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February
8, 2005
Hippies
Lose Protest Movement to Campus
Conservatives
by John T. Plecnik
From
Yale to the University of North Carolina, liberal
academia is being challenged by a new generation of
conservative leadership. Credible tales of
professors grading down conservative students have
always run rampant. Biased lectures remain the
unremarkable norm. One variable has changed,
however. Liberal academia lacks its traditionally
receptive audience.
During the opening weeks of the Iraq war,
professors were shocked by the absence of antiwar
fervor among their pupils. Leading up to the 2004
elections, record numbers of undergraduates joined
the College Republicans and other conservative
organizations. Ingenious student protests, such as
Berkeley's affirmative action bake sale and Duke's
"W" (Bush) T-shirts (worn in Cameron Indoor Stadium
during televised Blue Devil basketball), have
garnered national attention and support.
This is not to say that all collegiate scholars
are voting Republican. I simply state the obvious
premise that our current student population is
markedly more conservative than their counterparts
in professorial and administrative positions. The
differing generational perspective has caused
noticeable friction between the scholars of past
and present, and this ideological friction is the
root cause of the upsurge in media attention to the
subject of liberal bias on campus. Our professors'
passion for Marxism, Stalinism, multiculturalism,
moral relativism, atheism, and the Democrat Party
is no more profound in the new millennium than it
was in the old. The sea change has occurred within
a different body politic: the lowly freshmen.
Today, incoming students are challenging their
professors' supposed monopoly on wisdom. Where
their predecessors might have acquiesced or even
agreed, the modern student body has objected. At
UNC-Greensboro, the resident College Republican
chapter protested their school's gay "Pride Week"
by organizing their own "Morals Week" to run
simultaneously. Joined by politicians and
reporters, the College Republicans debated their
liberal counterparts to a standstill.
At UNC, a Christian student was lambasted by his
professor in a class-wide e-mail for expressing his
personal belief that homosexuality is immoral. Back
in the day, the poor fellow might have been without
recourse, quieted by his own fear. However, the
student fought back, and with the help of U.S. Rep.
Walter B. Jones (R-N.C.) the offending professor
was punished for violating his civil rights.
More recently, UNC Chancellor James Moeser
arbitrarily changed his university's policy on the
recognition of religious, student organizations. He
declared that limiting membership to one religious
group is nothing less than sanctioned
discrimination, and prohibited the practice. In
line with his new policy, UNC refuses to recognize
Alpha Iota Omega Christian Fraternity because the
group declines to admit non-Christians. In the
past, Chancellor Moeser might have had the final
say, but today's Tar Heels are not so easily
silenced. The group has resorted to the courts, and
seeks an injunction against the new policy. Again,
Congressman Jones has come to their aid, bringing
national attention to the cause.
Recognizing Congressman Jones' continued
dedication to protecting the First Amendment rights
of campus conservatives, at UNC and across the
country, the Duke College Republicans created the
Walter B. Jones Campus Defender Award. It will be
presented annually "to the politician, professor or
protester who best reflects [Jones']
legacy," as "the chief defender of campus
conservatives across Carolina." A newly forming
foundation (based in Charlotte, N.C.) has pledged
to attach a $1,000 prize to the award. The first
recipient of the award was Rachel Lea Hunter, a
Republican attorney who promised to represent any
victims of liberal bias on campus, in North
Carolina. Hunter is currently running for Chief
Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court.
The protest spirit of free speech is alive and
well on the American campus
but unlike the
hippie generation, we protest liberal academia.
Campus conservatives, for lack of a better word,
are cool. College Republicans have become the
antiestablishment fraternity, and their membership
levels have exploded. What could be stodgier or
more conformist than supporting John Kerry for
president, being antiwar and anti-American? The
vast majority of authority figures on campus would
wholeheartedly agree with you.
The hippie generation, now the keepers of the
keys to the ivory tower, has become what it once
hated most: the censor, the oppressor, "the Man."
Today, it is they who advocate campus speech codes
to quiet the politically incorrect. It is they who
force feed propagandized curriculum, with classes
on race-privilege and pornography. It is they who
seek to remake an unwilling generation after their
own intellectual image.
Contrary to the lament of America's professors,
our student body never lost the passion of protest.
We just changed sides.
Plecnik
Archive
John
T. Plecnik (JTP) is a 21-year-old law student at
Duke University and a Featured Columnist at The
Conservative Voice (www.theconservativevoice.com),
Lincoln Tribune, a weekly newspaper in
Lincolnton, NC., and various other online and print
publications. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in
Accounting with a Minor in Mythology and graduated
summa cum laude, sharing the title of
Valedictorian, from Belmont Abbey College. Email
your comments to John at John.Plecnik@law.duke.edu.
Copyright
(c) 2005 by John T. Plecnik. Reprinted with
permission.
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