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Political correctness devours yet another college, fighting over mini-sombreros

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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On Saturday, two members of Bowdoin College’s student government will face impeachment proceedings. What heinous transgression did they commit? Theft, plagiarism, sexual assault?

Nope. They attended a party where some guests wore tiny sombreros.

Two weeks ago, some students threw a birthday party for a friend. The email invitation read: “the theme is tequila, so do with that what you may. We’re not saying it’s a fiesta, but we’re also not not saying that :).” The invitation — sent by a student of Colombian descent, which may or may not be relevant here — advertised games, music, cups and “other things that are conducive to a fun night.”

Those “other things” included the miniature sombreros, several inches in diameter. And when photos of attendees wearing those mini-sombreros showed up on social media, students and administrators went ballistic.

College administrators sent multiple schoolwide emails notifying the students about an “investigation” into a possible “act of ethnic stereotyping.”

Partygoers ultimately were reprimanded or placed on “social probation,” and the hosts have been kicked out of their dorm, according to friends. (None of the disciplined students whom I contacted wanted to speak on the record; Bowdoin President Clayton Rose declined an interview and would not answer a general question about what kinds of disciplinary options are considered when students commit an “act of bias.”)

Other students closed ranks, too.

The school newspaper editorialized about attendees’ lack of “basic empathy” and placed the event in the context of two other controversially themed parties from the past two years: a “gangster party” (at which some students showed up with cornrows and gold chains) and a racially insensitive Thanksgiving party (where some dressed as Pilgrims and Native Americans).

Within days, the Bowdoin Student Government unanimously adopted a “statement of solidarity” to “[stand] by all students who were injured and affected by the incident,” and recommend that administrators “create a space for those students who have been or feel specifically targeted.”

The statement deemed the party an act of “cultural appropriation,” one that “creates an environment where students of color, particularly Latino, and especially Mexican, students feel unsafe.” The effort to purge the two representatives who attended the party, via impeachment, soon followed.

To outsiders, as well as some students on campus, all this fuss over a “tequila party” may seem a little extreme.

Probably most 21st-century Americans would agree that wearing, say, blackface or Native American war paint is generally outside the accepted bounds of taste, civility and human decency.

But tequila and tiny sombreros? I am not of Latino heritage, and I wouldn’t deign to tell those who are what they should or should not be offended by, especially on a mostly white campus. But even Bowdoin’s Latino students are divided about the propriety of the party and ensuing punishments.

One student of Guatemalan and Costa Rican heritage, freshman Brandon Lopez, pronounced the whole kerfuffle “mind-boggling” and called the disciplinary consequences a “travesty,” especially in light of the dining hall’s Mexican night a week later. (Lopez was invited to the party but could not attend because of baseball practice, he said.)

Such divisions on campus are unsurprising. Unlike with blackface, there does not seem to be any sort of settled social norm about the offensiveness or inoffensiveness of sombreros. Go to Chili’s, Chevys or other Mexican and Tex-Mex restaurants, and you’ll likely find similar decor and garb.

If your litmus test for the suitability of a party theme is something like, “Could this plausibly be a national chain restaurant?,” then a “tequila party” probably seems safe.

The school’s reaction seems especially arbitrary when you learn that — on the very same night of the “tequila party,” just across campus — Bowdoin held its annual, administration-sanctioned “Cold War” party. Students arrived dressed in fur hats and coats to represent Soviet culture; one referred to herself as “Stalin,” making light of a particularly painful era in Slavic history.

What principle makes one theme deserving of school sponsorship and another of dorm expulsion? Perhaps race is the bright line, but not long ago people of Slavic heritage weren’t considered white either. Does intent matter? What about distance (geographic or chronological) from the culture being turned into a party theme?

These are worthwhile questions, ones tailor-made for academic debate. But they are also ones that Bowdoin’s students — like students on other campuses roiled by cultural appropriation controversies — now avoid discussing publicly for fear of being labeled a bigot. Many have instead taken to Yik Yak, an anonymous social media platform that the administration has repeatedly urged them to abandon, because anonymity lends itself to ugliness.

But this necessary conversation has no place else to go so long as colleges remain unsafe spaces for free and open dialogue.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...e1902f6b6571_story.html?tid=pm_opinions_pop_b
 
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Liberals should seriously worry about the influence the SJW's have among them. It is only going to continue to grow.
 
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So, I suppose a remake of The Three Amigos is out of the question now days, right?

three-amigos-main.jpg
 
Can't you just picture this scene? The Dean opens his email to discover a picture of a bunch of underage kids doing tequila shots and decides the tiny hats are the problem. I'd say that University President just found a way to fund the new band uniforms. There should be one less Dean.

FYI, this theme party over reaction is sort of a trend at this school which was ranked the #4 liberal arts college in 2016 by USNWR.

In 2014, Bowdoin’s Lacrosse team held a themed party that included dressing up as Native Americans that were attending a "Cracksgiving." The students involved were administratively disciplined and Dean of Student Affairs, Foster sent a campus-wide email stating that "at this moment in America, as tensions run high about race, class and inequality, we must continue to learn from one another, to think before we act, and to take responsibility for our actions and our mistakes."[54]

On October 22, 2015, Bowdoin’s sailing team held a themed party that sparked issues of racism and cultural appropriation.[55][56] The theme was characterized as "gangster-themed" featuring costumes that were stereotypically associated with black culture. This sparked a major debate on campus about racism, cultural stereotypes, and racial discrimination.[57] On December 8, 2015, Bowdoin President Clayton Rose hosted a 75-minute "town hall" discussion about race in the College's David Saul Smith Union that was attended by more than 500 students. During the event, titled "Why should I care about race if I'm white?," students were invited to speak candidly and to ask questions about race.[58]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowdoin_College
 
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The party was organized by a Colombian. This school is just on edge and out of touch.



sombrero.jpg


That's awesome. I absolutely love kitschy architecture like that. Florida used to do stuff like this everywhere until the hurricane safety nazis changed all the building codes.
 
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Haha, I don't know what to say. This could just have easily been an onion article.
 
Soooo, Mexicans never wore sombreros and ponchos? I thought is was protection from the sun and the sun is hotter there.
 
I wonder if they get excited about stereotypes of Irish people at St Pats day? The students should find a way to test this out celebrating as many ethnic holidays as they can. Pissing off this school should become a national pastime.
 
Well, here’s an interesting development.

A Bowdoin alumna read my column today about Bowdoin undergraduates who’ve been disciplined for wearing sombreros, and she decided to email me about last year’s on-campus reunions. She said that the school provided a photo booth replete various hats, mustaches and other props conducive to taking silly celebratory photos.

Guess what was among those items: sombreros!

Not only did Bowdoin provide sombreros, but the school actually posted, on Facebook, pictures of people donning them for the photo booth. Here are a few embedded photos from Bowdoin’s public Facebook page. At least one of them appears to show undergraduates working at a reunion event and wearing the same school-provided sombreros.

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10488041_10153326313218194_9042612621641486971_n.jpg



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So let’s get this straight. If students wear their own sombreros during a whimsical celebration, that’s an act of cultural appropriation so odious that they must be ousted from their dorm, campus social events and student government. But if alumni and students wear sombreros provided by the school during a whimsical celebration, that’s all in good fun, and the images ought to be flaunted on the school’s own Facebook page. Talk about mixed messages.

Again, I’m not taking a position on whether wearing sombreros is “culturally appropriative”/racist or not. As far as I can tell, the social norms on wearing sombreros are pretty ambiguous. But I don’t see how the school can argue that these “tequila party” attendees should have known better than to treat sombreros as silly props if the administration itself didn’t either.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...alumni-students-in-school-provided-sombreros/
 
the students should sue for harassment and psychological damage. if i were on the jury i would find in their favor and hope they are awarded a nice sum of $$$.

this PC insanity must stop. Vote for Trump!
 
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I would try to start a movement where everyone wears sombreros around the clock. I just love the idea of students all over campus rocking sombreros. Hopefully it would lead to more restrictions.

#SombrerosMatter
 
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the students should sue for harassment and psychological damage. if i were on the jury i would award them find in their favor and hope they are awarded a nice sum of $$$.

this PC insanity must stop. Vote for Trump!

What does this have anything to do with Trump? Isn't he the one that wants to restrict the freedom of the press?
 
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We held a white trash party once in college and I attended as: Skeeter who happened to own a small engine repair shop that was run out of my 8 x 8 tin shed. I wore a wife beater with a mustard stain on it with jean shorts.

Kids today sound like no fun at all.
 
What the hell do they do during Halloween?
yes, your feelings don't matter, grow up! you should have learned this long ago. sorry your parents did not inform you of this.

you have no right to not be offended.
And if your savior resides on the Left then you must understand the EU model that they don't have PC there. They say pretty much what they want, if you don't like it - bugger off!
 
My point is that yes, I think that political correctness has gone too far when wearing a sombrero at a tequila party gets someone in trouble, and that kids can't play dodgeball on the playground. But to swing the pendulum so far back the other way that the answer is Donald Trump? Can't we find somewhere in the middle where we agree that not everything is offensive, while also not deliberately trying to offend?
 
My point is that yes, I think that political correctness has gone too far when wearing a sombrero at a tequila party gets someone in trouble, and that kids can't play dodgeball on the playground. But to swing the pendulum so far back the other way that the answer is Donald Trump? Can't we find somewhere in the middle where we agree that not everything is offensive, while also not deliberately trying to offend?

What do Freedom and Liberty mean to you?

Our ancestors fled political and thought oppression like the PC police state this adminstration panders to stupid and feeble minds.

All liberals should rage against the PC politburo in DC, instead they trumpet this false prophet horn gladly.

unbelievable.
 
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