Site icon Attack the System

The Day The Empress’ Clothes Fell Off

Did the Congressional hearings finally expose the scandal of the Ivy League?

Andrew Sullivan
Dec 8
Paid
READ IN APP

From left to right: Harvard president Claudine Gay, Penn president Liz Magill, professor Pamela Nadell of American U, and MIT president Sally Kornbluth testify before Congress on December 5. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

It may be too much to expect that the Congressional hearings this week, starring the three presidents of Harvard, MIT, and Penn, will wake people up to the toxic collapse of America’s once-great Ivy League. But I can hope, can’t I? In the immortal words of Hitch (peace be upon him), as you listen to these people, “You see how far the termites have spread, and how long and well they have dined.”

The mediocrities smirked, finessed, condescended, and stonewalled. Take a good look at them. These are the people who now select our elites. And they select them, as they select every single member of the faculty, and every student, by actively discriminating against members of certain “privileged” groups and aggressively favoring other “marginalized” ones. They were themselves appointed in exactly the same way, from DEI-approved pools of candidates. As a Harvard dean, Claudine Gay’s top priority was “making more progress on diversity,” i.e. intensifying the already systemic race, sex and gender discrimination that defines the place.

Thanks to the recent Supreme Court case, the energetic discrimination against Asian-American candidates for admission at Harvard is no longer in doubt. But countless other candidates for admission have little to no chance, regardless of their grades, or extracurriculars, because they belong to the wrong race, sex, sexual orientation, and “gender identity.” As soon as students are admitted under this identity framework, they are taught its core precepts: that the “truth” — or, in Harvard’s now-ironic motto, “Veritas” — is a function not of logic or reason or of open, free, robust debate and dialogue, let alone of Western civilization, but of inimical and evil “power structures” rooted in identity that need to be dismantled first. Identity first; truth second — because truth is rooted in identity and cannot exist outside of it.

In the hearings, President Gay actually said, with a straight face, that “we embrace a commitment to free expression even of views that are objectionable, offensive, hateful.” This is the president whose university mandates all students attend a Title IX training session where they are told that “fatphobia” and “cisheterosexism” are forms of “violence,” and that “using the wrong pronouns” constitutes “abuse.” This is the same president who engineered the ouster of a law professor, Ronald Sullivan, simply because he represented a client, of whom Gay and students (rightly but irrelevantly) disapproved, Harvey Weinstein.

This is the same president who watched a brilliant and popular professor, Carole Hooven, be effectively hounded out of her position after a public shaming campaign by one of her department’s DEI enforcers, and a mob of teaching fellows, because Hooven dared to state on television that biological sex is binary. This is the president of a university where a grand total of 1.46 percent of faculty call themselves “conservative” and 82 percent call themselves “liberal” or “very liberal.” This is the president of a university which ranked 248th out of 248 colleges this year on free speech (and Penn was the 247th), according to the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. Harvard is a place where free expression goes to die.

The critics who keep pointing out “double standards” when it comes to the inflammatory speech of pro-Palestinian students miss the point. These are not double standards. There is a single standard: It is fine to malign, abuse and denigrate “oppressors” and forbidden to do so against the “oppressed.”

Freedom of speech in the Ivy League extends exclusively to the voices of the oppressed; they are also permitted to disrupt classes, deplatform or shout down controversial speakers, hurl obscenities, force members of oppressor groups — i.e. Jewish students and teachers in the latest case — into locked libraries and offices during protests, and blocked from classrooms. Jewish students have even been assaulted — at Harvard, at Columbia, at UMass Amherst, at Tulane. Assaults by woke students used to be rare, such as the 2017 mob at Middlebury that put Allison Stanger in a neck brace — but since 10/7, they’re intensifying.

If a member of an oppressor class says something edgy, it is a form of violence. If a member of an oppressed class commits actual violence, it’s speech. That’s why many Harvard students instantly supported a fundamentalist terror cult that killed, tortured, systematically raped and kidnapped Jews just for being Jews in their own country. Because they have been taught it’s the only moral position to take. They’ve diligently read their Fanon, and must be puzzled over what the problem is. Palestinians are victims of a “colonial,” “white,” “settler-state” and any violence they commit is thereby justified.

It would be wrong to see this as a function merely of old-school anti-Semitism. The new anti-Semitism is simply a subsidiary of the entire rubric of “anti-Whiteness” that is taught as the supreme principle of “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.” DEI does not mean and has never meant diversity, equity and inclusion for all. It means active support for the “oppressed” against the “oppressors.” It means challenging “whiteness,” as represented by individual white people. Let’s go to the Smithsonian to read a definition of the term:

Since white people in America hold most of the political, institutional, and economic power, they receive advantages that nonwhite groups do not. These benefits and advantages, of varying degrees, are known as white privilege. For many white people, this can be hard to hear, understand, or accept — but it is true.

Now replace the word “white” with “Jewish,” and it all fits neatly into place, doesn’t it? Jews “hold most of the power.” Jews “receive advantages” others do not. Jews have “Jewish privilege.” Within “white supremacy” there is, definitionally, “Jewish supremacy,” because Jews in America (and even Israel!) are defined by their “whiteness.” They may not want to hear it, but they are the oppressor class now. If “white supremacy” is changed to “Jewish supremacy,” you even get the title of David Duke’s 2003 book, Jewish Supremacism.

The tropes, the structure, and the psyche of anti-Semitism have simply been copied and pasted onto anti-whiteness. There’s the same envy and resentment of an all-controlling racial group that is deemed not inferior (as in anti-black racism), but superior — by underhanded, shifty, rigged means. That’s why the word “merit” is now derided in the Ivy League: it doesn’t exist in neo-Marxist eyes. Only power exists.

As whites, Jews helped construct a Constitution long ago that pretends to guarantee equal rights, but once you “awaken” to the racist conspiracy that will always define America, you can see it was actually designed to oppress non-white goyim forever. This is what the New York Times believes, as we discovered in 2019, in an entire issue of their magazine, which they then distributed to high-school kids, so they could learn which groups to hate in America, and which groups to love.

This is why when non-whites commit hate crimes, they are instantly redefined as enacting “white supremacy.” It is why it is not “triggering” to call a conservative student a “white supremacist” or a white gay man of my generation a “queer” — we deserve it as oppressors — but it is a form of violence if you misgender a trans person or ask where someone is from. Even “Silence Is Violence,” as the BLM protestors insisted. In fact, some say, “silence is the worst form of violence.” Could Chairman Mao have put it better?

It is why you can set up a segregated dorm at MIT, call it “Chocolate City,” and be praised by the president, Sally Kornbluth, as being about “positive selection.” It’s why due process exists in sexual abuse cases for women on campus, but is denied to all men. It’s why these universities have racially segregated graduations for everyone — except “whites.” And because this grotesque racist engineering requires admitting vast numbers of students who cannot meet the academic standards of the evil past, 80 percent of Harvard and Yale students now get an A or A- as a grade. This is not “equity,” however they re- and re-define it. It is the hard bigotry of no expectations.

The absolute worst thing you can do right now is what the presidents of these woke institutions now say they intend to do: switch Jews out of the “oppressor class” and into the “oppressed one,” and re-apply all the DEI discrimination on their behalf.

That doesn’t solve the problem; it compounds it. Pro-Palestinian, and anti-Israel speech should no more be censored than any other — and the suppression is real. There should be one standard and it should be free speech. But there can be no free speech and no guarantee of it until the toxins of critical theory, and the architecture of its enforcement, DEI, are excised from the university altogether. Asking the current leadership to correct these lost institutions is an exercise in futility.

End DEI in its entirety. Fire all the administrators whose only job is to enforce its toxic orthodoxy. Admit students on academic merit alone. Save standardized testing — which in fact helps minorities, and it’s “the best way to distinguish smart poor kids from stupid rich kids,” as Steven Pinker said this week. Restore grading so that it actually means something again. Expel students who shut or shout down speech or deplatform speakers. Pay no attention to the race or sex or orientation or gender identity of your students, and see them as free human beings with open minds. Treat them equally as individuals seeking to learn, if you can remember such a concept.

David Wolpe is a distinguished and learned rabbi who resigned this week from Harvard’s advisory committee on anti-Semitism. In a tweet, he wrote:

Harvard is still a repository of extraordinary minds and important research. However, the system at Harvard along with the ideology that grips far too many of the students and faculty, the ideology that works only along axes of oppression and places Jews as oppressors and therefore intrinsically evil, is itself evil.

Yes, it is evil. This is no time to be mealy-mouthed about it. And we must root it out. Before its poison makes our liberal democracy almost impossible to reconstruct.

Give The Gift Of Dish!

The vast majority of the emails we publish every week are dissents, but we also get lots of fan mail, often from new subscribers. One writes:

In a time when informed discussion is discouraged, the Dish makes me think — and even though I disagree at times, I always come away with thoughts to reflect upon and sometimes incorporate into my worldview.

From a professor:

Thanks. Really. Your writing, and Jonah Goldberg’s, help me maintain some sense that all is not lost. (I’m one of the remaining academic conservatives.) The words you put down on paper (or whatever) sometimes reflect my thinking, sometimes challenge the same. Regardless, you help keep me from intellectually throwing in the towel.

From a long-time Dishhead:

I have been a subscriber for years — before Trump, before Covid. You told Bill Maher he didn’t “get to explain your faith to you” and I was an immediate fan. You have been one of my guiding lights. I always thought one day I would say thank you — like when I had some terminal illness — but that seems ridiculous. I have been uplifted by you, strengthened by you, freaked out by you, and always made smarter by you. I read you and listen to you and your guests every week and talk about your opinions to everyone I know. Please know you make a difference.

And I’m sorry about the loss of Bowie.

One more note:

I recently learned that my 85-year-old mother is active on Twitter and marvels at the incivility and poor argument. I bought her a gift subscription to the Dish to increase her flow of thoughtful, well-written fodder.

Buy your own gift here — and you can schedule the gift to arrive at any time, e.g. Christmas morning. You can choose an annual gift for $50 or stocking stuffers of $5 monthlies (and don’t worry, the gift subs don’t auto-renew). Substack also lets you craft a custom message. If you’re logged in, your credit card info will be loaded already, so purchasing a gift is super quick:

Buy a gift subscription

New On The Dishcast: David Leonhardt

David is a journalist and columnist. He writes the NYT’s flagship daily newsletter, “The Morning,” contributes to the paper’s Sunday Review section, and co-hosts “The Argument,” a weekly opinion podcast with Ross Douthat and Michelle Goldberg. In 2011 he won a Pulitzer Prize for Commentary on economic questions. His new book is Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream.

We just had a last-minute technical snafu with the audio file — Bodenner sends his sincere apologies — so there’s a little delay with linking to the episode this week, but it will arrive in your inbox as usual this afternoon, and sent to your preferred pod platform.

Money Quotes For The Week

“No Christmas trees — that’ll teach the Jews!” – Bill Maher on the violent pro-Palestine rally at the Rockefeller tree lighting.

“We are saying there is almost an epidemic of young gay children, young gay children, being told they are trans, and being put on a medical pathway for irreversible decisions and regretting it … We will sort it by publishing a draft Conversion Practices Bill alongside the work being undertaken by Dr Hilary Cass,” – Kemi Badenoch, British Secretary of State for Business and Trade.

“Israel admits the Gaza Health Ministry number of causalities are ‘fairly accurate’ and ‘more civilians have been killed than Hamas operatives.’ This is after 60 days of Biden and mainstream media relentlessly sowing doubt about these figures and thus enabling the killing of way more,” – Muhammad Shehada.

“So, to recap: A member of the Mexican Mafia, who is not Mexican, stabbed Chauvin on Black Friday, which is a shopping holiday, in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. It’s 2023, so I guess we’ll go with it,” – Park MacDougald.

Dissent Of The Week

Very few readers sent criticism over last week’s column on populism. Here’s one from “an older Millennial born in the early ‘80s”:

I think your column forecasting doom and gloom for Biden ignores one major issue: abortion rights. I don’t know how often you socialize with people born in 1980 or later, but the sense of anger and frustration amongst younger Americans over the loss of abortion rights across a huge swath of the country is palpable. Don’t forget that Millennials now outnumber Boomers due to death, and most of Gen Z has reached voting age.

Abortion rights are a vital issue for Democratic turnout. I agree entirely — it is a point I’ve made about Roe for decades. And I noted I got 2022 wrong because I underestimated it. Trump, however, gets this too. Which is why he remains a threat, even on this issue.

As always, keep the dissents coming: dish@andrewsullivan.com.

Mental Health Break

Conan finally gets a taste of his own Triumph:

In The ‘Stacks

The View From Your Window Contest

Where do you think? (A few details have been altered or hidden to make the view more challenging.) Email your entry to contest@andrewsullivan.com. Please put the location — city and/or state first, then country — in the subject line. Bonus points for fun facts and stories. Proximity counts. The deadline for entries is Wednesday night at midnight (PST). The winner gets the choice of a View From Your Window book or two annual Dish subscriptions.

See you next Friday.

Invite your friends and earn rewards

If you enjoy The Weekly Dish, share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe.

Invite Friends

Exit mobile version