“Be true to your school,” The Beach Boys sang in 1963.
But what if your school isn’t true to you?
I’m
referring to my alma mater, Pepperdine University, which made headlines
recently for its perceived support of Proposition 8, a hateful effort
to overturn the California Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex
marriage. The well-funded Yes on 8 campaign debuted its first television spot Sept. 29, including a fear-mongering claim that acceptance of
same-sex marriage is “mandatory.”
“That changes a lot of things,”
Pepperdine law professor Richard Peterson warns in the ad, “people sued
over personal beliefs, churches could lose their tax exemptions, gay
marriage taught in public schools.”
Progressive Portlanders might
be horrified to see an institute of “higher learning” stepping into
such a divisive minefield, but Pepperdine isn’t your typical university.
For starters, the Malibu, Calif.-based school is affiliated with the
Church of Christ, which frowns on dancing and putting women in positions
of power.
When I arrived on campus in 1990 to pursue a
bachelor’s degree in journalism, Pepperdine had just recently lifted its
ban on campus dances. A couple of years later, the female dean of
students was allowed to lead the prayer at a school assembly—one small
step for womankind.
Like so many conservatives, Pepperdine also
confuses faith with politics. As a student it was hard to tell whether I
was at college or at a GOP think tank: Invited speakers included the
likes of former Attorney General Ed Meese and Solicitor General Ken
Starr, who went on to achieve infamy as the independent counsel who
spent $40 million of taxpayer money on a witch hunt to destroy President
Bill Clinton. Oh, and guess who’s now on staff shaping the minds of
future lawyers? You got it: Law School Dean Kenneth Starr.
So,
given that track record, it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that
Pepperdine remains in lockstep with the right-wing agenda by opposing
equal rights for all couples. Or does it? After a vocal outcry from
alumni who were furious about the Yes on 8 ad, the administration tried
to distance itself from the campaign.
“We’d like to stress that
the professor does not represent a Pepperdine University-endorsed
position, as the university does not advocate for/against political
candidates or ballot propositions,” public relations executive director
Jerry Derloshon said Oct. 2. “The professor in the ad was not advocating
a Pepperdine position, but his own personal position. We have received
confirmation that our request to have the reference to Pepperdine
University deleted from the ad will be honored…perhaps by today.”
Since
that statement was issued, Pepperdine’s name has yet to be removed from
the ad. In fact, Peterson shows up again in an even more inflammatory spot that uses the ultimate scare tactic: A little girl comes home from
school and excitedly tells Mommy about how she’s going to grow up to
marry a “princess.”
“Think it can’t happen? It’s already
happened!” Peterson bellows. “When Massachusetts legalized gay marriage,
schools began teaching second-graders that boys can marry boys. The
courts ruled parents had no right to object.”
The deception
tactics already seem to be succeeding. While early polls indicated Prop 8
was behind by as much as 38 percent to 55 percent, the ads are being
credited with flipping numbers around: Led by a major shift among young
Californians, a CBS survey says that likely voters now favor the measure
by a five-point margin, 47 percent to 42 percent.
For a school
that boasts “the highest standards of academic excellence and Christian
values,” Pepperdine doesn’t seem to place much importance on either.
California law already bans bias based on religion and prohibits public
schools from teaching students anything about family issues against the
will of their parents, so Peterson’s bogus declarations put the entire
university’s reputation on the line.
Furthermore, the school
isn’t exactly being Christlike by spreading the lie that it knew nothing
about the professor’s involvement. According to its student newspaper,
The Graphic: “Peterson said he informed School of Law Vice Dean Tim
Perrin in advance that he was appearing in the commercial and that he
would be associated with Pepperdine. Perrin did not voice any concerns,
according to Peterson.”
This isn’t the first time that Pepperdine
has underestimated the backlash that comes from homophobia. Way back in
1992, when I was editor of The Graphic, a group of underground gay
students approached me to make their presence known. In the middle of
the night, they had painted a pink triangle on “The Rock”—the only
free-speech zone on campus—but it was immediately covered up by a
Bible-banging adversary.
When I called that student for a
comment, his blunt reply was shocking: “No way is homosexuality
tolerated or should be tolerated. If they want to paint it during the
day, I’ll watch over them with my baseball bat.”
The bigot was
surely expecting backslaps and high-fives, but my article ended up
turning him into a campus pariah, and he eventually transferred to an
even more conservative university. It was a tense time—especially for a
closeted student like me—but at least it got people talking.
In a
follow-up story, I interviewed one sensitive administrator who said a
mouthful: “I would hope on a campus like this that we’re able to talk
about issues like this in less emotional, less confrontive kind of ways.
I suspect that we’ll be talking about those things on campus for a long
time.”
Originally published in Just Out, Oct. 17, 2008
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