Things have changed a lot on college campuses since when I was studying

in life •  3 months ago 

I went to college a normal amount of time. I graduated in 4 years like I believe you are supposed to and of the friends of mine that attended during that time, most of them did the same thing. I wasn't terribly involved in any extra-curricular activities when I was attending university, but I do recall the campus being an extremely peaceful thing. Every now and then some politician would stop by with a big one being when George W. Bush came by to give a speech. John Edwards came by once to give a speech as well and it was kind of funny how few people even noticed he was there. I remember walking to one of my campus buildings and saw about 20 people gathered on the library stairs with a podium at the top. I paid it almost zero mind because I was heading somewhere already and I hadn't hear anything about someone giving a speech. In retrospect it is amusing to me that this man, who would later be on a Presidential ticket as a Vice-President candidate, wouldn't be able to bring in more people than that but then again, I readily admit that the part of North Carolina that I live in and attended university in, is primarily conservative. Still though, you would assume he would get a larger crowd than 20 people.

My point here is that campus life in my days was relatively free of political action or social-justice type of activities that just seem to be all over the place these days. A recent story I read was about how a UNC (University of North Carolina) pro-Palestine group was making some rather extreme claims stating that violence might be necessary for their cause so this drew the attention of authorities and later it was discovered that they receive funding from Hamas.


image.png
src

This group was part of a rather large clash in late April that resulted in dozens of arrests and many clashes with police as the students tried to take over the campus and put red paint everywhere, as well as pulled down the American flag to replace it with a Palestinian flag. This resulted in the rather famous photo of some people that were labeled as "frat boys" protecting the American flag.


image.png
src

I just kind of wonder what exactly has changed about the student mindset between the time I attended college, which was about 25 years ago and today: Is the world in a much worse place than it was back then or is the attitude of students just different?

I think a lot of the blame can be placed on social media because while we did have MySpace back when I was in college, it wasn't all encompassing the way that Twitter and Facebook seems to be among especially young people today. Perhaps when I was a student we could have been influenced by such technology as well. I'm not trying to suggest that we were somehow better than the youth of today and from what I see around me, there is just as much affluence on college campuses as there was in my day - so it can't really be economic hardships so much as it is the attitude of the people and perhaps, how they are easily manipulated by technology. This is just a guess because I can't notice much else that has changed other than access to information.

When I was in my 20's and in college, we would find out about events by word of mouth or by fliers that were posted on the campus. We didn't have access to real time updates on things that were going on and even if I had been a member of some sort of cause, if we were going to organize it would have been done primarily through land-line phones and answering machines. Basically, we wouldn't be terribly organized.

I just don't really understand why today's students are so angry and why they are using college campuses as a means of getting their point across. Before someone chimes in and states that college campuses have always been the scene of some sort of new notion or uprising, yes, I realize that is the case... but outside of very isolated incidents, these things rarely got out of hand. These days it seems like they regularly do.


image.png
src

Was it Portland or Seattle or something like that which inspired people to set up tents on campuses and then make demands of the college? I didn't think I would see the day that we would have that going on here but we do. Thankfully it doesn't tend to last very long and certainly doesn't spiral out of control like it did in Portland where the protestors basically took control of a downtown area. I don't think that would be tolerated here in NC but the way things are going, you never know!

I honestly believe that the mindset of the average person is being deteriorated by social media, even though I don't actually participate in a great deal of it. I mean, how else do you explain this? I was in college during 9/11 and the subsequent invasions that took place after that and no one was doing stuff like this back then even though we now know that much of what was justified by the government post 9/11 turned out to be bad intel and the actions resulted in almost no one being better off because of it. Yet students weren't taking over campuses then and one would imagine that various groups like Hamas would have had the resources to fund student groups back then as well. Is it possible that these "alliances" never ended up happening back then because of the absence of social media?

I may get an "OK boomer" comment or two for this but I am extremely happy that I attended college 25 years ago and not today. These days it seems like campus life would be something that is borderline dangerous on a regular basis.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

This started becoming a norm when I was a Sophomore 10 years ago. I graduated 7 years ago before it culminated into this, but given the relatively small size of the university I attended and its location in Tangipahoa parish there wasn't much activism going on anyway as most of the adult population had jobs after classes and the foreign exchange students kept to themselves.

perhaps small universities are the way to go then.