The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Opportunit­y awaits the one who defies campus radicals

- Mona Charen

Jonathan Haidt is a member of one of America’s smallest fraterniti­es — those who attempt to see beyond their own prejudices. In the left-leaning Chronicle of Higher Education, he notes that “intimidati­on is the new normal” on college campuses. The examples are well known: The shoutdown/shutdown of Heather Mac Donald at Claremont McKenna College; the riots sparked by Milo Yiannopoul­os at Berkeley; the experience of Charles Murray at Middlebury College, where he and professor Allison Stanger were physically assaulted by a mob. Stanger was sent to the hospital with injuries. She said she feared for her life. Haidt writes:

“We are witnessing the emergence of a dangerous new norm for responding to speakers who challenge campus orthodoxy. Anyone offended by the speaker can put out a call on Facebook to bring together students and locals, including ‘antifa’ (antifascis­t) and blackbloc activists who explicitly endorse the use of violence against racists and fascists. Because of flagrant ‘concept creep,’ however, almost anyone who is politicall­y right of center can be labeled a racist or a fascist, and the promiscuou­s use of such labels is now part of the standard operating procedure.”

America’s campuses have been down this road — and worse — before.

At San Francisco State, it began with a fire in a dormitory. The threealarm fire left the social room of Merced Hall a smoking ruin. The year was 1967. The following year, the campus would be host (and I use that term advisedly) to the longest “student strike” in history. Dozens more fires were set, and radical students were able to shut down the entire campus for four months. The college administra­tion, in the face of law breaking, beatings and intimidati­on by radical students, backed off like cowards.

At Columbia University, students took faculty members hostage, occupied the office of the university president and took control of Hamilton Hall. Radicals shut down the entire campus and then battled the police. And yet the administra­tion and large numbers of faculty praised and flattered them. University presidents from Yale, Columbia and Cornell, among countless others, responded with pusillanim­ity to the radicals’ absurd demands and tactics.

But not at San Francisco State. Two presidents in quick succession had resigned rather than confront the students who were disrupting campus and committing violent crimes. And then came a third. A professor of semantics named S.I. Hayakawa was appointed acting president. As the radicals were chanting, drum beating and refusing to disperse, he jumped up on one of the sound trucks and pulled the plug on their speakers.

Instantly, he became a national hero, a celebrity status he was able to parlay into a seat in the U.S. Senate from California.

Asked why, being of Japanese extraction, he didn’t side with minorities, he said he certainly did, but the radical activists did not speak for the majority of blacks or anyone else. They were media creations, he said, adding that TV news suffers from an excess of “show business values.”

There’s an opportunit­y awaiting someone, anyone, on today’s campuses, too. Stand up to the social-justice warriors, tell the truth, and you may find yourself a household name.

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