It’s about time somebody called out the racist hell that is … wait, I have it here somewhere … oh yeah, the racist hell that is George Washington University.
Caleb Francois (GWU Senior) is that person. He has also written a Washington Post op-ed calling upon GW’s name change This piece could be explained in one of two ways: It’s an extra credit attempt to show his professors he lapped up every woke nostrum and racialist complaint they vomited out, or 2. Francois has accepted money from a rival university to show prospective students and their parents that a GW diploma isn’t worth a sleeve of red Solo cups.
Either way, it’s not a serious argument – more sobbing whine than think piece.
Why isn’t the Father of our Country’s name good enough to grace a mediocre university in the city named after him? Francois can give you all the facts:
As our nation’s history of slavery, Jim Crow, red lining and other discriminatory policies toward African Americans has never been fully addressed or atoned for, these pleas for racial justice are a reflection of a shifting paradigm in American politics in which compromise and intolerance are no longer an option.
That’s quite a sentence, particularly the last bit about “intolerance and compromise.” Perhaps GW no longer teaches about irony.
But Francois is, I’m sure, in earnest when he says “systemic racism and inequality still present on campus.” His evidence:
“These problems,” Francois explains, “are rooted in systemic racism, institutional inequality and white supremacy.”
Francois, however, is not a helpless victim. Francois is a man with a clear plan to make GW better. Relax, it doesn’t involve original thought, academic rigor, personal resilience or anything more than identity-based highchair pounding:
At least four avenues could help the university make significant progress include: the decolonization of university curriculums, increasing Black enrollment, the renaming and selection of an African American president.
That’s it? It’s done. Caleb Francois University’s honors, laurels will continue to be a source of great joy.
This post was last modified on May 11, 2022 11:59 am
This website uses cookies.