Money talks: Donors show the path to restoring freedom of thought and speech in higher education – Wirepoints

By: Mark Glennon*

A welcome trend is unfolding in higher education. Wealthy donors are using their clout to fight the cancel mobs and woke radicals now dominating most colleges and universities. No freedom of speech or thought? Then no money for you, they are saying.

A Monday Wall Street Journal column described the movement, reporting that that dissident alumni organizations targeting at least 20 schools have formed over the last couple of years – including several this fall.

Unfortunately, there was no mention of any Illinois schools, and I have found no such groups targeting Illinois schools like Northwestern, DePaul and the University of Illinois, which have been among those that have too often traded academic freedom for mob rule.

But the path now seems clear for such groups to form here and everywhere. An umbrella organization for them has now been formed called the Alumni Free Speech Alliance.

Its members already include donor alumni groups from Princeton, Cornell, The University of Virginia and others, and it says many more are coming.

The Alliance shares tools and experiences for donors to aggregate their power to set things right. From its website:

The Alliance provides a mechanism for the exchange of information among its members on substantive and organizational issues. A priority for the Alliance is to encourage the creation of alumni free speech groups for other colleges and universities, and the Alliance will create tools to help new alumni groups organize.

Withholding cash is one of two means to get the attention of illiberal college administrators and trustees. States that fund higher education should be doing the same.

The other means is competition. On that, too, we had good news this month with the announcement of a new university in formation. The University of Austin will be dedicated to the fundamental principles on which higher education is supposed to be built — freedom of opinion and the marketplace of ideas. Classical liberalism, in other words.

That announcement was surely an “oh shit” moment for higher education trustees and bureaucrats who have turned their schools over to leftist mobs. They have to know that a counterrevolution is cooking.

The stakes are enormous. “This is a battle for our culture and, in many ways, for Western civilization,” said the head of one of the dissident donor groups to the Wall Street Journal.

That’s no exaggeration.

*Mark Glennon is founder of Wirepoints.

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KI_Time
4 years ago

CB’s need to steal 2% of your purchasing power from you each year through inflation in order to survive . . . We’ve experienced hyper-inflation to the tune of 4% or 5% over the last few months , , , and that hyper-inflation startup makes the CB’s very happy . . . Deflation scares the crap out of CBs . . . In the 1932-33 time frame, a severe Deflation of the Fiat Money System prompted Roosevelt to confiscate physical gold from all ordinary Americans in an attempt to stimulate demand for the deflating fiat Fed Notes . . .… Read more »

JimBob
4 years ago

Where this gets interesting is the retreat from alumni admission preferences for applicants to today’s top tier schools (along-side elimination of Western Civ). Most of these preference applicants have records of high academic, athletic etc. achievement (due in part to private schools and prep course and many other opportunities their parents are able to provide). These colleges are lending their prestige and using their endowments to expand opportunity — providing credentials to those who wouldn’t historically have had access to them. Harvard’s Asian quota and other schools’ discarding of alumni “preference” illustrate this trend. This raises the question whether alumni… Read more »

Rob
4 years ago

I’m a DePaul alum. I donated every year during their drives. But once they got involved with the state on the unnecessary stadium near McCormick Place I told them emphatically that I would never donate again. I was already on the fence about some of their other initiatives but being blatant bedfellows with the state was the last straw. Here’s hoping the trend continues until the schools return to their proper missions and values. But I’m not holding my breath.

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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