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🔥 Georgetown President Refuses to Explain What “Decolonization Is Not a Theory” Means Congressman Randy Fine asked a basic question: “What does decolonization is not just a theory mean to you—and to Georgetown?” Georgetown President Robert Groves, head of one of America’s top universities, had no answer. “I don’t...

13,397 次观看 • 11 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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🚨 MUST READ 🚨 ‼️ How Qatar Continues to Influence Hiring Decisions at American Universities In Violation Of The Trump Administration’s Negotiated Campus Settlements‼️ One of the most disturbing and under-reported stories this week that further exposes how much control Qatar has in our country and inside US Educational institutions is the fact that Georgetown University Law School Georgetown Law has hired Liz Magill, the former President of the University of Pennsylvania Penn, to be the Executive Vice President and Dean of Georgetown University Law Center, with her term set to begin on August 1, 2026. You’ll recall, Magill couldn't answer a basic question during a congressional hearing regarding whether or not calling for the genocide of the Jews is bullying. Magill resigned from her position at Penn in December 2023 following widespread criticism of her testimony before a congressional committee that was investigating antisemitism on college campuses. During the hearing, when asked whether calls for the genocide of Jews would violate university policy, Magill responded that it "depends on the context," a statement that drew significant backlash and contributed to her departure and resignation . Georgetown's interim president described Magill as bringing "a values-driven vision" aligned with the institution's Jesuit mission, including commitments to academic freedom and institutional independence. Here’s a reminder of how that Congressional hearing went down, with Congresswoman Elise Stefanik asking the questions during the hearing regarding Jew hate on the campuses of Ivy League universities: STEFANIK: "I am asking specifically: calling for the genocide of Jews, does that constitute bullying or harassment?" MAGILL: "If it is directed and severe or pervasive, it is harassment." STEFANIK: "The answer is, yes?" MAGILL: "It is a context-dependent decision, Congresswoman." STEFANIK: "It is a context-dependent decision? That is your testimony today? Calling for the genocide of Jews is dependent upon the context? That is not bullying or harassment? This is the easiest question to answer yes, Ms. Magill. So is your testimony that you will not answer yes?” Magill’s appointment comes amid ongoing scrutiny of Georgetown's Georgetown University financial ties to Qatar, a major donor to U.S. higher education, in addition to global jihad. Reports show Georgetown has received more than $971 million, and in some estimates over $1 BILLION, from Qatari sources since establishing its branch campus in Doha in 2005, primarily through the Qatar Foundation. It appears that Qatar, the largest financier of Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, is now making personnel decisions at Georgetown! We were promised that the Trump administration would be cracking down on foreign influence over academic priorities, curriculum, and campus discourse, particularly regarding Middle East studies, Islamic movements, and issues related to support for Islamic terrorism and antisemitism on campus. Harmeet K. Dhillon LeoTerrell Pam Bondi Stephen Miller Ambassador Rabbi Yehuda Kaploun (((Jeff Miller))) See video here. 👇🏻

Laura Loomer

268,009 次观看 • 4 个月前

Students of the University of Lagos who were on campus between 1993 and 1994 can bear witness to this. One of the earliest lessons I learned in life is that the struggle for justice and the defense of the oppressed are often thankless. That is the burden of leadership. In 1993, when cult violence had placed the University of Lagos under siege, cult groups had effectively taken over the campus. The university authorities were complicit, and many of the attacks were coordinated with the active involvement of the university administration and the then Commissioner of Police, James Danbaba. A few student leaders and I made a decision that we would confront cultism head-on, regardless of the personal cost. For that decision, I was brutally beaten, injected with unknown substances, humiliated, and left at the brink of death. But the deepest wound was never the physical abuse. It was the ingratitude and disappointment from the very students whose lives we were risking everything to protect. At one point, I wrestled a live grenade from a student who intended to detonate it on campus. While many stood frozen in fear, I was prepared to lose my own life if that was what it took to save thousands of other students. I do not recount these experiences to seek sympathy or applause. I say them because they define what leadership truly means. Leadership is sacrifice. Leadership is standing for what is right when it is dangerous, unpopular, or unappreciated. Leadership is remaining committed to justice even when those you fight for do not understand the price you are paying. My fight to liberate Nigeria did not begin today. It is a commitment I made decades ago, and one I have never and will never abandoned! #RevolutionNow #Sowore2027 #SoworeForPresident

Omoyele Sowore

39,314 次观看 • 12 天前

The University as a Joke: My UNIABUJA UNIVERSITY OF ABUJA Experience When the Students’ Union Government of the University of Abuja, led by Comrade Yusuf Tobi Jamiu, invited me for an interactive session with students, I was skeptical. Given the recent decline in the courage and independence of students’ unions across Nigeria, I didn’t expect much. Still, I decided to give it a try. I came straight from Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport to the University. An advance team already on the ground hinted that something was off; they couldn’t locate the Students’ Union President on time, and the hall reserved for the event looked deserted. Soon after, one of them informed me that the university authorities had cancelled the program. Not long after, Comrade Jamiu himself reached out to say the event would still hold. So, I headed to the university gate. There, I was stopped by campus security, who bluntly told me the management had declared my visit “unacceptable.” They claimed the Students’ Union had no permission to host me on campus. I alighted from the vehicle and sat on a dilapidated chair by the gate, refusing to leave immediately a silent protest. As I sat there, I witnessed a scene that summed up the death of our university system, a female student was barred from entering the campus for “improper dressing.” When I asked if the university bought clothes for its students, the confused security men eventually allowed her in, perhaps to avoid a scene. Moments later, Comrade Jamiu arrived to apologise, visibly helpless. I couldn’t help but wonder whether he had been elected to lead or to kneel, to represent the students or to appease the school authorities. After a brief conversation, I left saddened but not surprised. What I saw at the University of Abuja was not an institution of learning, but a graveyard of courage and ideas. Our universities are dying — not for lack of resources, but for lack of integrity, independence, and freedom. Nigerian universities are dead. What remains is the struggle to resurrect them.

Omoyele Sowore

99,700 次观看 • 7 个月前