Crush Liberalism

Liberalism: Why think when you can “feel”?

Government school punishes janitor for reading a book

From the “hallowed” halls of IUPUI:

Keith John Sampson never thought he could get in trouble for reading a book, especially not on a college campus. But that’s what happened. Sampson is a man in his early 50s. He does janitorial work for the campus facility services at IUPUI, where he’s been gradually accumulating credits for a degree in communications studies. He has 10 credit hours to go.

At the time, Sampson was reading a book he had checked out from the public library. Notre Dame vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan, published in 2004, features a photograph of the University of Notre Dame’s famous golden dome on the cover. Its author is Todd Tucker, the publisher is Loyola Press of Loyola University in Chicago.

The book is about how for two days in May 1924, a group of Notre Dame students got into a street fight with members of the Ku Klux Klan. The Klan was meeting in South Bend for the express purpose of sticking a collective thumb in the eye of the country’s most famous Catholic university. Notre Dame vs. the Klan was a Notre Dame Magazine “Pick of the Week” and garnered an average customer review of 4.5 stars on Amazon.com. In its review, The Indiana Magazine of History noted that Tucker “succeeds in placing the event in a broad framework that includes the origins and development of both the Klan and Notre Dame.”

Sampson recalls that his AFSCME shop steward told him that reading a book about the Klan was like bringing pornography to work (WTF? – Ed.). The shop steward wasn’t interested in hearing what the book was actually about (Remember, to the left, feelings trump facts! – Ed.). Another time, a coworker who was sitting across the table from Sampson in the break room commented that she found the Klan offensive. Sampson says he tried to tell her about the book, but she wasn’t interested in talking about it (Remember, to the left, feelings trump facts! – Ed.).

A few weeks passed. Then Sampson got a message ordering him to report to Marguerite Watkins at the IUPUI Affirmative Action Office. He was told a coworker had filed a racial harassment complaint against him for reading Notre Dame vs. the Klan in the break room. Sampson says he tried to explain to Watkins what the book was about. He says he tried to show her the book, but that Watkins showed no interest in seeing it (Remember, to the left, feelings trump facts! – Ed.).

Then Sampson received a letter, dated Nov. 25, 2007, from Lillian Charleston, also of IUPUI’s Affirmative Action Office. The letter begins by saying that the AAO has completed its investigation of a coworker’s allegation that Sampson “racially harassed her by repeatedly reading the book Notre Dame vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan by Todd Tucker in the presence of Black employees.” It goes on to say, “You demonstrated disdain and insensitivity to your coworkers who repeatedly requested that you refrain from reading the book which has such an inflammatory and offensive topic in their presence … you used extremely poor judgment by insisting on openly reading the book related to a historically and racially abhorrent subject in the presence of your Black coworkers.” Charleston went on to say that according to “the legal ‘reasonable person standard,’ a majority of adults are aware of and understand how repugnant the KKK is to African-Americans …” (Where do these morons get off telling anyone about a “reasonable person” when they’re being so incredibly unreasonable in this situation? – Ed.)

Sampson was ordered to stop reading the book in the immediate presence of his coworkers and, when reading the book, to sit apart from them.

“I feel like I’ve been caught up in a 21st century version of catch-22,” says Sampson, who has never been given the opportunity to officially face any of his accusers. When I tried calling the Affirmative Action Office, I was told their policy is to never speak to the media.

But, Sampson says, this episode could be an opportunity. He would welcome the chance to participate in a moderated forum that might use his experience for a larger discussion dealing with intellectual freedom on the IUPUI campus.

That’s a good idea. For Sampson’s sake, I hope ideas still count at IUPUI.

Ideas never count at public universities anymore. Feelings are more important.

By the way, this was at the end of the story:

Editors note: At press time we learned that Sampson received another letter from IUPUI’s Affirmative Action Office, postmarked Feb. 21. We will continue to follow this story.

How ironic that a program like Affirmative Action, which is based on discriminating against one ethnic group in favor of other ethnic groups, is complaining about discrimination!

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March 4, 2008 - Posted by | affirmative action, bigotry, political correctness, public education

7 Comments »

  1. Wow, he gets blasted for reading a history book… wonder what they would’ve done to him if he was reading the Bible in the lunchroom?
    He should bring the Koran and a copy of “Commercial Aircraft Piloting For Dummies,” and then claim he’s being profiled based on his religion after his coworkers report him to the FBI.

    Comment by PabloD | March 4, 2008

  2. I suppose the ACLU has nothing to say in this matter?

    Comment by TheBad | March 4, 2008

  3. If I didn’t work on a University campus, this sort of complete idiocy might surprise me. Sadly, it doesn’t.

    The sheer hypocrisy too. Nope, that either.

    Comment by jsingood | March 4, 2008

  4. Wonder what they would have done had it been the book “Black Like Me?”
    Oh wait, that’s what all the brouhaha over SNL having a non-black play Ballsack is all about, isn’t it? Guess the only safe book to read on the IUPUI campus would be a book by Louis Farrakhan or Ward Church-ill…

    Comment by Submariner | March 5, 2008

  5. The Psychology of Tyrants:

    What type of people do offices of thought control accusation attract? Sad, powerless losers who want to be able to yell at others in order to feel good and reduce their own guilt-complex in which their usually privileged childhood afforded them including a parents-paid college education in a non-productive field? This feels like a provocation to me though, planned in order to shine some like on a sewer full of rats. Who are the Klan-like people here? Let’s see, the office involved in thought–control is the Affirmative Action Office, meaning a university sanctioned and funded RACIAL PREFERENCES office, whose official policy is to override high school grades and SAT scores in order to REFUSE admission to Caucasian students, such as, oh, Jews, perhaps most often, given their average IQ of way over 100, which explains why they own 30% of science Nobel Prizes despite their 2% share of world population, which would be higher than that were it not for a certain democratically elected German leader who called his party the “National Socialist Workers Party” (NAZI). Assuming this story is real, why is a racial preferences office (RPO) investigating, with the power to punish, someone for reading a *book* on a COLLEGE CAMPUS?

    Comment by NikFromNYC | March 5, 2008

  6. These sub-literate affirmative action beneficiaries have no knowledge nor appreciation of how good they have it, and obviously they have no respect for learning or free speech. They’re always talking about throwing people in jail for hurting their feelings; don’t expect black power candidate Barack Obama to do anything to slow down or reverse this anti-white agenda.

    Comment by Mr. Roach | March 9, 2008

  7. [...] bigotry, political correctness, public education at 8:29 am by crushliberalism You may recall the story of Keith Sampson, a janitor (and student) at IUPUI (public university in Indiana) who was harrassed and punished by [...]

    Pingback by Victory for common sense « Crush Liberalism | July 16, 2008


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