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The Fall of Harvard: How America’s Oldest University Became Its Most Expensive Liability – The American Spectator | USA News and PoliticsThe American Spectator

For well over a century, Harvard was considered the crown jewel of American education. Presidents came from its halls, and Nobel laureates filled its lecture rooms. It was the kind of place that turned ambition into achievement and ambition into legacy. It symbolized something enduring: excellence, discipline, and elite leadership. The very name carried an air of unimpeachable credibility.

Those days are gone. Long gone.

What was once a training ground for future statesmen and scientists has become a bloated, self-satisfied bureaucracy. Harvard’s leaders now prioritize activism over academics, show greater loyalty to foreign interests than their own government, and are more focused on preserving a brand than protecting the country that created it.

If in doubt, consider Harvard’s outright defiance of the Trump administration’s call to rein in campus activism, antisemitism, and ideological extremism. The response from the administration was swift: a freeze on more than $2.2 billion in federal grants and $60 million in contracts. If Harvard doesn’t comply, nearly $9 billion could be on the line. (RELATED: The Appalling Tunnels Beneath Our Universities)

To be clear, this isn’t about banning speech. It’s about stopping publicly funded institutions from becoming playgrounds for ideologues and safe havens for extremism. But Harvard doesn’t see it that way. In a performative statement, President Alan Garber waxed lyrical about “groundbreaking innovations” and “the health and well-being of millions.” He framed federal oversight as an existential threat to progress. In reality, it’s the only thing keeping elite institutions honest. Dr. Graber is fully aware of this, of course, but he won’t admit it. (RELATED: Higher Education’s 7 Deadly Sins)

What Harvard’s headmaster failed to mention is that his university continues to accept huge amounts of money from hostile foreign powers — most notably, China.

The Harvard China Fund, the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, and the Harvard-Yenching Institute are all deeply entangled with China’s academic and political machinery. Fudan University, one of Harvard’s long-standing partners, literally rewrote its charter to prioritize Communist Party loyalty. To be clear, this isn’t speculation; it’s documented policy. Harvard knows this, and Dr. Graber knows this, but the unhealthy relationship continues anyway. That decision is a middle finger to America. When a university willingly partners with institutions openly aligned with authoritarian governance, while resisting oversight from its own democratic government, it reveals a set of values completely out of step with national interests.

Sadly, this is a pattern that extends far beyond Harvard. According to a recent report by Americans for Public Trust (APT), a nonpartisan watchdog group that investigates how money and influence shape public institutions, U.S. universities have quietly raked in over $60 billion in foreign gifts and contracts in just the past few years. That’s a lot of money. In fact, one could, and possibly should, call it a pipeline. Nearly $20 billion of that money went straight into the vaults of elite institutions like Yale, Stanford, MIT, and yes, Harvard. Even more troubling, close to $800 million came directly from countries openly hostile to the United States, including Russia, Venezuela, Qatar, and, of course, China.

Some call this philanthropy. Other people, perhaps a bit more plugged into reality, would call it infiltration. It’s soft-power warfare in its purest form. These foreign “donations” don’t come for free; they come with numerous strings. The money pouring in, greenlit by authoritarian regimes, comes with influence, access, and leverage. Is it really any wonder, then, that so many elite universities now seem utterly out of sync with American values? They’re not being shaped by the country they serve. They’re being shaped by the powers that don’t. (RELATED: Is China Weaponizing Christianity to Divide America?)

This is why Harvard’s betrayal matters most.

If America is the shining city on a hill, Harvard was meant to be its citadel, the pinnacle of its intellectual promise. It was supposed to train the next generation of American leaders, not roll out the red carpet for adversaries seeking to harm the country from within. While Harvard parades itself as the gatekeeper of progress, it’s quietly mortgaging its soul to the highest bidder, even if that bidder wants to undercut American sovereignty and pilfer advanced research with potential military applications.

The real threat isn’t that Harvard might lose funding. The real threat is that the American people keep pretending it still deserves it. This isn’t about punishing one school. It’s about ending a culture of entitlement, a toxic belief that some institutions are simply too historic, too well-connected, or too smug to be held accountable. They’re not. And they shouldn’t be.

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