All members of the U.S. Supreme Court were associated with either Harvard or Yale — as student or faculty — as were all four Presidents from 1989 to 2016. And when you look at a rundown of principals at America’s “newspapers of record”, the New York Times and the Washington Post, it’s a clear picture of Ivy League dominance.[1]The rest of the article is even more nauseating. In particular, what Mr. Willers reveals about Harvard law professors Cass Sunstein, Adrian Vermeule, and Jack Goldsmith and their smug ideas on managing our speech for our own good, as well as about Larry Summers and Kenneth Rogoff and their plans to deny us, the dregs of society, the use of "anonymous" cash.
Rogoff thinks cash "handcuffs" central bankers who are prevented from imposing negative interest rates and thereby forcing savers to spend. There is only one orthodox opinion among dirtbags like this and it's stimulus, baby. It's what makes the world go round and don't you dare spread any "misinformation" around that it's leading us to disaster.
Who are these swine?
Notes
[1] "A Plague From Harvard." By Bill Willers, Dissident Voices, 5/19/20.
2 comments:
It must only be some time before the entire University system is held to account by people refusing to allow their children near these factories. My study of zoology and evolution taught me that Havard was a den of PC right back in the 1980's when little academic dictators were telling us that there were no racial differences and deriding molecular biology reality.
Some observe here that remote learning and office work might open the eyes of employers to the possibilities of "gittin' 'er done" without expensive Manhattan office space and commuting employees. Ditto re "butt in the chair" instruction. Some of my uni courses could have been on video with no loss in quality. Smaller classes are not so amenable to distance learning but I'd sacrifice a bit of the social interaction with fellow students in exchange for lower tuition. Earlier education probably would lose a lot with no practice in getting along with others.
Why we fawn over the Ivy League types, I don't know. Not that it's "we" who are doing it. They just have an in with future employers from the same schools. I certainly have found that there is more understanding and better judgment in the ranks who've not received elite schooling and actually sullied themselves by being in the military or swinging an axe at some point.
I loathe this elite culture and its parasites and house niggers.
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