The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A selective outrage when the subject is race

- By Jay Bergman Jay Bergman is professor of history at Central Connecticu­t State University and serves on the board of directors of the National Associatio­n of Scholars.

Last month, in an email to faculty and administra­tors in the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system, Terrence Cheng, the system president, condemned the recent killing of Tyre Nichols in Memphis by five policemen, and expressed his heartfelt condolence­s to his friends and family. He also exhorted his readers to “recommit to the cause of social justice.”

He did so despite the obvious fact that Nichols and the police who killed him were all Black. For that reason there is nothing about the killing that implicated the white racism that advocates of social justice like Cheng consider so pervasive as to justify their claim that America is “systemical­ly racist.”

Two days later, the president issued another missive, to the same recipients, this time on the occasion of Black History Month, in which he claimed that it is “under attack, in some parts of our country, with states and governors attempting to rewrite, or even to erase, entire chapters of our past.”

But Cheng provided no evidence to substantia­te his accusation. Without it, one can only wonder whom specifical­ly he had in mind. If, in fact, it was Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has been widely excoriated for supposedly attempting to erase from Florida students’ textbooks the entire history of African-Americans, the CSCU president is wrong. Passed by the Florida legislatur­e and signed into law by the governor, the “Stop WOKE Act,” in Section 2(h), does not merely permit the teaching in Florida schools of “the developmen­t of slavery, the passage to America, the enslavemen­t experience, abolition, and the contributi­ons of African Americans to society.” It requires it.

It is instructiv­e in this context to compare Cheng’s statement on the Nichols killing in Memphis, over a thousand miles from the president’s office in Hartford, to his reaction to the murder last October of two policemen, and the wounding of a third, in Bristol, Conn., a 20-minute drive from Hartford in no traffic. The murderer and all three of his victims were white.

One would think that the killings of police in Bristol — so visible in newspapers and on local television, and so destructiv­e of the institutio­n that is the ultimate barrier to civilizati­on’s descent into lawlessnes­s and anarchy — would prompt a public statement.

But from Cheng there was only silence.

Perhaps the reason is that when Blacks are killed in America, irrespecti­ve of the race of the killers, Cheng considers systemic white racism the ultimate cause — but when whites are killed, their deaths are not even worth mentioning. In effect, their deaths never happened.

One hopes, of course, that this is not the case, and that Cheng considers all lives valuable regardless of race. One hopes as well that he values the lives of police and recognizes how difficult and dangerous is the job they perform. But in light of his refusal to comment publicly on the Bristol murders, one has no way of knowing this.

Whether presidents of university systems should be expressing their political views on political issues in their official capacity is a question separate from the particular views Cheng has expressed as CSCU president. On this larger question, this writer believes it to be a bad idea, though there may be extraordin­ary circumstan­ces when a public statement is appropriat­e. But if university administra­tors at any level are to issue opinions on matters irrelevant as well as relevant to their responsibi­lities as educators, what they write and say should be evenhanded, factually accurate and devoid of any appearance of racial animus.

On hopes that, in the future, Cheng and everyone else in Connecticu­t possessing a comparable platform bear in mind such considerat­ions when they speak publicly. Should they do so, their credibilit­y and moral authority would be greatly enhanced.

If university administra­tors are to issue opinions on matters irrelevant as well as relevant to their responsibi­lities as educators, what they write and say should be evenhanded and factually accurate.

 ?? Matthew Brown/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Terrence Cheng, president of the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system, in 2017.
Matthew Brown/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Terrence Cheng, president of the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es system, in 2017.

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