Midterm Edition Fall 2021 — The Auburn Plainsman

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The Auburn Plainsman Midterm Edition

Fall 2021

OPINION

THE EDITORIAL BOARD EVAN MEALINS Editor-in-Chief

EDITORIAL: It’s time to do better, Auburn ‘ Every reaction is a performance. There are still bits of glass on the floor from when you dropped it and hastily swept it up. The sharpest parts are still on the floor.’’

CHARLIE RAMO

By EDITORIAL BOARD

Managing Editor, Content

Fall 2021

ABIGAIL MURPHY

Wallace Hall is the graphic design building in the village, named after George C. Wallace, who famously said, “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.” In June 2020, Ashley Henton, now an alumna of Auburn, started a petition to get the hall renamed, which has now garnered around 12,000 signatures. “I emailed Dr. Gogue, and I was like here is my petition, and I think at the time that I had just gotten like 11,000 signatures,” Henton said. “He said, ‘Thank you, Ashley,’ and sent it to the Board of Trustees.” Henton knew from then that it would be handed to whatever sub-group that handled renaming buildings. “I kind of like sat by my computer, checking on upcoming minutes for upcoming Board of Trustees meetings to see if it would come up, and it never did, and I checked for months,” she said. “They would rename conference rooms and random rooms after donors, and that was all that happened.” That was true until September, when the Board of Trustees unanimously approved the installation of a plaque outside of Wallace Hall to contextualize the name of the building. The text of the plaque attempts to describe the complexity of Wallace’s legacy including his racist history and apologies for segregationist words and deeds later in his life. Frances Carlisle, fifth-year student in graphic design, made a second petition after the plaque was announced. As of publication, it has 473 signatures. What the resolution and plaque fail to do is recognize the voices of the students that attend Auburn, that have unified and said: We do not want this. What this resolution does do, very well, though — an unintended side effect — is prove to Auburn students what we have always known. Joelle Woggerman, junior in biochemistry, wrote a letter to the editor in late September in response to the town hall on sexual assault titled, “The town hall on sexual assault proved our worst fears.” And it did. The same way the plaque did. There are countless other examples from

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only the past year — a letter titled, “How dedicated is Auburn to its black students?” a letter titled, “Auburn fails to protect students against sexual violence.” What Auburn students have always known, is the University will try to hastily sweep up the mess they made instead of trying to prevent it from happening in the first place. They are reactionary in their attempts rather than facing these issues in a proactive way. The University will opt for placing a BandAid over the crack in the glass instead of trying to use glue. Using glue would be a futile effort to try to repair something broken, but it shows a great deal more effort. The plaque is the Band-Aid. The town hall that many called disastrous was a Band-Aid. They are only meant to appease and silence, they are there to say: Hey, we did something. Isn’t that enough? That line of thinking aligns itself with the definition of performative activism, which seeks to capitalize on a movement for social clout or capital rather than supporting the movement and its demands. Auburn as an institution, can’t be performative activists because we wouldn’t label them as activists wat all. But Auburn is performative in every sense of the word — they act only to elicit a response or reaction. That is the problem. Every reaction is a performance. There are still

bits of glass on the floor from when you dropped it and hastily swept it up. The sharpest parts are still on the floor. In the first month of the 2021 fall semester, three sexual assault cases were reported in the span of a week. Two protests were held in the following days as a response. A town hall to discuss resources and concerns was set the same day the third assault case was sent to students. Auburn Campus Safety and Security, Title IX, Green Dot and Safe Harbor were in attendance, to name a few of the organizations. Title IX, Green Dot and Safe Harbor are and have been taking steps to listen to the concerns of students, to make their presence and services well-known. There have also been students working restlessly with these and other organizations on campus to create tangible changes. Some things need equal parts student buy-in and administrative action, but in every case, the administration could always be doing more. Students will never shut up, they will always demand things and work tirelessly to get it by the grit of their teeth and sheer determination, but the University could always be doing more. Stop giving us flowery words, telling us you’ll do things that most of us don’t even get a glimpse of any progress in the time we’re here. Bureaucracy is slow, some things take time and that is something that everyone can understand, but stop offering us meaningless gestures.

FILE PHOTO

In September, the Board of Tustees unanimously approved to add a plaque to contextualize Wallace Hall.


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