co-sponsors want to use legislativ­e strong-arming to decide what topics people can address in public.

They can try to go all North Korea on the state’s education system, but educators — and curious students — will find a way to discuss the continued pay disparitie­s in society, the racial reckoning caused by George Floyd’s death, and why Ohio wants to institute an official policy of Chinese hate.

If you don’t think universiti­es will take a position, think again. Because the next time there’s some societal injustice — pick any — colleges will stand with their diverse school population, not with lawmakers only interested in furthering their brand of intoleranc­e.

In the book “1984,” George Orwell writes: “Doublethin­k means the power of holding two contradict­ory beliefs in one’s mind simultaneo­usly, and accepting both of them.”

SB 83 and its head-spinning, nonsensica­l doublethin­k should be banished to the graveyard of bad bills. Maybe, after a few meetings, the bill will quietly die.

That’s the best outcome.

They can try to go all North Korea on the state’s education system, but educators — and curious students — will find a way to discuss the continued pay disparitie­s in society, the racial reckoning caused by George Floyd’s death, and why Ohio wants to institute an official policy of Chinese hate.

 ?? ?? Ray Marcano
Ray Marcano

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States