A New York Times op-ed by a Yale historian tries to see universities from the vantage point of an outsider. Instead, it unwittingly illustrates why universities will not self-correct without external intervention.
Kategorie: National Conservatism News
Daily News from Edmund Burke Foundation(NL)’s “NationalConservatism.org”
The National Conservatism Conferences and study group represents a rich source of intellectual capacity for advancing good in the earth. Numerous conferences, essays and reports are uploaded regularly to the site.
China’s Port in Peru Marks Dangerous New Era
Ending ‘Race’
The UK Is a Window to Our Dystopian Future
Roots of the Present Crises: Embracing Communist China Was U.S.’ Greatest Strategic Failure
Brave African Delegates Fight Abortion in Landmark UN Family Resolution – C-Fam
Wish you could escape the planet? Too bad life in space would suck
For a great win Merz must not tilt to the centre, he must understand AfD concerns
Trump Should Stop Feds From Hiding Docs By Classifying Them
Give Me Fertility, Or Give Me Death › American Greatness
Joel Kotkin: Elite arrogance is fuelling the rise of the global right
Chris Wright, An Unapologetic Energy Humanist, Will Be The Next Secretary Of Energy
I Saw How Georgetown’s Prestigious School of Foreign Service Coddles Violent Anti-Semites—Who Are Plotting to Transform US Policy From Within
Georgetown University sits on a hilltop above the Potomac. Its flagship school, the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, trains America’s future diplomats, senior military officers, and intelligence operatives. Its graduates include Bill Clinton and a long list of senators, ambassadors, a CIA director, two White House chiefs of staff, the king of Spain, and various heads of state. The school also grants degrees to foreign students. I enrolled in its master’s degree program after spending years as a Swedish military officer and diplomat. I was interested in making a career transition from my country’s armed forces, where I’d spent nearly a decade, to diplomatic service. I’d done two tours in Afghanistan, three in Africa and some diplomatic and commercial work in the Persian Gulf. I wanted to study at one of the world’s premier schools of diplomacy. What I found at Georgetown was far from what I had expected.