๐ War on Higher Education: J.D. Vance's Attack on Learning
In a shocking speech, J.D. Vance labels universities the "enemy" in a campaign against knowledge and diversity.
Quotes:
"The professors are the enemy" - Richard Nixon (quoted by Vance as his closing line)
"We are giving our children over to our enemies and it's time we stopped doing it." - J.D. Vance, who attended Yale
"Progressive politics is a language. A language used by our new oligarchy to do two things. On the one hand to rob the American people blind and on the second hand to tell them to shut the hell up about it if they dare complain." - J.D. Vance
"We didn't elect him. We said I hope no person here voted for Anthony Fauci. We didn't do anything to make him the Lord over our entire economy and over our entire social lives." - J.D. Vance about Anthony Fauci
๐ฝ Keepinโ It Simple Summary for Younger Readers
๐ง๐พโ๐พ๐ฆ๐พ
J.D. Vance, who used to write about struggles in his own community, has started saying that universities are bad ๐โ and teach things he doesn't like. He thinks schools should stop talking about real problems โ ๏ธ and should make students proud of America ๐บ๐ธ, but many believe learning about history ๐ and justice โ๏ธ is how we can make things better. When Vance attacks schools, he's also attacking peopleโs ability to understand the world ๐ and fight for what is right โ.
๐๏ธ Takeaways
๐ Vance declares war on universities, labeling them the "enemy."
๐คฅ His claims suggest universities promote hatred for America and indoctrination.
โ Education is vital for marginalized communities to document history and challenge injustices.
๐ฐ Vanceโs critique of student debt is hypocritical, given his support for policies limiting access to education.
๐ Resistance includes supporting critical education spaces and ethnic studies programs.
The War on Knowledge: J.D. Vance's Crusade Against Higher Education
Mira, compaรฑeros - another day, another assault on intellectual freedom from the MAGA industrial complex.
The Context: A Manufactured Culture War
Let me break this down for you, mi gente. J.D. Vance - the same guy who wrote a memoir about Appalachian struggle and then sold his soul to the Trump (who he literally called โAmericaโs Hitlerโ) machineโhas declared an all-out war on universities.
And when I say war, I don't mean a metaphorical skirmish. I mean a full-blown, ยกAy, Dios mรญo!, scorched earth campaign against the very institutions that have been lifelines for marginalized communities.
In a recent speech at the National Conservatism Conference, Vance didn't just criticize universities. He called them "the enemy" and urged conservatives to "honestly and aggressively attack" these institutions.
Estรกs chingando? Are we really at a point where seeking knowledge is now considered an act of political rebellion?
The Weaponization of Ignorance
Vance's argument isn't new, but it's increasingly dangerous. He's spinning a narrative that universities are:
Indoctrination centers for progressive ideology
Institutions that teach students to hate America
Systems that trap young people in debt while destroying their sense of patriotism
Internal monologue: The irony of a Yale Law School graduate attacking higher education is not lost on me.
But let's dig deeper. This isn't just about universities. This is about power. This is about maintaining a system that keeps marginalized communities from accessing critical thinking tools, from understanding systemic inequalities, and from challenging the status quo.
The Real Threat: Knowledge as Resistance
For Indigenous and Chicano communities, universities have been revolutionary spaces. They're where we:
Document our histories
Challenge colonial narratives
Build solidarity across marginalized groups
Create pathways for generational transformation
When Vance attacks universities, he's attacking these very mechanisms of resistance.
Personal Stakes: More Than Just Academia
Coรฑo, this isn't abstract. When Vance claims universities teach children to hate America, he's specifically targeting curriculum that:
Acknowledges historical injustices
Teaches critical race theory
Provides nuanced understanding of systemic racism
For communities of color, this isn't "hating America" - this is loving America enough to demand it lives up to its promised ideals.
The Broader Political Context
Vance's rhetoric is part of a larger Republican strategy:
Discredit intellectual institutions
Create distrust in expertise
Position education as a liberal conspiracy
Maintain power through manufactured ignorance
Ay, los pendejos - they think we don't see through this?
The Economic Dimension
Let's talk money. Vance criticizes universities for putting students in debt while simultaneously supporting policies that make education less accessible. The hypocrisy would be hilarious if it weren't so dangerous.
Resistance is Not Futile
To my fellow students, educators, and community members: No nos van a callar. They will not silence us.
Our response must be:
Continue creating critical spaces
Support ethnic studies programs
Challenge narratives that erase our experiences
Build educational solidarity
Final Thoughts: Beyond the Rhetoric
J.D. Vance represents a dying ideology - one terrified of change, of true equality, of a future where diverse voices are not just heard but centered.
Que se jodanโthey can try to wage war on knowledge, but knowledge has always been our most powerful weapon.
Seguimos luchando - We continue fighting.
ยกHasta la victoria siempre!
Nota bene: This isn't just political commentary. This is a love letter to education, to resistance, and to every student who understands that learning is an act of radical hope.
Con respeto y rage, Your Chicano Citizen Journalist
If people learn to reason and think (not that education necessarily teaches those skills these days), they will ask questions. Scientists may also prove an enormous problem as they discuss such topics as global warming (which, as the Right insists, is a fraudulent hoax). The Trumpistas, who seek to Make America Gangrenous Always, try to provoke antagonism toward anyone with an education, whom they deem the "elites." [Somehow, the billionaire criminals as all portrayed as "average Joes"!]
At the end of the day, education will ultimately inspire people to protest against the exploitative oligarchy and those who abuse the system. Much of the opposition to the VIetnam War was spawned on college campuses; hence, Nixon's hatred for those "professor" types.
I still cannot understand all the venom heaped at those "Ivy League elites." After all, Trump's degree is from Wharton (part of the University of Pennsylvania), and Vance's law degree is from Yale. Aren't these Ivy Leaguers also part of the "elite"?