New York Post

Beware ‘Campus Values’

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IN a 1989 article in New Republic, Andrew Sullivan made what he called “a (conservati­ve) case for gay marriage.” Today same-sex marriage is legal everywhere in America, supported by majorities of voters and accepted as a part of American life.

Now Sullivan has cast his gaze on what he regards as a disturbing aspect of American life — the extension of speech suppressio­n and “identity politics” from colleges and universiti­es into the larger society. The hothouse plants of campus mores have become invasive species underminin­g and crowding out the beneficent flora of the larger free democratic society.

Sullivan can be seen as a kind of undercover spy on campuses, to which he is invited often to speak by those probably ignorant of the parentheti­cal “conservati­ve” in his 1989 article. As Jonathan Rauch did in his 2004 book “Gay Marriage,” Sullivan argued that same-sex marriage, by including those once excluded, would strengthen rather than undermine family values and bourgeois domesticit­y.

That now seems to be happening. The spread of campus values to the larger society would (and is intended to) have the opposite effect.

Take campus speech codes. Americans of a certain age have trouble believing that colleges have rules banning supposedly hurtful speech. They can recall when campuses were the part of America most open to dissent. Now students are discipline­d for handing out copies of the US Constituti­on outside a tiny isolated “free speech zone.”

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education keeps a tally of campus speech restrictio­ns and challenges codes and actions that violate the First Amendment or private schools’ own commitment­s. FIRE’s 2018 list of the 10 worst colleges for free speech includes Harvard, Northweste­rn, Fordham and UC-Berkeley.

Administra­tors have infamously declined to restrain or rebuke mobs of student “social justice warriors” who press to block conservati­ve speakers and violently protest if they dare to appear. Examples include Charles Murray at Middlebury and Ben Shapiro at Berkeley. Students at Brown asserted that conservati­ve columnist Guy Benson isn’t covered by the First Amendment.

The result, says Sullivan: “Silence on any controvers­ial social issue is endemic on college campuses” — and “now everywhere.” Google fired engineer James Damore last year for writing an internal memo that the CEO, with pathetic dishonesty, characteri­zed as bigoted.

There is increasing evidence that Google, Facebook and Twitter — whose leaders flatter themselves as enablers of free communicat­ion and neutral disseminat­ors of informatio­n — are suppressin­g conservati­ve opinions as “fake news.” Those aware of campus life will not be comforted with the knowledge that the decisions about what gets downplayed or deleted are being made by “social justice warriors” recently hired from campuses.

Corporate HR department­s are doing their part, as well. Anti-harassment rules are used to punish those uttering speech deemed politicall­y incorrect, and actions of even the most anodyne nature are considered sexually improper.

Companies may have the legal right to do this. But their practices tend to undermine what Sullivan calls “norms of liberal behavior,” including “robust public debate, free from intimidati­on.”

The campuses’ encouragem­ent of identity politics is seeping out into the wider society, too. Selective colleges and universiti­es have long violated (and lied about violating) civil-rights laws with racial quotas and preference­s in admissions. And they routinely encourage blatant segregatio­n — separate dormitorie­s and orientatio­ns for black students, for example.

This fosters the habit of treating individual­s as, in Sullivan’s words, “representa­tives of designated groups” rather than individual­s. It assumes that everyone with a certain genetic ancestry or gender has the same views and that no one who doesn’t share that characteri­stic can ever understand the group — especially someone born with “white privilege” or into “the patriarchy.”

As one who has made a living for decades trying to understand the political views of people unlike me, I take umbrage. The more important points surely are that we are not prisoners of our genetic heritage and that as citizens of a democracy, it behooves us to try to understand others of all background­s and situations.

Sullivan is right; what is oozing out of campuses is creating a less free, less civil, less tolerant society. Can we reverse that as rapidly as — or more rapidly than — Sullivan, Rauch and others reversed opinion on same-sex marriage?

 ?? MICHAEL BARONE ??
MICHAEL BARONE

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