By Professor Doom
Six months ago I covered how the
University of Iowa was targeting a Christian youth group, tossing them off campus because of
their anti-homosexuality stance regarding their own club officers—note
carefully, the group was merely asking that its own officers adhere to
Christian beliefs.
The Christian group decided to fight the
university’s bullying, taking their case to the courts. How’d that work out for
them?
Blatant discrimination, no less. I really
feel the need to point out that the university was only too eager to spend a
vast sum of tax dollars defending their blatant religious discrimination in
court…a court paid for by tax dollars.
While the previous note highlights the
dementedness of our system, I focus on higher ed. How many times now has it
been that the lunatics running our universities are perfectly confident they’re
in the right, only to lose utterly once they make contact with our (admittedly
corrupted) judicial system? Honest, this isn’t nearly as much praise for our
judicial system as it is a highlight of just how far astray higher education
has wandered from anything resembling a true path.
To be fair, the university wasn’t just
targeting Christian groups in the name of Progressive ideology:
When BLinC informed
the university that it could not change its faith or stop asking its leaders to
share its faith, it was kicked off campus. The university then
deregistered 10 other religious groups,
including Chinese Student Christian Fellowship, the Imam Mahdi Muslim
organization, the Latter-day Saint Student Association, and the Sikh Awareness
Club, for the same reason.
--BLinC, Business
Leaders in Christ, is the Christan group fighting back.
Progressivism really is just a religion,
so I respect that it must target other religions for annihilation. The problem
is, a university is supposed to be about knowledge, not religious purity.
While the University of Iowa will cease
their crusade, for the time being, the gentle reader should be aware it’s not the only institution so deranged as to try such persecution:
Another Christian student group, Ratio Christi at the University
of Colorado, Colorado Springs, is having similar issues dealing with its school
administrators. The group, which allows any student to become a member as long
as they are in agreement with its mission, but requires all leaders to be of
the Christian faith, was not allowed to register as a student organization,
which would give the group access to funds, help from university
administrators, and space to host events on campus.
Please understand a university policy,
particularly a policy affecting large numbers of students, doesn’t just get
installed overnight. It has to go through a committee, if not three such
committees, before finally receiving approval from someone well up in the
administrative caste.
Perhaps U of Iowa was a fluke (a weird
fluke, for Iowa), but it’s also happening in Colorado as the quote above shows,
and, to a lesser extent, you can see this weird discrimination occurring on
many other campuses. That’s the big takeaway here: this bizarre attempt to
smite Christianity off campus wasn’t just an error by one deranged
administrator, we have a whole bureaucratic system set up to destroy people of
faith, a system where this policy was reviewed by perhaps a dozen
administrators, none of whom knows enough about this country or its people to
say “hey, this is morally wrong and blatantly illegal.”
Granted lack of morality or knowledge of
our country’s basic legal premises is pretty much a given in a college
administrator, as any reader of my blog would know, but there’s a message here:
the Christians are fighting back, and winning.
It’s a good message, and I hope they win
so much we all get tired of them winning…though that point is a long way away.
www.professorconfess.blogspot.com
A bigger question is: why are university funds used to pay for ANY student group? Delist them all! Down to the last frickin' one! Let these cliques fund their own activities, and keep university dollars for strictly academic uses.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure university funds do pay for most student groups; at least the ones I was with, all we could get was a place on campus to meet.
DeleteMany universities require payment for use of facilities, i.e. the rooms meetings are held in. They give money to student groups to pay these fees. It's a way of rationing out the use of limited facilities.
DeleteA bit off topic--(many) left celebrities and executives and declining college standards seem made for each other? https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/12/a-slew-of-ceos-are-charged-in-alleged-college-entrance-cheating-scam.html
ReplyDeleteI guess I'll be topical for a change and post on that tomorrow.
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ReplyDeleteTimely and very disturbing article, and I say this as the guy who coined LBGT+. BTW--My understanding is that in most colleges such clubs are intended as special-interest study groups (SIG's) open to all, not restricted personal clubs, though personal clubs are allowed.
ReplyDeleteThe distinction is that a math club is open to all who have an interest in math, not just math majors. It is also the case that one can have a restrictive honor society for math majors with a certain GPA as well.
As another example I do not require that libertarian-interest clubs be officered by pledged Libertarians. The LP or US Libertarian Party even allows an anti-capitalist ‘libertarian socialist’ caucus: we have to keep an eye on the opposition somehow and the way they telegraph far-left policy trial balloons way in advance is hilarious. (I started the Greens with Petra K. for libertarian small-community eco-socialist fans though I haven’t supervised them in years and many of their national parties have gone around the bend; true libertarian voluntary socialism is about small communities like Kibbutzes or comprehensive social vision and already incorporated by libertarian-direction or federalizing groups as the LP –and if approved by our family, period.)
It may be the legal distinction was poorly drawn in this case by officials. I would say that both types--SIG's and personal clubs/honor societies-- are in general appropriate on campuses. An attempt to forbid one or another type is a question mark for a secular open-to-all campus.
Michael - We need give these people no benefit of doubt. They are anti-religious; anti-Christian in particular. Marx is a jealous god, and will permit no others.
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