Discrimination is not where it appears
Steve Jaskikoff '05
Issue date: 3/3/05 Section: Opinions
- Page 1 of 2 next >
This is not an attempt to defend or justify what many have recently referred to as the discriminatory hiring practices of America's Armed Forces. All forms of discrimination are wrong, whether they be directed towards homosexuals or military personnel.
Despite the careful cultivation of a long history of tolerance and diversity, Middlebury College's track record in regards to America's military since the Vietnam era has been questionable at best. One need not look farther than popular histories such as David Stameshkin's The Strength of the Hills to find evidence of this disturbing phenomenon. An examination of Middlebury's relationship with America's military is essential in understanding the current ill-will exhibited by some members of this community.
In 1969, our faculty voted that "none of the ROTC staff would have full faculty status or voting rights." This was blatantly discriminatory. One year later, the building that housed the ROTC offices on this campus was burned to the ground by an arsonist. To this day, Old Chapel's official stance is that the culprit acted alone and was not motivated by intolerance for the military. This explanation is highly improbable and dangerously oversimplified. Acts of violence and intolerance towards the US military and its sympathizers continued at Middlebury throughout the 1970s. Not only were students taunted and spat upon, ROTC classrooms became the targets of vandals and demonstrators. There are striking similarities between this type of intolerance and that displayed towards Middlebury's gay community with incidents like the repeated vandalism of MIddlebury Open Queer Alliance's (moqa) symbolic closet.
Not long ago, a visit by a military recruiter prompted a large majority of our faculty to propose a resolution preventing employers who cannot adhere to Middlebury College's anti-discrimination policy from recruiting here, regardless of whether the practices in question are considered legal according to federal law. The recent faculty vote is identical to one that occurred here in the late 1980s when Middlebury's faculty ended recruiting visits by the CIA because it was rumored they did not hire gay applicants. The fact that one of the world's most prestigious language institutes prevented the CIA from recruiting its graduates is without a doubt illogical. It is, in fact, no less ridiculous than the U.S. military's history of discharging openly gay language translators, a practice that has been criticized by those on this campus opposing the periodic, college-sanctioned presence of military recruiters.
Despite the careful cultivation of a long history of tolerance and diversity, Middlebury College's track record in regards to America's military since the Vietnam era has been questionable at best. One need not look farther than popular histories such as David Stameshkin's The Strength of the Hills to find evidence of this disturbing phenomenon. An examination of Middlebury's relationship with America's military is essential in understanding the current ill-will exhibited by some members of this community.
In 1969, our faculty voted that "none of the ROTC staff would have full faculty status or voting rights." This was blatantly discriminatory. One year later, the building that housed the ROTC offices on this campus was burned to the ground by an arsonist. To this day, Old Chapel's official stance is that the culprit acted alone and was not motivated by intolerance for the military. This explanation is highly improbable and dangerously oversimplified. Acts of violence and intolerance towards the US military and its sympathizers continued at Middlebury throughout the 1970s. Not only were students taunted and spat upon, ROTC classrooms became the targets of vandals and demonstrators. There are striking similarities between this type of intolerance and that displayed towards Middlebury's gay community with incidents like the repeated vandalism of MIddlebury Open Queer Alliance's (moqa) symbolic closet.
Not long ago, a visit by a military recruiter prompted a large majority of our faculty to propose a resolution preventing employers who cannot adhere to Middlebury College's anti-discrimination policy from recruiting here, regardless of whether the practices in question are considered legal according to federal law. The recent faculty vote is identical to one that occurred here in the late 1980s when Middlebury's faculty ended recruiting visits by the CIA because it was rumored they did not hire gay applicants. The fact that one of the world's most prestigious language institutes prevented the CIA from recruiting its graduates is without a doubt illogical. It is, in fact, no less ridiculous than the U.S. military's history of discharging openly gay language translators, a practice that has been criticized by those on this campus opposing the periodic, college-sanctioned presence of military recruiters.
2008 Woodie Awards