Tuesday, May 20, 2008
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The Arrogance Of Commencement Speakers
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Posted by:
Hugh Hewitt at
10:11 AM
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I have spoken at enough commencements to know that rule one is don't confuse your role as speaker with the celebration of the accomplishments of the graduates.
Don't step on the story, in other words, and don't impose yourself or your political views on the audience. They are the honorees, and they are a diverse group.
The cost of losing sight of this is fully explained in an e-mail I received last night:
Hi Hugh, I sent this as a letter to the editor for the Honolulu Advertiser hoping to get at least a favorable portion published...
I attended my wife's graduation ceremony this Sunday from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. As a full-time, active duty officer in the U.S. military, it was a proud moment for her. I sat next to her Dad, who was glowing with pride at how his little girl had set off on her own from a little farm in Colorado to achieve his equal in the realm of academics: a Master's degree.
We sat in awe of the sheer numbers of graduates in their ceremonial gowns, in wonderment and respect for their achievements. Unfortunately, this celebration was curtailed somewhat with disappointment at a portion of the commencement address given by Dr. Rita Colwell, Ph. D., a distinguished University Professor and former Director of the National Science Foundation. Much of her address was good-natured and inspirational, but she just couldn't help herself and broke dinner table etiquette, taking a stab at the Iraq war by unmistakably suggesting a parallel to the Vietnam War, and hinting at the grand tradition of students acting out in opposition to war.
My wife sat next to two classmates; one is a female active duty Army officer whose work directly supports Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan); the other, whose husband is serving on his second deployment to Iraq as a combat infantry officer, is considerably active in support networks for spouses of deployed soldiers and sailors, never knowing what the next phone call may bring. They sat aghast as in one breath, Dr. Colwell incredulously presumed the outcome of the conflict, stating that it "may well turn out to be a tragic mistake"; and in the next breath feigned praise for the service men and women, stating that no matter what one may think of the Iraq conflict, we must honor their service. (One can only deduce from this statement that these poor lemmings, nobly cascading over the falls in support of this tragic mistake, are merely answering the call of duty and therefore cannot be held at fault.)
Statements such as these, however subtly suggested, are so utterly misplaced and irrelevant to the accomplishments of the students. They serve only to insult the troops, thereby dishonoring their commitment, and demonstrate the obvious disdain in academia for the successes and failures of the current administration and those in its employ. What often goes unrecognized by persons who make these passing remarks, however well-intentioned or obsequious they may be, is that these soldiers and sailors, the very students sitting in attendance, have worked hard in service to their country's missions, and cannot help but be offended.
Dr. Colwell, who no doubt has accomplished a great many things in academia as well as public service, rightly asserted in her address the tragedy of 17 million people worldwide who succumb each year to the spread of infectious disease. She spoke to the effectiveness of simple ideas, which can often solve problems which may at first glance, appear too complex to resolve. Yet in all of her obvious intellect, experience, and achievement, the Iraq war apparently equates to a tragedy earning the same honorable mention as the 17 million deaths to disease, despite the opportunity for freedom from dictatorship and oppression afforded to millions of Iraqi citizens through our troops' efforts, and the overwhelmingly disproportionate casualty comparison. One can only assume that in the arena of international relations and conflict resolution, these same simple solutions are not valid when they do not meet with the approval and input of the superior intellect of academia.
Not to be outdone was University President David McClain, who eulogized on the responsibilities of those with higher degrees, now presumably part of an elite crowd. He used the analogy that those with advanced degrees are similar to the mountain dwelling Hawaiian ancestors, whose smoke signaled the production of taro for beach dwellers who relied upon them for sustenance. While well-intentioned, this leftist argument only reinforces the elitist views of university academia, who seem to believe that superior education translates into superiority per se, and they must therefore confer upon those less educated, the generosity of their wisdom and opulent intellect.
The reality is that the 'beach dwellers' of today are the engines of society, and the role of those with higher education is to enable and serve the masses with their ideas and ingenuity, and become an integral and productive member of society, not some intellectual mountain dweller or ivy tower occupant blowing smoke from on high. (Application of suggested pun is left to the reader.)
After enduring 2 years of the predominantly left-leaning opinions of their classmates and educators, replete with frothing anti-Bush, anti-Iraq war exasperation and fury, these three women, like the men and women fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, prevailed nevertheless, and accomplished what they set out to do. What should have been a celebration on Sunday for my wife and her two friends ended up leaving a bitter taste in their mouths.
And so, since Dr. Colwell brought the issue to the table, on their behalf I will gladly inform those in attendance what it is that she and her two classmates, (and presumably there are more of them of the same mind), think of the Iraq conflict by speaking the heretofore unspeakable: "If you really want to honor the troops and sailors in their mission, place your personality dislikes to the side and repeat after me this very simple idea: God Bless our President, and God Bless the honorable mission of our troops in Iraq!"
Congratulations Graduates - all of you - and Good Luck!
UPDATE: Commencement lunacy extends from HA to Maine. Here's an article on the odd ramblings of Doug Hall at the University of Maine commencment, and another as-yet-unpublsihed letter-to-the-editor forwarded to me via e-mail on the occasion:
To the Editor:
I’m writing about the “eccentric” (to use your term) speech given at the University of Maine commencement by Mr. Doug Hall. Speaking “barefoot beneath his black academic gown”, Mr. Hall shared, among other things, the following pearls of wisdom:
- The American health care industry has developed Botox, Viagra, and gastric bypass surgery rather than improving people’s actual health
- The students should lead a revolution against the failed policies of their parents’ generation (“a new American revolution…..against conformity”)
- The lack of a vaccine to prevent AIDS is an American failure.
I was interested to see if the article, or any rational observer, would comment on:
- How many grandparents (and even great-grandparents) of students were in attendance as a testimony to the relative health and longevity of the current American populace
- The reaction to the speech of the parents present, whose “policies” Hall advocated overthrowing, and what “policies” these were
- The level of funding of AIDS research in America per patient, as compared to cancer and heart disease, and how many AIDS patients are surviving and leading relatively normal lives today thanks to medical advances
- If, walking around barefoot, Hall remained uninjured throughout the event, or if instead this brilliant academic honoree stepped on a tack, nail, or something, and incurred some needless societal health care cost.
I left disappointed – no such additional context was presented. Isn’t a part of education (and journalism) asking questions and learning both sides of issues?
Jeff Oxman Southwest Harbor
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I would have paid money to see that! I don't donate to UCLA either. I love the campus, support their sports and my daughters have done well there, but I'm already paying $22K or 23K per year and if that isn't enough to indoctrinate them thoroughly, that's just too bad! By the way, I wouldn't donate to ANY university in the present climate. Hope your son got his money's worth. Go Bruins! |
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is this knothead Doug Hall and why should anyone care or any college be interested in what he thinks? |
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Remember this commencement speech? http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/jun1999/mumi-j15.shtml Mumia Abu Jamal at The Evergreen State College. |
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..now its Commencement Speakers. |
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My empathies to you as I also am a mother who's biting the tongue and sitting on hands not to embarrass the lass and laddies.
The Way is an escapee from KosKidzKommie Endocrination Center. As with most of the little brats, you don't know Biblical Prophecy,and you sure don't know the Lord's way....but you make a nice attempt at being a mocker!2Peter(read the whole book) |
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...to Molefi Kete Asante, professor of African American studies at Temple University, who was the speaker at the Pepperdine University Graduate School of Psychology commencement last weekend. When I saw his bio in the program, I was ready for the worst.
He actually delivered a very appropriate address with sage and practical advice to the graduates, and added only a hint of multi-culti political correctness (you know, embrace diversity, every human being is valuable). No politics whatsoever. |
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Conservative speakers can’t participate. The fringe elements from the left would be throwing eggs (or worse). |
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This is not even debatable.
Before the sparkers in question can restrain themselves they would need to have respect for human beings that have opposing views instead of contempt.
This is not even a free speech issues its much simpler ...... Its not the right venue.
Sad indeed. |
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make your way to a spelling class. "armogeddon" is trying to read one of your comments. |
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I totally agree. College graduation is the one last gasp of lib indoctrination in case 15 years of it didn't take. |
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We skipped 3 of our 4 children's graduations. What a smart move. Apparently "the way" skipped the whole dang education process. Maybe not the smartest thing to do.
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it must be standard practice at almost all college graduations for some guest speaker of academia to to reinforce the Liberal ideialst agenda one last time from the institutions that they learned from, so tht they won't forget what they were taught. Instead of praising the graduate on the positives thay have accomplished and how they can make an utmost contribution to society, they speaker usually makes it about them and that theri political ideas are the only one ususally leftwing. That is why I have foregone my college graduatiuons. |
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you terrible spelling belies the source of your diatribe. |
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"The righteous shall rejoice when he sees the vengeance. He shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked." (Psalms 58:10)
John McCain is the only cannidate that will fufill our presidents war on islam. What we need in these endtimes is a good strong
anti-libaral, non-hippie who holds true to the word of our lord. I really hope WHEN McCain becomes president he lives up to the
republican platform and ends abortion, criminalizes gay sex and marrage and stops de-regulashion. We need to invade andor
nuke iran and all these terriorists before its too late. This is exacly what the bible pridected would happen if the world fell
away from his word. Armogeddon is close at hand we must stop them as a global force and unite christians and live as the
word would tell us. and wage war against the non-beilevers and democarats and libarals. |
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Boycott all graduation ceremonies. Encourage your children to do the same. My own high-school graduation was the last graduation ceremony I will ever attend. I skipped my own undergrad and graduate ceremonies; saved me money, time, and the harrasment of leftist speakers. |
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When my youngest son graduated from UCLA about 20 years ago, there was a replacement speaker. A senior member of the faculty.
To make a long story short, with barely a comment about the graduates, this person immediately launched into an extended rant about how all the "white people" in the audience needed to give away all our wealth and all of rights to the "brown people". And beg their foregivness for our being white. (News to my Asian wife.) And on and on.
At the time, I had never heard anything like this, and was aghast. (It was a considerable sacrifice at the time for my wife and I to pay full rate for four years at UCLA.)
After about 15 minutes, the boos started, and after another five minutes or so, a Dean basically dragged the lunatic off of the stage.
I was suitably impressed; I never gave a dime to UCLA and I have voted against every California university system bond since then. |
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I wanted to boo the commencement speaker at my daughter's graduation from UCLA in 1998, but I felt it might embarrass her to have her mother removed from the ceremony. I'm already preparing myself to behave for the graduation of my next daughter in 2011. Student councils, or whatever they're called, won't even consider a conservative speaker like Hugh who might actually give an address that praises the accomplishments of the students rather than use it as a forum for their own political rantings. Not to worry too much though. I certainly don't remember what was said at my graduation, let alone who gave the address. The current students probably won't either. They just want to get that piece of parchment and get the hell out of the ivory tower they've been subjected to for four years! |
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As a resident of Hawaii for over twenty years this is just another item in a long list of what the Left has done with the state. It is not called "The Far Left Islands" for no reason at all. The State of Hawaii has so much to be thankful because of the Military but, time and time again the Left just sticks their thumbs int the eye's of our fine men and women in the service. Left here just keeps getting it wrong. I could give you list of all the utter failures what the left leaning state and local government have completely ruined. One example is the public school system k-12.
To the gentlemen who wrote the email bringing this to your attention. Please let your wife know I thank her for her service and sacrifice. I know going to that school where some one like Haunani Trask who hates the U.S. with a passion and receives almost rock star status on the Campus must have been as difficult thing she has ever done and being able to stick it out and graduate is an accomplishment in itself.
Thank you very much and even though I feel we are a minority there are people in Hawaii that appreciate our service men and women. |
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I more often hear about arrogance and rudeness by students (in students turning their backs on speakers) than I observe speakers offending their audiences.
I did once almost hit the commencement speaker with a champaign cork at my undergraduate graduation, but I swear it was an accident. |
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Some well-placed 'boo's' would do the trick?
The fantasyland of acedemia has been a long-standing peeve of mine. The tenured protectionism of the elitist caste has been so abused and twisted that what started out to be an important step to foster new ideas has degraded to a tyranny of 'if-you-disagree-with-me-you're-a-natzi-so-shut-up.'
I guess the good news is that all these 60's era revolutionary wannabees are getting old and are starting to retire and go away. And the Reagan-era conservatives are taking over.
Yay :) |
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My son graduated from American University in D.C. this year. The speakers were uniformly depressing talking about the housing crisis, high gas prices and places like Sudan. Where is the joyous, uplifting rhetoric celebrating the wonderful achievements of the graduating class and the go forth and make us all proud that the $120,000 we just spent on your education will actually make life better for us all. Can't we have just one politics free assembly? |
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I must agree with Hugh. Commencement speakers are almost uniformly awful. They should be abolished, and the focus of the ceremony should be to honor the graduates. |
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