War on Universities, Lawyers & Expertise

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Imagine, even 15 or 20 years ago a cabinet secretary (backed by the POTUS) sending a letter like this to one of our top universities. The resentment and bile just flow from that letter like a river. This has nothing - nada - to do with the spurious claims of "ugly racism" and "hate speech" and other bullshit excuses. This is an assault on modern universities for being racially and culturally diverse (and for promoting diversity) and for being mostly liberal politically.

At any rate, McMahon (the former CEO of a professional wrestling organization) is doing nothing but trolling the libs yet again, as do so many of Trump's appointees this time around. I'm sure this will be challenged in the courts and Trump 2.0 will likely lose. But it's still just disgusting and angering to see an attack on diversity being disguised under the guise of fighting "racism" and "hate".
 
This is the way this is being portrayed on the right....

In order to receive federal money, you can't be in violation of the Civil Rights Act. If a university was as complicit in allowing anti-black sentiment as Harvard has been in anti-Jew sentiment, it seems likely that opinions would be different.

Nobody is saying Harvard, or any other private university, can't allow any speech they'd like. They just can't do it and get taxpayer money.
 


Nobody is crying for Cadwalader but that doesn’t make it right.

“… Cadwalader already was facing troubles, including imminent attorney departures, before its April 11 deal with the White House in which it avoided a punitive executive order by pledging at least $100 million of pro bono work to support the president’s priorities. The agreement now is pushing more lawyers to leave, people familiar with the matter said, spurred by anger that the firm capitulated to Trump instead of fighting back against an administration campaign that many in the industry believe to be unconstitutional.

… The firm, founded in 1792, made a record $638 million in revenue last year. A firm spokesman said 2025 is on track to be even stronger than the previous year and that Cadwalader has added five new partners in recent months. “Departures can be tough,” he said. But he added, “Some attrition is normal and expected; it is part of the typical rhythm of a successful firm.”

Still, Cadwalader has been facing setbacks for months. Separate from the Trump headaches, it recently lost a real estate partner who had been there for two decades. She took other lawyers and a big book of business with her in a move widely seen as a blow to the firm.

… Trump’s deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, was a Cadwalader partner, but left the firm when it refused to represent Trump in a New York criminal trial. Cadwalader, which has about 400 lawyers, was smaller in size than some other targeted firms, which gave it less of a buffer to withstand any loss of business from being named in a White House order. …”
 
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