Will Harvard Go Full Hillsdale?
Harvard risks $2.2B in federal funds as it defies anti-discrimination mandates, drawing comparisons to Hillsdale's stand-alone model of rejecting government strings.
Harvard University has rejected various demands of a presidential commission on anti-Semitism.
The task
force wants to persuade Harvard to ensure Jewish students on its campus are no
longer harassed, or else lose its federal funding.
Harvard
retorts that it won’t be bullied by Washington.
Among its
other requirements, the Trump administration also warned Harvard to cease using
race as a criterion in its admissions, hiring, and promotion, contrary to law.
And it
also directed the campus to ban the use of masks that, in the post-COVID era of
protests, have emboldened violent demonstrators with anonymity.
The
administration’s order to stop race-based bias was in accordance with civil
rights statutes, and a recent Supreme Court decision specifically banning
affirmative action at Harvard and elsewhere.
No
matter. Harvard claimed that the Trump administration infringed upon its First
Amendment rights.
So, it
has temporarily rejected the administration’s orders. At least for now, Harvard
has lost its annual $2.2 billion grant of federal funds.
Former
President Barack Obama, among others, lauded Harvard’s rejection of the demands
of the administration’s anti-Semitism task force. He claimed the Trump
administration’s efforts were ham-handed.
But what
academic freedom are Harvard and Obama talking about? The freedom to
discriminate and segregate by race in hiring, admissions, dorms, and
graduations?
The
freedom of 500 Harvard students to crash the classes of others, shut down
traffic, and harass students on the basis of their religion or views on Israel?
Despite
all of Harvard’s platitudes, its classrooms are still being disrupted. Jewish
students remain fearful.
And what
would Obama say if, for example, African-American students at Harvard were
harassed on campus by masked disrupters?
Or black
studies classes were crashed by students wearing scarves over their faces as
they vented their hatred? Would he press the Trump administration to force
Harvard to honor federal civil rights protections?
Remember,
Harvard is a private university with a largely untaxed endowment of over $50.2
billion. Yet again, it still receives some $2.2 billion—now suspended—in
federal funds.
The
administration task force is not forcing Harvard to run its university
according to its version of federal dictates.
Instead,
the Trump commission is simply warning Harvard that if, in addition to its huge
sources of private funding, it still wishes continuance of some $2.2 billion in
public money from the federal government, then it must comply with existing
laws and executive orders.
Does
Harvard remember the embarrassing testimony of its former president, Claudine
Gay?
She
failed to assure a congressional committee that Harvard had taken action
against openly hostile anti-Semitic student protestors during its growing
protest movements.
Does
Harvard understand why the Supreme Court ruled it had violated the “Equal
Protection Clause” of the Fourteenth Amendment and was culpable of prejudice
against Asian-Americans?
Does
Harvard have any clue why it has lost some $150 million per annum of donor
giving?
Does
Harvard realize that no one believes its pretenses anymore that it “cannot and
will not tolerate disruption” of classes—given that it still happens all the
time at its various professional schools and undergraduate courses?
Perhaps
Harvard should follow the strategy of independent Hillsdale College, which long
ago wished to be free of federal dictates.
So,
unlike Harvard, the college put its proverbial money where its mouth was and
agreed unilaterally to give up all federal funding to be free of Washington’s
octopus tentacles.
Yet,
there is one critical distinction between Hillsdale and Harvard.
Hillsdale
does not take federal money, period—whether doled out by either a Democrat or
Republican administration.
It
sincerely believes that too often the federal government itself does not follow
the Constitution, impinges on freedom, and forces colleges to violate equality
under the law when discriminating by race and gender.
Harvard
has no such principles.
Its beef
is not with the notion of an overweening federal government, eager to coerce
private colleges to follow particular protocols.
Instead,
it is at war only with the Trump commission or, in theory, any other similar
conservative administration that might wish it to adhere to the law as a
condition of being federally funded.
Otherwise,
Harvard has no problem with an activist federal government, as long as it is a
liberal one forcing all sorts of Title IX or DEI initiatives on private and
Christian colleges that apparently lost their autonomy by accepting federal
money. It has said nothing when state and federal governments in the past
gratuitously hounded Hillsdale.
So,
Harvard loudly can set itself free by permanently pursuing its agenda on its
own $50 billion, in the same manner Hillsdale does quietly with its $1
billion—without the taxpayer’s dime, whether Democratic or Republican.
https://amgreatness.com/2025/04/17/will-harvard-go-full-hillsdale/
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