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March
12, 2005
The
Conscience of a Campus Conservative
by John T. Plecnik
My
last column, "Forget
Free Speech, Liberals Don't Tolerate Campus
Conservatives," drew the ire and attention of
thousands. Published online by GOPUSA and the
Washington Times, it sparked still more
debate on the issue of liberal bias on campus.
Conservative professors from North Carolina,
Wisconsin and across the country e-mailed their
support. One celebrity endorsement came from former
U.S. House Historian Christina Jeffrey, who
currently presides over the South Carolina
Association of Scholars. In her words, this past
column was my "best ever."
Still more students, parents and alumni stepped
up, sending e-mails and notes, while weighing in on
countless blogs and message boards. An Assistant
U.S. Attorney, who read and enjoyed my column, even
made a point of telling me that his office had jobs
for law students like me. Thank you, Sir. And thank
you, all. Together, we are big enough to beat
liberal bias.
Of course, for every message of support, a
legion of liberals gnashed their teeth. One angry
reader just told me to "get a life." Another
insisted that I was a hypocrite for criticizing
higher education without dropping out of school.
And sadly, the next hundred-or-so arguments only
got less intelligent from there.
However, one theme was clear from the
holier-than-thou feedback of the liberal elite. The
majority of them are still in denial. They refuse
to believe that campus conservatives are anything
more than a handful of rich brats and "Bible Belt"
bumpkins. In their minds, we either drive to Duke
in a BMW or spend our summers on mission trips. Not
to knock luxury cars or spreading the Gospel, but
in actuality, campus conservatives come from every
walk of life. The money-hungry, nerdy stereotype of
Alex P. Keaton, depicted by actor Michael J. Fox on
the popular 80s sitcom "Family Ties," has never
been less germane than it is today.
Liberals also can't stand the reality of our
numbers. The 60s hippy generation represented a
national movement, but campus conservatism is just
a fad, right? There are over 200,000 College
Republicans on campus, says College Republican
National Committee Chairman Eric Hoplin. And, the
College Republicans barely constitute the tip of
the academic iceberg. Add in millions more
conservatives that don't like political clubs or
vote Libertarian, and you begin to get the idea. Is
it any wonder that America's Leftist faculty has
trouble dealing with my generation of students?
And make no mistake, America's faculty is
Leftist. Ever wonder what happens to all those
failed, liberal politicians who espouse the
famously unpopular tax and spend platform? They go
straight for the ivory tower. Al Gore grew a beard
and started teaching after losing Florida to
then-Gov. George W. Bush. Joe Trippi, Howard Dean's
campaign manager, dropped his imploding
presidential candidate to be a fall fellow at
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Remember
Johnny Edwards? After his embarrassing loss, the
University of North Carolina decided to create a
"Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity," for the
former senator and vice presidential nominee.
Finally, who could forget the famed
professor-politician, U.S. Rep. David Price
(D-N.C.)? As a member of congress, and Duke's
faculty, Price always has a job
even when he
loses the popular vote.
Aside from these much-cited and sensational
illustrations, the reality is that most professors
are card-carrying liberals. Various studies and
surveys indicate that faculty at elite schools,
good schools, average schools, state schools,
private schools and on down the line, tend to be
overwhelmingly liberal. In many ways, contemporary
campus conservatism is a response to these liberal
professors and their collective attempt to
proselytize my generation.
We resent the professorial endeavor to label
conservatism as a disease. And, we refuse to let it
go unanswered. On campus today, it's considered
acceptable behavior for a professor to plug
liberalism in English 101, history or economics.
It's acceptable for universities to invite speakers
like Ward Churchill, who compared the 9/11 victims
to Nazis. It's acceptable to ban conservative
groups like the UNC-Wilmington College Republicans
or UNC's Alpha Iota Omega Christian Fraternity.
Campus conservatives respectfully disagree.
And whether our professors like it or not, we
have no intention of disagreeing quietly. We choose
to air our dissent on Fox News and CNN, in the
Washington Times and New York Times, and even in
federal court. By necessity, campus conservatives
are becoming columnists, commentators and First
Amendment watchdogs. We are taking our case beyond
the campus community.
And, the nation is taking notice.
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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