Higher physician has promote’ ethnic relativism’ and ‘ pseudoscience,’ social commentator says
Colleges are discouraging relationship through their development of “intersectionality” and “ideologically driven pseudoscience”, according to the creator of a new book about relationship and politics.
Conn Carroll, the director of the Washington Examiner‘s criticism section, recently released the text” Sex and the Resident: How the Assault on Marriage is Destroying Politics.” He received an email from The College Fix about his reserve.
According to Carroll,” the design, usurpation, and transmission of ideologically motivated science that promotes cultural pluralism and undermines Holy sexual norms has had the biggest impact on the decline of marriage.”
” As is detailed in the book, this really begins with the parents of social relativity, Franz Boas, and his pupil Margaret Mead”, Carroll said. Boas taught his pupils that there was no such thing as a transition from basic to civilized society. All civilizations were identical in Boas’s eye, with no society being the spiritual better of another”.
Boas was a social anthropology, according to a Columbia University page.
Peoples “did not pursue Christian physical standards, and allowed young ladies to sleep with as many men as they wanted,” according to his pupil Honey.
It “was a best-seller and earned her compliments from late night talk shows, Congress, and yet President Jimmy Carter. Problem is, as perhaps her greatest soldiers then admit, none of it was true”, Carroll said. The title of the book is” Coming of Age in Samoa.”
Premarital intercourse is strongly linked to a higher level of marriage, according to current studies.
An Indiana University professor found that sexuality and marriage were much more prevalent than previously thought in more than 5,000 interviews for his text Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, Carroll said. He claimed that Alfred Kinsey’s work “was celebrated in popular traditions, and he has been referenced in Model Penal Codes and yet Supreme Court decisions.”
However, his writing “turned out to be philosophical literature that has never been reprinted.”
According to Carroll,” Kinsey pushed his analysts to engage in homosexuality and marriage themselves, yet filming them performing physical acts in his home,” drawing non-representative examples from school campuses and prison.
Last month, Indiana’s government signed a bill that forbids the Kinsey Institute for Research in Gender, Gender, and Reproduction from funding the Indiana University.
According to Carroll, Mead and Kinsey and dozens of other anthropologists and social researchers ‘ contributions to the Supreme Court’s work laid the groundwork for the Supreme Court to overturn the fundamental legal systems that have made wedding the foundation of American household law since its founding.
Carroll added that some younger people are turning away from marriage because of intersectionality.
He said:
First coined by Columbia Law School teacher Kimberle Crenshaw, “intersectionality” was a phrase used to help identify the discussion of race and gender in the framework of discrimination. It was not enough to look at only gender discrimination, since firms could only hire white women, or race, since firms could hire dark men, because these two practices would leave dark women without any recourse.”
According to Crenshaw, the law needed to consider how race and gender interacted to establish a hierarchy of oppression, with white men at the bottom serving as the oppressors and black women at the top as the most oppressed. Since its inception, religion, disability, physical appearance, and importantly for marriage, sexuality, have all been added to the mix.
” So straight, Christian white men would now be the most evil oppressors on Crenshaw’s intersectionality oppression scale, with a black, queer, atheist woman at the saintly top, “he said.
Crenshaw described the resignation of Harvard president Claudine Gay earlier this year as a victory for the far right, for crowing racists, and for the new McCarthyism intended to ideologically cleanse Higher Ed.
MORE: Colleges should promote marriage, integrate kids on campus
Carroll argued that” white women can move up” the victimhood scale by identifying as queer. ” He referenced polling showing that” young white women “are” most likely to identify as bisexual.”
According to a 2022 report, almost 40 percent of students at liberal arts colleges identify as LGBTQ. At some women’s colleges, that number was even higher.
” Now sexual identity, especially for young women, can be very fluid. Many of these women will end up straight up again eventually, “he said”. However, in the meantime, they are being taught to view straight white men as the enemy in addition to missing out on opportunities to meet and date young men their age. And no one wants to marry the enemy.”
Far too much of the rhetoric on campus and in politics pits men against women as if we were two equal groups competing against one another, according to Carroll. We’re not. If anything, our biggest competition comes from people within our own gender.”
Despite the biological differences that exist between men and women, and there are many, he said,” We both value the same quality in potential mates: someone who is willing to put in the effort and be patient enough to develop a loving, committed relationship together,” he said.
Regardless of the growing partisan political gaps on college campuses, “if you focus on that, on finding someone who wants to build something special and unique with you, you will find a partner.”
Editor’s note: The reporter worked under Carroll and was a former College Fix fellow for the Washington Examiner.
MORE: ‘ Babies are, in fact, good’: Columnist tells Notre Dame why society needs culture change
IMAGES: Bombardier Books, The Washington Examiner/YouTube
Follow The College Fix on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.