Statement on mob attack at U.S. Capitol
Dear ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Community,
I write today in response to the astonishing events that occurred in our nation’s
capital yesterday. Like millions of people in our country and around the world, I
watched in horror as a mob attacked the United States Capitol and disrupted one of
the most hallowed of American political actions, the peaceful transition of power
from one party to another in the wake of a lawful election that expressed the voice
of the people. This was not protest, this was not political action meant to improve
the nation, this was not a legitimate effort to support American democracy. This was
a lawless act of defiance against the will of the democratic process. As an unabashed
American patriot, I am dismayed and outraged at this literal assault on our 244-year-old
democratic institution and this brazen flouting of the Constitution and electoral
process.
At the very heart of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø’s mission statement, we find this principle:
"The College seeks to prepare liberally educated graduates to continue their quest
for knowledge and to make the choices required of informed, responsible citizens." The responsibilities of civic duty are part of the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø mission. Democratic
process, commitment to justice and the rule of law are woven into our very identity.
The events of yesterday, and the actions that led to those events, are in stark opposition
to who we are as a College and what we are committed to doing in the world.
Our work as a great liberal arts college is more important than ever in this difficult
moment. The world needs our mission today more than ever. We’re living in a time when
a Manichean worldview dominates. Us versus them. Two warring opposites that can’t
imagine the truth or legitimacy of the other. A refusal to speak to or engage with
those who possess opposing views and an almost puritanical righteousness that would
condemn the very right of the other to even speak or exist. We see this on both extremes
of the political spectrum today. It is the very opposite of what a liberal arts education
teaches us.
Truth depends upon argument; meaning arises through debate and contestation; my being
open to the challenge of a different worldview shows my confidence, not my weakness.
At the very heart of the liberal arts ideal is this conviction: difference and diversity
and multiplicity are the glory of the human condition. Yes, that makes for argument.
Yes, it makes for messiness. But it’s also where the deepest beauty and justice is
to be found.
As Ralph Ellison states near the end of his great novel Invisible Man: "Whence all this passion for conformity? Diversity is the word. America is woven
of many parts. I would recognize them and let it so remain."
Today, right now, as we begin a new year that is filled with hope and enormous challenge,
I urge us all to ponder such words and to put them into practice.
Sincerely,
Marc C. Conner
President