“Harvard is fighting back.”
There was a time when more colleges had ROTC units, producing soldiers, sailors, and pilots every year, patriotically rallying to the cause in wartime, fighting for their country.
It’s been a long time since that was the norm.
Since the 1960s and 1970s, our nation’s colleges have been identified with pacifism. The idea that an American college would do any fighting at all sounds more like Ancient History than Current Events.
But now the professors of Harvard Yard are fighting mad. They’re holding press conferences and firing off op-eds, trying to rally other colleges to their cause.
And what is their “cause”? Unlimited government funding, free from the limitations of a desperately needed federal austerity program.
The college is willing to fight — against our own virtually bankrupt federal government — to keep the cornucopia of federal taxpayer-funded checks flowing, when President Donald Trump is trying to shut off the spigot.
Since the Executive Branch issues a lot of checks to Harvard — and to most colleges, in fact, to darned near all of them — the Trump administration has put its foot down. They have determined that since part of their mandate is to bring common sense back to our country, this is no time to fund a bunch of overpaid countercultural Marxist rabble-rousers. It’s no time to enable their worst inclinations, from race- and sex-based hiring to forcing “girls’ sports” to include boys, from sitting back while student groups abuse their Jewish classmates to actively facilitating the selling out of their country through partnerships with hostile foreign governments.
So yes, the Trump administration is cutting off some of the checks. And as it turns out, Harvard University doesn’t believe that ferociously biting the hand that feeds it for years beyond count ought to be grounds for ending the gravy train.
What will be the general public’s reaction? I wonder.
For generations, parents have watched their children’s applications be rejected while students with worse preparation, worse grades, and worse test scores have been accepted to elite colleges, causing their own children to have to settle for lesser schools as their punishment for being white or Asian or middle-class or normal.
For generations, parents have stared at their children’s course descriptions and reading lists, horrified at the dreck being assigned for full course credit, the once noble institution of higher education having long ago plummeted to a nadir by offering pretend majors like “Gender Studies” and “Multi-Cultural Inquiry.”
And we’ve seen all this go on, as their prices climbed higher and higher, charging whatever a subsidized market will bear. Too many colleges brazenly encourage their students to take on outrageous levels of debt — obligations certain to hang over the heads of most of their graduates for decades — as the coursework hardly ever prepares a student for legitimate careers that would actually enable them to pay back these loans.
If you were one of these parents — and you probably are — who’ve watched your children emerge from those ivy-covered dens of iniquity awash in debt, unprepared for life and robbed of their values — are you likely to side with these pompous college spokesmen or with the president you’ve now voted for three times?
If we have this fight in the public eye, then be prepared for everything to be exposed.
That’s what this federal money has been propping up all these years. The colleges demand more joint research projects to give away to our enemies, more foreign elites’ children to corrupt our own, more opportunities to practice such bigotry as DIE and BDS, free rein to depress the once-high standards of academia even more than they have already done.
For generations now, far too many of our colleges and universities have been funding an increasingly hostile tumor in the body politic. We want to value them for the good work they do in producing great engineers, scientists, doctors, and inventors, but the balance between these positives and their plethora of societal negatives is off kilter.
It’s time to end the gravy train.
And if our colleges really want to fight this out in the public square, as if the above sample of the case against them weren’t enough, let’s have at it.
John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based international transportation manager, trade compliance trainer, and speaker. Read his book on the surprisingly numerous varieties of vote fraud (The Tales of Little Pavel), his political satires on the Biden-Harris years (Evening Soup with Basement Joe, Volumes I, II, and III), and his most recent collection of public policy essays, Current Events and the Issues of Our Age, all available in eBook or paperback, only on Amazon.
Image via Pixabay.
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