Tag Archives: higher-education

The End of American Higher Education

It seems that education in the United States is becoming something of a bygone era. And it isn’t just about the impending demise of the Department of Education, which the new Secretary, Linda McMahon, has vowed to eradicate. She has already fired 50% of its staff. It also appears to be the end of American higher education as well.

In the last few weeks there has been growing uncertainty and chaos on college and university campuses. Just recently, Harvard University announced hiring freezes as they wait for the Trump regime to implement massive federal funding cuts. Schools like the University of Washington, North Carolina State, Cornell, Emory, and Notre Dame, have issued similar hiring freezes. Northwestern is introducing preemptive cost-cutting measures. Several colleges and universities have drastically decreased the number of graduate students and have rescinded many offers to PhD candidates. Scores of students are now scrambling to figure out their next move as their future plans have crumbled before them.

In its culture war, the Trump regime has suspended funding to the University of Maine because the school refused to discriminate against transgender athletes. Last week, the administration revoked $400 million in federal funding to Columbia University over bogus claims of antisemitism during this past summer’s student-led protests. That university has been ruthless in its crackdowns and has collaborated with ICE in persecuting students who opposed the schools investment in Israel as it commits genocide. And the Department of Education has threatened schools with massive funding cuts if they don’t eliminate Diversity, Equity and Inclusion programs and related language in their curriculum.

All of these cuts affect far more than the universities themselves. For instance, the Trump regime also stopped $800 million in grants to Johns Hopkins University. Officials at the school and local business owners are saying that these draconian funding cuts will not only ravage current research projects but the entire state’s economy since the university is the largest private employer. And the long honoured tradition of national endowments are also in jeopardy. Congress is looking to raise the current 1.4% tax rate on university endowments to 10%–20%, essentially ending them for most programs.

It appears that the Trump regime has taken notes from Putin’s crackdown on higher education in Russia following its war of aggression against Ukraine. The result of this was catastrophic as scientific research programs were shuttered, the humanities were rendered toothless, and scores of Russian intellectuals fled the country.

Donald Trump once said, “I love the poorly educated.” It appears he intends to expand that love to the entire country.

Kenn Orphan, March 2025