Silencing and marginalization of
conservative voices have become commonplace in the United States, as amazingly highlighted
by former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Just the other week, Bloomberg spoke
about universities becoming bastions of intolerance. “This spring, it has been disturbing to see a
number of college commencement speakers withdraw - or have their invitations
rescinded - after protests from students and - to me, shockingly - from senior
faculty and administrators who should know better,” Bloomberg said at a
commencement speech at Harvard University, according to CNN.
Bloomberg referred to an October
speech by former police commissioner, Ray Kelly, at Brown University, which
canceled the speech after a protest by those who were opposed to the police
department’s stop-and-frisk policy. The
former mayor had several other incidents to cite, including at Rutgers. “In each case, liberals silenced a voice - and
denied an honorary degree - to individuals they deemed politically
objectionable. This is an outrage,”
added Bloomberg. “We cannot deny others
the rights and privileges that we demand for ourselves. And that is true in cities and it is no less
true in universities where the forces of repression appear to be stronger now,
I think, than at any time since the 1950s,” he told graduates. “There is an idea floating around college
campuses, including here at Harvard, I think, that scholar should be funded
only if they’re work conforms to a particular view of justice. There’s a word for that idea - censorship - and
it is just a modern form of McCarthyism.” Bloomberg called conservative academicians “endangered
species.” “Today, on many college
campuses, it is liberals trying to repress conservative ideas, even as
conservative faculty members are at risk of becoming an endangered species,” he
said.
Bloomberg also criticized
Republicans and Democrats in Washington, where, he said, decisions are reached
“not by engaging with one another, but by trying to shout each other down.”
In an op-ed for USA Today, Kristen Powers, an American political pundit, analyst
and media personality on Fox News, blasted
what she called the “virtual manhunt” of Mozilla chief Brendan Eich. “His heresy was a private donation in support
of an anti-gay marriage initiative six years ago. Mob rule enforcing groupthink is as illiberal
as it gets, and yet it was liberals demanding uniformity of thought - or else,”
she wrote in April.
It’s refreshing to hear a couple of
liberals speak the truth about the intolerance of those who cry the loudest for
tolerance.
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
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