Ivy League Balderdash!

Well, I think my mom has opened up a can of worms for my poor little Cornell over at Hot Air. The latest update from see-dubya is about President Skorton’s remarks at the vigil on Thursday afternoon. Namely, his inclusion of the VTech shooter as the 33rd victim in “our family.” By “our family,” we obviously mean the collegiate community at large. (Don’t you feel open and tolerant now that you know we have a family?)

I thought see-dubya’s analysis about the reasoning behind Skorton’s analysis was spot on:

Why in the world did President Skorton give that shout-out to the Korean communities at Cornell? One of two possible explanations is that Skorton thinks they were feeling a great degree of racial guilt for the sins of their monstrous blood-brother. (”Racial guilt” isn’t something most people feel these days, but it is indoctrinated in Ivy League schools.) I’m sure he and most of the Cornell faculty blubber themselves to sleep over the collective sins of white dudes around the world, so it’s only logical to think that Korean-Americans need some special affirmation when a Korean student does something bad. But no need to worry, my friends. President Skorton has absolved you of the stain of Cho.

The other possibility: maybe he was trying to head off an Ugly Racial Incident. But for President Skorton’s brave inclusion of the Korean American Community in his address, Cornell’s vast Intolerant Redneck-American Community would have perpetrated an outrageous wave of despicable hate crimes upon every Korean in Ithaca.

First of all, anyone who doesn’t walk around the hill all day might need a little context: Cornell University suffers from institutional racism. How do we know? Well, the Black community tells us, the Latino community tells us, the Asian community tells us, and of course, the rich, white, liberal community suffering from white-guilt tells us. And in this case the verb “to tell” includes hostile takeovers of various buildings on campus (ever since they put a bank in Willard Straight, making armed takeovers a felony of sorts, the administrative building, Day Hall, has been all the rage).

Obviously, because of Cornell’s record of institutional racism, Skorton would have to be very very careful in how he addressed the VTech shootings. Because they were race-based, like everything else in the world. Obviously. So, he lovingly brought Cho into our family and had the chimes ring not 32, but 33 times in honor of the victims fallen at Virginia Tech.

Shocking and outrageous? Absolutely. Anything out of the ordinary for a Cornell president? Not at all. I suppose it’s easy for non-Cornellians to get shocked and outraged at specific incidents like the VTech vigil, but for someone who is here day in and day out, stuff like this kind of blends together. I’m not saying that I excuse it or even ignore it. On the contrary, it really is disgraceful and worthy of anger. I just have bigger battles to fight on campus than Skorton’s latest purchase of a racial off-set. Seriously, if every conservative Cornellian got themselves in a tizzy over each and every exhibition of liberal idiocy, we would get pretty tired, pretty fast. That’s why I’m satisfied to let non-Cornellians like my mom and in this case, see-dub, take the wheel in Cornell-bashing. (I can only engage in so much self-hatred before it starts to get to me. ;))

P.S. I would prefer if people did not use this incident as an opportunity to say, “See, we should boycott all Ivy League institutions! All of those bastions of liberal propaganda! We’ll show them.” Um, no, you won’t show them. They’ll be happy. The reason I go to Cornell (and pay President Skorton’s salary, via loans at this moment) is so that someday I’ll be able to play on the same playground as the brainwashed liberals that come out of Harvard, Yale, Cornell, et al. (And I’ll be the winner, since everyone knows that conservatives win in the end). How would me going to a lower institution stick it to the man in this case? It wouldn’t. It would just further empower them.

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8 Responses to “Ivy League Balderdash!”


  1. 1

    Sweet. Glad I woke you up early this morning.

  2. 2

    Don’t you feel open and tolerant now that you know we have a family?

    Only if that family has two mommies.

    FYI: I like to say that my alma mater (Tufts) made me the conservative I am today. ;)
    You’re completely right about sticking it out at Cornell because you are a conservative, not in spite of it. Liberals run around, unquestioned, at college campuses, and the fact that so few students are conservative makes it worse. I’m not convinced that every young liberal is a lost cause…. and what’s wrong with planting the seeds for conversion?

  3. 3

    Keep up the good work out there in “Traunerville”

  4. 4

    Haha, actually, Scott, it might be more accurately dubbed “Ted Ladd-ville” - if anyone actually remembers Ted Ladd, who was a Cornell alum. :) Man, don’t I have some history to be proud of as a Cornellian?

    (Actually, I do: Ann Coulter and E.B. White, two of my favorite authors ever both came to Cornell!)

  5. 5

    And Bridget, I completely forgot about the two mommies! I think Cornell meets that requirement as well since the Tompkins County DA is the “life partner” of a professor in the Govt / Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies departments. :)

  6. 6

    thanks for the perspective. sure seemed crazy to me, but when i think of it in terms of the university i went to it makes more sense. Still deplorable. Keep it up at Cornell! We need to take thoses schools back eventually!

  7. 7

    I was thinking of the larger aspect of Tranerville in that Trauner was from NY. I hadn’t heard about Ted Ladd (the other Wilson Dem that couldn’t beat Cubin) being a Cornell grad. Thanks for the info!

  1. 1

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