By
Tom Knighton
March 30, 2017
Charles Murray is fast
approaching household name status. Every since the violent protests
surrounding his talk at Middlebury College, Murray has been met with
protests at every school he's been asked to speak at. Ironically, it's
doing wonders for his popularity.
Thirty minutes before sociologist Charles Murray was scheduled to speak in McKenna Hall on Tuesday, students began to gather outside the building; some carried signs with slogans protesting Murray, and many were dressed in black.
“We’re out here to let students know that not everyone on this campus believes what’s written in Charles Murray’s books and articles,” fifth-year Rachel Wallace said. “ … We want to present an alternative narrative to what he’s proposing.”Murray -- best known for co-writing “The Bell Curve” in 1994 -- is a libertarian political scientist. “The Bell Curve” argues that genetics at least partly determines economic and social success; his critics, however, argue the book approaches claiming that race is a genetic factor contributing to IQ differences.The protest was organized by student activist group We Stand For, a group that has organized a number of protests on campus since the election of President Donald Trump.
What these
student activists may not have thought about is how few people actually
knew who Charles Murray was before Middlebury. While The Bell Curve
was certainly controversial, it first appeared over 20 years ago. He
was anything but a household name, even among the
libertarian/conservative crowd.
But due to the protests at Middlebury College, Murray's 23-year-old book is rising on Amazon.
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