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myself's avatar

As a foreign policy analyst and former Fulbright prof in the field myself, I thank you for this. The deletrious influence on our foreign policy of our ideological thought-suppression at home is something I have observed for years, seen the toll it has taken on relations with friends around the world, but despaired of other Americans noticing it. I am glad you have noticed it and called it to a wider attention. The costs have grown incredibly high. They go far beyond the costs of recent cases that you have found the space to mention here.

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JGB's avatar

The source of this problem in America is academia - specifically the liberal arts and social 'sciences'. University professors vie for status among their peers - and the cheap and easy way to become top-dog is by becoming ever more extremist. With enough wordplay and rhetoric (the currency in these academic fields) you can convince impressionable students that segregation is equity, grievance is justice, and truth is a social construct (unless the gatekeepers disagree with that 'truth' in which case its supporters must be deplatformed). These fields have no use for evidence, empiricism and fact-checking ideas - often they decry evidence as oppression - hence they run the risk of descending into demagoguery.

There is good news on the horizon - the academic bubble is going to burst and Academic excess will bring it about! First, these impressionable students are taking on an unsustainable debt burden for degrees in grievance & victimhood (which aren't marketable enough to pay off the debts - so these degrees are increasingly only accessible to the sons & daughters of privilege). Second, due to grade inflation (one way to bribe students into majoring in these fields is by giving away grades) employers no longer trust GPA's and Diplomas and assess skills and abilities of interviewees - and grievance studies majors develop few skills that employers actually want (these unfortunate students learn to write in 'academese' which is unsuitable for businesses). Third, companies are seeking more 'new-collar' employees - a new category of workers with valuable skills but no college degree - a lot of technicians and coders fall into this category. These, combined, signal a decline in University enrollment - we can already see it happening. Enrollments are dropping but the decrease is not uniform across all majors - STEM majors still see robust enrollments - Universities will cut back on departments which are not in demand. Liberal Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences will wither and die due to their own selfish excesses - those Profs have been exploiting their students' trust to boost their own careers and they will learn that truly you cannot fool all the people all the time.

Also, I predict that within one decade we will see students file class-action lawsuits against Universities for 'selling worthless degrees.' Students who are deep in debt and unable to pay off the loans will realize that they were mislead by the educators that they trusted or even idolized. The excuse of 'broadening of minds' will ring hollow to those who are working 3 jobs to pay off debts and have no time to feed their mind. They will come to realize that Universities turned them into debt slaves - how ironic: their greatest grievance will be with those who taught them the culture of grievance.

Academia is digging its own grave - let's hope something new and beautiful grows from its compost!

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