Anti-DEI fight just beginning, NIH cuts won’t kill | Latest News

Date:

Anti-DEI fight just starting, NIH cuts won’t kill – Latest News

Banner Ad


Campus watch: Anti-DEI Fight Just Beginning

Amid the Trump anti-DEI push, notes City Journal’s Heather Mac Donald, “private and public entities are also calibrating their language to preserve as much of the pre-Trump status quo as possible.” Schools just like the University of California and the University of Pennsylvania are shamming compliance with Trump directives round equity and requirements. Yes, the “administration can flag certain words and phrases essential to the antiracist project. It can eliminate them from official executive branch pronouncements.” But “professional antiracists in faculties and bureaucracies won’t cede power without a fight.” “Uprooting the diversity ideology constitutes an existential threat.” “After this first round of executive orders and funding decisions, the Trump administration will have to get even more creative in combating a poisonous worldview. The battle is just beginning.”

Libertarian: NIH Cuts Won’t Kill Bioscience

Critics’ claims that Trump-proposed cuts to National Institutes of Health oblique funds “will annihilate biomedical scientific research” just “don’t stand up under scrutiny,” explains Zachary R. Caverley at Reason. “In the era before the NIH was spreading federal money,” US biomedical-science “was not hurting for private support”; “the public sector’s role” in analysis achievements “is often overstated.” Notably, the “chief innovator” of mRNA vaccine tech, Katalin Karikó, “was roadblocked for years in academia” earlier than creating the Pfizer vaccine “in the private sector.” Public funding plainly “is not necessarily the crucial factor for scientific advancement and innovation.” “In practice, the private sector drives new technologies,” because it does “have motivation to invest in basic research.”

NY/NJ beat: Pols’ Frivolous-Lawsuit Addiction

“Lawsuits targeting industries such as energy, agriculture and manufacturing have become en vogue for populist politicians — and billionaire donors,” lament Alex Daniel & Tom Stebbins at USA Today. Yet these officers are “racking up a string of losses” at taxpayers’ expense. They blame power corporations for international emissions, although “emissions don’t come from energy production” however from “energy use.” That’s why judges have rejected a number of such fits. Similar ones notably from New York and New Jersey, have fared badly. These embody New York Attorney General Letitia James’ swimsuit in opposition to a meatpacker over its environmental impression. “When will these politicians learn from their repeated failures?” Gov. Hochul is including judges to handle a courtroom backlog; higher if pols just “stop filing bad cases.”

More From Post Editorial Board

Astroturf alert: Democrats Paid for ‘Brat’ Cred

Kamala Harris’ brat standing final summer season was “quietly funded by an elusive group of Democratic billionaires,” RealClearInvestigations’ Lee Fang stories. “Way to Win, one of the major donor groups behind the effort, spent more than $9.1 million on social media influencers during the 2024 presidential election.” Much of the money went to Gen-Z pleasant influencers, like comic Illana Glazer, who “received Way to Win funding for a series of election videos called ‘Microdosing Democracy,’ in which she half-heartedly endorsed Harris as she lighted a spliff.” “While television or radio ads require disclaimers showing the groups responsible for paying for the advertisements, there are no equivalent mandates for TikTok stars or Instagram personalities.” To put it mildly, that “tidal wave of enthusiasm” for Harris “was not entirely genuine.”

Eye on Africa: Somalia Falling

“For decades, the U.S. and African Union have sought to keep the government of Somalia afloat, but time is running out,” warn Jonathan Sweet & Mark Toth at The Hill. Muslim terror group Al-Shabaab is transferring “to capture Mogadishu and establish a Sunni caliphate in East Africa.” Al-Shabaab might be Iran’s new proxy now that “Hamas and Hezbollah have been significantly degraded.” Tehran aspires “to shut down the Red Sea, and l-Shabaab could be the missing ingredient.” ISIS-Somalia, al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab are main threats “to the government of Somalia, international shipping lanes and U.S. forces in the region.” The Trump administration should deal with al-Shahaab’s enablers — specifically, “the Houthi rebels, Iran and Russia.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

Clickable Banner
CWP (Crypto Work Pro)
CWP (Crypto Work Pro)https://www.cryptoworkpro.net
Hi, I’m a passionate cryptocurrency enthusiast with 10 years of experience in the world of digital currencies. I’ve always been fascinated by blockchain technology and the potential of decentralized finance (DeFi) to reshape the financial landscape. I share insights, tips, and strategies to help others navigate the fast-paced world of crypto.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.


Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

The Dems’ far-left agenda is just starting — and | Latest News

The Dems' far-left agenda is just starting — and...

NYC is faltering — and a bailout from Washington | Latest News

NYC is faltering — and a bailout from Washington...

Why Zohran Mamdani is bad for NYC families | Latest News

Why Zohran Mamdani is bad for NYC families -...

How cryptocurrencies are solving America’s stocks | Latest News

How cryptocurrencies are solving America's stocks - Latest News ...

How Pope Francis fought the church – and lost | Latest News

How Pope Francis fought the church – and lost...

How Supreme Court special session can halt | Latest News

How Supreme Court special session can halt - Latest...

Jewish student claims he was blocked from part of | Latest News

Jewish student claims he was blocked from part of...

The Court’s deportation lunacy, progs are losing — | Latest News

The Court’s deportation lunacy, progs are losing — -...