
One member of the ad hoc infectious disease task force, Ariella Rabin Rotramel, currently serves as the College’s "Interim Dean of Institutional Equity and Inclusion," and is also Associate Professor of Gender, Sexuality and Intersectionality Studies, with a specialty in "Queer Theory and Activism." Here is Rotramel answering a Zoom question from an anonymous student:
I’m sure they is a lovely person, but it’s unclear why Rotramel should be endowed with authority to issue virology-related policy pronouncements. Either way, they gave some indication that they is perhaps not up for the task, describing the whole situation as "exhausting" — that familiar exasperated rallying cry of activists demanding acquiescence.
Demonstrating his unparalleled leadership abilities, however, Dean Arcelus stated that he was "quite disappointed" at reports that parties had been rudely held this past weekend at an on-campus residential facility. "There will be conduct consequences," he warned. "Suspension is most definitely on the table." Though the most extreme variation of the Australia-style lockdown had been lifted just hours after my visit last week, students are still being ordered not to partake in normal social gatherings such as parties (gasp) or going to bars (gasp).
"If you have parties, if you go to the bars, you’re not going to be able to have everything else," the Dean exhorted, threatening that those who misbehave could prompt a return to lockdown for everybody. However, he did leave a glimmer of hope, enticing students that "if we were able to see that you all were actually being really good" about acceding to his prohibitions, then "things could potentially change."
"The power in preventing this from happening again is in you and in holding each other accountable," Dean Arcelus continued. There’s that ubiquitous feature of the contemporary college administrator jargon — presumably tailored to the sensibilities of "accountability"-minded young adults. Again with the added irony that these invocations of "accountability" serve to deflect scrutiny from those who wield the real decision-making power. In the name of "accountability," students become scapegoats for the irrational policy choices of the people actually in charge. "Accountability" is usually also demanded on behalf of some imagined "community," so you are not to comply solely at the behest of Dean Arcelus, but rather at the behest of some diffused assemblage of individuals who are claimed to represent a unified community. There’s always this incredibly annoying pretense that bureaucratic operatives and public health "experts" are alone the most exalted guardians of "community safety," and if you don’t agree with them on moral, practical, or epidemiological grounds, you are a menace.
'Moving forward, none of you should be OK with people not having a mask on inside, or not having it properly worn," the Dean inveighed, again appealing to the shockingly pervasive snitch culture being fertilized at this and other academic institutions. Deans at Georgetown University and the University of Southern California have also been sending out these imperious injunctions for students to rat out the alleged violators among them, or as USC Law School Andrew T. Guzman put it in that typically manipulative style: "non-compliant members of our community." What’s a "non-compliant member" of the USC "community," exactly? Someone who engages in unsanctioned indoor "hydration." No, I’m not kidding.
Do you find any of this arbitrary or ridiculous? Tough luck. Because nowadays all public and private officials apparently have to do is incant the magic word "Delta," and people whose dictates about proper interpersonal behavior would otherwise be ignored are suddenly imbued with this awesome, unchallengeable power. Their decrees must be obeyed, preferably with effusions of gratitude. Forcing masks on crying two-year-olds? "Delta." Forbidden to remove your mask for a few seconds in order to take a sip of water at USC, even as a lavish and unmasked Emmys extravaganza just took place right down the road? "Delta." Shutting down a special needs school in East Harlem less than a week into the academic year? "Delta." Concerned about the privacy implications of being made to walk around with your health information stored on mandatory smartphone apps, as is the current policy at the University of Michigan, and being made to display this information on command? "Delta." Also, I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance by switching to Delta.
For all his foibles, at least Dean Arcelus nicely encapsulates the mindset which is now running rampant at major US educational institutions — the same institutions producing the graduates who will soon be governing the rest of the country. At the disciplinary Zoom meeting, the good Dean admitted: "I know all of us thought, going into getting vaccinated in April and May, we thought that we would be able to come back to campus and live campus differently [sic] having been vaccinated… But as I’ve said multiple times now, the Delta Variant just presents a whole new level of challenge to us. And that’s why we can’t do what we thought we were going to be able to do back when we got vaccinated in April and May."
Well, there you have it. Vaccination was never the gateway to normalcy it was presented to be, and the only option is apparently to instate "Permanent Emergency" protocols with no cognizable "off-ramp" in sight, as a Duke University "expert" helpfully conceded this week. Reneging on these prior assurances is portrayed as some inherently unavoidable fait accompli, rather than a conscious policy choice undertaken to the exclusion of other vastly more sensible options. Choosing another option would mean re-assessing the underlying logic of constantly surveilling a 99% vaccinated population of healthy young adults with these increasingly dubious "tests," and gathering their private data so as to opine about the permissibility of their social activities. College administrators are totally committed — politically, professionally, metaphysically — to that logic. There’s also an entire financial infrastructure that’s been erected to sustain the endless provision of nonsensical testing services. Ultimately, these officials can’t or won’t extricate themselves from the scolding surveillance paradigm — and why would they? That would entail the relinquishment of power.
Read more at: MTracey.Substack.com
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