December 17, 2023
Joel Pollak
@joelpollak
Email from Harvard Jewish Alumni group: "We have heard from multiple sources at the University that it is the official, undisclosed policy of the school to drive down Jewish admissions to 1-2% of the student body, proportionately
Tim adds:
I guess Harvard hasn't changed much. They
had their ties to the Nazis back in the '30's and seem to be eager to renew them.
FTA:
The Harvard University administration during the 1930s, led by President James Conant, ignored numerous opportunities to take a principled stand against the Hitler regime and the antisemitic outrages it perpetrated, and contributed to Nazi Germany’s efforts to improve its image in the West. The administration’s lack of concern about Nazi antisemitism was shared by many influential Harvard alumni and students. A faculty panel that supervised a mock trial of Hitler in 1934 ruled that Hitler’s anti-Jewish actions were "irrelevant” to the debate. Nazi leaders were warmly welcomed to the Harvard campus and invited to prestigious social events, as the Harvard administration strove to build friendly relations with thoroughly Nazified universities in Germany. By doing so, Harvard’s administration and many of its student leaders offered important encouragement to the Hitler regime as it intensified its persecution of the Jews and strengthened its armed forces.
President Conant’s insistence on treating Nazi academics as part of the "learned world,” and his reluctance to offer faculty positions to prominent Jewish refugee scholars, was shaped in part by his own antisemitic prejudices. When the DuPont corporation sought his advice about hiring a German Jewish scientist who had fled the Nazis, Conant urged it not to employ him, noting that he was "very definitely of the Jewish type–very heavy.” The scientist they rejected, Max Bergmann, was described by the New York Times as "one of the leading organic chemists in the world.”
Prominent Harvard alumni, student leaders, and some faculty assumed a major role in the friendly welcome accorded the Nazi warship Karlsruhe when it visited Boston in 1934, flying the swastika flag. Boston’s Jewish community protested vociferously. President Conant remained silent. Officers and crewmen from the warship were entertained at Harvard, and professors attended a gala reception in Boston where the warship’s captain enthusiastically praised Hitler.
So is Harvard's new antisemitism really a surprise? Theyare just reverting to type.I wonder what prominent Jewish graduates think of this?
As of 2018 the student population at Harvard was roughly 25% Jewish and nearly 24% Asian. Why is that a bad thing? It shows that the Jews are doing something right (the Asians as well but many of them no doubt are exchange students from China.)
Instead of saying they will be a good influence on the others who come, Harvard is saying they need more other students because Jews are overrepresented. But how is any sort of multiculturalism to work if there is no base to enculturate?
The reality is they are bowing to the pressure of the radical, Jew-hating, Muslim-loving students they have indoctrinated.
All of the worst, most horrible movements in the last couple hundred years began in universities just like Harvard. They are the citadels of Satan.
Posted by: Timothy Birdnow at
12:33 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 537 words, total size 4 kb.
35 queries taking 0.1908 seconds, 172 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.