Middlebury professor breaks silence on assault, blames radical campus elements

Middlebury College political science professor Allison Stanger has broken her silence on the assault that occurred during conservative author Charles Murray’s campus visit in March.

Appearing in a C-SPAN interview late last month, Stanger discussed the student protest that prevented Murray from speaking at Middlebury and addressed the students who attacked her following the event, leaving her with a serious neck injury.

C-SPAN TV host Brian Lamb interviewed Middlebury Professor Allison Stanger last month about the violent campus protest that resulted in her and Charles Murray’s injuries in March. (Photo courtesy of C-SPAN)

“This is the first interview I’ve done and I’m glad to be doing it with you because we can have an extended conversation,” Stanger told Brian Lamb, host of C-SPAN’s “Q&A” program. “But I didn’t want to speak to journalists until my brain had been restored to me, because once something like this happens, you’re angry. It’s emotional.”

During the one-hour interview, Stanger said she faults some faculty more than students for what happened on campus, saying that some individuals claimed that what happened outside the lecture hall (the assault on Stanger and Murray) “has nothing to do with what happened inside the lecture hall.”

Following the protest, Murray was labeled a “troll” by Middlebury scholar and climate activist Bill McKibben.

Stanger painted a picture of the campus as existing as a “bubble within a bubble” of academic privilege and monolithic liberal politics.

“Middlebury College is in the Green Mountains of Vermont, the Champlain Valley — so, in some sense you can, in part, explain the reaction because it’s almost a bubble-within-a-bubble,” Stanger said during the interview. ” … It’s in Vermont, which is the home of Ben & Jerry’s, the home of Bernie Sanders, and also is the state in the union with the smallest percentage of voters who voted for Donald Trump. So, that context, I think, is very important for understanding what transpired.”

The incident, which saw leftist student protesters and outside agitators shout down guest lecturer Murray, received international attention.

Stanger was violently attacked by protesters as she and Murray made their way to a car after the lecture abruptly ended. She was approached by as many as eight black-masked persons, dressed like Antifa militants, as she and Murray left the McCullough Student Center auditorium on the evening of March 2. She had been escorting Murray from the building amid protesters both inside and outside the student union.

Stanger was taken to nearby UVM Porter Medical Center and treated for a neck injury. No charges were filed in the campus assault. Shortly after the incident, Stanger left Middlebury for a two-year-long sabbatical.

Most people know Murray for his book “The Bell Curve,” but the speaker had been invited by Stanger to discuss “Coming Apart,” a more recent book about the moral decline of white America and the growing economic divide.

Stanger said students are often intolerant of other views, even though they should be capable of finding unity around a common set of American values.

“They’re (students and faculty) voting Democratic, and so a scholar associated with the Republican Party is controversial to them, which is unfortunate since the Republican Party is the other major party in the United States,” she said.

“I think it’s really easy to paint it as a story of mean conservatives versus students of color, but really what’s taking place is that we have a situation where American values are at stake, and they don’t belong to a particular party or a particular identity group — they belong to all Americans, and I think that’s at the heart of this issue we’re discussing.”

While Stanger, who received her Ph.D. at Harvard University, has never identified herself as either a staunch liberal or conservative, she has appeared in the media as being more open-minded than most of her Middlebury colleagues.

“Part of the reason I want my students to engage with someone like Charles Murray is I, myself, at Harvard, benefited enormously from interacting with some of the great conservative thinkers there — people like Harvey Mansfield, James Q. Wilson, even Samuel Huntington,” she said.

Middlebury College officials seemed to distance themselves and the institution from Stanger’s interview.

“We don’t have any comment on Allison’s testimony,” Bill Burger, Middlebury College’s vice president of communications and chief marketing officer, told True North Reports.

Burger drove the car in which Stanger and Murray fled the campus protesters.

Sarah Ray, director of media relations at the college, said only that Stanger is “away on academic leave” and that she’s “currently a cybersecurity policy fellow at New America, a think tank in D.C.”

However, Robin Newton, C-SPAN’s media relations specialist, told True North that the network “thought it was an important story.”

On camera, Stanger was philosophical about the incident. She said she prefers America’s constitutionally guaranteed freedom of speech to extremist action when there are growing differences of opinion within society.

“(Radical faculty and students are) directly connected because shutting down speech is an invitation to violence. We have these heated passionate exchanges of views precisely to avoid having to pull out guns or swords or have a duel,” she said.

“It’s unfortunate to me that there are some very smart people who have said publicly they’re giving up on America. I would never give up on America for all its flaws. If you look at its trajectory since the Revolution, it’s the story of gradual progress to make those ideals reality.”

Lou Varricchio is a freelance reporter for True North Reports. Send him news tips at lvinvt@gmx.com.

Image courtesy of C-SPAN

10 thoughts on “Middlebury professor breaks silence on assault, blames radical campus elements

  1. Where was she when all this noise was occurring? Hiding in her office? As for McKibben, he’s a quack. Years ago he removed his creds from the Harvard page. He has no background in science; his degree is a DD: A doctor of Divinity.
    Works nicely when delivering homilies on Eco-nonsense.

    Middlebury should qualify as an extension of some “School of Pretension and Posturing”.

  2. I think Stanger has completely missed the mark. It was not about Republicans and Democrats. It was about the message the “Bell Curve” touted as fact/science.

    I also disagree that people are giving up on America. I know people who are stepping up and being heard on what could change and make our country better.

    Bill McKibben should use his talents and teach the students how to protest in a civil non-violent manner. That is something they could take away and use for the rest of their lives.

    Middlebury College is a great school. It may not be for everyone but that doesn’t make it any less of an outstanding institution.

  3. Another example of “folks from someplace else” giving Vermont a bad reputation. These little angry Snowflakes are not the real Vermonters – “The People of the Valley are not the People of the Mountains !”

  4. “A bubble within a bubble” – sad but true. Although what really saddens me is the ongoing silence from the opinion media and political leadership in Vermont about what happened. I wouldn’t quite call it silent approval. It’s more like embarrassment for one’s friends acting badly. I am glad to hear that the college has at least taken some action against students, although we don’t know exactly what action. And if evidence is needed about how some representatives of the far left, once in control, exert thought and physical control over dissent – look no further than the bubble within a bubble, or perhaps I should say the babel within a babel, amid the ivory towers of Middlebury.

  5. Cowards hide behind masks. What’s the difference between these black masked hoodlums and the Klan? I wish Congress would pass a law that anyone wearing a mask at a public gathering to cover up their identity would be arrested and thrown in jail. Let’s see these jerks are.

  6. A very introspective article which reveals a truth that Vermont does not want to admit. Along with a monolithic ideology that accompanies domination by one party in a political system comes the reality of violent supression of free speech and the total abdication of an academic responsibility by a major college.

  7. What solice can members, and faculty of an institution of higher education like Middlebury take in allowing the stiffering of free speech, the exchange of ideas, and not providing for the protection of faculty and guests who come to speak.

    After this display why would any parent send their offspring to be indoctrinated.

    • Time to introduce the anti-free speech fascists at Middlebury to the Capitalist system. Just like the NFL, we have a choice about whether or not to support and fund this “institution” based on the behavior of faculty and students.

Comments are closed.