Ivy League Black Students Group: There are too many African and Caribbean students here
Identity politics is a nasty thing. Everyone who isn’t a progressive knows this. At Cornell University, that slice of politics is rearing its ugly head, with the school’s black students group demanding that more African American students be enrolled. They’re concerned that there are too many Caribbean and African students. To start, their letter to the administration prefaces with the usual ‘there’s white supremacy everywhere’ angle.
We attend a university where our peers believe we do not belong here; where they decry the usefulness and necessity of affirmative action; where they claim we segregate ourselves because we lean one each other to survive. We attend a university that is obsessed with the optics of our black and brown faces but is indifferent to the justice we seek.This is not an indictment of white people; this is an indictment of a system that perpetuates white supremacy and shelters our peers under the warm blanket of white privilege- all the while, we are left to freeze in our frigid reality of racist epithets, essentialist curriculum, and apathetic governance. In post-racial America, our classmates call us n***ers from their pickup trucks in broad daylight. In post-racial America, weare berated by airborne bottles on our own campus.In post-racial America, we are told we have a chip on our shoulder. We are called everything but our name. Above all else, in post-racial America we are bombarded by the deafening silence that allows the centuries-old hum of white supremacy to grow louder. Silence is violence.
The Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Council both present a system that not only excludes people of color, but exudes white supremacy. The verbal and physical assault of a young black student, committed by members of the Chi Chapter of Psi Upsiloncannot go unpunished and the Cornell administration can no longer stand silent while we are under attack. The fact that it has taken the administration far too long to realize the extent of the systemic issues that exist at our school is unacceptable.
Then, they go on listing their demands that they think will solve the university’s supposed problems in this area of racial injustice (via Daily Caller):
Cornell University’s Black Students United demanded the university start recruiting more black American students because the campus has too many African and Caribbean students Wednesday.
Black Students United, a group for students identifying with the African diaspora, handed the university president a list of twelve demands, with one of them dealing with the disproportionate representation of African students compared to black students on the campus.
[…]
Black Students United takes issue with the fact that there are more African and Caribbean students on campus when compared to black students. The group defines black students as those who come from black families that have lived in America for two or more generations. While the group said it doesn’t mind the university trying to recruit African students, they want the college to pay more attention to black students whose families have been affected by years of white supremacy.
[…]
The demands from Black Students United come after a black student alleged that fraternity Psi Upsilon members brutally assaulted him and called him a “n*gger.” The demands also call for the frat to be shut down and give up its house to students of color to gather.
And yes, they want new coursework that is guided along the rigid confines of identity politics:
We believe that our community has a responsibility to learn about the ways in which systems of power and privilege continue to inform the experiences of people of color both on campus and out in the world. We believe mandatory course work will provide an initial means of challenging and dismantling the white hegemony that pervades the university’s present curriculum.
We demand that all employees of the university, academic and otherwise (including tenured professors), to have appropriate, ongoing training (tied to evaluations and payroll) that deals with issues of identity (such as race, class,religion, ability status, sexual/romantic orientation, gender, citizenship status,etc.). We want this coursework to be explicitly focused on systems of power and privilege in the United States and centering the voices of oppressed people.
All I can say is that I’m glad I graduated before this insanity took hold at my college.
For more on this story go to: https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2017/10/01/ivy-league-black-students-group-there-are-too-many-african-and-caribbean-students-here-n2389020