For 20 years or so, I had the good fortune of being a college professor. I started out as an adjunct instructor in 1996 teaching in an evening adult education program for a prominent Colorado private university. From that humble beginning, I eventually found myself, at various stages of my academic career, an assistant professor, a department chair, a center director, a tenured full professor and a dean. I plied my wares on many campuses and in various modalities, but for the most part I took my turn with the 8:OO AM class in basic economics. Trust me, that is a challenge of the highest order. For the most part the academic world treated me pretty well, which may seem a bit surprising given my political views. I was blessed with working for great campus administrators and had colleagues, for the most part, who were more interested in education than in indoctrination. Since leaving the academy, however, I have become alarmed at what may have been there all along—a complete lack of intellectual diversity on most college campuses around America.