


Our doomed country has raised two generations in a row whose members are majority-unemployable.
A flurry of Harvard University students and groups are desperately trying to backtrack on their support of a letter blaming Israel for the mass slaughter of its own people by Hamas terrorists -- as some business titans seek to blacklist them from future jobs.
Four of the initial 34 student organizations attached to the inflammatory statement have already withdrawn their support -- while board members of other groups have quit to distance themselves.
Late Tuesday, 17 other Harvard groups joined around 500 faculty and staff and 3,000 others in signing a counter-statement attacking the other groups' letter as "completely wrong and deeply offensive," according to the campus paper, the Harvard Crimson.
A third letter from nearly 160 faculty members also ripped Harvard's response to the scandal, writing that it "can be seen as nothing less than condoning the mass murder of civilians based only on their nationality."
Others in groups supporting the initial letter -- which held "the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence" -- quit while distancing themselves from any involvement.
Danielle Mikaelian, who identified herself as a board member of one of the student organizations that signed onto the statement, said she did not see the statement beforehand -- and has since stepped down from her role.
"As a board member of a Harvard group that signed the statement on Israel, I think it was egregious and have resigned from my role," Danielle Mikaelian tweeted Monday.
"I am sorry for the pain this caused," the law student continued. "My organization did not have a formal process, and I didn't even see the statement until we had signed on."
Mikaelian added that she "prevented another student group I remain on the board of from signing on when I saw the statement.
"This statement is not representative of my values, and my heart is with those impacted."
...
The Harvard Undergraduate Nepali Student Association also released a statement on Instagram expressing "regret" at signing the letter that "has been interpreted as a tacit support for the recent violent attacks in Israel.
"We deplore the attacks that have taken the lives of hundreds of innocent civilians, including 10 Nepali students in Israel," the student organization continued.
Harvard College Act on a Dream told the student paper that it only signed as "a result of miscommunication and a lack of due diligence."
Here's The New Hotness:
A "doxxing truck" is driving around the campus of Harvard University with digital billboards that display the names and photos of students who allegedly signed a letter blaming Israel for Hamas' violent attack that killed more than 1,200 people over the weekend.
Giant video screens hung on the sides and back of the truck display the words "Harvard's Leading Antisemites" in gothic script over a slideshow of Ivy Leaguers' headshots and names in bold, red block letters, according to photos on social media.
Nonprofit news watchdog Accuracy in Media was behind the truck, which showed the students involved in the 34 student groups that signed a letter saying Israel is "entirely responsible" for Hamas' deadly attack on Saturday.
The truck's surprise appearance around campus on Wednesday "was the first day [of a] multi-day, multi-pronged campaign involving multiple billboards and a variety of other tactics," Accuracy in Media president Adam Guillette told The Post.
The group deployed the truck because it's "incredibly important to know who the hateful antisemites are in our society. And it's important for people to know that their actions have consequences," Guillette said in an interview with The Post.
Leftwing propagandist Megan McArdle stepped out and decried "cancel culture," which is what she always does when a fellow leftist and only a fellow leftist pays a price for vile statements. She's somehow never around to speak against cancel culture when someone is getting ten years in federal prison for joking that you can vote for Hillary Clinton on your phone.
And Megan McArdle, you fraud c*nt, let me ask you: Would you say it's "cancel culture" if people wrote "I Stand With the Charlottesville Black-Church Shooter" and then businesses refused to hire those supporters of racist murder?
Presumably not.
But you think this is "different." Because like all other identitarian leftist c*nts you think that you get to decide whose lives are worth protecting, and who is deserving of racial murder.
Black Lives Matter! Jewish lives -- well, it depends on the context.