Freedom from Fear: Crime and the Diversity Hustle

By now, most Americans have watched the newscast on the brutal killing of Chicago honors student Derrion Albert.

FDR made “freedom from fear” one of his Four Freedoms. Many Chicago students flee to my rural university to secure “freedom from fear.” They escape gang violence and the prospect of ending up in jail. They are the Derrion Alberts of the world–kids who want to start over.

Alas, college administrators–in the name of “diversity”–promote gang magnet events such as our Player’s Ball: a fraternity-sponsored event with “pimps,” “hoes,” and “bitches.”

Guilty white administrators cave to demands for “urban culture.” After all, “it’s a black thing.” Diversity officials remain silent (privately, they do not approve but “what are we going to do?”).

The same administrators ban credit card vendors on campus, squelch “hate speech” (a term never applied in this context) but will not lift a finger to “do the right thing.” At the very least, campus officials could use their bully pulpit to criticize these events.

One of my former students escaped his gang, became an honors student and attended the “Ball” in his second year. At the Ball, gang members searched him out and put a “hit” on his head for leaving them. Several of us found a way to relocate him but ultimately this student left for another university.

That is not education, it is exodus.

Since administrators and diversity deans do nothing, say nothing, hear nothing, I call them out: “Shame on you!”

Derrion Albert could have been one of my students, if he lived to attend college. For the Derrions of the world, those of us who teach or lead need to speak up.

R.I.P. Derrion Albert

[Crossposted with National Association of Scholars blog.]

Jonathan Bean is a Research Fellow at the Independent Institute, Professor of History at Southern Illinois University, and editor of the Independent book, Race & Liberty in America: The Essential Reader.
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