Poisoning A Generation Of College Students
R.R. Reno, editor of First Things, writes in the WSJ, "Why I Stopped Hiring Ivy League Graduates. Even those who aren't woke seem damaged by the experience, and they're deprived of role models":
I'm not inclined to hire a graduate from one of America's elite universities. That marks a change. A decade ago I relished the opportunity to employ talented graduates of Princeton, Yale, Harvard and the rest. Today? Not so much.As a graduate of Haverford College, a fancy school outside Philadelphia, I took interest in the campus uproar there last fall. It concerned "antiblackness" and the "erasure of marginalized voices." A student strike culminated in an all-college Zoom meeting for undergraduates. The college president and other administrators promised to "listen." During the meeting, many students displayed a stunning combination of thin-skinned narcissism and naked aggression. The college administrators responded with self-abasing apologies.
Haverford is a progressive hothouse. If students can be traumatized by "insensitivity" on that leafy campus, then they're unlikely to function as effective team members in an organization that has to deal with everyday realities. And in any event, I don't want to hire someone who makes inflammatory accusations at the drop of a hat.
Student activists don't represent the majority of students. But I find myself wondering about the silent acquiescence of most students. They allow themselves to be cowed by charges of racism and other sins. I sympathize. The atmosphere of intimidation in elite higher education is intense. But I don't want to hire a person well-practiced in remaining silent when it costs something to speak up.
...Some resist. They would seem ideal for my organization, which aims to speak for religious and social conservatives. But even this kind of graduate brings liabilities to the workplace. I've met recent Ivy grads with conservative convictions who manifest a form of posttraumatic stress disorder. Others have developed a habit of aggressive counterpunching that is no more appealing in a young employee than the ruthless accusations of the woke.
...My rule of thumb is to hire from institutions I advise young people to attend. Hillsdale College is at the top of that list, as are quirky small Catholic colleges such as Thomas Aquinas College, Wyoming Catholic College and the University of Dallas. In my experience, graduates from these sorts of places are well-educated. But more important, they've been supported and encouraged by their institutions, and they haven't been deformed by the toxic political correctness that leaders of elite universities have allowed to become dominant.
Large state universities and their satellite schools are also good sources. In my experience, top-performing students at Rutgers are as talented but less self-important than Ivy Leaguers. They're more likely to accept the authority of those more experienced. This allows for better mentoring, which in turn produces better results over time.
The biggest liability that comes with hiring graduates from places like Haverford and Harvard is that they have been socialized to panic over pseudocrises. Talk of systemic racism and fixation on pronouns inculcate in young people an apocalyptic urgency, a mentality that often disrupts the workplace and encourages navel-gazing about "diversity," "inclusion" and other ill-defined notions that are far removed from the main work of my organization, which is good writing, good editing and good arguments.
A few years ago a student at an Ivy League school told me, "The first things you learn your freshman year is never to say what you are thinking." The institution he attended claims to train the world's future leaders. From what that young man reports, the opposite is true. The school is training future self-censors, which means future followers.








Not quite the same subject, but pretty close:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_x5SeXNabd8
"New Rule: The College Scam"
It's under 7 minutes.
Lenona at June 13, 2021 8:28 AM
It is an interesting cultural habit. This paying to get yelled at about your supposed sins stuff. Though in this case they didn't pay cash and instead had to spend time to make this happen.
Either way it is an open lie that students force administrators in these situation. When the president or even lower level administrators don't like the direction things are going they shut it down with only a few words. The students aren't in charge. Claims otherwise are nonsense.
Also, conservative students aren't that worried about their fellow students bringing a lynch mob. They are understandably worried about their professors punishing them. The people she is looking for, those who speak up even if it costs them something, have all been driven out of the ivy league decades ago. They spoke up. It cost them their place in the ivy league.
Ben at June 13, 2021 9:50 AM
Ben, you every read any Alcott? Her characters are always begging their friends and relatives to tell them their faults so they can improve themselves. They enjoy lectures from their parents and SOs. It's really weird but reminds me of woke culture.
NicoleK at June 13, 2021 10:04 AM
Millennial Job Interview
JD at June 13, 2021 11:45 AM
Ben, you every read any Alcott? Her characters are always begging their friends and relatives to tell them their faults so they can improve themselves. They enjoy lectures from their parents and SOs. It's really weird but reminds me of woke culture.
NicoleK at June 13, 2021 10:04 AM
You will find a lot of 19th and early 20th century literature, especially the kind written primarily for women contains moral and social lessons.
This generally got it past the social censors who didn’t want their women and girls reading bodice rippers and trashy fiction that would promote the sort of immoral behaviors that the middle and upper classes frowned upon.
Work culture operates the same way, but to a less desirable end since the ultimate goal seems to be racism, violence and inequality before the law.
Isab at June 13, 2021 11:52 AM
I've never read any of those NicoleK. From what you are saying I doubt I would like them. As an engineer the whole woke movement feels very inefficient.
Ben at June 13, 2021 12:38 PM
Alcott for 2021: Little Wokemen
JD at June 13, 2021 5:45 PM
I have to say that this isn't an entirely new phenomena.
In 1974, as a naive midwestern kid heading off to Cambridge to be a freshman at MIT, I quickly realized that I needed to keep quiet about certain things.
Like that I called my local Marine Corps recruiting office to report to them my new address, just in case they needed it. (I had read somewhere that you needed to provide your current address to the Draft authorities ... and I had just received my draft card.) The very kind Marine NCO who answered my call seemed a little surprised, and then amused, as he assured me that they didn't need things like school addresses.
Boston and Cambridge were hotbeds of antiwar and anti-establishment opinions in the college crowd.
When my 3 boys headed off to college, they all received "the talk." No, not that one. The talk about how to keep their mouths shut and politics to themselves until they figured out the lay of the land, and which people they might trust, and which ones they might find as allies.
ruralcounsel at June 14, 2021 3:11 PM
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