The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, May 29, 2025
Episode Date: May 29, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 - 06:50)Why Has President Trump Has Declared War on Harvard? An Open Challenge to a Bastion of the Ed...ucational ElitesDoes the President Want to Fix Harvard or Destroy It? by The Wall Street Journal (Jason L. Riley)Part II (06:50 - 10:16)‘Trust Us, We Won the Johan Skytte Award’: The Self-Congratulatory Condescension of the Academic ElitesLetter: Prize-winning political scientists speak out by Financial Times (Francis Fukuyama and others)Part III (10:16 - 16:27)President Trump Changed the Political Landscape: Americans Now Believe That Republicans Represent the Working Class, and Democrats Represent the ElitesHow Donald Trump Has Remade America’s Political Landscape by The New York Times (Shane Goldmacher)Part IV (16:27 - 21:50)‘Be Normal. Sound Normal.’: Democrats are Attempting to Dump Their Woke Jargon, But Not Their Woke Ideologies– But It’s Not WorkingDemocrats ditch woke jargon to win back Trump voters by The Telegraph (Benedict Smith)Part V (21:50 - 25:58)Woke Education is the Left’s Agenda: The Left Wants Your Kids, and They are Targeting Them Through SchoolsWoke Education Is Going Strong, Even in Middle America by The Wall Street Journal (Daniel Buck)Sign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Thursday, May 29, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Decade after decade, we have known that America's elite colleges and universities are moving left, then further left, and even further left.
The resistance to any kind of change, the resistance to any kind of correction has been absolutely massive and almost universal.
But now you have an irresistible force in the form of the form of the change.
the president to the United States, Donald J. Trump, and he is using the federal budget, or at least
federal monies, as a blunt instrument to try to get the attention of those very elite academic
institutions. Now, a good many observers are asking why exactly the president's going after Harvard
rather than some other institutions. And honestly, there are some other institutions that are
probably even more reckless and ideologically corrupted than Harvard. But the fact is that Harvard
is the biggest brand out there, and President Trump knows it. So it wasn't much of a surprise when
just days ago the White House announced that the president is issuing a letter directing federal
agencies to cease funding at least all discretionary programs, discretionary program funding,
when it comes to Harvard University. The president has made the claim that he'll be cutting
off about $3 billion in federal funding to Harvard. Now, to just state the obvious, even an institution like
Harvard is going to have a very hard time dealing with a $3 billion shutoff in funding,
especially since so much of that funding goes to personnel.
It goes to programs.
It goes to issues, items, it goes to priorities that are central to the institution.
And President Trump is basically offering a slash and burn approach when it comes to Harvard.
He is doing so, at least in part, to warn other institutions.
But even as there are so many who are looking at this and saying, this isn't
irresponsible savage attack upon a major academic institution that is crucial to American science
and innovation. The fact is that the same institution has resisted correction decade after decade,
and we've been asking the question for the entirety of that time, what would finally get Harvard
University's attention, and now we're about to get at least maybe our best chance of getting
an answer to that question. The liberalization, the leftist capture of the universities,
all of this is now old hat. It's so much a part of the academic landscape that most persons
believed it could never be corrected. And frankly, it still remains a disproven theory that it can be
reversed. But at this point, President Trump is testing that theory. And he is testing it in the
language that academic institutions most understand, the language of money. The president posted
about this at Truth Social on Memorial Day, stating, quote, I am considering taking $3 billion of grant money
away from a very anti-Semitic Harvard and giving it to trade schools, that was in all caps,
trade schools, all across our land. He said, what a great investment that would be great for the
USA and so badly needed. End quote. Is that right or is that wrong? Well, a further investment
in trade schools would almost assuredly be a good thing, especially when it comes to many young men,
what they most need is preparation for what will turn out to be an actual job. On the other hand,
the loss of all the research capacity at an institution like
Harvard will come with effects, and those effects might well endanger other priorities that even
conservatives would share, including, say, innovations in defense technologies, medical technologies,
you just pretty much go down the list. The federal government decided decades ago,
and we're talking now about more than a half century ago, that it would not conduct research itself,
and that means research not only for esoteric things that you might think were absolutely useless,
but to things we all understand would be useful when it comes to missile technology and satellite technology.
And you could just go down, again, a very long catalog of things, including pharmacological development, drugs.
But the president has made very clear that this is not an empty threat against Harvard.
And frankly, other institutions are forewarned.
What happens at Harvard could happen to you.
There are even conservative authorities in higher education who are saying this approach is reckless.
and by many measures, it is reckless, but it also follows the style of leadership and action that
President Trump has demonstrated in other areas where he's tried to bring about change.
Will it be successful or not?
Well, I'll just state the obvious that when it comes to reversing decade after decade of liberal
direction and liberal drift and then outright ideological commitment to the left, it's hard to
imagine that in a short amount of time, even a relatively short amount of years, that any kind
full correction can be brought. On the other hand, it is clear that he has Harvard University's
attention. And that's a first just in terms of looking at the battle we face. Jason L. Riley, who is
hardly a leftist, columnist of the Wall Street Journal, asked the question, does the president
want to fix Harvard or destroy it? The subhead says his actions against foreign students and research
grants have little to do with student civil rights. Now, let's look at the question. Does President
Trump want to fix Harvard or to destroy it? Well, I'm not sure.
that President Trump wants to do either. At least one way of understanding what's going on is that he is
using Harvard as, well, you might say an alarm, a test case, an example, to seek to bring about a broader
landscape change in American higher education. I don't think the president wants to destroy Harvard.
I do think the president sees Harvard is so much a part of the problem that he wants to humble it,
if not destroy it. Now, Jason Riley warns, and this is important, that such an action will come with
consequences. And some of those consequences will put us in a position where we might lose some
brilliant researchers, we might lose some necessary research. We might actually be putting the United
States in some disadvantage when it comes to other nations who might be, after all,
recruiting, if not capturing those scientists and the research and innovations that will come with
them. It is also just a basic conservative principle that if you want to salvage something,
you want to save something, you can't break it utterly. Because once you break it,
you can't turn around and then say you were trying to save it.
But the edifice of higher education, like the edifice of public education in America,
is a giant ideological blob.
Honestly, I don't know what would get its attention,
especially when dealing with the most fundamental questions here.
But at the very least, President Trump has, well, he's achieved getting Harvard's attention.
What's going to happen now on both sides remains to be seen.
Well, all right.
Another of the criticisms made against the Ivy League and against institutions
like Harvard, and the faculty members who teach there is that they are endlessly condescending
and frankly dismissive of just about any form of criticism, however legitimate, coming from
outside the university circle. But let's look at a letter that I recently saw published in the
Financial Times. When I saw the letter, I thought I just have to talk about it. It is a letter
from political scientists, in this case from four political scientists at premier institutions,
Stanford University, Cornell University, Harvard University, and another from Harvard University.
Here's what the letter writers have to say, and I quote,
it is from a position of scholarly responsibility that we as winners of the Johan Skite Prize in Political Science
and Award recognizing the most significant contributions to the field speak out.
What do they say?
Quote, we are deeply concerned about recent actions taken by the Trump administration
that undermine the independence and academic freedom of research universities,
and scholarly institutions. They cite Harvard President Ellen Garber, who said, quote,
no government regardless of which parties in power should dictate what private universities can
teach, whom they can admit, and hire, and what areas of study and research they can pursue.
They go on to say themselves, we strongly support these values. As award-winning political
scientists who do not know each other's political affiliations, we collectively fear that the
current actions of the U.S. government are a threat to the rule of law and civil peace,
and we condemn the tools being used to achieve the administration's goals.
Well, they go on.
Later, they also say,
we, the authors of this letter,
have been awarded the annual Johan Skite Prize at Uppsala University
for outstanding contributions to political science.
As political scientists, we have learnt how easily voters can be swayed
to support anti-democratic candidates,
but it is democratic and civic institutions,
ones that Trump seeks to dismantle,
that often save us from ourselves.
End quote.
Now, honestly, if you want to be able to,
wanted to come up with a demonstration of academic condescension. It's hard to come up with better than this.
They start out identifying themselves as winners of the Johan Skite Prize and Political Science.
They then later describe themselves as award-winning political scientists. They come back to say as political
scientists, each of them has been awarded the annual Johan Skite Prize at Uppslo University for outstanding
contributions to political science. Just in case you didn't get the memo, they have won the Johann Skite Prize
and political science.
something that I'm just going to guess, most of you didn't even know exists.
I am not even arguing that all the points they made are without merit, or at least without consideration.
I am going to say that this common letter is an incredible example, the kind of academic condescension
in which you have most importantly, these academics claiming that as political scientists,
they are in a position to define reality, and the rest of us are in no position to do so.
and then they come back and again they underlined their expertise by the Johan Skite Prize in political science.
Evidently, the readers of the Financial Times are supposed to say, well, winners of the Johan Skype Prize must know what they're talking about.
We'll rearrange our societies in accordance with their dictates.
The future of higher education in the United States is a subject that should interest us all.
We'll watch the unfolding situation at Harvard.
No doubt there are going to be many headlines to come.
But our concern is not just with the academic landscape, but it's also the political landscape that has our attention today.
Shane Goldmacher at the New York Times has written a very interesting piece with a headline how Donald Trump has remade America's political landscape.
This is the kind of story that can only come out months after an event as big as, say, the 2004 presidential election.
His assessment, quote, the Democrats' problems run deep, nearly everywhere.
and then the article, the paper, offers a map, and it's an intensity map. And so you have arrows,
and the arrows are pointing either to the left or to the right, and they are based upon county
election shifts, and the map is overwhelmingly pointing to the right. Most of the action,
by far most of the action is pointed to the right. Action towards the left is virtually
non-existent on the map. So, as the paper states, quote, Mr. Trump has reordered America's
political divide both geographically and demographically. One of the big issues is that Republicans
are overwhelmingly making gains in working class counties. That's exactly the statement by the times.
Quote, Democrats are improving almost exclusively in wealthier areas. They go on to say that education's
also a major factor. Quote, Republicans are running up the score in counties where a few people
have attended college, tie that back to our concerns about the liberalization of higher education.
then, quote, Democrats are gaining ground in a small sliver of the best educated enclaves.
Now, the bottom line in this article is that a fundamental shift has taken place in American political life.
For decades, the Democratic Party has claimed to be the party of the middle class,
the party of those who are aspirational, the party of the weak and the poor,
but it turns out that it is those very persons that the Democratic Party has claimed to represent
who have decided the Democratic Party doesn't represent them at all.
Massive movement over time.
And the bottom line in this article is that there is very little good information,
encouraging information for the Democrats,
and that doesn't necessarily mean that there's enormous encouragement to Republicans
because the big question on the Republican side
is whether this is a shift to the Republican Party
or a shift to Donald J. Trump.
Those are not necessarily the same thing.
The study covers a far larger period.
period than you might expect, looking from 2012 to 2024, so that's a full 12 years.
And then the study tells us that 435 counties voted more Democratic in 24 than they did in 2012,
but 2,678 counties became more Republican, quote, by an average of 13.3 percentage points.
The paper goes on to say that six times as many counties moving towards the GOP than toward the Democratic Party
and by a substantially wider margin, end quote.
Now, you're looking at 12 years, and when you're looking at Donald Trump, you're looking at an electoral span from 2016 to 2024.
So this is older than Donald Trump.
This goes back to 2012, but the big momentum does come with Trump's runs for the White House in 2016 and 2020 and 2024.
It turns out that in looking at many aspects of his base, in 2020, President,
Trump actually deepened support. Ben Tolchin, a pollster who has worked with Senator Bernie Sanders,
said looking at the electoral map, quote, the math doesn't work. For years, the belief was Democrats
have had demographic destiny on our side. Now, the inverse is true, end quote.
Increasingly, by so many different measures, we are moving into a two-party country. And you can look at
this in terms of the more religious and the more secular. You can look at this in terms of the more
liberal and the more conservative, certainly the more Democratic and the more Republican. But you can
also look at many other issues, and those have to do with the cultural values, that the Democratic Party
is basically running only with a leftward message. Another very interesting development from a
worldview perspective is where we are told that Democratic strongholds, quote, are increasingly
islands. So that tells us a lot about our country. We talk about an awful lot of red, but you look at
blue dots, but those blue dots are highly educated, they tend to be highly compensated, they tend to be
high income, and they tend to be very liberal. Quote, if a broad and increasingly diverse swath of
the country is realigned toward the Republican Party, only a few isolated areas, says the report,
have moved sharply in the Democrats' direction, end quote. As you look at the map, you can probably
already anticipate where those blue dots are. In turn to the party distinction, the study tells
us, quote, just nine counties voted more Democratic in each of the presidential elections since
2012. That's just nine. Quote, on the other hand, 535 counties shifted towards the
Republicans in all three presidential elections and by a total of at least 25 percentage points.
They were spread across 36 states from diverse democratic strongholds like the Bronx in New York
City, where the black and Latino population tops 80 percent to overwhelmingly white and rural
counties, end quote. So this also points to the fact that President Trump made significant inroads
when it comes to the voting patterns of many ethnicities. And at least a part of this may reflect the fact
that these voters don't primarily see themselves in ethnic terms at all, but rather are voting
because of their concerns over cultural issues, economic issues, in other words, like most Americans.
One very interesting statement was made by Ken Martin, who's just taken over as chairman of the Democratic
National Committee, he at least understand something of the challenge he faces. He said, quote,
the majority of Americans now believe that the Republican Party best represents the interests of the
working class and the poor. He went on to say, quote, the Democratic Party is the Party of
the wealthy and the elites, end quote. Now, if the chairman of your national committee for your
party is making that kind of assessment, that ought to be pretty sobering, you would think.
But then, along the same lines, I want to turn to a very interesting.
report that came out in the telegraph. That's a rather conservative British newspaper that has a
deep interest in the United States. They offer a headline story, Democrats ditch woke jargon to win back
Trump voters. The subhead party figures fear activist phrases, isolate electorate and urge candidates to
quote, be normal and sound normal, end quote. Well, looking at the article tells us that the goal is to
be normal and sound normal. Let's just say they're failing on both counts. This article actually makes that
clear. Benedict Smith is the reporter. He says, quote, Democrats are ditching woke jargon to win back
voters who defected to the right and elected Donald Trump. Quote, prominent party figures warned that
said phrases beloved by its activist base like Latin X had isolated ordinary voters and fueled
shattering losses in the last year's elections, end quote. The next sentence, and I quote,
they also fear the party's emphasis on issues such as pronouns exhausted the electorate,
end quote. Now let me just say at this point that exhausted can't be the right term. It's more
rightly described as offended, grossly offended. Ruben Gallego, who won a tight Arizona Senate race,
said, quote, some words are just two Ivy League tested terms. He went on to say, well, I actually
can't read exactly what he said. He cited a phrase such as social equity and then asked, why do we say
that. Why don't we say we want you to have an even chance? The paper then tells us, quote,
Mr. Gallego, who defeated Kerry Lake, a candidate endorsed by Mr. Trump in his Senate race,
said he had once been instructed to describe his background as, quote, economically disadvantaged
rather than poor. He went on to say, quote, not every person we meet is going to have the
latest update on what the proper terms are, end quote. That's an understatement. The Telegraph also
acknowledges that the Biden administration turned into Exhibit A of how to
to tangle itself up in this leftist jargon. For example, the Biden administration referred to,
quote, justice-involved populations, end quote. What does that mean? It means prisoners.
The administration referred to, quote, previously incarcerated individuals, end quote, which means
ex-convicts. Now, if you can't use the phrase, if you can't use the word, in this case,
prisoners, or ex-convicts, you're not going to make any sense to people because when you try to
shift it to justice-involved populations, which is just absolute leftist nonsense, or previously
incarcerated individuals, it's not so much that you're just making a linguistic change.
You're trying to make a moral change, and that's what the public has caught on to.
When you refer to persons as justice-involved populations rather than prisoners, you're losing
the entire moral script.
Okay, a very interesting statement was made by Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, who is expected
to make a run for the presidential nomination on the Democratic side in 2008.
The Telegraph tells us, quote, Andy Bashir, the Kentucky governor who won two terms in the
red-leaning state, that's Kentucky, said Democrats have fallen into using phrases like
substance abuse disorder instead of addiction. The governor said, quote, I believe that over time,
and probably for well-meaning reasons, Democrats have begun to speak like professors and started
using advocacy speak that was meant to reduce stigma but has also removed the meaning and emotion
behind words, end quote. You can also say it's removed the truth behind words. Kentucky's governor
went on to say, quote, it makes Democrats or candidates using the speech sound like they're not normal.
It sounds simple, but what the Democratic Party needs to do is be normal and sound normal, end quote.
Well, that advice sounds normal. And remember, the Kentucky governor was saying that Democrats have begun to speak like professors,
so who would be cited next in the article? You beat me to it, a professor. In this case,
Prash, identified as an associate professor of rhetoric, politics, and culture at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, she said, quote, Democrats trip over themselves in an attempt to say exactly the
right thing. She says Republicans maybe aren't so concerned about saying exactly the right thing,
so it may appear more authentic to some voters, end quote. Well, I guess there's one test in terms of the
great divide in our country, and that divide is whether or not that sentence makes much sense
on its own. Rom Emanuel, the former ambassador to Japan and also mayor of Chicago, who is also
likely a candidate for the 2008 Democratic nomination, he was responding to the fact that the Trump
campaign or allies of the Trump campaign had made a great deal of progress against Kamala Harris
with the tagline, quote, Kamala is for they, them, President Trump is for you.
Rahm Emanuel said, quote, I'm empathetic and sympathetic to a child trying to figure out their
pronoun, but it doesn't trump the fact that the rest of the class doesn't know what a pronoun is,
end quote. Now, that advice may seem to be offering some form of common sense, but notice that
Rahm Emanuel basically affirms the underlying gender ideology confusion. And he's not going to
confront that, otherwise he doesn't have a chance in the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.
So instead, he's trying to say sound normal and understand there's a larger educational crisis.
but diverting attention is not going to solve the Democrats' problem.
When you put the word woke with education, you pretty much get the agenda of the left in the United States.
Daniel Buck, writing for the Wall Street Journal, is onto it.
He offers an article, quote, woke education is going strong even in Middle America.
This should be a wake-up call to a lot of parents listening right now.
The subhead, quote, schools in Wauotosa, Wisconsin embrace far-left fads from gender identity to restorative justice.
The point here is that this is not just in, let's say, an urban center with a very progressivist,
well-understood to be progressivist school board, teachers unions, and all the rest. This is in the suburbs.
But the point is, this is what you will find in the suburbs as well. The educational blob,
it is so difficult to defy. And this just shows that these agendas continue to show up,
even where parents probably think there's no chance they would be there. Oh, there's a
They're there all right. Daniel Book writes, quote, what happens in San Francisco may be an outlier,
but what happens in Wawatosa likely happens in countless other districts. So then he asks,
so what's happening? Quote. In 2022, the Wawatosa School Board approved a new sex education
curriculum, among other things, it expects sixth graders to define different types of sexual
intercourse. Kindergarteners learn about, well, let's just say body parts with the help of cartoon
drawings, and third graders are informed that no matter their body parts, they're not. They're
parts, they may feel like another gender, third graders.
Quote, notably, the newly adopted units are based on the national sex education standards,
which encourage teaching third graders about puberty blockers, six graders about abortion,
and students as young as kindergarten about gender identity.
He goes on to say the red flags appear in more than the curriculum.
He explains, quote, while Wotosa is one of thousands of districts to have adopted a restorative
justice policy. This is an alternative to traditional discipline structures that emphasizes dialogue
over punishment and focuses on revising school policy rather than changing student behavior.
The report just goes on and on. You pretty much got the theme. You also need to note that one of
the tools of cultural change, particularly by the left, is when you look at something identified
as the, quote, national sex education standards. Well, adopted by whom? Well, by the very people who
want third graders to know about the flexibility of gender and six graders to know about abortion,
kindergartners to be taught about gender identity, and sixth graders to be experts in sex.
The school is also bought into an equity model that means that it is poised to sideline advanced
programs such as, say, AP or STEM schools, and that's because, quote, offering six graders
the chance to do accelerated coursework is, according to,
consultants for the program, quote, highly problematic. The bottom line in that kind of statement is that
these consultants from the left, they may want children to learn, but they don't want any children
to learn more quickly than other children, regardless of the circumstances, regardless of the
aptitude, regardless of the family structure. You can see exactly where this is headed.
Speaking of these ideas, Buck says, quote, these aren't tumors that can be easily excised.
They are degenerative disorders that leave schools hunched and limping toward failure.
End quote.
Well, powerful metaphors there, but unfortunately powerfully true.
And the left, of course, isn't satisfied with the students in this one Wisconsin school district.
They want your kids as well.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmohr.com.
You can follow me on X or Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mowler.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to SBT-Svety.
For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com. I'm speaking to you from Berlin, Germany,
and I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
