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OPINION

Thomas Sowell: Colleges trample on freedom

Thursday, December 4, 2008
(Updated 3:00 am)

Most people on the left are not opposed to freedom. They are just in favor of all sorts of things that are incompatible with freedom.

Freedom ultimately means the right of other people to do things that you do not approve of. Nazis were free to be Nazis under Hitler. It is only when you are able to do things that other people don't approve that you are free.

One of the most innocent-sounding examples of the left's many impositions of its vision on others is the widespread requirement by schools and by college admissions committees that students do "community service."

There are high schools across the country from which you cannot graduate, and colleges where your application for admission will not be accepted, unless you have engaged in activities arbitrarily defined as "community service."

The arrogance of commandeering young people's time, instead of leaving them and their parents free to decide for themselves how to use that time, is exceeded only by the arrogance of imposing your own notions as to what is or is not a service to the community.

Working in a homeless shelter is widely regarded as "community service" -- as if aiding and abetting vagrancy is necessarily a service, rather than a disservice, to the community.

Is a community better off with more people not working, hanging out on the streets, aggressively panhandling people on the sidewalks, urinating in the street, leaving narcotics needles in the parks where children play?

This is just one of the ways in which handing out various kinds of benefits to people who have not worked for them breaks the connection between productivity and reward, as far as they are concerned.

But that connection remains as unbreakable as ever for society as a whole. You can make anything an "entitlement" for individuals and groups, but nothing is an entitlement for society as a whole, not even food or shelter, both of which have to be produced by somebody's work or they will not exist.

The most fundamental problem, however, is not which particular activities students are required to engage in under the title of "community service."

The most fundamental question is: What in the world qualifies teachers and members of college admissions committees to define what is good for society as a whole, or even for the students on whom they impose their arbitrary notions?

Supposedly students are to get a sense of compassion or noblesse oblige from serving others. But this all depends on who defines compassion. In practice, it means forcing students to undergo a propaganda experience to make them receptive to the left's vision of the world.

I am sure those who favor "community service" requirements would understand the principle behind the objections to this if high school military exercises were required.

Indeed, many of those who promote compulsory "community service" activities are bitterly opposed to even voluntary military training in high schools or colleges, though many other people regard military training as more of a contribution to society than feeding people who refuse to work.

In other words, people on the left want to impose their idea of what is good for society on others -- a right that they vehemently deny to those whose idea of what is good for society differs from their own.

The essence of bigotry is refusing to others the rights that you demand for yourself. Such bigotry is inherently incompatible with freedom, even though many on the left would be shocked to be considered opposed to freedom.

Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.

Comments

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scottb

December 4, 2008 - 4:53 pm EST

Mr. Sowell,

Community service is not the only "commandeering" of young people's time while in school. What about lectures and labs? How are they different? If community service is part of the school's curriculum or requirements, then so be it. It's part of freedom as you described it--the school doing something you don't approve of. You can look for other schools that don't require it to meet your needs.

Do you really believe that only vagrants are served in homeless shelters? Do you really believe most people are homeless by choice and want to go to soup kitchens and sleep in the streets? You can't be serious. Propaganda?!?

As a member of the left, as you so partonizingly put it, I am not opposed to military training in school. I think it's a viable way to teach discipline, which is sorely lacking amongst our young people today.

Are you suggesting that "people on the right" don't want to impose their idea of what is good for society? It's what you do in your columns--they are all the same. You are entitled to your opinion, but it's not necessary to make the "left" sound like the root-of-all-evil in society to make your point.

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