A new student group at UNC-Chapel Hill that decries "radical multiculturalism" and "mass immigration"—and whose faculty sponsor, ironically, is married to a Hispanic woman—will host former U.S. Congressman Tom Tancredo to speak Tuesday night about illegal immigration.
The event is hosted by the UNC chapter of Youth for Western Civilization, a self-styled "right-wing youth movement" founded in 2008 to "create a subculture that will promote the survival of Western Civilization and pride in Western heritage" on college campuses.
Riley Matheson, a senior, told the Indy that he started the UNC chapter in February to counter the campus' celebration of diversity, as well as the university's "deep mistrust and hatred of Western heritage."
"If we look at most college campuses, UNC especially, diversity is celebrated," he said. "You're told from the second you get here for orientation that diversity is a strength. And we believe that that makes absolutely no sense."
The Leadership Institute, an Arlington, Va.-based conservative training organization, is funding the event, according to Matheson.
Chris Clemens, a UNC professor of physics and astronomy, is YWC's faculty sponsor, though he admits to not having read the group's national charter. He told the Indy he "hesitated at first," due to Matheson's focus on immigration, before sponsoring the group to foster a "diversity of opinion."
"I don't agree with everything in their charter," he said. "My wife is Hispanic, and my child goes to bilingual school."
Tancredo, a fringe presidential candidate in 2008, boycotted a Spanish-language Republican debate during the campaign, saying the event "pandered" to Spanish speakers and encouraged the "balkanization" of the U.S.
He also campaigned on a hard-line anti-immigration stance that included a proposal for reducing the number of legal immigrants allowed into the U.S.
"We have to have an immigration time-out, I think, in order to assimilate the people who have come here already," he said in a 2007 interview published in Time.
In an interview this month on Fox News, Tancredo referred to the proposed DREAM Act—which would allow children of illegal immigrants to attend college—as "a nightmare act." Tancredo is also infamous for suggesting that the U.S. threaten to bomb Mecca and other Islamic holy sites, as a "deterrent" to prevent future terrorist attacks.
Clemens said he doesn't "understand the direct connection between promoting, or even defending Western civilization, and the immigration of mainly westerners into the United States, from Mexico."
However, Tancredo and Youth for Western Civilization have argued this point fervently. In a video featured on the YWC Web site, Tancredo claims "a lot of people come here ... not desiring to disconnect [from the past] linguistically, familially, culturally, or even sometimes politically," thus threatening our way of life. A recent YWC blog post referred to an increasing Latino population in the U.S. as "La Reconquista" and said that a path to legalization for immigrants would mean American culture "would be assaulted."
Matheson said such language, "while it might be strong, [is] true." "We're talking about people who don't ... show much interest in learning English. And so that would change part of our culture, because we're going from English to Spanish."
In response to the event, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. in Room 103 of Bingham Hall, several campus groups have organized a "No Place for Hate" protest, which will consist of a concurrent dance party. The Carolina Hispanic Association (CHispA), Students for a Democratic Society and Feminist Students United are among the groups that have sponsored a protest petition, which has gathered 200 signatures.
"They're not bringing in people to talk about Proust and Shakespeare," said Patrick Toomey, a UNC sophomore who is participating in the protest. "This isn't about the great contributions Western civilization has made to history and culture. It's about hating certain people."
Read the Indy's full interview with Riley Matheson in this week's print edition, and follow Sam Wardle's coverage of the Tom Tancredo speech in our news blog, Triangulator.
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More bias reporting from the "Lefty." You can feel the writer's contempt for the YWC. Journalism is dead.
Matt spews his bias once again calling the meeting anti-Hispanic since he finds it shocking an organizer has a Hispanic wife. Not a single rational argument presented against Tancredo or the group hosting him, just the usual name calling. I plan to go to the meeting and I'll advise them to show Matt and the Indy Weekly the door because experience has proven that you can't trust Matt or the Indy to tell the truth about meetings like this.
Good to see you here again, William. Yes, Professor Clemens told me that his wife is Hispanic, and that they raise their child bilingually. He did so to point out that he has a fundamental disagreement with Youth for Western Civilization's, and Tom Tancredo's, argument that Latino culture--and "bilinguilization," to borrow from Tancredo's dictionary--is "assualting" the fabric of America. Nevertheless, Clemens is sponsoring YWC out of at ideological principle to encourage a full "spectrum" of debate on campus. The point was relevant--and interesting--and so it stayed in the story. (There's my bias showing.)
Are you suggesting that YWC close tonight's event to the press, or just the Indy? It is, after all, being held at a public university.
Oh, please. The author of this piece is not biased. Tancredo is supported by the KKK, and while it is unfair to hold him responsible for what his supporters do, it is nonetheless revelatory of his agenda.
I was at the event this evening. Unsurprisingly, loud opposition from the UNC community prevented Tancredo from speaking. Supporters and protesters alike defended themselves by appealing to free speech. Eventually, the protesters inside silenced themselves, but when the police tazed and maced two students, a window was smashed from the outside and Tancredo left.
I find it surprising that most of the protesters defended their actions by appealing to freedom of speech, when the real worry is that Tancredos invitation was a misappropriation of University funds. It seems dubious to pay a political extremist to proselytize with school money. He wasnt lecturing on economics or civics or doing anything strictly educational. He was just advancing a particular political cause with funds that are supposed to be politically neutral.
Anyone familiar with Matt's reporting knows that this story is spun like cotton candy. You are getting the perspective of a far-left ideologue and NOT the whole story of what the YWC organization represents. Ill admit that I have never heard of this organization. I know nothing about it. But I do know the Indy and Matts reporting well enough to conclude that anyone opposed to illegal immigration in anyway, shape, or form will be demonized as hate mongers. We have laws in this country to regulate immigration. All we ask is that the government follows its own laws and stop using illegal immigration as a means to empower itself (by this I mean democrats trying to build their base). Play by the rules or take a bus ride back to the border.
What Im really curious about is how the Indy will cover the tea party protests on Wednesday. I will be at the state capitol on the 15th to participate. I cant wait to read what the Indy prints about the protest of high taxes and out of control government spending. How will the Indy demonize the people who participate in this event?
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