Gay appearing before Congress last month. Kevin Dietsch/Getty
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The âintellectual rotâ poisoning US universities |
The resignation of Harvard President Claudine Gay should not come as a surprise, says Bret Stephens in The New York Times. The universityâs first black leader had been on borrowed time since she and other college bosses, in the wake of the October 7 attack on Israel, said that calling for genocide against Jews wasnât necessarily against campus rules. Furious donors and activists quickly dug up dozens of examples of alleged plagiarism in Gayâs academic work, and this week she finally fell on her sword. The real question is âwhy she was brought on in the first placeâ. How did someone with a scholarly record as thin as hers â âshe has not written a single book, has published only 11 journal articles in the past 26 years, and made no seminal contributions to her fieldâ â reach the pinnacle of American academia?
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The sad truth is that the old âexcellence modelâ that prized scholarship has been replaced by a âsocial justice modelâ centred on âdiversity, equity and inclusionâ. Thereâs nothing wrong with allowing these things to be a consideration in student admissions and faculty appointments. The problem is that universities âturned an allowance into a requirementâ. As a result, when someone like Gay is appointed to top positions, thereâs a widespread assumption that sheâs a âpolitical symbolâ rather than just the best candidate for the job. This is really damaging. The number of Americans who express âhigh confidenceâ in higher education fell from 57% in 2015 to 36% last year. This âintellectual rotâ wonât stop spreading until universities return to the idea that their central purpose is to âidentify and nurture and liberate the best mindsâ, not to engineer social utopias.
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đđ¤ Many of Gayâs defenders have portrayed her as a martyr for oppressed minorities, says Tyler Austin Harper in The Atlantic. Yet she was born into a family that runs a Haitian concrete empire, and went to âAmericaâs most prestigious boarding schoolâ. This was an âelite-born president of an elite universityâ.
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Hero
A food delivery driver in India who dropped his orders off by horse to avoid long queues for petrol. After a truckersâ strike resulted in fuel shortages, the unnamed equestrian was pictured trotting through the busy streets of Hyderabad carrying the distinctive red bag of Zomato, Indiaâs equivalent of Deliveroo. |
Villains
The ânitwitsâ who removed road signs for Slag Lane in Wiltshire because they considered it âinappropriateâ, says Michael Deacon in The Daily Telegraph. The road has ânothing to do with female promiscuityâ â it was named after the slag piles at the nearby Westbury iron works. Besides, we Britons should take pride in our âglobally unrivalledâ collection of rude-sounding street names, from Spanker Lane in Derbyshire to Hardon Road in Wolverhampton and Crotch Crescent in Oxford.
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Hero
Andrew Lloyd Webberâs poltergeist, for being so tidy. Asked in a recent interview about ghosts, the composer said he once had a paranormal housemate who defied the stereotype of noisy, bothersome spirits. âIt would do things like take theatre scripts and put them in a neat pile in some obscure room,â he recalled. âIn the end we had to get a priest to come and bless it, and it left.â |
Hero An 11-year-old girl in Aberdeen who reunited a handbag with its owner 30 years after it was stolen and dumped in the River Don. Maisie Coutts stumbled upon the accessory, which contained coins, pens, lipstick and long-expired credit cards, on a walk with her parents. After some online sleuthing, she returned the bag to 81-year-old Audrey Hay. âItâs amazing,â Hay tells BBC News. âItâs the only bag I have lost.â |
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THE TREE HOUSE This beautifully crafted four-bedroom home blends into the woodland of the North Foreland Estate in Broadstairs. Raised on stilts with floor-to-ceiling windows throughout, the houseâs natural feel is accentuated by a trellis wrapping around the exterior for climbing plants. Other features include a modern kitchen with custom-made birch units, a bespoke steel staircase and an extensive garden. Broadstairs station is a six-minute drive, with trains to London in 80 minutes. ÂŁ1.5m.
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Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) |
Our economyâs stronger than the doomsters think |
Much of the commentary on the UK economy continues to be âvery downbeatâ, says Jeremy Warner in The Daily Telegraph. But this âunrelenting gloomâ overlooks two rather important points: government tax receipts remain strong and businesses are still hiring. Neither would be happening if companies thought a recession was imminent; instead, they reflect a confidence that âthings will soon be improvingâ. And rightly so. Interest rate cuts by the Bank of England later in the year look a âracing certaintyâ. Inflation is easing. Wage increases are continuing to outstrip price rises. Things just arenât as bad as the media doomsters make out.
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Itâs a similar story across much of the West. Last year produced one economic problem after another: stalemate in Ukraine, renewed war in the Middle East, a sluggish Chinese economy. Yet with the notable exception of Germany, high-income countries have emerged from all this âbattered but still afloatâ. Energy prices have abated; the promise of AI has âbreathed new life into a previously becalmed tech sectorâ. The US economy is âpositively boomingâ. If anything, the lesson from last year is a heartening one: big economies can cope with âalmost anything that can be thrown at themâ.
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Probably gearing up for a rager: Frederik with his wife Mary on his 50th birthday. Patrick van Katwijk/Getty |
Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, who will become king on 14 January, used to be known as the âparty princeâ for his love of âfast cars and fast livingâ, says the Evening Standard. A spell in the Danish navyâs special forces unit is believed to have brought out his âsporting sideâ: the 55-year-old has completed an Iron Man triathlon and run marathons in Copenhagen, New York and Paris. But he didnât completely abandon his fun-loving ways. In 2007, he made a surprise appearance at a friendâs rock concert, âtreating the crowd to a harmonica soloâ. In 2014, he was spotted at the Burning Man festival dressed in âa flower-embroidered kilt, a gold waistcoat, a necklace and a pair of motorcycle gogglesâ â and insisted on everyone calling him Hamlet. Not for nothing do Danes see Frederik as the âRock ânâ Roll Kingâ.
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đ¸đ When Frederikâs mother, Queen Margarethe, steps down next Sunday, there wonât be a reigning queen anywhere in the world. |
Yanis Varoufakis. Leonardo Cendamo/Getty |
Nato is hardly a club of saints |
During my childhood, Greece was ruled by a âbrutishâ military junta, says former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis in UnHerd. In 1971, when I was 10, I visited my uncle in a hotel that had been converted into a âholding cell for VIP dissidentsâ. Before stepping inside, my mother âput her arm around me and whispered words of courage in my earâ. Seeing her brotherâs tortured face illustrated, even to a child, what kind of regime we were living under. I remember âbe-medalled army officers barking orders at their viewersâ on the television news; I remember listening to BBC radio broadcasts under a blanket, to prevent neighbours overhearing and informing on us.
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It may surprise younger readers to know that all this took place despite Greece being part of Nato. And we werenât the only members of the much-feted security alliance living under autocratic rule: the Spanish and Portuguese were in the same boat; Turkey, another member, has long flirted with authoritarianism. Yet there remains the perception that Nato is more or less synonymous with liberal democracy, and that all right-thinking governments â Kyiv, in particular â should aspire to membership. Thatâs tosh. In reality, Nato has always put Americaâs interests above high-minded ideals â the junta that tortured my uncle took power in a CIA-backed coup. I once asked a former Nato bigwig â an American â what he thought its purpose was. âFirst, to keep us in Europe,â he said. âSecond, to keep the Russians out. Third, to keep Germany down.â Iâve never heard a more accurate description.
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Nick Frost and Simon Pegg hard at work in Hot Fuzz (2007) |
Perhaps I should have been a burglar |
Tucked away between Christmas and New Year, says Douglas Murray in The Spectator, was some âhappy new guidanceâ from the National Police Chiefâs Council. Police officers, said the new advice, âought to try to go to properties that have been burgledâ. Even better, they should try to do so âwithin an hour of the burglary being reportedâ. After all, if you turn up at a burgled house soon enough, you might be able to log evidence while the crime scene is still fresh, âor even â imagine â find a burglarâ. With more than 1,000 break-ins a day in this country, you might wonder why such advice had to be given in the first place. But in England and Wales, three-quarters of burglaries result in no suspect being identified, and just 4% end up with someone being charged.
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So what are the police up to? Well, if you fly into Heathrow Terminal 5, you might notice a ârather surprising signâ theyâve put up, asking anyone who has witnessed âterrorism, war crimes or crimes against humanityâ in Israel or Gaza to report it to the UK police. What officers plan on doing about these crimes, which took place thousands of miles from their jurisdiction, is anyoneâs guess. But all this has made me wonder âwhy I chose to make a living as a writerâ. If I had decided instead to go into burglary, the odds would be âoverwhelmingly on my sideâ. I could break into someoneâs house and make off with their best cutlery, with a 96% chance of not being caught â far easier than a normal dayâs work. âAnd I could do with some new cutlery.â
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âThe only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.â
JK Galbraith |
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Thatâs it. Youâre done. |
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