Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - The American College Crack-Up - with Niall Ferguson
Episode Date: December 4, 2021In this decade we may finally experience a true crack-up in higher education. There have been comparable periods on American college campuses in the past (in the 1960s and 1980s, for example). But o...ur guest today, historian Niall Ferguson, believes what’s happening now is on a whole other level. Niall is doing something about it -- he’s starting a new university. Niall argues that parents -- who had enriching and intellectually diverse experiences when they went to college -- don’t fully appreciate that their own children will experience something completely different when they go off to university. Niall Ferguson has taught at Harvard, Cambridge, Oxford and New York University. He’s authored 17 books. He’s currently at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University where he is the MIllbank Family Senior Fellow, and Managing Director of Greenmantle, a macroeconomic and geopolitical advisory firm. Order Niall’s most recent book, “Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe” here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/doom-niall-ferguson/1137713414 Learn more about the University of Austin here: https://www.uaustin.org/ Learn more about Greenmantle here: https://www.gmantle.com/ Email me with questions, comments and ideas at Dan@unlocked.fm.
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I'm old enough to remember a time when you went to university expecting greater freedom of speech and freedom of thought than anywhere else.
But the exact opposite is now true.
You will be able to speak more freely in your local diner than on the major campus nearest to you. In this decade, we may experience a true crack-up in higher education.
There have been comparable crack-ups on American college campuses in the past.
In the 1960s, for example, or the political correctness movement in the 1980s and early 90s. But our
guest today, historian Neil Ferguson, believes what's happening now is on a whole other level.
I tend to agree. But Neil is doing something about it. He's starting a new university.
Because Neil argues that parents who had enriching and intellectually diverse experiences when they
went to college don't fully appreciate the extent to which what their own children are about to experience is completely different. We'll talk
about all of this with Neil in part two of our Call Me Back conversation with him. Just to refresh
from last week's episode, Neil has taught at Harvard, Cambridge, Oxford, and NYU. He's authored
17 books. He's currently at the Hoover Institute at Stanford University,
where he is the Milbank Family Senior Fellow, and he's founder and CEO of Greenmantle,
a geopolitical risk and applied history advisory firm. We'll pick right up where we left off with
Neil last week, so the conversation will open a little abruptly. Neil Ferguson and the Great
American College crack-up.
Let's get to it. This is Call Me Back.
I want to switch gears to the state of universities in the United States, which is a topic you have
been quite, not just prolific on, but quite active on, including a new enterprise that you're backing,
which we'll talk about in a moment. But I want to start by asking you on this topic,
because it's a big topic. What do my friends who are fixated on getting their children
into the best universities in America, what are they missing about the current state of universities in America? Not
what their own experience was when they went to college or their parents went to college.
Not even what may have been going on at universities 10, 20 years ago. But what is
going on now at American universities that people don't fully comprehend unless you're on the front lines
It's certainly a mistake to make judgments based on
one's own experience whether it was in the
1980s as my undergraduate days were or in the 1990s or even more recently than that things have changed
very suddenly
For the worse in the last five or six years.
And you don't need to take it from me.
Just read The Coddling of the American Mind
by my good friends John Haidt and Greg Lukianoff,
who run organizations,
Heterodox Academy and FIRE, respectively,
dedicated to trying to uphold academic freedom and avoid
the really serious deterioration in the atmosphere on campus is going even further.
So first of all, your own experience, parents, is irrelevant here.
You need to look at what has happened in the last few years and what has happened has been a rise of a highly liberal culture on
campuses which specializes in disinvitations, no platforming or
deplatforming of speakers, informing on professors or students who transgress the speech rules of the progressive
movement. And I could go on, but the basic impact of all of these different tactics
is to create an atmosphere of fear in which people are reluctant to speak their minds in
the classroom or indeed on campus. 62% of undergraduates
today in the United States are afraid to speak their minds on campus. Now, I'm old enough to
remember a time when you went to university expecting greater freedom of speech and freedom
of thought than anywhere else. But the exact opposite is now true. You will be able to speak more freely in your local diner than on the major campus nearest
to you.
And I could give you so many cases that it would take up the rest of the podcast to illustrate
the way all of this has evolved.
But let's just look at the recent events at Yale Law School, the most prestigious law school in
many ways in the country, which seem to me symptomatic of something that's wrong not only
with Yale but with the Ivy Leagues, with the major universities generally. What is interesting is
that an apparently trivial event, an invitation to a party, is deemed by a combination of a few
students and administrators to have some racist implication the student is then
called in and told to apologize and that the wording of the apology is presented
to him essentially for signature so this is the confession you're supposed to
sign and the administrators make clear to him that if he doesn't then it will have negative
consequences for his career
That's the kind of thing that that goes on on a routine basis on
American campuses and it's a very unholy alliance between a
minority of students who have extremely radical views on everything from race to gender
administrators who have proliferated
In numbers throughout the system over the last 40 years and broadly weak leadership
At the highest level of the universities. So this is the situation it is
It's not about the theories. I'm not saying that critical race theory
is so dreadful that nobody should be allowed to study it. On the contrary, what I'm really saying
is that the methods, the tactics used by the left on campuses, and when I say the left, basically
everybody's on the left on campuses today. There are hardly any conservatives. I'm talking about
the far left, the radical progressive or woke left. The tactics they use, regardless of the theories they espouse,
but the tactics they use are designed to intimidate, and they succeed in intimidating,
so that not only students but professors are fearful of speaking openly, of dissenting openly from these very radical views.
That's the reality.
And there really aren't exceptions to the trends that I'm describing.
You might like to believe that Chicago is different
because they have a clear code of free speech on the campus there,
which, interestingly, a relatively small number of universities have
adopted. But Robert Zimmer's very clear statement about academic freedom and free speech on campus,
that exists and is spelt out to students when they arrive at Chicago. But if you talk to people
there and say, well, is it actually an atmosphere where you can speak freely? They'll say, no,
not really. despite these these
guarantees in practice you have the same atmosphere of what i call it kind of totalitarianism light
when you're wondering you know who's going to denounce you to whom and when you're going to be
subjected to an investigation that whole culture exists everywhere even in chicago you have written
about what universities were founded to be you you've traced it all the back
way back to like the 11th century oxford bologna like looking back at the very earliest universities
that basically hewed to a certain culture for most of their existence which was to provide
some protection from the craziness of daily life so people could really think and debate and disagree
and work out their ideas and worldviews.
I don't want to conjure up a romantic golden age
because universities have, throughout a millennium of their existence,
been subject to the kind of strange pathologies that we've just talked about it's not the first time in history that a
University culture has become dogmatic intolerant of
Heterodoxy we've seen this before
But universities are important and the reason they're important and the reason that they exist today as they began to exist a thousand years ago is that you need institutions for intergenerational transfer of knowledge and wisdom.
You need institutions that can educate your elite. an artificial setting in which the teachers are essentially protected from the hurly-burly of daily life
and the need to earn their crust in the market.
They're given a privileged position as professors,
and the students are given time out from the hurly-burly of daily life too.
That was the model when Oxford and Bologna were founded, the oldest universities,
and it's still the model. It's still the basic idea that you're going to give a bunch of people
a strangely removed from reality situation and give young people, especially the more academically
capable, exposure to the ideas and wisdom that those professors can impart. That's the theory.
As I said, it's not always worked brilliantly. There have been periods when the great universities
of Europe have been in a torpor. Edward Gibbon, the great historian, said that his years at Oxford
were the least profitable intellectually of his life. But by and large, if you look back on, let's say, the 20th
century, it's very hard to imagine the United States and its allies achieving victory in World
War II without universities, because it was basically professors who cracked the German
code at Bletchley Park. And of it was a academically trained scientists who who ran the Manhattan
Project and came up with the atomic bomb that ended the war
Against Japan just just to take two simple examples that illustrate why universities matter
I mean those people and I know some on the right who say look a plague on all their heads is just you know
Let's be done with them. Let's just walk away and
Do without universities. I don't think of being realistic's just walk away and do without universities.
I don't think of being realistic. You can't really do without these institutions.
There's a reason they've persisted for so long, despite all the technological changes of the last thousand years.
The printing press didn't render universities divide, namely on the democratic side.
There's a problem there.
We're educating our elites with ideas, particularly in history, but I could mention other disciplines too, which are highly inimical to the ideals of the republic itself. If you educate an elite that despises the institutions
that they're ultimately going to be running, don't expect it to end well. That seems like a pretty
clear lesson of history. In your book, Doom, you wrote that catastrophes are um are like revelations right like pandemics or economic
depressions they don't so much change societies but they do get us to focus on what trends or
developments that may have already been in place that we just we weren't focused on and i guess i
wonder this issue you're talking about now, how much of it was
sort of exposed by the pandemic? Because I know a lot of people who are parents of kids in elite
private schools or, you know, meaning, you know, high schools and then post-secondary like colleges
and universities whose kids were home during the
pandemic and they actually the parents for the first time got to focus on what their kids were
learning and they actually overheard a lot of the course content on zoom because it was just playing
in the house and they got completely freaked out yeah i think this is what happened and the reason
education is now an issue and it wasn't an issue before. I mean, I've been writing about
this stuff for years. I wrote a book called The Great Degeneration about it 10 years ago,
in which I said, if we look at the problems in our society, one of the big four problems is
what's going on in education. Nobody paid any attention to this. I would make these arguments,
and people would essentially say, la, la, la, la, I still want my kid to go to Harvard or Yale.
The pandemic was the moment of revelation when parents who, it must be said, can't have been paying much attention before suddenly became aware of what their children were being taught.
And it may have been overheard Zoom instruction or it may have been conversations at mealtimes.
I heard a lot of that. But at any event, suddenly the penny dropped that, oh,
actually, high school and college are not the same as they were when I was there. What is
happening to my children seems a lot more like indoctrination. And there's no question that
most parents, once they realized this, were appalled.
And that's, I think, a big part of what happened in Virginia.
Because when one candidate says,
it doesn't matter what parents think,
that's not up to them what goes on in schools.
The other candidate says, it absolutely matters.
You know, guess who wins?
Because parents do care about the education of their children.
Busy parents in our time have not, I think, been doing their due diligence.
Why?
Because the prestige of the institution counts for everything.
Our elite is obsessed with, like all elites in history, with the impossible challenge of passing on to their
children their achievements. And because actually we're not that good as a species at transmitting
intellectual firepower and particularly the work ethic from generation to generation,
there is this race by high-achieving people to get their children to achieve as much as they did.
And this is done through educational credential seeking.
In this spirit, I've got to get junior into Harvard, whatever it takes.
A complete lack of scrutiny to what was actually going on at the elite institutions set in.
And it took the pandemic to make people
realize that they were handing money to institutions that were essentially engaged
in indoctrinating their kids into progressive ideas on race and gender and many other issues,
which parents don't subscribe to. I mean, I can only say it's a shame it took a global pandemic
to wake you up to this problem.
It wasn't exactly hidden from sight.
You mentioned a moment ago a big problem going on at universities is administrative bloat.
Can you just explain that?
I just want to draw you out a little bit on that.
How bad has the administrative bloat problem become?
And why does it exacerbate this exact problem
you're talking about?
Well, one of the things that's obviously wrong
with American college life is that it's so expensive.
I mean, the cost of public college tuition
has been going up at a rate of 6.7% per annum since 1980.
A lot of the cost of tuition ends up
leading to student debt student loan debt is now greater than credit card debt and
one of the things that's driving the the rising cost of college, which is not a
Universal global phenomenon. It's a very American phenomenon is this extraordinary growth of
the bureaucracy.
The number of managerial staff Yale employs has gone up three times faster than the undergraduate student body over the last few decades.
So I think one of the things that's really important to notice here
is that there's a structural problem with the way college works.
And a kind of arms race to make the elite colleges really attractive to applicants
has been accompanied by a proliferation of bureaucrats with responsibilities like Title IX
officer, diversity, equity, and inclusion officer, officer responsible for student
relations. Those were the people, of course, who were up to no good at the Yale Law School. And
this bureaucracy is one of the things that's really shocking if you're, like me, somebody
from the Oxbridge world. I mean, Oxford and Cambridge are still remarkably unbureaucratic
places where the academics, the professors, do a lot of the
administrative work, including admissions. When I was at Cambridge and then at Oxford, part of what
I would do at this time of year would be to read application files from potential undergraduates
and then interview them. I got to Harvard and I found all of that was taken care of by a large and entirely opaque admissions
bureaucracy. And it took me many years to work out what their criteria for admission to Harvard were.
Shock, horror, academic excellence was not the top priority. And so it's a very broken system.
And I'm amazed that when a bunch of us say, hey, let's create a new university because we kind of haven't had a new university for a while.
It's just, you know, like a startup.
Let's create a new university in Texas at Austin.
The outcry, the outpouring of hostility from the establishment, from the defenders of the status quo is really extraordinary to me considering the modesty of what it is that we're trying to do.
So let's talk about that. Can you just, because our listeners may not know what you're referring
to. So you're referring to the University of Austin, which you and a number of your colleagues,
mostly from academia, but not entirely from academia, have decided to launch a new university.
So what is the project?
Well, some of the founders are academics.
I'm certainly one of those.
Heather Hying is, or was,
until driven off the campus at Evergreen,
a biologist and academic.
Pano Kanelos, a scholar of Shakespeare,
is the president of the new university he was at St. John's for many years.
But there are non-academics involved too. Joe Lonsdale, the venture capitalist, Barry Weiss,
the journalist. And we have a broad range of advisors too, some of them figures from what
might be called the academic establishment, some of them from outside academia, including other journalists, public intellectuals, people without
affiliations. Now, why did we do this and do it in a hurry? Because, I mean, this was an idea
we discussed in late May of this year, and we launched just a couple of weeks ago. Because
there's an urgent need to create a new institution
for the people who are losing their jobs to cancel culture.
People like Peter Boghossian,
who was driven from his position at Portland State
because he dared to expose the bogus nature of the scholarship
at a number of so-called academic journals the grievance studies
scandal when he and
Two collaborators got fake and really quite funny fake articles published in supposedly serious
gender studies and similar discipline
similar disciplines, journals. So there's an urgency when people are being driven
off campuses. Kathleen Stock hounded off the campus at Sussex University in England for
expressing views on the nature of gender and sex that are now considered to be heretical by the
extraordinarily intolerant radical transgender movement. And I could go on.
So there was an urgent need to create an institution for the new intellectual or
academic refugees, a little bit like the role the New School played in the 1930s when
mainly Jewish refugees from Central Europe needed homes because they were being persecuted
in Germany and Austria.
But there's another, perhaps more important goal here,
and that's just to model academic freedom.
I mean, my passionate belief is that we need institutions of higher education
where free thought and free speech are the key means to the end of the pursuit of truth.
And that's just all we're trying to achieve.
We're trying to show that this can happen in the 21st century without restrictions on speech, without rules about what
can and cannot be said. We just want to show that this is possible. And I hope that if we succeed,
and I think we will succeed, we'll set an example that other universities will be forced to follow.
Because we'll start attracting the smart people.
Smart people don't want to sit in class worried that they might say something that could get them cancelled or get a lousy grade.
They don't want that.
Smart people want to experiment.
As I did when I was in my late teens and early 20s.
They want to be able to think aloud and say things that are stupid because they're experimenting to try to find out what is true.
And if we create an institution where that is possible again,
where it no longer is possible in the major universities,
then I think we will get some very, very talented people.
We've already had thousands of inquiries
from academics who want to come and work at the University of Austin. I kid you not, within a week
of announcing, more than 3,000 academics had emailed saying, when can I apply for a position?
And more than 5,000 students, potential students, had said, when are you going to be able to take applications for admission?
So we are definitely at a moment in the history of American education
where people are hungry for real academic freedom,
not some list of rules that nobody really pays attention to,
but a real system, a real foundation of academic freedom
in which, once again, people's minds can flourish.
You know, Neil, you are so onto something. I mean, obviously, the actual project,
the University of Austin is exciting, but just the idea that you've sparked this conversation,
it's like the market is speaking and that reaction you've gotten. I've had two separate
friends who are professors at top universities.
I won't say their names.
I won't even say the name of their institutions because it may,
people could kind of connect the dots and I don't want to out them,
who've both told me separately that the most interesting conversations now they have with their students are the,
and these are seminars, meaning the classes are supposed to be discussions.
They're not lectures.
The most interesting discussions they have with their students are either in office hours or their students come up to the professor
after class because they don't want, they're afraid to say anything in class. It's unbelievable.
That is exactly the point. Yeah. That we've created a culture on campuses which is
hostile to the very thing that is the lifeblood of a university. The free exchange of ideas between
the generations. We've got to the point where professors like my friend Amy Chewer at Yale
are subject to strange and it seems to me highly questionable investigations because students come
to their homes to discuss things.
I mean, when I was at Oxford,
it was considered a great sign of favor
to be invited to a professor's home for afternoon tea
or perish the thought a glass of sherry.
But now you actually take your career in your hands
if you so much as extend a social invitation to a student.
The whole culture has become completely toxic. And, you know,
don't take it from me. Take it from someone on the left, Nicholas Christakis, a good friend of
mine, but definitely ideologically far removed from my relatively conservative position. But he
was one of the earliest casualties of this ridiculous culture when he and his wife were
driven out of their positions as masters of one of
the residential houses at Yale because of an email about a Halloween party. I mean, crazy stuff.
So Nick-
That I think is extremely important. Sorry, I'm interrupting you, but I feel really strongly
about this. It's extremely important for parents who are distant from their campus years, maybe 20 years away, to understand how things have changed,
including very likely at their alma mater.
And the only way they're gonna find out
is to do the kind of due diligence
that they certainly would do
if they were considering a career move of their own.
This is your children's,
perhaps most important educational decision.
It pays to look closely at what institution
they are considering applying to
and asking the question, is it actually where I want my son or daughter to spend four years?
Not to belabor the point, but Nick Christakis, you're right, is the case study. He's been on
the podcast and he makes this point that some of his best experiences in college were
conversations in the dorm room with friends he disagreed with.
He says just that notion, friends you disagree with.
Now at colleges, everyone's in an affinity group, either formally or informally.
You don't have conversations with people you disagree with.
You don't know anyone you disagree with.
So, I mean –
Look at the survey that they did at Harvard on the incoming class.
And this was published in the Harvard Crimson a couple of months ago.
And it's almost funny that 95% I forget the exact number, but more or less 95% say that
they are liberals and progressive liberals at that.
Now, there are two possible interpretations of the data.
Number one, the undergraduate body is incredibly homogenous,
and that can't be healthy. We talk endlessly about diversity, but if diversity of outlook has been
sacrificed to all the other kinds of diversity, then I don't think the atmosphere is healthy.
But the other possibility is that the conservative undergraduates at Harvard know damn well not to
admit that they're conservative, least of all to the Harvard Crimson, for fear of consequences. And that seems to me probably the more likely explanation
and a more depressing one. It's a very exciting project, the University of Austin. I really wish
you guys the best of luck. And if the conversation you've already sparked is any indication of its
promise going forward, it's uh you know hope for
a revolution in education for the better sparked by your entrepreneurialism and that of your
your band of brothers and sisters we prefer the term renaissance revolution we've had enough
revolutions on american campuses and what we need is a renaissance all right thanks uh i all we can do is hope for it, pray for it, and help make it happen.
And support it.
And support it, right.
We need more than luck and prayers.
We need support.
You don't build a university out of thin air.
You need support.
And you can read, just Google University of Austin.
The homepage is easily findable and lots written about it.
And we'll post the link on our show notes.
Neil, thanks for joining the conversation.
Thank you, Dan.
That's all for today's conversation with Neil.
To keep up with Neil, you can follow him on Twitter,
at nfergus, that's at n-f-e-r-g-u-s. And of course, you can find all of his books at your
favorite independent bookseller or at Barnes & Noble or barnesandnoble.com or that other
e-commerce website they call Amazon. If you have questions, comments, or ideas for episodes,
send them my way, dan at unlocked.fm. That's dan at unlocked.f as in Frank, m as in Mary.
Call Me Back is produced by Ilan Benatar. Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Senor.