Winston Churchill, up in Heaven, looking down on this idiotic appeasement sh!t and wondering why he worked so hard for such future generations of fools.
you see, China has been trying to build its economy to be more like America’s: high margin brainpower jobs. Those kinds of jobs are why Americans are so much richer than Chinese.
So Chinese leadership is dumbstruck watching Trump try to import the Chinese model of low margin, low wage mass production.
China is saying: when your enemy is making a mistake, let them. So China will be in no hurry to make a trade deal that might stop America’s descent to developing nation wage status. While smashing the best universities in the world, of course.
China is letting Trump swing in the breeze. Smart.
And China will lose. it’s impossible for them to win. Hard to believe any American would believe otherwise. Definitely shows wherever you got your schooling stole your money. Communists can never beat free thinkers at a free thinking game goofball. That’s why they waited thousands of years to find some brains they could copy. Are you really this un educated or just hating Trump forces you this mindset. Trump has China by the balls and they know it.
Biden was Catholic. Those people stick together, Disco. All that weirdo stuff they do, whilst pretending to be Christians, meanwhilst they are taking subversive orders from the Papalists in subrogation of their Oaths to the US Constitution which Christians literally killed for so that their own kids could be taught the true glory of life under god.
NEW: The Harvard Law Review has made DEI the "first priority" of its admissions process. It routinely kills or advances pieces based on the author's race. It even vets articles for racially diverse citations. And guess what? Editors at the top journal put all this in writing.
We obtained more than four years of documents from the law review, including article evaluations, training materials, and data on the race and gender of journal authors. They reveal a pattern of pervasive race discrimination that could plunge Harvard into even deeper crisis.
Just over half of journal editors are admitted solely based on academic performance. The rest are chosen by a "holistic review committee" that has made the inclusion of "underrepresented groups"—defined to include race—its "first priority," per a resolution passed in 2021.
The law review has also incorporated race into nearly every stage of its article selection process, which as a matter of policy considers "both substantive and DEI factors."
Editors routinely kill or advance pieces based in part on the race of the author, according to eight different memos reviewed by the Free Beacon, with one editor even referring to an author’s race as a "negative" when recommending that his article be cut from consideration.
"This author is not from an underrepresented background," the editor wrote in the "negatives" section of a 2024 memo. The piece, which concerned criminal procedure and police reform, did not make it into the issue.
Such policies have had a major effect on the demographics of published scholars. Since 2018, according to the journal's data, only one white author has been chosen to write the foreword to the review’s Supreme Court issue, arguably the most prestigious honor in legal academia.
The rest—with the exception of Jamal Greene, who is black—have been minority women. That pattern is a stark departure from the historical norm. Between 1995 and 2018, the data show, nearly every foreword author was white.
The Trump administration has already frozen over $2 billion to Harvard. The documents from the law review could create a new line of attack for the administration as the fight over federal funding escalates and invite litigation from private plaintiffs eager to join the pile-on.
Such plaintiffs would have no shortage of ammunition. The documents show that the Harvard Law Review continued using race after the Supreme Court outlawed affirmative action in June 2023, implementing several DEI measures within the past year.
Just this January, the law review voted down a proposal to make personal statements the only non-academic factor considered in the admissions process for editors, effectively renewing its policy—adopted prior to SFFA—of making race the "first priority" of holistic review.
One July 2023 training told editors to consider "DEI values"—including the racial diversity of each article’s citations—when giving pieces a preliminary read. Articles that make it past that initial screen are subject to even more DEI vetting.
Each piece is assigned to an editor who decides whether to recommend it for further consideration. As part of that process, editors write memos to the articles committee laying out each piece’s pros and cons—including, in many cases, the race of the scholar who wrote it.
In at least seven memos obtained by the Free Beacon, editors argued that an author’s minority status counted in favor of publishing their article. "The author is a woman of color," read one 2024 memo. "This meets a lot of our priorities!"
Another memo, from 2022, said that one "pro" of an otherwise weak article was that it had been "written by a woman of color outside of the T14," a reference to the top 14 law schools that dominate legal scholarship.
Still another recommended a piece on the grounds that it would "help advance [the] career" of a "young academic of color on an upward trajectory at UVA."
At least one attorney is already planning to sue Harvard over the law review’s policies. Jonathan Mitchell, the former Texas solicitor general, told the Free Beacon that he is preparing complaints against both Harvard and the law review based in part on the documents.
While the Harvard Law Review is an independent nonprofit and legally distinct from the university, it operates out of a Harvard building, is cleaned by Harvard janitors, and employs only Harvard students as editors.
It is also advised by administrators and professors at Harvard Law School, including the dean, and some student editors are on federal financial aid.
The pending litigation follows a wave of lawsuits against other top schools, including Northwestern and NYU, over the diversity policies of their law journals, as well a separate complaint Mitchell filed against Harvard in 2018 that was based on publicly available information.
Though all three complaints were eventually dismissed, most of the litigation took place before SFFA. And it did not have the benefit of the breadth of materials reviewed by the Beacon, which provide an unusually wide window into the decision-making process of a top law journal.
Take the solicitation process for the foreword to the Supreme Court issue. A list of nominees is typically compiled by 5 people: the EIC, two SCOTUS editors, and one rep from each of the jouranl's two diversity committees, including the "Women, Nonbinary, and Trans Committee."
Armed with more votes than the journal’s top editor, the DEI officials help whittle down the list of nominees. In a section titled "Why should they write the foreword?", one 2024 spreadsheet stated that a professor would be "the first hijabi, Muslim woman to write the Foreword."
...
Advocates rarely consult journals like the Harvard Law Review, said O.H. Skinner, Arizona’s former solicitor general, because the journal's obsession with DEI has led to "ever-more-ridiculous levels of academic myopia" and pushed the most pressing legal questions to the side.
Insane.
You’re not normally worth replying to, but this one prompts me. “I can see that the Harvard Law Review is probably a highly flawed entity, but I can’t see that Trump’s ‘leadership’ of a nearly infinitely more important entity is perhaps a tad flawed, too.”
A much more succinct response to your post: “Yep, sounds pretty stupid. But not within a million miles of as stupid as supporting Donald Trump.”
Even the Great Wall of China has Free thinkers there making the money.
If we end relations with China, they will be forever stuck with aging technology in a World rapidly depending on it. We will regroup and create the faster chip. The better OS. More intelligent automation.
Automobiles. Free thinkers.
China better wake up or they will be left in the past, while we look forward to the future. And it’s not their people, for all you racists out there who immediately think like this. It’s their government. You cannot be born a creative thinker, it happens by allowing people to creatively think.
you see, China has been trying to build its economy to be more like America’s: high margin brainpower jobs. Those kinds of jobs are why Americans are so much richer than Chinese.
So Chinese leadership is dumbstruck watching Trump try to import the Chinese model of low margin, low wage mass production.
China is saying: when your enemy is making a mistake, let them. So China will be in no hurry to make a trade deal that might stop America’s descent to developing nation wage status. While smashing the best universities in the world, of course.
China is letting Trump swing in the breeze. Smart.
Fake news. Imagine the huge surge of smart foreign students flocking to US higher education this coming fall !!
I’ve been an adult for the whole internet age. Like tons of people, I’ve done tons of web searches. For decades, it was very often pleasing to see (at least some) .gov results, as one could reasonably expect that they would be more reliable than average. And that included the first Trump administration.
That has fundamentally changed in less than 100 days.
Just landed in Rome. A good day in talks and meetings with Russia and Ukraine. They are very close to a deal, and the two sides should now meet, at very high levels, to “finish it off.” Most of the major points are agreed to. Stop the bloodshed, NOW. We will be wherever is necessary to help facilitate the END to this cruel and senseless war!
NEW: The Harvard Law Review has made DEI the "first priority" of its admissions process. It routinely kills or advances pieces based on the author's race. It even vets articles for racially diverse citations. And guess what? Editors at the top journal put all this in writing.
We obtained more than four years of documents from the law review, including article evaluations, training materials, and data on the race and gender of journal authors. They reveal a pattern of pervasive race discrimination that could plunge Harvard into even deeper crisis.
Just over half of journal editors are admitted solely based on academic performance. The rest are chosen by a "holistic review committee" that has made the inclusion of "underrepresented groups"—defined to include race—its "first priority," per a resolution passed in 2021.
The law review has also incorporated race into nearly every stage of its article selection process, which as a matter of policy considers "both substantive and DEI factors."
Editors routinely kill or advance pieces based in part on the race of the author, according to eight different memos reviewed by the Free Beacon, with one editor even referring to an author’s race as a "negative" when recommending that his article be cut from consideration.
"This author is not from an underrepresented background," the editor wrote in the "negatives" section of a 2024 memo. The piece, which concerned criminal procedure and police reform, did not make it into the issue.
Such policies have had a major effect on the demographics of published scholars. Since 2018, according to the journal's data, only one white author has been chosen to write the foreword to the review’s Supreme Court issue, arguably the most prestigious honor in legal academia.
The rest—with the exception of Jamal Greene, who is black—have been minority women. That pattern is a stark departure from the historical norm. Between 1995 and 2018, the data show, nearly every foreword author was white.
The Trump administration has already frozen over $2 billion to Harvard. The documents from the law review could create a new line of attack for the administration as the fight over federal funding escalates and invite litigation from private plaintiffs eager to join the pile-on.
Such plaintiffs would have no shortage of ammunition. The documents show that the Harvard Law Review continued using race after the Supreme Court outlawed affirmative action in June 2023, implementing several DEI measures within the past year.
Just this January, the law review voted down a proposal to make personal statements the only non-academic factor considered in the admissions process for editors, effectively renewing its policy—adopted prior to SFFA—of making race the "first priority" of holistic review.
One July 2023 training told editors to consider "DEI values"—including the racial diversity of each article’s citations—when giving pieces a preliminary read. Articles that make it past that initial screen are subject to even more DEI vetting.
Each piece is assigned to an editor who decides whether to recommend it for further consideration. As part of that process, editors write memos to the articles committee laying out each piece’s pros and cons—including, in many cases, the race of the scholar who wrote it.
In at least seven memos obtained by the Free Beacon, editors argued that an author’s minority status counted in favor of publishing their article. "The author is a woman of color," read one 2024 memo. "This meets a lot of our priorities!"
Another memo, from 2022, said that one "pro" of an otherwise weak article was that it had been "written by a woman of color outside of the T14," a reference to the top 14 law schools that dominate legal scholarship.
Still another recommended a piece on the grounds that it would "help advance [the] career" of a "young academic of color on an upward trajectory at UVA."
At least one attorney is already planning to sue Harvard over the law review’s policies. Jonathan Mitchell, the former Texas solicitor general, told the Free Beacon that he is preparing complaints against both Harvard and the law review based in part on the documents.
While the Harvard Law Review is an independent nonprofit and legally distinct from the university, it operates out of a Harvard building, is cleaned by Harvard janitors, and employs only Harvard students as editors.
It is also advised by administrators and professors at Harvard Law School, including the dean, and some student editors are on federal financial aid.
The pending litigation follows a wave of lawsuits against other top schools, including Northwestern and NYU, over the diversity policies of their law journals, as well a separate complaint Mitchell filed against Harvard in 2018 that was based on publicly available information.
Though all three complaints were eventually dismissed, most of the litigation took place before SFFA. And it did not have the benefit of the breadth of materials reviewed by the Beacon, which provide an unusually wide window into the decision-making process of a top law journal.
Take the solicitation process for the foreword to the Supreme Court issue. A list of nominees is typically compiled by 5 people: the EIC, two SCOTUS editors, and one rep from each of the jouranl's two diversity committees, including the "Women, Nonbinary, and Trans Committee."
Armed with more votes than the journal’s top editor, the DEI officials help whittle down the list of nominees. In a section titled "Why should they write the foreword?", one 2024 spreadsheet stated that a professor would be "the first hijabi, Muslim woman to write the Foreword."
...
Advocates rarely consult journals like the Harvard Law Review, said O.H. Skinner, Arizona’s former solicitor general, because the journal's obsession with DEI has led to "ever-more-ridiculous levels of academic myopia" and pushed the most pressing legal questions to the side.
Insane.
You’re not normally worth replying to, but this one prompts me. “I can see that the Harvard Law Review is probably a highly flawed entity, but I can’t see that Trump’s ‘leadership’ of a nearly infinitely more important entity is perhaps a tad flawed, too.”
A much more succinct response to your post: “Yep, sounds pretty stupid. But not within a million miles of as stupid as supporting Donald Trump.”
Highly flawed? Could you imagine the outcry if Trump called the first priority for a position to be a white male?
I’ve been an adult for the whole internet age. Like tons of people, I’ve done tons of web searches. For decades, it was very often pleasing to see (at least some) .gov results, as one could reasonably expect that they would be more reliable than average. And that included the first Trump administration.
That has fundamentally changed in less than 100 days.
Incredible. Horrible.
Here is a good government web page for you to learn from:
THE ORIGIN “The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2” publication — which was used repeatedly by public health officials and the media to discredit the lab leak
"Donald J. Trump defines the American success story. Throughout his life he has continually set the standards of business and entrepreneurial excellence, especially in real estate, sports, and entertainment."