|
Maintaining Liberty:A 21st Century Challenge
Walter Williams
Dr.
Walter Williams, a professor of economics at George Mason University,
delivered these remarks at Grove City College on January 25, 2003, in
dedication of the new Hall of Arts and Letters, a $21 million, 40 classroom
building. This speech is reprinted from Vision & Values, a publication of Grove City College. Parents,
students, friends, faculty, Board of Trustees and Dr. Moore, I am honored to
have been invited to give the dedication address for the new Hall of Arts and
Letters building. I have had a long and warm relationship with Grove City
College that goes back at least 20-some years. Grove City College is a place
where parents can rest assured that their children will be educated, be safe
and get a good start along the road to intellectual maturity. Reflections on the 20th Century As
we begin the 21st century, there are some reflections we might make about the
century just past. We can safely conclude that the 20th century was at once
mankind’s most brutal century and at the same time a century of
mankind’s greatest achievements. It was brutal because of a war toll of
nearly 50 million lives and another 170 million murdered by their own
governments, not to mention the hundreds of millions living under cruel
totalitarian regimes. The 20th
century was also one of remarkable human achievement that included
unprecedented gains in life expectancy, health and standards of living, as
well as technological advances that could not have been imagined by those who
lived in the 19th century. As we stand just inside the door of the 21st
century, we might ask: What is the greatest challenge we will face? In a
word, I would say the maintenance of liberty. That’s where Grove City
College and the values passed on to its students stand out. Grove City
College and a precious few other institutions of higher learning must
survive, flourish and lead the way if our nation is to remain free and
prosperous and recapture the moral values that made the American experiment
so successful in the first place. Some of you might be tempted to think, with
some 3,000 colleges in our country, what is so important about Grove City
College? Higher Education’s Plight
Many college
campuses are home to elitists who are out of touch with and have contempt for
American values. Let’s sample some of the statements made by their
professors and students after September 11, 2001, one of the darkest days in
our history. * Hours after the
terrorist attacks, University of Mexico History Professor Richard Berthold
told the students in his Western Civilization and Greek History classes,
“Anyone who can blow up the Pentagon has my vote.” * At the University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill, a teach-in featuring Professor William Blum
equated the United States with the terrorists saying, “There are few if
any nations in the world that have harbored more terrorists than the United
States.” * A student columnist
for the University of Michigan student newspaper said, arguing that the
United States deserved to be attacked, “. . . the actions taken by the
terrorists on Tuesday are not completely unwarranted. We try to forget about
the way this country behaves internationally—that we too often behave
as terrorists.” * A California Chico
State College professor said that President Bush wants to “kill
innocent people,” “colonize” the Arab world and capture
“oil for the Bush family.” * University of Texas
Professor Robert Jensen said that the terrorist attack “was no more
despicable than our massive acts of terrorism.” * At Lehigh University,
the vice provost ordered removal of the American flag from the campus bus.
After adverse publicity the flag was replaced and the provost apologized. These actions
and remarks should not surprise us, for they represent the prevailing
attitude on far too many college campuses across America. As such, coupled
with gross academic dishonesty, they constitute a betrayal by people to whom
we entrust our immature, impressionable 17- and 18-year-olds. In many
classes, U.S. students are taught that America is not only a racist, sexist
and homophobic nation, but a terrorist nation as well. Moreover, according to
the prevailing views on many campuses, the United States is an international
monster creating world poverty and destroying the planet. Western Values Attacked
Among their
preachments they pronounce that Western values are no better than other
values. This is where we differ with them fundamentally. Western values are
superior to all others. Why? The indispensable achievement of Western
civilization has been and continues to be the concept of individual rights.
It is the idea that individuals possess certain inalienable rights.
Furthermore, individuals do not exist to serve government. On the contrary,
governments exist to protect the inalienable rights of their individual
citizens. Unfortunately,
the idea of individual rights did not fully develop until the 17th century.
We are indebted to English philosophers John Locke and David Hume for
providing the West with such concepts. Only a few nations in the world,
mostly in the West, honor at least partially the idea of individual rights.
Their fortunate citizens enjoy the blessings of liberty. Let me make one
thing absolutely clear. One need not be a “Westerner” to embrace
Western values. A person can be Chinese, Japanese, Jewish, African or Arabian
and still hold Western values. In other words, individual rights, although
developed in the West, have a universal appeal. By the way, I would enjoy
seeing those leftist professors whom I referred to earlier stand up and make
the case for the moral equivalency between the Taliban’s treatment of
women and the American treatment of women. However,
Western values are by no means secure. They are under ruthless attack by the
academic elites on college campuses across America. These people want to
replace personal liberty with government control; they want to replace
equality with entitlement; and they want to halt progress in the name of
protecting the environment. They use multiculturalism and diversity as a
disguise for much of their attack on Western values. They pose a far greater
threat to our way of life than any terrorist or rogue nation because they
seek to undermine the ideas upon which Western progress is based. Champion of
Liberty
Grove City
College stands in stark contrast to most colleges in a number of ways. It
accepts no government money. Thus it has the independence to do the right
thing by not having to compromise moral values in order to satisfy government
mandates. It produces graduates with an excellent preparation in the liberal
arts and sciences. As such, these graduates are immune to and can challenge
the socialist propaganda that has become so much a part of today’s
America. Further, because of superb management and plain common sense, Grove
City College can offer its superb academic product at a reasonable price, so
reasonable that U.S. News and World Report and others who do such ratings, list it as a number
one “Best Value” or close to it. This wonderful,
new state-of-the-art building is just another tool that will advance Grove
City College towards its mission of academic excellence. However, it is the
people here—faculty, administration, trustees—and their vision of
what a good liberal arts education is that counts the most. I am proud of
both my association with Grove City College and the opportunity to be here
for the dedication of the Hall of Arts and Letters building. Ω |
||
[ Who We Are | Authors | Archive | Subscribtion | Search | Contact Us ] © Copyright St.Croix Review 2002 |