We once had Separate but Equal in the Good Ole
USofA. Now we have Separate but Separate.
In his inaugural address in January 1963, Governor George Wallace of Alabama thundered: “Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever”.
In his inaugural address in January 1963, Governor George Wallace of Alabama thundered: “Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever”.
Those who remember who Wallace
was have said a lot of bad things about him since he said those Awful Words. Here are a few examples…
Ø
What an Awful
Guy!
Ø
How could anyone ever have voted for him knowing
that he is such an Awful Guy!
Ø
He is such an Awful
Guy someone ought to shoot him (someone did shoot him)!
It turns out that Governor Wallace is going down in history
as the Awful Guy who had the power to see into the distant future about
the “tomorrow” part of his Awful Words in 1963.
***************
More than half a century later, Racial Segregation is well engrained into many American Colleges
and Universities.
Wallace had in mind the exclusion of blacks from white-only
institutions. Today’s Racial Segregation,
by contrast, consists of ethnic groups walling
themselves off within institutions of higher learning.
A short time after the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education verdict, black students in
predominantly white higher educational institutions began requesting Segregation.
This has come to be called Neo-Segregation (voluntary racial segregation of students, aided by
college institutions, into exclusive dormitories, common spaces, classes, and events).
Neo-Segregation
differs from Jim Crow Segregation
because it is voluntary: It invites students of color to separate themselves
out from the rest of the campus.
In the past two years the National Association of
Scholars surveyed 173 colleges and universities, public and private, in all 50
states. The surveyors found…
Ø
46% of schools surveyed Segregate Student Orientation
Programs.
Ø
43% of schools surveyed Segregate Residential Arrangements.
Ø
72% of schools surveyed Segregate Graduation Ceremonies.
These arrangements are ostensibly voluntary but students
can’t easily opt out because the social pressure to conform is overwhelming.
All of this is being done, not because the
administrations want it this way but because the students want it this
way.
***************
Where have I been?
This is Fella pecking out this Blog Posting. This is the guy who notices stuff, the guy who is always blogging about what he reads in the newspaper and the guy who some consider well read but I have to admit I did not realize this craziness had gone this far.
This is Fella pecking out this Blog Posting. This is the guy who notices stuff, the guy who is always blogging about what he reads in the newspaper and the guy who some consider well read but I have to admit I did not realize this craziness had gone this far.
Maybe the answer lies in that fact that, in the old days (I
come from the old days) it was all over the news when people demonstrated that
they wanted to Integrate. Today the
students say they want to Segregate
and the School Administrations give in before the demonstrations get started.
As soon as the School Administrations get a hint that their
students are unhappy and are contemplating a demonstration, they rush out and
say to the milling students…By golly,
students, no need to go to all the trouble of organizing a demonstration. We
will give you whatever it is you want. We know that you know what’s best. Who
are we to question students? Besides we are afraid that you might start
demonstrating and every time you do that we get so confused because it takes us
weeks before we can figure out what you are demonstrating about”.
Would I kid u?
Smartfella
Lagniappe: Some of the
“accomplishments” of Neo-Segregation
are…Separate Dorms, Separate Libraries, Separate Dances, Separate Advisers, Separate
Orientations, Separate Curriculum and the African-American Studies Program (which
requires Separate Faculty Members with Separate Qualifications). All of this
falls under the heading of Progress…Or
does it?