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Talking About Cornell University's Website

  • Writer: Thomas Jones
    Thomas Jones
  • Sep 6, 2022
  • 3 min read

Cornell University's School of Integrative Plant Science (SIPS) has a Diversity and Inclusion Council which publishes the following statement on the university website. "The Council's vision is for an inclusive SIPS community that flourishes because it values and supports diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice. It recognizes that our institution was founded on and perpetuates various injustices. These include settler colonialism, indigenous dispossession, slavery, racism, classism, sexism, transphobia, homophobia, antisemitism, and ableism. We seek to address and repair the harms caused by these intersecting forms of oppression." (https://cals.cornell.edu/news/sips-community-commits-diversity-and-inclusion)

This rhetoric is a good example of why many elite universities, including Cornell, are losing their claim to moral leadership in America. Let me explain.

I have a long affiliation with Cornell University and I know its history well. I am not aware of any role played by Cornell or its founders in "settler colonialism, indigenous dispossession, or slavery". I am not aware of how Cornell "perpetuates" the injustices cited by SIPS. I do know that Cornell's founders articulated a noble and egalitarian purpose -- "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study". I know that the founders demonstrated their commitment to that visionary ideal by admitting the first African American student in the second freshman class in 1869; and admitting the first female student in 1871 -- both events were rare and unusual in that era. I know that Cornell had enough African American students so that America's first African American intercollegiate fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, was founded at Cornell in 1906. I know that Cornell had a large and thriving Jewish community by the 1930's. I know that Cornell was a national leader in the 1960's by aggressively expanding recruitment and enrollment of African American students.

I also know it's indisputable that American history is infected with the various injustices listed by SIPS Council, and undoubtedly there were Cornellians who embraced those practices. But wouldn't it be more thoughtful for SIPS Council to assess and evaluate Cornell's position on the moral spectrum, rather than issue a blanket indictment?

With regard to the broader American context within which Cornell operates, my reading of history says that, at their worst, American practices were consistent with prevailing global moral codes in their era. And at their best, American moral aspirations reached for noble ideals which were far above prevailing social mores. That is why the language "...All Men Are Created Equal..."in America's Declaration of Independence is so important. High ideals are a key reason why America has progressed against injustice in every generation, and America has slowly become a better country more closely aligned to its founding ideals. My reading of history says that America and Cornell at their best were, and still are, beacons of hope to much of the world.

The societal gap between the ideals we profess to believe, and what we do in practice, is not too different from a similar gap in each of our individual lives. For example, those of us who profess religious faith and commitment, as I do, rarely live in practice to the high standards we profess. Should our shortcomings therefore become justification for our condemnation? No. I pray every day in thanks for the good I'm able to do, and to ask forgiveness for my shortcomings.

I pose a challenge to the SIPS Diversity and Inclusion Council. Who among them lives in accord with a high moral bar? Who among them does not need forgiveness for their shortcomings? By what moral calculus do they deny forgiveness to prior generations for not being better than the prevailing standards of their era? Perhaps the first "harm" SIPS Council should "address and repair" is their smug and self-righteous defamation of Cornell. The Cornell board of trustees would be wise to free the university from the swarm of administrators who foster, feed and perpetuate this harmful ideology. Cornell should have higher standards for what is allowed on the university website.

7 comentários


jhaletky
27 de nov. de 2022

The solution to the evils is not to piss and moan about the past but to confront the present situation and be assured that we are going forward correctly.

I did my undergraduate work at Brown. it was pointed out that the Brown family was involved in the slave trade and thus part of Brown’s early endowment was sourced in that business. What did Brown do about it? At the suggestion of the then President (the first African-American woman Ivy League President, by the way) Brown created a fund of millions of dollars to improve the struggling Providence school system which serves primarily minority students. it also acknowledged the participation in the 18th century by some members of the…

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johnnybwebb
29 de out. de 2022

Cornell has a solid foundation about equality and justice

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johnnybwebb
29 de out. de 2022

Cornell is an international community. I chose Cornell many years ago (1970) because of the variety of people who study there. I made friends and learned from people from many countries as well as different regions of the USA. Furthermore, there was a mix of humanity such as homosexuals, feminists, and so on…and I never felt “superior” to any. Since those times, I’ve travelled the world. I learned French at Cornell and have picked up several more languages along the way. Cornell got me off to a good beginning in life. I do understand that some people may need to make a statement about inequalities & injustices.

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amysarbinowski
26 de set. de 2022

Amen.

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tedrhudson
tedrhudson
25 de set. de 2022

A Devil's advocate might say this. Southern partisans arguing history often argue, along with arguing that slavery didn't cause the Civil War, that Yankees profited from slavery even if they did not participate in slavery or the slave trade. One of Ezra Cornell's pre-Civil War business enterprises was the marketing of plows for which he had obtained patent rights. According to that "authoritative" source, Wikipedia, he spent summers selling them in Maine, and winters selling them in Georgia, undoubtedly to slave-owners.

Prof. Ed Baptist (whom I finally got to meet last spring) linked slavery to the growth of ALL American capitalism, not just agriculture in the South (in his wonderful book The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the…


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