These are not encouraging times for libertarians on campus. Studies show millennials’ political views are much more reliably liberal than those of the population at large, and college students increasingly lean to the progressive left. In 1981, about 20 percent of freshmen described themselves as “liberal” or “far-left” (as opposed to “middle of the road” or “conservative”); today, more than a third do.
Students and professors who dissent from leftist orthodoxy often keep their views to themselves, for fear of suffering social or reputational harm. That can make it difficult for libertarians to identify each other. Some of the most elite colleges in the country maintain academic departments that teach, with a quasi-religious fervor, that capitalism is the root of all the world’s problems. The activist left increasingly views free speech with skepticism or even outright hostility.
The right, meanwhile, occasionally makes overtures to libertarians; young conservatives tend to be much more in step with libertarians on issues such as drug legalization and gay marriage. But many conservatives aren’t interested in discussion either, writes Robby Soave.
from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2AJOXVu
via IFTTT