- Moderator
- #1
The Ivy League schools are going to end up putting themselves out of business if they don't get the chaos and radicalism terrorizing their campuses under control. The likelihood of that is iffy, however, given this behavior seems to be permissive straight from the top. We already saw two Ivy League presidents resign in the wake of their defending anti-Semitic sentiment on their campuses. Now, violent mobs have broken out at universities like Columbia, NYU, Berkeley, and others where Jewish students and staff as well as law enforcement have been threatened, physically attacked, and terrorist organizations like Hamas are openly supported.
Ultimately, big money interests, many of which happen to be Jewish, will pull their funding of these institutions. Robert Kraft just did it with Columbia. The former president of U Penn was ousted after a $100 Million endowment was threatened following her House testimony. More will certainly come.
The recent wave of violent protests and arrests at elite universities like Yale and Columbia have only confirmed for Scott Katz that he made the right decision to attend Elon University. The North Carolina college, where he is currently wrapping up his sophomore year, is a long way from his hometown of Lafayette Hill, the predominantly liberal Philadelphia suburb where the average home costs $610,000.
Katz, who is Jewish, says the antisemitism that’s increasingly visible at colleges nationwide—especially in the Ivy League, and other elite institutions like Stanford and Berkeley—hasn’t even touched his campus.
“I haven’t been affected by it at all,” Katz told me. “I definitely feel very safe on campus regarding my religion.”
Ultimately, big money interests, many of which happen to be Jewish, will pull their funding of these institutions. Robert Kraft just did it with Columbia. The former president of U Penn was ousted after a $100 Million endowment was threatened following her House testimony. More will certainly come.
The recent wave of violent protests and arrests at elite universities like Yale and Columbia have only confirmed for Scott Katz that he made the right decision to attend Elon University. The North Carolina college, where he is currently wrapping up his sophomore year, is a long way from his hometown of Lafayette Hill, the predominantly liberal Philadelphia suburb where the average home costs $610,000.
Katz, who is Jewish, says the antisemitism that’s increasingly visible at colleges nationwide—especially in the Ivy League, and other elite institutions like Stanford and Berkeley—hasn’t even touched his campus.
“I haven’t been affected by it at all,” Katz told me. “I definitely feel very safe on campus regarding my religion.”
Kids Are Giving Up on Elite Colleges—and Heading South | Command Education
“We are working around the clock with students to restructure their college lists as a result of the fallout,” says Christopher Rim, the CEO of college consulting firm Command Education. “One student we work with recently abandoned her yearslong dream of attending Columbia” because of...
www.commandeducation.com