He is trying to take over/intimidate higher ed. This is what dictators do.
Blatantly, illegally using taxes as a weapon.
Every American should oppose this. While we still can.
Link: https://x.com/gma/status/1912832207535718771?s=46&t=kVeQeQf8ed0KokuRgfOE0g
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The shame, the shame to even have Harvard in the same sentence as Bob Jones.
Link: https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2025/04/harvard-meet-bob-jones.php
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spouting off about.
He’s spouting on their curriculum. They should not lose on the academic freedom issue which is the heart of this crappy from the right.
I saw a summary that if ND loses its tax-exempt status, that translates to a $12,000 per student impact per year.
Rule of thumb is to spend about 4% of that annually ($800MM), while a conservative annual growth is 7-8% on the endowment ($1.5B). Revenues exceed $1.5B.
Need-based scholarships for qualified students among the 13K student body should be completely unaffected. One might even question why we aren't doing more for the entire student body.
The provision of only need-based aid rather than assisting all qualified students weighs heavily on my daughter and is making her decision to attend ND quite hard.
From her perspective, and she's more social justice oriented than I am, it's wasteful to spend ND money when you can spend a fraction of that and attend a fairly comparable school offering significant money. She likes the idea of legacy, but is legacy worth the premium and is it morally responsible?
From my perspective, and I'm much more materialistic, I view it as the opportunity cost of the money and what else she could do with it to launch her life.
Knowing some guys who work for ND, they are true believers (not unlike the people who work at Disney), and rather than recognize the greed for what it is, they view it as in furtherance of the mission.
Mind you, it wasn't approaching $80K per year, but inflation-adjusted was still pretty expensive. But they weren't very generous with the "need" side of things. They tended to give just enough to make it possible for a student to attend, if they qualified from a household income standpoint. This was based on the idea that it was a special opportunity to attend N.D., and that there should be some level of "sacrifice" for everyone who sent their kids there.
One can agree or disagree on that, but I think part of the motivation was so that we didn't have people lined up to attend simply based on low-cost priority. I can somewhat understand.
To your point, I get it. I also think that $400k all in for a non-ivy degree is a lot of money, especially for someone who might want to go to law school. Fortunately, we're in a position where we put away money for this so she has options.
I told my kid to go to Tulane for close to free, party for 3 years, make law review and marry a rich chick. ND has the worst merit scholly offers. He didn’t listen.
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Got the job he wanted and easily makes the coin he needs.
He’s also conservative and didn’t want to go to indoctrination and not law school. He got a good mix of the different sides at Du Lac.
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Link: https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1Bb2EK9qWt/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Don’t worry, he’ll tell you.
Of course that was way way before DEI admissions and remedial math courses.
But then I had a legal college who was admitted to play football... which he never mentioned on his CV.
Lawfare after lawfare.
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