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The University of Notre Shame
Mike Adams
RightBias.com
March 8, 2010
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It’s understandable that student newspapers at public universities are left-leaning.
The advisors of the papers are usually left-leaning and they often have a left-leaning
administration leaning on them. So their coverage of issues like abortion and homosexuality
is often skewed. But private religious universities once provided a safe haven for
those who wished to express views not approved by the immoral minority. It’s tough
to comprehend the extent to which they have fallen prey to political correctness
in recent years.
The Observer, the student newspaper at the University of Notre Dame, has shown that
our nation’s Catholic universities no longer provide an escape from the politically
correct orthodoxy running rampant on our nation’s public campuses. And the paper
has shown a remarkable contempt for intellectual honesty – not to mention the Ninth
Commandment.
The Observer declined to print a column that defends Church teachings on homosexual
activity, which was written by Charles Rice - a Notre Dame Professor of Law. Rice
has written a regular column with the Observer for nearly two decades.
At 996 words, Professor Rice’s column is a little long. At first, Observer Editor
Matt Gamber used the column’s length as an excuse for non-publication. The excuse
sounded credible but, after doing a little research, I’ve concluded that his excuse
is an outright lie.
When Barack Obama came to speak at Notre Dame, Professor Rice wrote an 1172-word
column, which harshly criticized his appearance as at odds with the school’s principles.
Note to Matt Gamber: An 1172-word column is longer than a 996-word column. That
much is as clear and obvious as the Bible’s teachings on homosexuality.
But, now, Matt Gamber is saying that the subject matter of homosexuality could best
by handled by printing opposing views on the subject. But why must a student newspaper
at a Catholic university censor Professor Rice in the absence of some “opposing
viewpoint”? And what are the implications of this new policy?
If Professor Rice decides to write a column opposing polygamy, will the Observer
withhold its publication until someone submits a pro-polygamy column?
If Professor Rice decides to write a column opposing incest, will the Observer withhold
its publication until someone submits a pro-incest column?
If Professor Rice decides to write a column opposing adultery, will the Observer
withhold its publication until someone submits a pro-adultery column?
Finally, if Professor Rice decides to write another column opposing abortion, will
the Observer withhold its publication until someone submits a pro-abortion column?
The answers to my four hypothetical questions follow: No, no, no, and no.
And the reason for the pattern is simple: The Observer carves out a special “opposing
viewpoint” exception for homosexuality because the Observer is intensely homophobic.
And the reason for the intense homophobia manifested by Matt Gamber and the Observer
is also simple: Homosexuals are less tolerant of criticism than any other portion
of the American population, including feminists and Muslims.
But the consequences of homosexual intolerance are not as simple. They are twofold:
1) Homosexual intolerance tends to result in the suppression of contrary views,
and 2) Such intolerance tends to make others fearful of talking to homosexuals.
In other words, homosexual intolerance actually promotes homophobia.
The present situation at Notre Dame is damaging to both sides of the debate. The
Observer should allow Professor Rice to present his views (as unthinkable as it
may seem to present the views of the Catholic Church at a Catholic university).
Then, they may decide whether the views of the opposition warrant publication.
I believe the other side should be presented after Professor Rice’s column is printed
if someone at Notre Dame actually thinks the Holy Bible is unclear on the issue.
If they do, the Notre Dame community will wind up with a greater appreciation of
the truth via its juxtaposition with falsity.
But the prior restraint of the views of Professor Rice is not defensible. While
not a technical violation of the First Amendment – Notre Dame is a private school
- it is an assault on both Catholicism and common sense. And it leaves many Catholics
wondering whether there is any safe haven in this land that once placed religious
liberty above political correctness.
Mike Adams is a criminology professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington
and author of
Feminists Say the Darndest Things: A Politically Incorrect Professor Confronts
"Womyn" On Campus.
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