parterning with saudi arabia
A MODEST PROPOSAL TO FRANCHISE BEHEADINGS
by
GARY OLSON
_________________________________________________________________
Gary
Olson
is a member of the Political Science Department at Moravian College
in Bethlehem, PA.
Thanks
to a bold marketing stroke, Salvation Springs College in Texas
may solve its precarious financial future while simultaneously
scoring a diplomatic coup with the government of Saudi Arabia.
Last week, college president Gretchen Pragmati announced that
the small liberal arts college has offered to outsource a limited
number of the kingdom’s legal beheadings, forced amputations
and lashings.
“In
addition to our subtropical desert climate, folks from the Lone
Star state empathize with those struggling with collapsing oil
prices. We think this proposal is the remaining missing piece
for making SSC the ‘go to’ destination for Saudi students
who will feel more at home.” The president went on, “In
this highly competitive race for full paying international students
this program sets us apart. While no formal agreement has been
signed, Pragmati told The Dallas-Fort Worth Tribune,
based on my preliminary talks I’m convinced Saudi officials
believe this partnering will neutralize some of the negative publicity
associated with their judicial system. This is a win-win. If all
goes well, starting in September 2016, the college will begin
a six-month trial run of corporeal and capital punishments on
the Campus Green, quickly dubbed ‘Lop Lop Square’
by students.”
Donating
some harvested organs should garner favourable publicity and according
to reports, the iced corpses and severed limbs will command top
dollar from an unnamed Dallas medical school eager to procure
material for student dissection labs. Perhaps revealing a puckish
sense of humour, Pragmati told The Tribune “we
won’t be accused of leaving any meat on the bone.”
SSC’s
Board of Trustees has blessed the proposal, convinced that the
notoriety, immediate financial gain and future giving by grateful
Saudi alums will mollify a handful of ‘squeamish’
faculty members. Professor Caleb Crutchfield, responding to rumours
about faculty misgivings told the newspaper, “We drew a
line in the sand. No new staff hires. But given that the Saudis
are covering all costs we embraced this new revenue stream as
a godsend.” For anyone fretting about complicity in an arguably
immoral activity, Dean of Humanities, Dr. David Sealy, noted,
“Prior to transport here, each person’s fate will
have been legally sealed in-country. We’re only deriving
the value added. A bonus is that our domestic students will learn
what is consider barbaric behaviour by one person is viewed by
another as a cherished cultural tradition and as such it merits
respect.”
Student
body president Will Gore is on board, having already scheduled
a referendum to change the college’s mascot from the Fighten’
Prairie Dogs to the edgier Decapitators. Under a photo in the
student newspaper featuring Gore sporting a new red and white
checked Saudi scarf, he praised Pragmati’s proposal as “hands
down, a no brainer.”
Professor
Jane Greenwald, who welcomes the presence of more Saudi students
on campus, objects to Riyadh’s prohibition on students registering
for courses exposing them to “strange ideas” including
ethics, feminist politics, comparative religion, middle east politics,
and even music. Greenwald asked, “Doesn’t our submission
to this restriction make a mockery of our stated commitment to
critical thinking and challenging prior assumptions, the hallmarks
of a liberal arts education?” Sealy responded, “It’s
a small price to pay for this financial bonanza.”
When
queried by ABC affiliate WFDX that the Department of Justice might
take exception to the proposal, college spokesperson Herb Fiddle
replied, “U.S. officials never utter a word of objection
about Saudi Arabia’s internal practices or support for terrorist
groups in the Middle East.” Fiddle went on “Given
U.S. droning of civilians abroad, secret C.I.A. torture centers
and support for brutal dictatorships, we’re confident Washington
will adopt a ‘Who Are We to Judge’ posture.’
According to sources, similar hands-off sentiment has been voiced
by Texas officials, a state that executes more people than the
rest of the country combined and the death penalty enjoys wide
support.
Finally,
in response to Professor Greenwald’s accusation that SSC
is “pimping for petrodollars,” President Pragmati
replied, “I’m eager to hear other proposals, provided
they also kill two birds with one stone. Barring that, other colleges
talk the talk, we chop the chop.”
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