Posted on 04/07/2008 1:28:40 PM PDT by bs9021
Cold War on Campus
by: Malcolm A. Kline, April 07, 2008
The latest survey on academic bias has sent academics into their usual state of denial despite evidence of same that frequently stares them right in the face. Taken together, 40 percent of the Americans in the survey said professors often use their classrooms as political platforms, Robin Wilson of the Chronicle of Higher Education reported on April 4th of a Gallup poll.
When that many Americans think this happens often, higher ed has a problem, says S. Robert Lichter, director of its Center for Media and Public Affairs at George Mason University. Higher ed doesnt feel that way:
The more you have less real experience on a campus, the more likely you might be to buy this ambient background belief, Jeremy D. Mayer, director of the master's program in public policy at George Mason says.
The farther away you are from academe, the more worried you are about what goes on, Harvard sociologist Neil R. Gross says.
Actually, proximity may prove correct a maxim of author M. Stanton Evans. He outlines what he calls Evans law of inadequate paranoia: No matter how bad you think things are, theyre worse.
In America, particularly on college campuses, memorials to Communists have appeared with alarming frequency every few years, my predecessor, Dan Flynn wrote in The American Spectator on April 4. San Francisco is not alone in its veneration of people who deserve scorn and not applause.
The University of Washington, which also memorializes American veterans of the Spanish Civil War...
(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...
Google “lenin statue in seattle”
to see how open these people are.
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