by James A. Bacon
Virginia Tech President Timothy Sands held a special meeting Friday to discuss the impact of the Trump administration’s order to shut down higher-ed Diversity, Equity & Inclusion programs across the country. Tech’s Board of Visitors voted recently to comply with the directive, and Sands said that the university would no longer require diversity-and-inclusion training for incoming students.
As summarized by Radio IQ, however, Sands said itโs important for members of the campus community to be politically active and explain to friends and neighbors about why they believe diversity in higher education is vital to democracy. โI appreciate all of your willingness to engage, whatever way you can. Because we have to be able to make that case for the public.โ
Sands did not elaborate upon his thinking — at least Radio IQ did not mention it in the article, which went on to cover other issues that the Tech president addressed in his two-hour Q&A — but there is enough there to warrant a closer look.
Sands is using “diversity,” a concept no one disagrees with, to shield a broader amalgam of concepts in “Diversity, Equity & Inclusion,” including a slew of controversial propositions intrinsic to the word “equity.”









