Gregory Lukianoff’s
Unlearning
Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate is well worth the read, even with the criticisms I’ll
be making of it. Lukianoff is a self-declared liberal and atheist, but one who
believes in free speech and works tirelessly for it through his Foundation for
Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). That makes his book all the more
important for ChristiansFIRE is not the ACLU. Lukianioff and FIRE are actually
working for free speech, rather than, with the ACLU, attacking Christianity at
every turn and trying to establish secularism and atheism.
Lukianoff wants fairness, and that brought him to a very
interesting realization about who is actually getting treated unfairly on our
campuses today. “If you told me twelve years ago,” Lukianoff confides, “that I,
a liberal atheist, would devote a sizable portion of my career to defending
Christian groups, I might have been surprised. But almost from my first day at
FIRE, I was shocked to realize how badly Christian groups were often treated.”
As Lukianoff amply documents, on campuses across the nation
persecution is directed at Christians by secular liberals intent upon imposing
uniformity in the name of diversity, complete intolerance in the name of
tolerance, liberal absolutism in the name of relativismand all this with
identifiably religious zeal in inculcating the far Left’s beliefs as orthodoxy.
I know whereof he speaks. Twenty-five years ago I saw it
firsthand during my graduate school experience earning my Ph.D. at Vanderbilt
University. Even mild disagreement with the “politically correct” party line
was met with hysterical accusations and verbal attacks. Not arguments, mind
you. I was informed by one well-indoctrinated young woman that rationality and
logic were instruments of male domination, and that she would have no part of
them. She was good to her vow, as were her mentors. It was very clear what one
was allowed and not allowed to say, and which moral and political positions
were considered clean and unclean, and the unclean were not permitted to speak.
My experience was not unusual. The combination of liberal dogmatism
backed up by institutional authority is still the rule, not the exception, in
academia. And in fact, it has gotten far worse, both on the graduate and even
more on the undergraduate level, since I was in school.
Today, for example, incoming students routinely undergo
intensive indoctrination during freshman orientation week, and it continues for
the rest of the year, administered in regular doses by heavy-handed
propagandists in the administration, among the faculty, and through converted
students (especially the RA’s that oversee dorm life).
Orientation has become the cleansing doctrinal gate of
entry. The goal of such “orientation,” reports Lukianoff, is quite literally
“thought reform.” For example, at the University of Delaware the Office of
Residence Life introduces incoming students to an imposed speech code forbidding
“any instance that is perceived by those
involved as being racist, sexist, anti-Semitic, homophobic, or otherwise
oppressive.”
Note: it’s clear that Christians are not among those whom the U of D is concerned might be
offended by anyone else’s speech. That’s because Christians are the ones
implicitly charged with being (among other things) sexist, anti-Semitic, and
homophobic.
As Lukianoff points out, the goal of the orientation program
in which students are indoctrinated into the worldview behind the speech code
is "the interior transformation of the beliefs of all seven thousand
students in the University of Delaware dormitories on issues as varied as moral
philosophy, environmentalism, tolerance, human rights, and social policy, to
make those beliefs conform to a specific political agenda.”
In one of the many excesses of the orientation program,
students were forced to engage in a little “exercise,” where they had to “stand
along one wall if they supported various social causes, including the right to
gay marriage or abortion, and along the other wall if they didn’t.” Quite
obviously, this exercise “functioned as a state-sponsored public shaming of
students with the ‘wrong’ beliefs.” If a Christian dares to say that she
opposes gay marriage, she will most definitely be “perceived” as “homophobic”
and therefore “oppressive.” The “speech” code is violated, and sanctions begin.
As Lukianoff reveals, the University of Delaware program is
considered a model for similar programs at other schools. Thus, these kinds of exercises are not confined to a
mere handful of way Left universities, but occur all across the nation. Lukianoff
lists similar imposed “speech codes” at (among others) Colorado State, Drexel
University, Ohio State, Saginaw, Bryn Mawr, DePauw, University of Wisconsin,
California State.
And just so we are aware of how high the problem reaches, he
devotes a whole chapter to Harvard and Yale.
Another popular “exercise” at many of these institutions
during the mandated (re)orientation is “The Tunnel of Oppression.” As Lukianoff
reports, Georgetown, Clemson, UNC Chapel Hill, Florida State, Ohio State,
Michigan all boast one, but as I found out by typing “Tunnel
of Oppression” into Google, there are countless others. Students are
typically led through a succession of rooms where they are made to witness
mini-dramasoften with student activist-actors screaming at themall of which
is meant to cleanse them of the sins of their heterodox views. The orthodoxy
forming the mini-dramas is patently defined by the Left.
But it doesn’t stop with orientation. It goes right into the
classrooms, and none too subtly. One Emily Brooker, an Evangelical Christian at
Missouri State University, was given a mandatory assignment in class in her
freshman year: go out in public and display homosexual behavior, and then write
a paper about the experience. In her senior year she was required by a
professor, as a class assignment, to write the state legislature advocating
adoption for gay foster parents. She was subjected to a closed
two-and-a-half-hour interrogation by seven professors when she was deemed
irredeemably Christian.
Things get worse. Christians are singled out for
persecution; Christianity is routinely profaned. At a Florida community college
the Christian Student Fellowship was banned from showing The Passion of the
Christ (allegedly because of its R rating),
even while the administration smiled upon a production on campus that included
a skit (with a title too blasphemous for me to include in print) in which the
most solitary of sexual acts (to put it as delicately as I can) was aimed at an
image of Jesus. Resident Assistants at the University of Wisconsin were barred
from holding private Bible studies in their own room, even while other RAs were
applauded for putting on the infamously vulgar Vagina Monologues. The Christian Legal Association was banned from the
University of California and at Vanderbilt, and Christian sororities and
fraternities are no longer allowed at San Diego State University
In reading Lukianoff’s various accounts of imposed political
correctness, the totalitarian manipulations in George Orwell’s 1984 come to mind. College bureaucrats are in the
forefront of imposing liberalism on campus, as the case of the Association for
Student Conduct Administration (ASCA), the lead umbrella group for academic
administrators overseeing discipline, demonstrates. ASCA has devised a model
program that allows the meddlers from above to persecute infractions that were
not previously punishable under university regulations. A vaguely accused
student must sit one-on-one with an administrator for four sessions in order to
learn to “take accountability” for what he’s done. The student must write down
what he thinks he’s done, but the administrator won’t accept the student’s
account until he gets it “right.” The student must draft and redraft until his
will is broken and he admits the offense as defined by the administrator. The
student, by the way, has to pay actual money for the privilege of these four
sessions of humiliation.
Lukianoff exactly captures the spirit of the ASCA’s model
program. “Like the famous scene in 1984 in
which Winston is forced to say he sees five fingers when his interrogator is
holding up four, you would complete the program only when you described your
behavior using the exact (strained and strange) language the program wanted you
to use.”
Lukianoff’s book is helpful for getting a full smack of
what’s really going on at our universities, but the real problem, or at least
the deepest problem, is not Unlearning Liberty but unlearning Christianity. As dual sign of this is both the deep
anti-Christian bias pervading our universities and the evangelical zeal in promoting the entire secular
liberal worldview. The deep bias against Christianity reveals an important
historical truth: secularism is not neutralthe mere subtraction of
religionbut, as we learn from its history, a worldview formed specifically against Christianity. The evangelical zeal of the secular
liberals reveals that we are dealing with what really amounts to another
religion.
We cannot comprehend what’s going on at our universities, or
in our culture, without grasping this dual connection. The problem, for the
Left, is not religion as such. As Lukianoff points out several times, students
are continually drilled on the evils of anti-Semitismand that is all to the
good. But surprisingly, they also compelled to heartily affirm Islam (under the
aegis of tolerance and diversity), even though Islam so often manifests a
thoroughgoing anti-Semitism, is certainly more “sexist” than anything these
students have experienced, and is most decidedly no friend of American-style
gay rights. On cannot imagine, for example, a vulgar sexual send-up directed
against Mohammed being tolerated. Jewish and Muslim groups are passionately
protectedand again, that’s all to the good.
But Christianity? You can say anything against it, profane
it in any way, and trace the evils of the world to its door.
So, it isn’t religion that bothers the reigning secular
liberalism on campus, but Christianity. It isn’t liberty that is being
unlearned, at least not directly. The curtailing of speech is largely directed
specifically at Christianityits worldview and its moral codes. But you are at
liberty to say anything you want about Christianity. Further, there is the
proper religious liberty offered to Jews and Muslims, the respectful protection
that allows them to live according to their faith without attack or
belittlement. But as Lukianoff shows, this same religious liberty is, more and
more, denied to Christians.
It is Christianity that is being unlearned at our
universitiesnot just removed, but ridiculed; not just ignored, but demonized.
That is deeply ironic, given one very amazing fact: it was the Catholic Church
that invented the university.