After that, progressives should extirpate the entire Ivy League.


Should Claudine Gay have resigned as president of Harvard? Are conservatives right that a rabidly pro-Hamas left has captured Harvard? Are liberals correct that the fascistic right has launched an all-out assault on academic freedom, at Harvard? The New York Times has explored these questions (about Harvard) over the course of almost 17,000 articles.

These are indeed fascinating topics. However, they ignore a key issue: That for anyone with a progressive perspective, Harvard should neither be reformed (to eliminate its wokeness) nor protected (from the forces of reaction). Rather, it should be razed to the ground.

Then, after Harvard has been razed, we must salt the earth, Carthage-style, so a new Harvard does not grow in its place. Next we have to destroy the rest of the Ivy League. Finally, anyone with enough energy left over should sail an emissions-free ship through the Panama Canal to California and obliterate Stanford.

Let’s start with a story that explains why I’m so personally committed to this cause. Then we can move on to a more rational explanation of why you should be too.

read more: https://theintercept.com/2024/01/06/claudine-gay-harvard-university-ivy-league/

  • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    The period when the Soviet Union was believed to be both communist and a threat to capitalism coincided with the growth of the middle class

    That’s just coincidence.

    The middle class in the US was created by the GI bill, which resulted in millions of former service-members going to school and buying houses. Add to that the economic boom from tons of reconstruction efforts, dominance in trade (everything else was destroyed), and access to lots of low cost labor in regions recovering from the war. That means higher demand for professionals and other middle-class positions vs labor, hence the rise of the middle class.

    None of it had anything to do with the Cold War or the USSR.

    Likewise, at least in the US, the rise of the welfare state was a reaction to the Great Depression, not anything the USSR was doing. In the UK, it was a reaction to wartime austerity, and while I haven’t checked the rest of Europe, I imagine it’s generally pretty similar.

    Those strikes and whatnot are likely also a reaction to post-war expectations. There were stirrings of communist (and fascist) ideology in the west prior to WW2, but after the war it pretty quickly fell off, likely due to a mix of Cold War propaganda and general prosperity. Most of the unrest that followed was due to Civil Rights movements and opposition to war, not demands for drastic economic reforms.

    building credible alternatives to capitalism. This also happens to be the only way “good” government can be achieved.

    My understanding is that capitalism has had a better track record for “good” government than any other economic system. Look at all the liberal democracies in the west and rights and lifestyles enjoyed by people there vs communist areas.

    Yeah, the income gap is probably higher, but so is average standard of living even among the poor. Outside the Great Depression period (where the USSR did far better), the average US citizen was way better off than the average Soviet citizen economically, though the USSR did a fantastic job at literacy and life expectancy. We won’t ever know how Russia would fare had they gone for a liberal democracy instead of communism, but I do sometimes wonder if Russia would’ve followed the US’s path.

    • FiveA
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      6 months ago

      The middle class in the US was created by the GI bill

      I don’t think I can have a coherent conversation with someone who has such a opportunistic relationship with causality. If you can hand-wave away the enormous political forces that dominated the minds of the capitalists as a historical coincidence with no bearing on their policy or legislation, we don’t share the same reality; I don’t know where to begin to bridge the divide.

      I apologize as it seems you started this in good faith, but I don’t think this conversation has any legs.