Sensationalized
Ed.
I
grew up in a household that watched a lot of Fox News. Our home was usually
filled with the sounds of heavy breathing and shouting coming from the likes of
Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity. As a child I hated this. Not because I was a
passionate young democrat or anything like that. I hadn’t yet developed even the
slightest semblance of a political thought. Honestly, I just wanted to watch
Nickelodeon. But at some point, during my teenage years, I started feeling
obligated to pay attention to the world around me, so I started watching the
news. Obviously, I began watching what was easily accessible and already in
front of me. The stories that I found the most relevance and relatability were
the ones that were covering the liberal brain washing pandemic that was
occurring in higher education. According to Fox News, this form of influence
was plaguing every major college in the United States. This concerned me
greatly because I really wanted to go to college, but I was scared to death of
becoming a communist. (That’s the kind of reality that partisan based news
sources create for impressionable young minds, just in case you were wondering).
But little did I know, it would be several years before I would have to worry
about my ideologies being challenged inside the walls of a university. Because
the first time I saw how much a single semester of college would cost, I nearly
shit my pants. So, I did what a great deal of young Americans do when they see
the price tag associated with higher education. I went and joined the Army. And
after a few years of falling out of airplanes for Uncle Sam, I decided to hang
up my uniform, and finally embark on the journey of a lifetime. Becoming a
twenty-six-year-old college freshman.
Somewhere between my
teenage years and where I am now, my political views had shifted from a
hard-nosed right-winger into more of a, “fuck-em-all” kind of standpoint. As a
result, I was growing increasingly more apprehensive as the first day of school
was slowly creeping in. Not only was I in full Billy Madison mode, being afraid
of the age gap that was going to exist between my classmates and me. I was also
convinced that I would be out of touch with my classmates. I felt as though my
ideals were not going to coincide with what I had thought the atmosphere of higher learning
was. However, my anxieties were stemming from completely external sources. I
had subjected myself to reading into the medias over-blown stories about the
current state of the college experience. I was creating my own biases about something
I had yet to experience in even the slightest sense.
On one hand, I saw the right-wing
news sources still just beating the hell out of a very dead horse. I was
reading the same stories that I had read in high school. Stories covering the rampant
persecution of defenseless conservative students at the hands of their maniacal
liberal professors. The same professors that seem to be hell bent on furthering
the “snowflake” agenda because of a deep-rooted hatred for the United States.
And even before I found that pretense to be almost entirely false, that’s not
what I was really afraid of. What really frightened me was the way the left was
reporting on these institutions. From what I was reading about various schools,
I just assumed I was going to be labeled as a, “white-privileged, alt-righter, guilty
of using hate speech”. See, I’m a white male that unironically wears The North
Face, thinks Bernie Sanders is a socialist tool bag, and finds it just
downright weird to concern yourself with anyone else’s gender or sexuality. So,
I was certain that I was going to be burned at the stake like a colonial-era witch
because of my classmate’s “hypersensitivities”. The left leaning sources of the
media are just as guilty as the right for their misrepresentations of the exclusivity
and irrational progressivism occurring at most schools. Luckily, all of my
fears and apprehensions fell by the wayside as I was slowly disarmed by my own
college experience.
What has been incorrectly
presented as an intellectual battlefield between conservatives and liberals, is
really nothing of the sort. College is not some dystopian wasteland full of
students and their professors plotting against the conservative establishment
from the depths of their, “safe-spaces.” It’s also not a place where the
overtly conservative students bully their liberal counterparts into the
previously mentioned, “safe spaces”. It’s just a place that the majority of
students attend in an effort to better themselves. Admittedly, the stereotypes
of the pretentious ideologues certainly do exist, but they are not the
majority. Not every university is being ran like UCLA or CU Boulder. Not by a
fucking longshot.
The more time I spend in college,
the more evident it becomes that even something as important as higher
education is susceptible to the sensational grasps of the mainstream media. But
rest assured, as I can report back to you from the frontlines of academia that there
is nothing to be afraid of. College is wonderful if you allow yourself to enter
it with an open mind and utilize it for what it is, a place to grow, both
analytically and emotionally. And never forget, the same reporters and news
sources that created a false sense of hysteria around higher education, are the
same groups of people that have made the entire world deathly afraid of a virus
that carries a two-percent fatality rate. Challenge everything and discover the
truth for yourself.
Disclaimer:
This article is not here to discredit anyone that has been
truly and unfairly persecuted in the name of pursuing an education. This
article is to discredit the sensationalism from the media that further drives
the wedge of disharmony into our society.
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