Harrison Ford’s commencement at Arizona State became a classic example of celebrity sermons at elite universities: big moral language, fashionable targets, and glaring contradictions. This piece calls out the ideological script of modern campuses, the chokehold of moral posturing, and the hypocrisy of elite advocates who lecture students while keeping private luxury. It also shows how cultural claims about stewardship and indigenous wisdom are used selectively to avoid deeper questions about human dignity and responsibility.
Ford stepped to the podium and delivered the line, “Humanity is a part of nature, not above it,” then went on to urge sweeping cultural and environmental changes. That sentiment sounds humble until you notice the policy implications it carries: strip human exceptionalism from public life and you weaken the moral case for human flourishing. The speech landed as predictable theater, the kind of sermon students at progressive schools hear every year.
The problem runs deeper than one celebrity or one campus. When universities elevate a single framework—oppressor versus oppressed, colonizer versus marginalized—they narrow the intellectual horizon and shut down real debate. That totalizing lens turns complex historical and moral questions into slogans, which is convenient for spectacle but terrible for education. Students deserve intellectual friction, not a pep rally.
There’s also a philosophical mismatch at play. Traditional moral systems, including the biblical view that made stewardship meaningful, start from the idea that humans hold a special moral status. Remove that distinctiveness and stewardship becomes arbitrary moral posturing rather than a duty grounded in dignity. If people are just another species in the wild, why privilege their judgment to restructure economies and lifestyles?
Leftward academic programs like DEI and decolonization often mix sincere concerns with symbolic gestures that substitute feeling for action. Claiming the moral high ground while retaining wealth and convenience is a pattern among progressive elites. It’s easy to call for sacrifice from students and working families when you don’t have to give up private jets, multiple estates, or exclusive lifestyles.
Ford’s praise for indigenous worldviews—saying “the trees, the mountain, water, soil are not commodities. They are relatives”—fits a romantic script campuses love. That script flattens the messy reality of human history, ignoring that people across cultures have manipulated environments, fought, and exploited resources like any other society. Treating indigenous life as a mystical ecological ideal is a sentimental dodge, not serious history.
The university’s routine confession that it sits on indigenous land raises practical questions nobody seems to answer. If that admission is a moral recognition, what is the remedy beyond a ceremonial nod? Confession with no restitution looks like performance, a way to tick a moral box while keeping all the benefits. This kind of moral theater substitutes appearance for accountability.
Hypocrisy shows up in lifestyle choices. Activists demand energy limits and economic sacrifices from the public but rarely propose comparable changes to their own lives. Lectures about climate guilt followed by a private jet takeoff are not persuasive; they are emblematic. When rhetoric and behavior diverge, the message collapses into cynicism and breeds distrust.
Another core flaw of the commencement sermon is its silence about positive alternatives: the virtues of the American founding, free markets, and the moral claims of Christianity that prize human dignity and agency. Instead of engaging competing visions of human nature, universities often present a single moral story. That’s education by omission, and it leaves graduates ill-equipped to weigh real-world trade-offs.
Ford got one thing right when he told students, “The world you’re stepping into, the world my generation left you, is a real mess.” The observation is honest because the mess is often the result of policies and cultural moves promoted by the very elites now offering tidy moral fixes. But warning without offering a serious account of responsibility only deepens the irony when the warners retreat to insulated comfort.
What graduates needed was exposure to robust disagreement, not a fashionable catechism. A university that honors its name should bring students into conversation with competing ideas about humanity and the good life. Instead, many commencements have become final-grade sermons in conformity, where moral zeal replaces intellectual honesty and “Let none who seek intellectual consistency enter here.” rings truer than anyone intends.
