A bunch of Harvard student organizations came out in support of Hamas. Because to those students, children, old people, and innocents being killed and stolen out of their homes aren’t important. Only some false reaching for some sort of non-existent moral equivalency.
Like MSNBC, the UN, and other ‘organizations’, they are trying to justify these actions. They have no moral compass and no sense of fundamental right and wrong.
What was done was not war, it was terrorism. Plain and simple.
The Harvard students in particular are being taken to task. Harvard’s former president, Larry Summers, has spoken out about this as well as Harvard’s delayed response.
And now Wall Street is speaking as well. They want to know who the students are who support the murder of children. So they can be sure to NOT hire them in the future.
But Wall Street appears even less forgiving with billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman revealing that his fellow bosses want to know who they are so ‘none of us inadvertently hire any of their members’.
And because people outside of their rarified academic echo chamber are calling them on their inhumanity, the student groups are running like scared rats–taking down websites, uploading a new document that doesn’t name the groups, etc. Because their folly has been shown to them in a big mirror.
‘For student safety, the names of all original signing organizations have been concealed at this time,’ it added.
Harvard law student Danielle Mikaelian said she had stepped down from her role as a board member of one of the student groups that co-signed the controversial statement, calling it ‘egregious’.
But it’s too late, the interwebz are forever. And because there were so many groups involved, the entire Harvard brand is now tainted.
I found this commentary to be interesting and quite telling. It’s from Elbridge Colby, a former Pentagon official:
“I think it’s not surprising a generation or two ago, these famous institutions, whatever their flaws — it was Princeton in the nation’s service. Or, you know, if you go to Harvard, the big dining hall is dedicated to Union Soldiers who died in the Civil War. That’s not the mentality that’s being cultivated. There’s a basic love of country, and a sense of public service that is obviously very much gone from these famous institutions that should be creating an elite that’s doing a better job than we have over the last 20 years,” he said.
He added that the “same people” who’ve gone through elite universities have overseen a “dramatic decline” in America’s global standing and economic position.
“So, why are we listening to them?” Colby asked.
If these students cannot get into positions of power anymore, it will be of benefit to the country.
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