Columbia University Defines a New Low Point in American Education

It is absolutely absurd that Americans should have to allow Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad access to speak within the shores of this great country, at least outside of the halls of the United Nations.   The fact that it occurred on a university campus speaks to the outright hypocrisies that occur with too much frequency.  A campus that will not allow military recruiters or ROTC units access has invited the man who is responsible for the death of many our military service members.  

The president of the university has claimed that Ahmadinejad has the right of free speech, but he has forgotten that that right exists and is extended to American Citizens not to Iranian Citizens, and that the people who are responsible for protecting that right are the very individuals who have laid down their lives so that Columbia President Lee Bollinger could have his moment of glory.

I applaud President Bollinger’s attack of several of the ludicrous statements made by Ahmadinejad in the past but it does not excuse the fact that he gave Ahmadinejad the right to express himself on American soil.  There must be some course that teaches patriotism and honor somewhere on campus?  Probably not.

Finally, I amazed by reports that suggest the students of Columbia University applauded Ahmadinejad?   Does that mean they are encouraged by the civil rights he extends to his citizens.  The exclusion / denial of gays, the stoning and rape of women, the list goes on, I guess these are all things that the students of Columbia University support.  Their charter should be revoked.

Published in: on September 24, 2007 at 10:38 pm Leave a Comment

What Price for Freedom?

Today (Sept 17th, 2007) is the 145th anniversary of the Battle of Antietam.  The battle was the single bloodiest day of the Civil War leaving some 23,000 Union and Confederate soldiers dead or wounded.  It cost George McClellan his command of the Union Army and lead to the announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation by President Lincoln.

The Battle of Antietam is relevant now as a point of discussion when considering the current Global War on Terror.  We often hear the cliché “freedom isn’t free” but never really stop to consider what it means in the context of the history of freedom.  What price has been paid?  What price will be paid now and in the future?  

As the debate about our mission in Iraq rages across the country and in the halls of Congress I think a little perspective is in order.  The seminal issues of the Civil War; slavery, states rights and the preservation of the Union cost 620,000 American lives.  It would have been very easy for President Lincoln to let the issue of slavery lie and allow the South to secede but he didn’t and we are better for it.  We as a country and we as a people could not allow the institution of slavery to continue. 

The price for democracy in Iraq, the overthrow of a brutal dictator and the security of its oil resources has been 3,000 plus American lives over the last 4 years.  Freedom still isn’t free.  If history is an indicator of probable events in the future, freedom never will be free!

Published in: on September 17, 2007 at 5:10 pm Leave a Comment