Have you ever wondered if there was a Pro Hama Columbia student sleeper ready for drums, pitch tents and smash windows after the attack on October 7th? Because the university consciously stacked classes full of activists.
Elite Colleges have long rocked the enormous pool of applicants for social justice warriors who are passionate about community work.
That admission strategy backfired spectacularly when children decided to turn their anger into the university itself in the name of Palestine. This has resulted in a loss of reputation and reduced federal budgets.
“Columbia essentially did this to themselves,” university admissions expert Christopher Lim told the Post. “Students involved in many social justice-type activities have been really sought after in Colombia in the past.”
Even in the Ivy League School application essay questions, their preferences for left-handed activists are clear.
One essay prompt asks students to discuss “points, perspectives, or living experiences.” [they] Learn and contribute from Colombia's diverse and supportive community. ”
Another question examines the “ability to overcome adversity” of future students and asks them to explain barriers and obstacles [they] I was faced. ”
Considering 36% of Colombian students, it's a bit rich It comes from family In the top 10% of incomes, 62% come from the top 20%, and 5% come from the bottom 20% to just 5%.
“I've said quite a bit that it's one of the five questions students should choose,” Lim said. Founder and CEO of Command Educationsaid. “I don't think that if you're wealthy and go to private schools, you can really answer this. Many of them don't have real adversity.”
Columbia's most North case studies are Keemani James, the camp fire brand that led a melodramatic press conference last spring on behalf of the school's pro-Palestinian Tent City.
James uses his/her/her pronouns and was interrupted after a video appeared during a disciplinary hearing with a university official saying “Zionists don't deserve to live.” However, his hated rhetoric barely emerged from blue.
James is already an outspoken activist for the Boston School Board, who is already a high school student. I told the committee “I hate white people too.” James was like that when he was a teenager. It has been featured by several local news outlets For his behaviourism, permanently Wear a Black Lives Matter shirt For photography.
“From my experience, the students at Cherry Pick in Columbia were really, really, really interested in social justice activities,” Lim said. “We thought they would add value to the community, but in reality it backfired completely.”
This is not limited to Colombia. When Stanford acknowledges a student whose essay consists of phrases written by #BlackLivesMatter 100 times, who can forget?
After going to Lawrenceville School, a New Jersey prep school and Ivy League factory, I saw how high school transformed into a “community activist.”
To celebrate my freshman year Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the school brought us in for a mandatory workshop. You can choose from topics like “Bruce Lee and Asian Masculinity,” “Daily Sexism,” “Unpacking White Privilege,” and “Black Yes,” sessions on Black Liberation Theology.
Students who paid $80,000 tuition fees can also participate in the “poverty simulation.”
When Donald Trump was elected in 2016, the school made it possible for us all to access the bus to protest in Washington, D.C. No such transport is provided to Trump rally.
Many Colombian students come from similar private schools that instill the same message. Become a social justice activist as soon as possible to make yourself stand out.
Avi Friedman, a Colombian professor whose anti-Semitism has resigned Avi Friedman, spoke about the post of protest last spring.
He recalls asking students at the camp why she was there.
“She said, 'We have space for Gaza,'” Friedman recalled. “What the hell is that?”
He's right. These may be the best and brightest Ivy League students in our county, but they are also confused agitators working on a sense of meaning. It was during a high time when Columbia learned that lesson as they derailed for the second year in a row.
Recognizing qualified children who believe they have all the solutions to social illnesses by the age of 17 calls for trouble.

