Elite colleges have been so completely absorbed by the left that they are no longer able to reform and provide an intellectually various and intellectually healthy schooling.
It should not be taken quietly to declare that organisations are beyond repair. This is a valuable lessons that the Bible provides. Abraham deals with God to spare the towns of Sodom and Gomorrah by judging the cities if yet 10 pious people may be discovered it. If there are fewer than 10, the places lack the essential large needed to make changes.
Let’s use the Sodom and Gomorrah check to the Ivy League. If we can find also ten openly traditional professors at these institutions, they might be able to create a critical mass and advance in hiring other traditional scholars to achieve significant ideological balance. Without even 10, these colleges would not only have the desire to see more philosophical variety, but they would also have a hard time identifying top liberal scholars and persuading them to add an institution without any like-minded peers. The point is not that traditional faculty are the pious ones, but rather that a critical mass of traditional professors is required to achieve internal reform.
I looked at campaign contributions from individuals who described themselves as faculty at these eight institutions in support of Donald Trump during the most current vote in order to find these ten conventional researchers who may win the Ivy League. There were only two faculty, both at Cornell University, from the whole Ivy League who contributed to Trump’s plan.
At the other seven Ivy League universities, there wasn’t a single doctor who contributed to Donald Trump. By contrast, there were around900 efforts from Ivy League faculty to Kamala Harris ‘ plan.
Of course, there could be liberal professors who didn’t create a plan contribution or didn’t also vote for Trump.  , Rick Hess and Riley Fletcher just analyzed , the university websites of 10 careful universities, including Harvard and Princeton, to identify professors as being on the returned, facility, or right. At none of these institutions had they get more than five faculty who are ideologically correctly. Elite universities once fail the Sodom and Gomorrah check, with none of them even having ten identifiably traditional professors.
The failure of elite colleges to have even 10 conventional professors is both a social and educational issue given that half of the American public supported Donald Trump. The Ivy League receives a significant amount of money from taxpayers for study grants and student loans each year despite being billed as being supposedly secret universities. This includes$ 1.8 billion in overhead on offers that school administrators can use as a slush account to fund anything they want, as well as$ 34 million in grants for student funding beyond what is anticipated to be paid back.
Republicans may determine leftist-captured universities and, like a malevolent God, purge those institutions of any tax funding once they have seized control of the federal government and the majority of state governments. Yet well-known private institutions are very vulnerable to Republicans pouring the fire and brimstone of funding slashes on them.
According to , an analysis by Stand Columbia, the university has$ 3.5 billion, or 55 percent of its budget, that could be placed in jeopardy by the incoming Trump administration. Columbia would suffer significant financial losses if it had more than$ 14 billion in endowment funds. Every other selective and Ivy League institution is equally susceptible.
If academic institutions are determined to have philosophical monolithic university, they may attract students and private contributors who will pay for it themselves. These institutions are not ineligible for any tax dollars, especially when they have abused the majority of American electorates with everything.
If these institutions can’t live on their own, then taxpayers should be unconcerned. Other universities that can pass the Sodom and Gomorrah test may reform, allowing for an intellectually various and intellectually balanced education.
Jay P. Greene is a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation’s Center for Education Policy.