American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

Bucknell Bake Sale Sparks First Amendment Debate

More news stories on Indoctrination

Susan Snyder, Philadelphia Inquirer, June 23, 2009

{snip}

The “affirmative-action bake sale,” at which the Bucknell University Conservatives Club charged different prices depending on a customer’s race, was shut down by the administration in April. But it didn’t end there.

Bucknell president Brian C. Mitchell has received about 100 letters, e-mails, and phone calls protesting the administration’s response.

A Philadelphia-based national free-speech group this month blasted the school in a news release that began, “Student rights are under assault at Bucknell University. . . .”

{snip}

At Bucknell, the dispute runs even deeper. The conservative club has had conflicts with the administration for years.

In March, the club complained that the administration shut down another of its activities—passing out anti-stimulus handbills that blared “The Socialist State of America” on the front with President Obama’s face. On the back, the fake dollar bills read: “Obama’s stimulus plan makes your money as worthless as Monopoly money.”

That incident and the bake sale prompted the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) to get involved.

“We want everyone around Bucknell to know that Bucknell is not a place that respects students’ rights,” said FIRE’s Adam Kissel.

{snip}

Bucknell officials said that the school’s reactions to the bake sale and the handbill handouts were not an issue of free speech, but rather of campus “safety and fairness.”

Students did not have the required prior permission to hand out the handbills at the cafeteria entrance, the school said. Permission is required to prevent cross-scheduling and allow management to prepare for “possible reactions” to the events, “including for the safety of those involved,” Bucknell’s general counsel, Wayne Bromfield, wrote in a response to FIRE dated June 11.

And the bake sale was “discriminatory,” Bromfield wrote.

“If students wish to engage other students in related discussions, there are opportunities for doing so that do not require us to sanction disparate treatment of our students, faculty, staff or visitors based on ethnic, racial, gender, religious, or other demographic distinctions,” he wrote.

{snip}

Sparking political dialogue is the objective of the Bucknell club, members said.

“No issue should be forbidden for discussion on a college campus,” said Jeff Taylor, 19, a sophomore political science and management major from Syracuse, N.Y., and a club vice president.

The affirmative-action bake sale was designed to make people feel uncomfortable, said club president Travis Eaione, 20, a junior accounting major from New York City.

“If you’re not comfortable with something as simple as a bake sale, then you really shouldn’t be comfortable in the form of affirmative action in schools in college selection and admission,” said Eaione, who said he was half Hispanic.

{snip}

The club held the bake sale, Eaione said, as a promotion for the speaker it was bringing to campus the next day: Star Parker, an African American woman who speaks against affirmative action.

Highlighting the strong feelings on both sides of the issue on Bucknell’s campus, a group of students connected with Bucknell’s multicultural center attended Parker’s talk, stood up in the middle of it, and walked out in protest.

The Alliance for a Better Bucknell, a year-old group of alumni, parents, and others, is backing the conservative club’s right to hold events such as an affirmative-action bake sale.

“This issue is not about conservatives or liberals; it is about one of the fundamental tenets of a university,” said Allison Kasic, 25, a 2005 Bucknell graduate and vice president of the group. “The expressive rights of Bucknell students, as well as faculty, must be respected.”

{snip}

Bucknell spokesman Tom Evelyn said the school was not planning on changing its position, saying, “We can’t allow an event that violates discriminatory policies that we adhere to.”

Eaione said the club might try another sale in the fall.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on June 25, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — Svigor wrote at 9:47 PM on June 25:

Hahahahaha, I love it. The conservatives as the rebellious youth and the leftist establishment throttles their rights. Can’t beat that with a bat. Must make the thinking liberal students (all one of him) feel like hypocrites, being dug into the establishment like a tick on a dog and leaving all the real rebellion to conservatives.

Ha!

And that’s before I’ve even gotten into how brilliant the AA bake sale is, I’ve always loved the idea.

MOCK THEM, they can’t take it! Liberals always wind up showing their fangs and looking like totalitarians (“fascists,” etc.) to anyone paying attention. It only follows; they got where they are by preying on the tolerance and fairness of those they overthrew, and they certainly don’t intend to make the same mistake. :)

2 — Saul wrote at 10:16 PM on June 25:

Parse this sentence for meaning.

*Bucknell spokesman Tom Evelyn said the school was not planning on changing its position, saying, “We can’t allow an event that violates discriminatory policies that we adhere to.”*

A Freudian slip? They admit that they “adhere” to “discriminatory policies” against white people.

3 — Madison Grant wrote at 10:28 PM on June 25:

The university slams the bake sale as “discriminatory” because it “require[s] us to sanction disparate treatment of our students…based on ethnic,racial…distinctions.”

What hypocrisy. They discriminate racially every time they admit a token minority over a white w/better grades as part of their affirmative action program.

4 — Tom in MI wrote at 10:36 PM on June 25:

Students in America have about as much freedom as the students in Iran. Don’t expect the Republicrats to notice.
They’re too busy trying to get the President to go to war with Iran and win rights for Iranians that Americans don’t have.

5 — Anonymous wrote at 11:06 PM on June 25:

Imagine if they dealt with something more controversial than a cupcake?

6 — Petrarch wrote at 8:43 AM on June 26:

The idea of affirmative action, which is to remedy past racial injustices is like many well meaning intentions, pavement on the road to h-ll. Life is competitive and as well karmic, at least as I see it. In effort to dismantle the way the societies unfolded and rearange them according to new improved methods ,political correctness for instance.. is to get in the way of natural law. What (Man)of any race or mixed race is satisfied to be Pitied and thus given unnatural advantage in the game of competition? Of course its true that previous white Americans favored the company of their own, whether Washington, Lincoln or Truman and didn’t even want to be around non whites, many still don’t. Whites created a culture in their own image and didn’t want it morphing into something less,which is happening with the influx of dark people darkening its appearance as well as morays. The societies created by whites have higher standards of living, as they get darker this standard gets lower. Honorable competition is the only proper unfolding and this conservative bake sale is a clever idea* to demonstrate the dishonesty in interfereing with natural law.

7 — Bernie wrote at 9:26 AM on June 26:

“Bucknell spokesman Tom Evelyn said the school was not planning on changing its position, saying, “We can’t allow an event that violates discriminatory policies that we adhere to.”

But the bake sales highlight the discrimination and racism of affirmative action — which guides the admissions policies of Bucknell and every other institution in the U.S. Good for these kids for speaking truth to power.

8 — Anonymous wrote at 6:14 PM on June 26:

So, let me get this straight. The students cant favor minorities with cookies, but the institution can favor them with Aid, acceptance etc etc etc etc. Sounds like an ego trip! Obviously This whole thing is ludicrous! Once again ever day I wake up I feel like I am at a circus.


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search