Harvard’s crying poverty while simultaneously funding woke pet projects? Color me shocked. They claim Trump’s policies are hurting vital cancer research, but their actions speak louder than their crocodile tears.
- Harvard claims funding shortages.
- They are still hiring for “Latinx Studies” and podcasting positions.
- The Palestinian Solidarity Committee is still collaborating with Harvard.
From Cancer Research to Crochet: Harvard’s Priorities
It seems Harvard’s definition of “essential research” has taken a sharp turn left. While President Garber wails about jeopardized cancer research, the university is actively seeking a “Lecturer in Latinx Studies” with expertise in “decolonial studies.” Are you kidding me? Meanwhile, the Harvard Kennedy School needs someone to teach podcasting? This isn’t a community college; this is supposedly one of the world’s leading institutions! Let’s be clear: this is blatant mission creep, prioritizing leftist ideology over real academic rigor.
“Latinx”: A Slap in the Face to Real Hispanics
Let’s talk about this “Latinx Studies” position. The term itself is an insult. Numerous polls show that the vast majority of Hispanics hate the term “Latinx,” finding it pretentious and culturally insensitive. A Pew Research Center study showed that only 4% of Hispanics actually use the term. So, Harvard is spending precious resources on a field of study that most of the people it’s supposed to represent find offensive? This is peak ivory tower absurdity, folks.
Palestinian Embroidery Over American Values?
The rot goes deeper. Harvard’s “Committee on Ethnicity, Migration, Rights” houses the “Muslim American Studies Group,” which is happily collaborating with the Palestine Solidarity Committee – a group suspended for disruptive pro-Hamas protests. So, while real patriots are fighting for the soul of our nation, Harvard is hosting Palestinian embroidery workshops. It’s a disgrace, plain and simple.
What Does This Mean For The Future?
This isn’t just about Harvard wasting money on ridiculous courses. It’s about the systematic erosion of academic standards and the embrace of radical ideologies. It’s about trading in merit for wokeism. Harvard’s decline is a microcosm of what’s happening to higher education across the country. We’re producing graduates who are more interested in social justice activism than in contributing to the economy or defending our freedoms. The Supreme Court used to quote Harvard professors like Bernard Bailyn, but those days are long gone. Now, they’re hiring podcasting teachers. Is this the legacy we want for our great universities?
Are we going to let the woke mob turn our institutions of higher learning into indoctrination camps?


