Sunday, May 18, 2025

Sunday/Feeling the Difficulty of Faith

On this day:
1152
Henry II of England marries Eleanor of Aquitaine.
1593
Playwright Thomas Kyd’s accusations of heresy lead to an arrest warrant for Christopher Marlowe
1860
Abraham Lincoln wins the Republican Party presidential nomination over William H. Seward, who later becomes the United States Secretary of State.
1896
The United States Supreme Court rules in Plessy v. Ferguson that the “separate but equal” doctrine is constitutional.
1980
1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens: Mount St. Helens erupts in Washington, United States, killing 57 people and causing $3 billion in damage.


***

“A bird with a 10-gram brain is doing pretty much the same as a chimp with a 400-gram brain. How is it possible?”--Onur Güntürkün, who studies brain structures at Ruhr University Bochum in Germany.

***

InventWood makes a carbon-based material that has 50% more tensile strength than steel with a strength-to-weight ratio that’s 10 times better, the company said. It’s also Class A fire rated, or highly resistant to flame, and resistant to rot and pests. With some polymer impregnated, it can be stabilized for outdoor use like siding, decking, or roofing. InventWood’s first products will be facade materials for commercial and high-end residential buildings.

Compressing the material also concentrates the colors. You end up with something that looks like rich, tropical hardwoods.

***


Sunday/Feeling the Difficulty of Faith

“If there is a single painter with whom the new millennium has identified, it is without a doubt Caravaggio,” begins the catalogue for Caravaggio 2025, an extraordinary exhibition of twenty-four of the artist’s works, gathered at Rome’s Palazzo Barberini from museums and private collections across the world. The crowds are big.

This hasn’t always been the case. After falling into obscurity for several centuries, Caravaggio’s (1571-1610) star began to rise again in 1951 thanks to a similar exhibition organized in Milan by the great art historian Roberto Longhi.

The painter’s life fits the post-Byronic template for a tragic artist –- salacious liaisons, murder, exile, and an untimely death on the unforgiving (but romantic) Italian coast. Romanticism put a premium on artistic self-expression, and Caravaggio’s work was undeniably original because of the inner tumult that gushes from his figures. Those figures are not always conventionally beautiful, but they are compelling.

Yet these considerations don’t quite explain Caravaggio’s magnetic draw. Perhaps above all, Caravaggio was a great religious painter; something about his style resonates with the spiritual aspirations and shortcomings of our age. His works on secular themes are clever, but don’t convey the power of his later religious works. And none of those works are quite so powerful as the Flagellation, Supper at Emmaus, and Ecce Homo with Jesus Christ at their center. One feels a yearning for redemption in the darkness of the artist’s life.

Caravaggio biographer Andrew Graham-Dixon locates the roots of Caravaggio’s style in the reforms of Milan’s great archbishop St. Charles Borromeo (1538-1584). Borromeo was the dominant cultural and religious figure in Caravaggio’s native Lombardy at the time of the artist’s birth. Guided by the Council of Trent’s emphasis on the sacraments and the imaginative prayer of St. Ignatius Loyola, Borromeo favored an intense, dramatic, devotional style Graham-Dixon describes as “populist.”

These characteristics, alongside Borromeo’s awareness of the darkness that original sin casts over our existence, are distilled in Caravaggio’s mature work. In the Flagellation or the Conversion of St. Paul or St. Francis contemplating death, one feels no scholastic abstraction, but salvation worked out achingly in wounded flesh.

Another art historian, Alessandro Zuccari, points out that all available evidence indicates that Caravaggio’s religious beliefs were conventionally Catholic. He confessed and received Communion at Easter and participated in forty-hours Eucharistic devotions. The fiery temper that caused the artist so much grief is evidence of concupiscence, not heterodoxy.
St. Francis in Ecstasy by Caravaggio, c. 1595 [in the permanent collection of the Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut]


Exiled from Rome after killing a man in a duel, Caravaggio spent the rest of his life seeking papal forgiveness instead of fortune in the Protestant principalities of northern Europe. When his self-portrait appears in scriptural scenes, it has a haggard, yearning look. But feeling the difficulty of faith is not the same thing as unbelief. And that’s, I suspect, why the artist’s work so resonates today.

In Michelangelo’s muscular figures, we witness the robust marriage of faith and Renaissance humanism. The inky darkness of Caravaggio’s scenes anticipates an age when faith no longer feels so inevitable. At Caravaggio 2025, I was struck by the arrangement of St. Francis in Ecstasy – the saint, reclining in soft angelic arms, fills one side of the painting, but its center is all shadow. If you look closely, you can make out figures in the distance, but just barely.

Other works also seem sketched at the border between faith and unbelief. In Caravaggio’s two versions of the Supper at Emmaus, the disciples’ bodies reel with the shock of recognizing the risen Lord, but in both cases, a weary innkeeper looks on with faint irritation, as if hoping they’d just place their order and finish their meal. Not all have eyes to see.

The Conversion of St. Paul, across town in the Church of Santa Maria del Popolo, forces viewers to question their own vision. In it, the young Saul, on the ground with outstretched arms, has literally been floored by a vision of Christ, but Caravaggio doesn’t paint that vision. All the viewer sees is the rear end of Saul’s horse. Like an examination of conscience that stings, the painting asks, “Do you have eyes to see?”

An earlier version, on loan to Caravaggio 2025 from a private collection, is a less inventive (and busier) composition but poses a similarly uncomfortable challenge. The figure of Jesus, attended by a cherub, is visible in the sky and Saul is on the ground again, covering his eyes. His attendant, however, is upright and armed with shield and spear, which he aims at Christ, as if to fight him off. Not everyone welcomes the Lord’s appearance.--from Fr. Anthony R. Lusvardi, S.J. in Catholic Thing

Saturday, May 17, 2025

SatStats


On this day:
1973
Watergate scandal: Televised hearings begin in the United States Senate.
1974
Dublin and Monaghan bombings: Thirty-three civilians are killed when the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) explodes car bombs in Dublin and Monaghan, Republic of Ireland.
1974
Police in Los Angeles, California, raid the Symbionese Liberation Army’s headquarters, killing six members, including Camilla Hall.
1990
The General Assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) eliminates homosexuality from the list of psychiatric diseases.


***

Are there topics or subjects in academic study dangerous to young minds? 
Is this the basis of The Index?
Do we shield people from unpleasant observations for what is perceived as the Common Good?

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SatStats

The average age of a homebuyer has climbed to 56, almost double what it was 40 years ago.

***

Not long ago, anyone could comb through a wide range of official data from China. Then it started to disappear.

Land sales measures, foreign investment data and unemployment indicators have gone dark in recent years. Data on cremations and a business confidence index have been cut off. Even official soy sauce production reports are gone.

In all, Chinese officials have stopped publishing hundreds of data points once used by researchers and investors, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis.

In most cases, Chinese authorities haven’t given any reason for ending or withholding data. But the missing numbers have come as the world’s second biggest economy has stumbled under the weight of excessive debt, a crumbling real-estate market and other troubles—spurring heavy-handed efforts by authorities to control the narrative.

***

43% of young people currently carry student debt, compared with 28% in 1993.

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A majority of Britons may now consider themselves neurodivergent, meaning they have a condition such as autism, dyslexia or dyspraxia, according to a leading psychologist.

***

Jensen: “First thing to understand: 50% of the world’s AI researchers are Chinese.”

***

Between 2014 and 2021, prices paid for prescription drugs by Medicare Part D, after accounting for generic substitutions, increased by just 13 percent—less than the rate of inflation over that period. Drug spending takes up only 12 percent of total health-care payments in the U.S., and American consumers spend only 0.4 percent of their total consumption on out-of-pocket prescription drug costs. Both these figures are far less than the OECD average. Meanwhile, the cost of hospital services rose 30 percent between 2014 and 2021.

***

Korea is facing a surge in suicides among men in their 30s to 50s, driven by worsening economic hardship, social isolation and high-profile celebrity deaths, highlighting urgent calls for stronger national suicide prevention measures.

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Women in midlife have upped their alcohol consumption in recent decades, as their lifestyles have changed. Doctors are now witnessing more hospitalizations of women for liver disease, and some researchers suspect alcohol consumption is contributing to rising rates of breast cancer. Alcohol-related deaths in women are increasing at a faster clip than in men, data show.

***

Nielsen data show that traditional TV accounted for less than half of all US viewing time for the first time ever. But the shows most people are watching on services like Netflix and Disney+ are the ones made for traditional TV.

Cable and broadcast TV represented 29.6% and 20% of total US viewing time, respectively, while streaming services accounted for roughly 40%. The remaining piece of the pie was taken up by DVDs, video-on-demand, and gaming.

***

Encouragingly for gas-powered cars, the 2022 model year saw the largest single-year improvement in CO2 emission rates and fuel economy in nine years. All while horsepower keeps going up.

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The S&P 500 index is meant to represent 500 companies. It has become so concentrated due to the rise of Mag 7 stocks that its effective diversification is less than 60 stocks.

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The risk of a fatality from commercial air travel was 1 per every 13.7 million passenger boardings globally in the 2018-2022 period — a significant improvement from 1 per 7.9 million boardings in 2008-2017 and a far cry from the 1 per every 350,000 boardings that occurred in 1968-1977, an MIT study finds.

Friday, May 16, 2025

Gifts

On this day:
1868
President Andrew Johnson is acquitted in his impeachment trial by one vote in the United States Senate
1918
The Sedition Act of 1918 is passed by the U.S. Congress, making criticism of the government an imprisonable offense.
1969
Venera program: Venera 5, a Soviet spaceprobe, lands on Venus.
2005
Kuwait permits women’s suffrage in a 35-23 National Assembly vote.

***

A podcaster described Psul Skenes as "a chandelier in a haunted house."

***

City Journal reports on
"a trove of internal documents that reveal Harvard’s racial favoritism in faculty and administrative hiring." More than “unconscious bias” training, they are vectors for systematic discrimination against disfavored groups: namely, white men. As one Harvard researcher said, “endless evidence” suggests that the university continues to discriminate against the supposed oppressor class in hiring and promotions.

***



Gifts

There is debate over Qatar's offer of a plane gift to Trump. Some claim concerns over possible hidden, nefarious motives despite its blatant transparency. Democrats raise their heads from the mire of their corruption and cry, "corruption!" This is especially interesting in light of the enormous financial gifts the Middle East has given American Universities, which no one seems to object to.

A question.

Trump is trying to cobble together a Persian rug of Middle East leaders in hopes of preempting more conflict or, if Iran is a plus one to the party, World War III. Qatar is a principal in that effort.

So, what, in Middle Eastern culture, are the implications of refusing a gift?

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Tick Tock

On this day:
1536
Anne Boleyn, Queen of England, stands trial in London on charges of treason, adultery and incest. She is condemned to death by a specially-selected jury.
1567
Mary, Queen of Scots, marries James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, her third husband.
1648
The Treaty of Westphalia signed.
1776
American Revolution: the Virginia Convention instructs its Continental Congress delegation to propose a resolution of independence from Great Britain, paving the way for the United States Declaration of Independence.
1864
American Civil War: Battle of New Market, Virginia – students from the Virginia Military Institute fight alongside the Confederate Army to force Union General Franz Sigel out of the Shenandoah Valley.
1891
Pope Leo XIII defends workers’ rights and property rights in the encyclical Rerum Novarum, the beginning of modern Catholic social teaching.
1963
Project Mercury: The launch of the final Mercury mission, Mercury-Atlas 9 with astronaut L. Gordon Cooper on board. He becomes the first American to spend more than a day in space.

***

Camp Century, a U.S. military base built under Greenland’s ice during the Cold War, was part of an ambitious and clandestine Pentagon plan for a network of nuclear-missile launch sites beneath the Arctic ice. It was partially constructed in 1959, abandoned in 1967, and is now buried under at least 100 feet of ice.

***

Pete Rose was posthumously removed from the Major League’s banned list yesterday. An Index for people.


***

A series of studies published in Science in February 2025 provides the best evidence yet that birds and mammals did not inherit the neural pathways that generate intelligence from a common ancestor, but rather evolved them independently. This suggests that vertebrate intelligence arose not once, but multiple times. Still, their neural complexity didn’t evolve in wildly different directions: Avian and mammalian brains display surprisingly similar circuits, the studies found.



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Tick Tock

In the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, TikTok will challenge the law banning it from U.S. app stores. TikTok argues in its brief that the law demands a divestiture (from Chinese ownership) that is technologically and commercially impossible — and unprecedented: “Never before has Congress expressly singled out and shut down a specific speech forum. Never before has Congress silenced so much speech in a single act.” In 2023, TikTok says, U.S. users uploaded more than 5.5 billion videos were viewed worldwide more than 13 trillion times. TikTok argues that the ban violates the First Amendment’s free speech guarantee and the guarantee of equal protection under the laws.

Granted, any company beholden to China’s Leninist party-state will do what the Communist Party dictates. But labeling speech (often accurately, regarding TikTok) as foreign propaganda does not license government interference with it. In 1965, the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a law that burdened citizens’ “right to receive” communist propaganda mailed from a foreign adversary.

…..

The TikTok law asks us to trust the government that evidently thinks we cannot be trusted to cope with propaganda. Trust the government that tried to suppress as misinformation true criticisms of the government’s pandemic policies? The government, which in 12 months extending into this election year, overstated by 818,000 the number of jobs created during the Biden administration?--from wsj

The great problem with democracy is that it burdens the citizen with decisions. And those decisions will be influenced by their education and common sense. Free societies will always be faced with such problems that are not just homicidal, they are suicidal. The choice is obvious. 
The American Revolution changed the world. But it came very late to the human social table, so it must not be a no-brainer. It is through education that the government should arm its citizenry. If it must protect them through control of its intellectual atmosphere, it is too late.

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

From Many, One

On this day:
1264
Battle of Lewes: Henry III of England is captured and forced to sign the Mise of Lewes, making Simon de Montfort the de facto ruler of England
1607
Jamestown, Virginia is settled as an English colony.
1787
In Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, delegates convene a Constitutional Convention to write a new Constitution for the United States; George Washington presides.
1796
Edward Jenner administers the first smallpox vaccination.
1804
The Lewis and Clark Expedition departs from Camp Dubois and begins its historic journey by traveling up the Missouri River.
1948
Israel is declared to be an independent state and a provisional government is established. Immediately after the declaration, Israel is attacked by the neighboring Arab states, triggering the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

***

“Maybe children will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls, you know, and maybe the two dolls will cost a couple of bucks more than they would normally. --trump
If this sounds like moralistically rallying the starving troops, it should;
the classic socialist response to shortages of their own device.

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Research-intensive pharmaceutical companies have also warned that low prices paid by European health systems are driving new drug discovery efforts to the US and China.

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From Many, One

Edan Alexander was released by Hamas, a year and a half after being kidnapped. He is a man with dual citizenship, American and Israeli.

Dual citizenship is a curiosity. Who--or what--is his kidnapping aimed at? Who negotiates? Importantly, who retaliates? And is there something bigger here?

The essential problem is, what does citizenship mean? Is it geographic? Just an opportunity for a low-profile passport? A statement of solidarity with family history? Does it carry any obligation, like taxation or military service?

Is there a country identity? Could there be an inconsistency between the countries you have joined? Could you have citizenship in the U.S. and in Russia? America and Iran? Are the philosophies of some different countries innocuous, or are others incompatible?

Citizenship defines both the citizen and the state. There is an element of Lavoisier in France, of the U.S. in the Rosenbergs. In a serious country, citizenship is more than a colorful luggage sticker, it is a declaration, a statement of principle. Some are historic. An Italian declares for an ancient people with a history of evangelical law and a sacred, genius artistic vision. The British declare for struggling, tortured individualism torn from aristocratic hierarchy and mercantilism. The Russians, a grim materialistic autocracy salted with astonishing literary protest. Some, like Germany and the religious states, are autocratic, nationalistic, and bigoted. Others are ill-defined or intensely parochial. 

But all nations and their citizens are amalgams, alloys, each taking and giving, one to the other. America 250 years ago initiated a New Age, an age of dignity--and responsibility--of the individual. Each citizen is part of that astonishing, revolutionary vision. It is hard to understand how such a concept could be diluted by dual citizenship, or why anyone would suggest it.

Can you imagine men or women of the Revolution requesting dual citizenship with Great Britain after the war?


Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Enlightenment/Romantic

On this day:
1515
Mary Tudor, Queen of France, and Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk are officially married at Greenwich.
1568
Battle of Langside: The forces of Mary, Queen of Scots, are defeated by a confederacy of Scottish Protestants under James Stewart, Earl of Moray, her half-brother.
1865
American Civil War: Battle of Palmito Ranch – in far south Texas, more than a month after Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s surrender, the last land battle of the Civil War ends with a Confederate victory.
1940
World War II: Germany’s conquest of France begins as the German army crosses the Meuse. Winston Churchill makes his “blood, toil, tears, and sweat” speech to the House of Commons.
1943
World War II: German Afrika Korps and Italian troops in North Africa surrender to Allied forces.
1948
1948 Arab-Israeli War: The Kfar Etzion massacre is committed by Arab irregulars, the day before the declaration of independence of the state of Israel on May 14.
1960
Hundreds of University of California, Berkeley students congregate for the first day of protest against a visit by the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Thirty-one students are arrested, and the Free Speech Movement is born.

***

The United States currently owns nearly 70 percent of the land in the State of Utah. The relative percentage of federal lands in Eastern states is trivial by comparison where the federal government owns less than 1 percent of the land in Connecticut, New York, and Rhode Island, and less than 3 percent of the land in Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

About half of the federal land in Utah has been designated as National Parks, National Forests, National Conservation Areas, and the like, or is being used in service of one of the federal government’s enumerated powers—e.g., as a federal military installation, courthouse, office building, or the like. But the rest of the federal land in Utah—about 34% of the State’s territory—is “unappropriated” land that the United States is simply holding, without formally reserving it for any designated purpose.--Utah website

***

Moderna and pharma giant Merck are developing an mRNA-based cancer vaccine, mRNA-4157 (V940), for people who’ve had high-risk melanomas removed.
The results have been impressive.
This targeted platform therapy is now being applied to other malignancies.

***




Enlightenment/Romantic

A quick summary of the Enlightenment/Romantic conflict:

For a time, the rationality of the Enlightenment seemed to hail the final triumph of human reason. Soon, the laws that operated behind the universe would all be known, and humankind would be able to create the future it wanted. At least that is how it seemed for a while.

If Copernicus is the most easily identifiable figure to mark the start of the Enlightenment, then the German philosopher Immanuel Kant can be most readily recognized as signaling the beginning of the Romantic Revolution. Romanticism emerged from a sense of disillusionment with the Enlightenment.

The Enlightenment thinkers, pursuing reason, had backed themselves into a corner. The philosopher David Hume took reason to its ultimate skeptical end. Hume showed that ultimately we can know nothing. We have only the perceptions of the senses, and there is no way to know if those perceptions correspond to any outside world, whether it be the physical world of time and space or any transcendent realm of spirit. In fact, there was no way to know if there was any reality outside of our sense perceptions at all. Hume fell into such despair over this profoundly skeptical trap that he was known to frequent public backgammon games to take his mind off humanity's predicament.

A second problem of the Enlightenment was the French Revolution disaster. What started as a revolt against tyranny with the aim to put in place a government created according to the highest principles of enlightened thought turned into a blood bath, demonstrating the lowest side of human character. What did it mean? What had gone wrong?

The Romantic thinkers began to feel that the Enlightenment was suffocating them and squeezing the spirit, passion, and morality out of existence. Kant, in response, created a new vision of reality. He rejected the universe of discoverable universal laws and instead envisioned a growing universe created in part by human choices and human will.

The Enlightenment saw a universe that was mechanical and run by fixed laws. The Romantics saw an organic universe, growing with acts of will. Human will and freedom were sacred, whereas the Enlightenment centered on human reason and rationality.

The Romantics were skeptical of science. In Frankenstein, the great Romantic novel by Mary Shelly, a scientist creates life only to discover that his creation is beyond his control and destroys him and those around him. The Romantics felt that the Enlightenment notion that the universe was knowable and controllable was naive. The universe was infinite, mysterious, and ultimately unknowable. Yet we are a part of it, and therefore, if we give ourselves to our deepest yearnings, we will be part of the creative part of the universe. For the Romantics, the highest human value was not rationality, but authenticity, moral integrity, and passion. The Romantics were the first to value these things for their own sake, regardless of where they were aimed. A Christian in the Middle Ages would never admire the zeal a Pagan demonstrated for a heathen faith. The Christian would simply see the zealous Pagan as more dangerous. The Enlightened thinker didn’t admire the passion of the monk’s love of God, instead, the monk seemed all the more foolish. The Romantic admires even the passion of her enemies. To die for one's ideals is the highest good, no matter what the ideal. 
Robert E. Lee? A loyal Buchenwald guard?

If the Enlightenment thinkers had felt shackled by the superstition of the Middle Ages, the Romantic thinkers felt that the natural laws of the Enlightenment were a straitjacket. The Romantics loved to break rules, to snub laws, and live as utterly unconventionally as possible. They were unconventional in dress, in lifestyle, and in thinking. As poets, playwrights, and novelists, they broke literary styles, and their great musical composers, perhaps Beethoven, the greatest of all, were notorious for breaking musical convention.

In Germany, the writings of Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, and Goethe set the stage for a Romantic Revolution. This revolution would erupt in the English poets Byron, Shelly, Blake, Coleridge, and Wordsworth. All of these writers had a tremendous impact on the developing thought of America at the start of the 19th century and have become a deep part of the consciousness of America. The Transcendentalists of Concord represent the American Romantic Revolution. And they were reading all of the Romantic philosophy, literature, and poetry coming out of Europe. Can the American mind be understood without understanding Romanticism?-- from Carreira

Monday, May 12, 2025

Education and the Lack of It

So far this year, Fetterman has missed more votes than any other senator. According to GovTrack.us, he’s missed 174 of 920 roll call votes, or about 19 percent of them.

***


On May 5 of last season, Aaron Judge was mired in one of the worst slumps of his career, sparking panic in the Bronx. So when he stepped to the plate for the first time, he decided to try something different.
Up to that point, Judge had always used an open batting stance, which angled his left foot toward the third baseman. Against Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal that afternoon, Judge moved the placement of his front leg ever so slightly back toward the pitcher. He promptly blasted a home run into the right-center field bleachers, followed by a booming double a few innings later.
The change to Judge’s setup was almost imperceptible at first, but it had an unimaginable impact: In the year since, he has put together one of the greatest stretches of hitting that baseball has ever seen.--WSJ

***

Rack or Wrack?
A “rack” is a torture device, from its origin "to stretch." So, as a verb, it usually means “torture” or “cause distress.” However, as a noun, a rack can also be a frame used for storage (e.g., a “spice rack,” restraining the spice but causing it no pain).
“Wrack” is an old word meaning “wreck.” It was used to describe a shipwreck and is associated with destruction.
Most of the time, “rack” will be correct. However, “wrack” is now widely accepted as a variant spelling when used as a verb.
Generally, “wrack” is used in phrases like “wrack and ruin” and “storm-wracked.” The word “rack,” meanwhile, appears in terms like “nerve-racking” or "racked with pain."

***

Education and the Lack of It

Universities screen teachers through ideological matrices, censor opinions within and outside the classroom, and permit violent and destructive acts on campus aimed at university students, without discipline or consequence.

In the face of such dangerous irresponsibility, should the university's freedom be compromised by the government's duty to protect its citizens and encourage the university's neutral and academic environment?

It may be the hallmark question of our time. The educational system creates the nation's future thinking and is frequently biased and often simply stupid. In the early years, it fails to develop a proper understanding of the nation's creation and its distinctive break with history. It also accepts fads as gospel--see transgender classes and modern reading teaching techniques--and promulgates provably untrue concepts that are anathema to the nation's philosophy and destructive to its nature--see the laughable 1619 Project.

The university has become the barricade of this propaganda and error. And, shortsightedly, the society sees this as a problem for the university and not the larger social problem it is. This country is not bound together by race or genes or history; it is a society maintained by an agreement among men, that all men hold certain rights in common that predate and preempt law. All of these strange educational deviations are guerrilla raids upon that belief.

What should we do? A real problem because, while the educational system is neither accurate nor socially responsible, both the correcting mechanisms--the press, and the government--are worse. The government has already demonstrated its failure in the lower school system. And the press won the Pulitzer Prize for The 1619 Project. And many problems are imported by foreign students with foreign ideologies who simply don't know--or believe--the lay of the new land. 

I shudder at the notion of police on campus. But if the schools will not prosecute crimes like vandalism and assault on campus, maybe the government doing it would be a reasonable compromise. And perhaps an aggressive Civics program, grade school, high school, and university--mandatory and thoughtful--could offer a second opinion if not an antidote to the youthful confusion of the nature of this New Land.

You can be a good citizen without knowing how to read or write.