And do you know? If you do, please enlighten us. In the meantime, all I can rely on is what actual professors are stating. For example:
It was probably inevitable that Jonathan Haidt, an academic long concerned about the politicization of academia, would eventually be caught up in the
reason.com
If you want to point out the lie, please, by all means, do so.
I'm going to propose a conspiracy theory. I have absolutely no evidence for it, and I'm not going to use it to inform my behavior in real life. I'm just throwing it out there because, if it turns out to be true, I want the credit.
The reason so many middle aged white male "celebrity academics" are suddenly shifting to the right and speaking out against "progressive" politics is because at some point it's going to come out that they have been using their students to live out their favorite harem anime storylines (because basically every male academic over a certain age has done that) and when that happens they will need a bunch of rational smart boys to rally around them, claim it's all an SJW conspiracy, and keep buying their books.
Anyway, serious point.
If you base your idea of "what professors are saying" on those who will call up their media friends and complain about the politicization of academia because they were asked to make an anti-racism statement, you're cherry picking a sample. Amusing, if you read the article, Haidt himself kind of gives this away by pointing out that there's a generational divide between those agreeing with him and those who don't seem to care (because they immediately realize his entire point is a basic misunderstanding of what is being asked).
We live in an increasingly neoliberal world with a neoliberal education system and a neoliberal knowledge economy, and that means academics are not paid to sit around stroking their enormous throbbing galaxy brains. They are delivering a service and the quality of that service is continually monitored and judged, whether it be their research output or their teaching. Being asked to evidence a commitment to anti-racism is not an enforced political position, it's a basic precondition of being able to provide that service to all people (side note: isn't it weird how it's always the anti-racism component of that obligation which gets brought up and not, for example, the mandatory consent training).
Like, the idea that being asked to include an anti-racism statement means you somehow have to connect your work to racism is such an absurd straw man I'm surprised it works on anyone. The simple fact is that if you work in the
human sciences, your work will end up dealing with
humans, humans who possess racial characteristics because all humans do. Elaborating your operational assumptions with regard to race should be absolutely trivial for anyone with a background in the human sciences, unless you're some kind of oversly sensitive snowflake who cries at the mere mention of words like diversity or doesn't understand the basic history of your own field.
And that's kind of the point. If you can't explain your basic assumptions about race without adopting an anti-racist position, that's a problem for your ability to do your job. Academia is a racially diverse environment.