Counterrevolution
on Campus
by
Daniel McCarthy
First
a note to readers in St. Louis. Tomorrow (4/17) Dr.
Hans-Hermann Hoppe, author of Democracy:
The God That Failed, will be giving a lecture on that topic
here at Washington University. It's scheduled for 4 pm in Rebstock
215. I'm lousy at giving directions, so I'll refer you to this campus
map (Rebstock is building #29) and to the information desk at
(314) 935-5998.
The
benefits of bringing someone like Dr. Hoppe to a campus are obvious.
Students who attend the event hear a learned talk from a pro-liberty
perspective, a rarity at most universities. Even those who don't
attend get the benefit of the advertising for Hoppe we've
chalked the campus walkways with slogans such as "Down with
Democracy!" and for an earlier event with Paul Gottfried we
came up with even more provocative catchphrases ("Are you ashamed
to be white?" was one of them). Chalking, by the way, is a
very effective means of advertising. Posting boards are always cluttered,
but sidewalks are usually bare, clean surfaces on which to present
your message. If it's legal on your campus, do it. Which brings
me to another of the benefits of these events, that students get
hands-on experience with fighting statism. In this case those who
work especially hard also get to have dinner with Dr. Hoppe.
My
last article made the case for another counterrevolutionary
campus activity, reading groups studying classics of the conservative
and libertarian tradition. A third activity as valuable as bringing
speakers and running a reading group more valuable even,
if done right is putting together a student newspaper. Every
few months a conservative student paper makes news when its offices
are burglarized, its entire print
run stolen, or hundreds of its copies
are burned by campus radicals. At Washington University I co-founded
one such paper, the Washington
Witness. We routinely face bureaucratic impediments, which
are seriously threatening in their own right, but never have had
a print run stolen. I like to pretend its because my colleagues
and I strike fear into the hearts of campus Leftists. The truth
is just that Washington University is a rare campus where there's
still a degree of civility.
Speakers,
reading groups and publications are only means to an end however.
For some students that end is personal advancement: padding out
a resume and maybe toadying up to Republican congressmen. Others
are in it to do something rather than to be someone.
Good intentions alone though are not worth much. I know of conservative
organizations on other campuses that have brought in top-dollar
speakers (Margaret Thatcher, Charlton Heston), won national awards
and distributed their publications on several campuses (or even
nation wide), and had regular meetings attended by scores of students
but that have still failed to achieve any lasting good at
their universities. What do you do after the speaker goes home?
What do you accomplish by distributing a student publication nationally,
as if you were competing with the Wall Street Journal or National
Review? You have a hundred students at a meeting but how committed
are any of them? I've seen groups that have done everything right,
only to collapse after a few years usually when the original
leadership graduates. Those involved may have had fun while it lasted
but they failed to achieve anything that endured.
I'm
far from certain that my own efforts at Washington University will
survive me, but that has always been my goal. Given the strain
academic, social and psychological involved in these activities
any shortage of fully committed talent will spell the end. That
will be true on any campus. Still I take pleasure is seeing how
the miniature institutions I've cultivated have grown and become
a unique kind of "Washington University" conservatism.
As high as the risk of failure is, I wholeheartedly recommend this
kind of particularism to everyone. Think small-scale and long term
(this applies outside of academia as well).
An
essay I came across in an old issue of the Intercollegiate Review
puts it concisely:
"In
the case of large secular universities...which seem to be administered
by those who think it their role to advance the cause of the universal
and homogenizing state, the conservative task is to work toward
developing smaller bodies on campus to resist homogenization from
within. ...Models for such associations exist: fraternities,
dining clubs, literary societies, interest-oriented group houses,
religious houses, independent 'think-tanks.' In each case a common
life develops which, being independent of the control of the central
authority, can be uniquely resistant to homogenization. Such groups
should positively revel in their peculiarity, and conservatives
should offer support in helping them retain or regain their independence."
(Mark Henrie, "Rethinking American Conservatism in the 1990's:
The Struggle Against Homogenization." Intercollegiate Review,
Spring 1993.)
This
is why even with the best intentions and most capable students groups
like the College Republicans or College Libertarians are limited
in their effectiveness. Aside from the necessary narrowness of their
ideas and activities, they simply are not campus-specific. They
are defined from without and never become part of the very identity
of their universities the way that unique, independent and non-partisan
organizations can.
It
takes time to develop an identity unique to a particular college.
Everyone comes to campus knowing what a Republican or a libertarian
is and this pre-fabricated identification helps those groups recruit.
On the other hand you will be surprised just how many people come
out of the woodwork to join a non-partisan conservative/libertarian
organization precisely because they do not want to be associated
with a given party. The same is true for ideology. Initially independent
organizations may not have a clear ideology, but gradually one will
grow and be better adapted to the campus than a set of beliefs derived
from some outside entity. Conservatives like to talk about tradition,
but tradition has to be endogenous and particular. Libertarians
love freedom, but part of freedom has to be independence. Usually
the campus projects of both libertarians and conservatives have
failed because they have not taken their own overarching principles
seriously enough. They haven't put them into practice.
A
number of think tanks and non-partisan institutions offer resources
that particularistic student groups can adapt to their own purposes.
Young America's Foundation supplies
speakers (I recommend the antiwar anarcho-capitalist and rap expert
Reginald
Jones. The Intercollegiate Studies
Institute has more scholarly speakers and other academic resources;
ISI also administers the Collegiate
Network, which assists independent conservative publications.
The Leadership Institute offers training for students interested
in broadcast
journalism or in starting
a campus publication. Some of these groups are neocon-ish, but
ideology aside they can still be helpful. Organizations that are
not exclusively concerned with campus activism also have resources
to offer. The Ludwig von Mises Institute has several especially
worthwhile summer conferences.
America’s
universities have been breeding grounds for radicalism for over
a generation now. As institutions they cannot be reclaimed from
the Left all at once or all in the same manner. If campus counterrevolutionaries
are to succeed, they have to use particularistic means. They have
to revive and lead the independent traditions of their universities.
April
16, 2002
Daniel
McCarthy [send him mail]
is a graduate student in classics at Washington University in St.
Louis.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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McCarthy Archives
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