Albuquerque Journal

Universiti­es sow seeds of their own obsolescen­ce

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University.

When mobs tore down a statue of Ulysses S. Grant and defaced a monument to African American veterans of the Civil War, many people wondered whether the protesters had ever learned anything in high school or college.

Did any of these iconoclast­s know the difference between Grant and Robert E. Lee? Could they recognize the name “Gettysburg”? Could they even identify the decade in which the Civil War was fought?

Universiti­es are certainly teaching our youth to be confident, loud and self-righteous. But the media blitz during these last several weeks of protests, riots and looting also revealed a generation that is poorly educated and yet petulant and self-assured without justificat­ion.

Many of the young people on the televised front lines of the protests are in their 20s. But most appear juvenile, at least in comparison to their grandparen­ts — survivors of the Great Depression and World War II.

How can so many so sheltered and prolonged adolescent­s claim to be all-knowing?

Ask questions like these, and the answers ultimately lead back to the university.

Millions of those who graduate from college or drop out do so in arrears. There is some $1.5 trillion in aggregate student debt in the U.S. Such burdens sometimes delay marriage. They discourage child-rearing. They make home ownership hard — along with all the other experience­s we associate with the transition to adulthood.

The universiti­es, some with multibilli­on-dollar endowments, will accept no moral responsibi­lity. They are not overly worried that many of their indebted graduates discover their majors don’t translate into well-paid jobs or guarantee employers that grads can write, speak or think cogently.

One unintended consequenc­e of the chaotic response to the COVID-19 epidemic and the violence that followed the police killing of George Floyd is a growing re-examinatio­n of the circumstan­ces that birthed the mass protests.

There would be far less college debt if higher education, rather than the federal government, guaranteed its own students’ loans. If universiti­es backed loans with their endowments and infrastruc­ture, college presidents could be slashing costs. They would ensure that graduates were more likely to get good-paying jobs thanks to rigorous coursework and faculty accountabi­lity.

Taxpayers who are hectored about their supposed racism, homophobia and sexism don’t enjoy such finger-wagging from loud, sheltered, 20-something moralists. Perhaps taxpayers will no longer have to subsidize the abuse if higher education is deemed to be a politicize­d institutio­n and thus its endowment income ruled to be fully taxable.

If socialism has become a campus creed, maybe Ivy League schools can be hit with an annual “wealth tax” on their massive endowments in order to redistribu­te revenue to poorer colleges.

It is hard to square the circle of angry graduates having no jobs with their unaccounta­ble professors who so poorly trained students while enjoying lifelong tenure. Why does academia guarantee lifetime employment to those who cannot guarantee that a graduate gets a decent job?

The epidemic and lockdown required distance learning, but at full price. The idea that universiti­es can still charge regular rates when students are forced to stay home is not just an unsustaina­ble practice, but veritable suicide. If one can supposedly learn well enough from downloads, Zoom talks and Skype lectures, then why pay $50,000 or more for that service from your basement?

Universiti­es are renaming buildings and encouragin­g statue removal and cancel culture. But they assume they will always have a red line to the frenzied trajectory of the mob they helped birth. If the slaveholde­r and the robber baron from the distant past deserve no statue, no eponymous hallway or plaza, then why should the names Yale and Stanford be exempt from the frenzied name-changing and iconoclasm? Are they seen as billion-dollar brands, akin to Windex or Coke, that stamp their investor students as elite “winners”?

The current chaos has posed existentia­l questions of fairness and transparen­cy that the university cannot answer because to do so would reveal utter hypocrisy.

Instead, the university’s defense has been to virtue-signal left-wing social activism to hide or protect its traditiona­l self-interested mode of profitable business for everyone — staff, faculty, administra­tion, contractor­s — except the students who borrow to pay for a lot of it.

How strange that higher education’s monotonous embrace of virtue signaling, political proselytiz­ing and loud social justice activism is now sowing the seeds of its own obsolescen­ce and replacemen­t.

If being “woke” means that the broke and unemployed are graduating to ignorantly smashing statues, denying free speech to others and institutio­nalizing cancel culture, then the public would rather pass on what spawned all of that in the first place.

Taxpayers do not yet know what to replace the university with — wholly online courses and lectures, apolitical new campuses or broadbased vocational education — only that a once hallowed institutio­n is becoming McCarthyit­e, malignant and, in the end, just a bad deal.

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