THEFT LICENSING PIRATING KNOCK OFF AGREEMENT SUBSIDY
It is not merely tech, manufacturing, know how, etc. that has been transferred permanently.
The theft or gift away of higher educational advantage, too, has already, now, very largely been done. This has been pointed out by specialists, not just by me...
They come here, now, to Harvard or wherever, merely for added prestige, and to compete with Asian peers, not Americans.
Kind of a bad inside Asian joke on the American people.
Steingart has a passage p 163 echoing my remark, "Never in the history of human conflict...."
"BUSINESS EXECUTIVES ARE LOATH TO DISCUSS..."GS
"Never before in history has there been such a massive transfer of knowledge--without war or conquest-- from one social group to another." Gabor Steingart
Chinese nationals at Harvard and elsewhere should be cut to zero.
The theft or gift away of higher educational advantage, too, has already, now, very largely been done. This has been pointed out by specialists, not just by me...
They come here, now, to Harvard or wherever, merely for added prestige, and to compete with Asian peers, not Americans.
Kind of a bad inside Asian joke on the American people.
Steingart has a passage p 163 echoing my remark, "Never in the history of human conflict...."
"BUSINESS EXECUTIVES ARE LOATH TO DISCUSS..."GS
"Never before in history has there been such a massive transfer of knowledge--without war or conquest-- from one social group to another." Gabor Steingart
Chinese nationals at Harvard and elsewhere should be cut to zero.
Monday, September 25, 2017
WASHINGTON POST RE HOW HARVARD HELPS ITS RICHEST
Classic....
Money is the cheapest thing.
Harvard helps some try to get more of it, but they have to already have some, from somewhere else, to play.
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
SHOULD CHIMPS HAVE HUMAN RIGHTS A NEW STANDARD FOR GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP
I am sure the Presidents of Albion College, Stetson University, and a thousand other American institutions of higher learning, not just Boston University, would welcome this broader franchise for global citizenship.
This would make most of Africa a broader electorate.
I am certain that most black African would welcome their new citizen fellows!
This is the kind of thing the Radical Republicans noticed at the time of the Civil War, expanding the franchise in the South to remain in power.
With BU right across a narrow river from Harvard, it is hard to see why Harvard University, too, should not pick up this new progressive banner!
With BU right across a narrow river from Harvard, it is hard to see why Harvard University, too, should not pick up this new progressive banner!
Saturday, May 30, 2015
RE WEALTH AND INCOME CONVERGENCE
One of my favorite passages is Rodrik's question, the first day of class, at Harvard, to his (really really smart Harvard) economics majors, and their answers.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
RE THE MARKET CALITALIST WORLD OF EDUCATION AND EXPERTISE SHARING
"....Today's universities have an insatiable appetite for cash, and thereby have to cater, in dozens of ways, to those who can provide it. Quite a few, including my own alma mater Harvard, have turned their endowments into hedge funds and thus experienced both the pre-2007 boom and the disastrous 2008 crash. (To be fair, Harvard's endowment just reported a flat year, indicating that its new manager, Janet Mendillo, has in fact adopted much more conservative strategies.) Dr. Hubbard's career is another example of how they function as one side of a triangle that also includes the financial services sector and government...." David Kaiser
I would add that, re our higher educational system, we have systematically given away what Randall Collins calls cultural capital to underdeveloped countries whose goal is to pull abreast and then overtake us.
Our laissez faire higher educational system, though an enormous market capitalist bubble for us, has frankly been of less benefit to Americans than to foreigners in recent decades.
In this sense it has paralleled our market capitalist corporate commercial and industrial sectors closely,
and, once again, according to analogous principles as Collins has pointed out.
The internet has facilitated this trend, a technology which, once again, we also pioneered, then offered to them as well.
Never, in the history of human conflict,
has so much been given away,
by so few,
to so many,
for so little,
so rapidly. Paraphrasing Churchill.
I should point out, parenthetically, that my inferences from some of Collins' views would not be shared by him, based on some of his views, eg that 'we are all one, under the skin', things like that.....
although this seems to me inconsistent with his theory of change as based on conflict, it is what it is apparently, for him.
I would add that, re our higher educational system, we have systematically given away what Randall Collins calls cultural capital to underdeveloped countries whose goal is to pull abreast and then overtake us.
Our laissez faire higher educational system, though an enormous market capitalist bubble for us, has frankly been of less benefit to Americans than to foreigners in recent decades.
In this sense it has paralleled our market capitalist corporate commercial and industrial sectors closely,
and, once again, according to analogous principles as Collins has pointed out.
The internet has facilitated this trend, a technology which, once again, we also pioneered, then offered to them as well.
Never, in the history of human conflict,
has so much been given away,
by so few,
to so many,
for so little,
so rapidly. Paraphrasing Churchill.
I should point out, parenthetically, that my inferences from some of Collins' views would not be shared by him, based on some of his views, eg that 'we are all one, under the skin', things like that.....
although this seems to me inconsistent with his theory of change as based on conflict, it is what it is apparently, for him.
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