Welcome and congratulations: Getting to the first day of college is a major achievement. You’re to be commended,
and not just you, but the parents, grandparents, uncles, and aunts who helped get you here.
It’s been said that raising a child effectively takes a village: Well, as you may have noticed, our American village is not
in very good shape. We’ve got guns, drugs, two wars, fanatical religions, a slime-based popular culture, and some
politicians who—a little restraint here—aren’t what they might be. To merely survive in this American village and to win
a place in the entering class has taken a lot of grit on your part. So, yes, congratulations to all.
You now may think that you’ve about got it made. Amidst the impressive college buildings, in company with a high- powered faculty, surrounded by the best of your generation, all you need is to keep doing what you’ve done before:
Work hard, get good grades, listen to your teachers, get along with the people around you, and you’ll emerge in four
years as an educated young man or woman. Ready for life.
Do not believe it. It is not true. If you want to get a real education in America you’re going to have to fight—and I
don’t mean just fight against the drugs and the violence and against the slime-based culture that is still going to
surround you. I mean something a little more disturbing. To get an education, you’re probably going to have to fight
against the institution that you find yourself in—no matter how prestigious it may be. (In fact, the more prestigious the
school, the more you’ll probably have to push.) You can get a terrific education in America now—there are astonishing
opportunities at almost every college—but the education will not be presented to you wrapped and bowed. To get it,
you’ll need to struggle and strive, to be strong, and occasionally even to piss off some admirable people.
I came to college with few