Sound citizens get out the vote
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JOSEPH N. BELL
We are being told by a whole spate of recent studies that the tilt of
American college students to the right is threatening to turn into a
free fall that should scare the daylights out of the Democrats. In
the last five years, for example, the number of stated college
Republicans has almost tripled, student protests of affirmative
action have mushroomed, and, says Brian Anderson, author of “South
Park Conservatives,” in an essay in the Los Angeles Times: “Never has
the right flourished among college kids as it does today.”
All of this reminds me of the years following the Vietnam War. I
started teaching in the English department at UC Irvine in 1966, so I
got the full impact in my classroom of those violent years of campus
protest. But when the war ended, and the military draft was done away
with, the tone and tenor of the student body changed almost
overnight. The strident political involvement and social awareness of
the Vietnam period disappeared like a deflated balloon, replaced by
concerns over advancement of self rather than society. There was
quite suddenly a lot more interest among my students in the stock
market and corporate retirement plans than teaching in the Peace
Corps.
That’s when one of my former students stopped by to report angrily
that she had been traveling other campuses to get signatures on a
petition against a proposed law that would prevent students from
voting at their university homes and found almost complete
disinterest in the subject. I wrote an essay for Harper’s Magazine
entitled “Silence on the Campus,” using her experience as a
centerpiece, that got several hundred outraged letters from students
who felt blindsided. It was the first show of involvement in the
outside world I’d seen among them since Vietnam ended.
Although that tide of conservatism receded gradually, partly to be
channeled into fundamentalist Christianity, none of the ferment of
the years of student engagement in civil rights or the 18-year-old
vote or war protest reappeared before I retired 15 years ago. After
that, I was too busy doing missionary work among Newport-Mesa
Republicans to keep in touch with students. So their current alleged
movement to the political right caught me by surprise and set me to
wondering if that was happening on my old campus. And that led me to
social science professor Mark Petracca, a close observer and willing
commentator on the UCI scene.
He had read the same articles that set me on this track and wasn’t
at all sure they were as true generally as the supporting evidence
suggested.
“Sure, there’s a more conservative tilt, but it doesn’t manifest
itself here in any organized way,” he said. “I’m a faculty advisor
for both campus Democrat and Republican clubs, and, between the two
groups, we’re lucky to get 25 people in a room when they meet.
“To me, the larger phenomenon here is that students aren’t much
interested in politics at all. I don’t know why we spend so much time
trying to figure out where our young people are politically when most
of them never vote, anyway.”
So if a presidential election as hyped as the one last November
doesn’t engage our college students, what do they find compelling
these days?
“More and more of our students,” Petracca said, “are getting
involved with organized programs -- especially community service work
-- that takes them off the campus. Things like the Arts’ Bridge, that
carries arts to our public schools, and Global Connection, aimed at
enriching school curricula. This is largely because of the new
emphasis on community service in public schools. Some require it, and
this carries over into college.”
Petracca was a graduate student during the Vietnam period and
remembers campus burn-out after it was over. He says there have been
two identifiable student cycles since that time: political
mobilization, both for and against, during the Reagan presidency, and
a breadth of world events in the late 1980s that stimulated strong
student interest. “Since the early ‘90s,” he said, “I haven’t seen
that same level of interest.”
Similarly, at the other end of the country, the dean of first-year
students at Wellesley College in Massachusetts was quoted recently as
saying that students have become much more worried about choosing the
“right major and boosting their resume with community service. I find
them a lot more reluctant to explore something they haven’t done
before. They’d rather take a safe and tried path.”
So what can we expect from the young people coming out of our
colleges now?
Said Petracca: “That’s what all of these studies are trying to
find out. In my opinion, conservative versus liberal is beside the
point. The politics of young people is likely to reflect the world
view they developed within a specific generation. People who grew up
as New Dealers, for example, mostly remained that way the rest of
their lives. More important than political leanings is the training
they receive to be effective citizens. They are, we must remember,
our social capital.”
I would hope that these new social capitalists would, somewhere
along the line, also learn that the first requirement of effective
citizenship is to vote. I’m sure that John Kerry wishes that might
have been better ingrained in college students.
I wonder, every once in awhile, what became of that frustrated
young woman who sat in my UCI office 30 years ago and vented about
the new generation of students who weren’t enough interested in
protecting their voting rights to sign her petition. I guess I’d
rather not know. It would depress me deeply to learn that she was
shilling for a pharmaceutical house or a tobacco company or an Enron
clone.
On the other hand, I guess it would be enough to know that --
wherever she is -- she votes regularly. At least that’s a place to
start.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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