Most Americans have long known that college campuses are like petri dishes for leftist rot. Many Americans thought that the rot was limited to liberal states, but Noah Wall at The Daily Signal says that the rot is far deeper on campuses in red states. He stated that “beneath the surface, a more pernicious sentiment lingers.” The American leftists who “cheered on Charlie’s unconscionable assassination, with a concerning number of them appearing to occupy key roles at American universities.”
The
vast majority of university employees have nothing to do with teaching or
research – they’re bureaucrats. According to the National Center for Education
Statistics in 2023, just over 64% of all university employees are anything but
faculty. The college where Charlie Kirk was murdered, Utah Valley University,
is a quarter-billion-dollar-a-year enterprise. It is also one of the largest
employers in the state, with 6,000 employees on its payroll. Of that number,
about one-third teach students.
This
is an issue that red states have been failing on across the board. When
measured on university employees per capita, 4 out of 5 of the worst offending
states were red, with the average red state employing 100 more university
employees per 100,000 residents than blue states.
It’s
imperative to point out the bureaucratic rot: Republican governors are employing
a fifth column of radical left ideologues that not only oppose American values
like free speech but are taking a supplementary role in brainwashing our youth
as well. Suppose an undergraduate wanted an internship with the Occupational
Health and Safety Department at Clemson University. In that case, they may be
interviewed by Robin “In a world full of Charlie Kirks and Brian Thompsons, be
a Tyler Robinson or a Luigi Mangione” Newberry. Clemson has employed him for 30
years, working now as their chief environment, health, and safety officer.
How
could students at Middle Tennessee State University feel safe when their
associate dean was celebrating a murder on campus? In her own biography, Laura
Sosh-Lightsy states, “… two decades of experience in student development,
specializing in student conduct and support systems.” From her social media, it
becomes pretty clear that she wouldn’t support conservative students,
especially those who were impacted by Charlie’s assassination.
Or
consider Winthrop University, where its Title XI coordinator shared a video
calling Charlie Kirk a “weapon of the enemy” among other justifications for his
murder. Could a conservative feel safe reporting on sex-based discrimination to
somebody who is openly hostile to them for their world views?
One
of the most blatant examples of the endlessly bloated bureaucratic patronage
scheme is seen at the University of Kansas. There, an accessible print
coordinator espoused on Facebook that Second Amendment supporters are “better
in the ground as worm food” than expressing their God-given right to own a gun.
No disciplinary action has been taken for an employee openly expressing hostile
and violent inclinations toward those on campus.
These
are just four of countless examples of state-funded leftist extremism.
Clemson
has received over $330 million from state appropriations and grants, Middle
Tennessee received $140 million, Winthrop received over $49 million, and the
University of Kansas Lawrence campus $178 million in 2024. It can no longer go
unanswered that Republican tax dollars are paying the salaries of people who
encourage murdering Republicans.
Charlie
Kirk’s assassination has undeniably revealed a complex of hate within publicly
funded institutions. They are infested with a cultural rot of radical,
violence-worshipping leftists that now staff endlessly growing administrative
departments, and an even faster increasing bloat of ‘other professional’
positions. For every administrative staff member, such as associate deans,
health officers, and labor coordinators, four “other professional” patronage
jobs exist.
Wall
concludes his article advising that the rot be cut out. States should “hinge
funding to the reduction of nonessential staff.” His point is, “Republicans can
no longer afford to fund a patronage scheme for people who want to murder them.”
No comments:
Post a Comment