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Monday, February 27, 2006

You think this guy's on a full-boat scholarship?

Jihadi Turns Bulldog - The Taliban's former spokesman is now a Yale student. Anyone see a problem with that?

Never has an article made me blink with astonishment as much as when I read in yesterday's New York Times magazine that Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi, former ambassador-at-large for the Taliban, is now studying at Yale on a U.S. student visa. This is taking the obsession that U.S. universities have with promoting diversity a bit too far.

Something is very wrong at our elite universities. Last week Larry Summers resigned as president of Harvard when it became clear he would lose a no-confidence vote held by politically correct faculty members furious at his efforts to allow ROTC on campus, his opposition to a drive to have Harvard divest itself of corporate investments in Israel, and his efforts to make professors work harder. Now Yale is giving a first-class education to an erstwhile high official in one of the most evil regimes of the latter half of the 20th century--the government that harbored the terrorists who attacked America on Sept. 11, 2001...

...Many foreign readers of the Times will no doubt snicker at the revelation that naive Yale administrators scrambled to admit Mr. Rahmatullah. The Times reported that Yale "had another foreigner of Rahmatullah's caliber apply for special-student status." Richard Shaw, Yale's dean of undergraduate admissions, told the Times that "we lost him to Harvard," and "I didn't want that to happen again."...


2 Comments

The Times puff-piece says he's not on scholarship. But that only raises another quesiotn. I mean, the guy has a wife and two kids who live with his parents, and his life story is portrayed in a sympathetic Horatio Alger poor-boy-makes-good tone.

But poor boys from poor families in Afghanistan don't have the money to pay for Yale education. (Heck, middle class American families with steady jobs can't afford Yale) So who is paying for the Taliban Bulldog's tuition?

If the Times was publishing journalism instead of pro-Islamist puff pieces, it might have asked someone that question.

He must have had one hell of an application essay. You know, the one in which you have to write about your extra-curricular activities.

I wonder who wrote his three letters of recommendation.

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