Okay, so here’s the thing about Harvard’s latest meltdown over Trump. The supposedly elite institution is throwing a fit because the Trump administration dared to demand that it adhere to basic standards of decency and equal treatment. Let’s break this down logically.

First, Harvard refuses to end its discriminatory “diversity, equity, and inclusion” programs, which, by definition, promote inequality. Second, they won’t expel anti-Israel demonstrators who are quite literally advocating for the destruction of the Jewish faith. The Trump administration, rightfully, said “enough” and froze billions in funding. Harvard’s response? Sue the federal government. Because apparently, the Constitution now guarantees taxpayer dollars for Ivy League indoctrination camps.

Let’s examine the facts. Harvard President Alan Garber claims they have “no choice” but to fight back against supposed federal overreach. This is a fundamental misunderstanding of how government funding works. If you take federal money, you play by federal rules. It’s that simple.

Now, let’s say, for the sake of argument, that Harvard truly believes its DEI programs and tolerance of anti-Israel activism are crucial to its mission. Fine. Then they can fund those activities with their massive $50+ billion endowment instead of demanding hardworking Americans foot the bill. Facts don’t care about your feelings, and the fact is, Harvard has more than enough money to stand on its own two feet.

Statistically speaking, the vast majority of Americans oppose racial discrimination and antisemitism. Yet Harvard insists on pushing both under the guise of “diversity” and “free speech.” This isn’t about academic freedom – it’s about weaponizing federal dollars to advance a radical leftist agenda.

The bottom line is this: Harvard can either comply with basic standards of decency and equal treatment, or it can go it alone without taxpayer support. Those are the only logical options. And if they choose the latter, well, that’s something the left simply cannot refute. The free market of ideas will decide Harvard’s fate, not government handouts.