The message from Wellesley couldn’t be more clear: The education of students here, or at least our ability to complete it, is contingent on our willingness to take a medical treatment that didn’t exist when I enrolled here. There’s no consent, only coercion, with participation in a human trial, joining physical education and foreign language proficiency as a prerequisite for graduation.
To be blunt, this has the potential not just to disrupt overall health, but fertility, too, so colleges are not just telling us that they get to control and disrupt our bodies, but also, potentially, our families; not just our present, but also, potentially, our future.
This isn’t even mentioning heart or autoimmune health that COVID vaccination is known to take a toll on, and the host of conditions that vaccination has been proven to cause. Will colleges—and college administrators—be footing medical bills for any health-related problems their mandates cost? Will administrators experience the physical and emotional burden?
Because administrators seem to have decided that there’s no overreach too personal to commit against students: This is despite the fact that the risk-return analysis that these same administrators conducted last year now appears dubious at best, outright dangerous at worst.
If their compulsion to impose more mandates isn’t about health or efficacy, it must be about something else. The simplest explanation is that this compulsion is about the mandate itself—about the appearance of progressivism and elite stature, given that progressive and elite institutions now define themselves by their willingness to look like they’re “taking COVID-19 seriously” at the expense of essentially every other consideration.
Here’s a question no administrators seem to be asking: What does it mean when a college tells its students that their bodies belong to the whims of bureaucrats rather than to themselves? It means that students are being groomed to believe that being an educated person means keeping one’s head down and submitting to every top-down order uncritically.
But seeing other institutional policies almost makes the reality at a place such as Wellesley worse. Despite all available evidence, and despite other institutions reversing course, many administrators across the nation who are supposed to concern themselves with the well-being of their students are making decisions not on scientific evidence nor on the safety of their students, but instead on politics. This should scare everyone.
Rumblings of anger can be heard at Wellesley, but the constant cycles of cancellation and gaslighting from the college and within the community have rendered many would-be dissenters too emotionally wounded to say a word about college vaccination policies. (There’s a reason I’m writing this anonymously.) But this silencing can’t possibly last forever.
If Wellesley—or any one of the other institutions with remaining vaccine mandates—thinks it faces no consequences, it’s sorely mistaken: As students, as well as faculty and staff, trace their own adverse medical events back to college mandates, the buck for the physical damage will stop with colleges—morally, legally, and financially. The mandates will fade, but the memory of the mandates will not; colleges such as mine have all but ensured they’re dead men walking.