Trump Threatens to Cut Off Government Funds to Universities, and Why Not? – PanAm Post

Protests turned violent at UC Berkley, which sparked the tweet by Trump (ABC 7).

By Brittany Hunter

Milo Yiannopoulos, the controversial and polarizing poster boy of the alt-right, was scheduled to speak at the University of California at Berkeley last week. However, thanks to destructive riots that resulted in almost $100,000 in damages, the event was canceled just hours before it was due to begin.

As expected, President Trump had strong opinions about the incident, which he made publicly known on his Twitter account.

Threatening to cut almost $500 million in federal funding, Trump chastised the historic California university for canceling the event and accused its administration of obstructing the First Amendment right to free speech.

But notice: this suggestion comes as a threat, as punishment for failing to control protesters, the withdrawal of a subsidy as a punitive measure. This is not the way to achieve what we desperately need: cutting off all federal funds for universities as a matter of fiscal soundness and the principle of freedom itself.

Cut them Off!

Whether he realizes it or notand it is almost certain that he does notPresident Trumps statement provided a compelling case for ending federal funding to all institutions of higher education.

One of the many problematic issues with federal funding is the tendency of politicians to use it as a bargaining chip against the opposition.

Partisan politics can turn ugly rather quickly, which is why budget cuts are often perceived as punishments rather than sensible economic decisions. As the saying goes, he who holds the purse strings holds the power.

Unfortunately, federal funding is almost always used as a means to force compliance from those receiving the financial aid. Institutions that choose to accept this money are soon likely to discover that they are required to adhere to certain stipulations that might not otherwise have been agreed to.

The Common Core standards, for example, were pushed onto the states through a federal stimulus package. Once this federal money was accepted, the states were required to adopt a curriculum that met certain standards.

The only way to really stay autonomous is to simply stop accepting federal funding.

Conveniently enough, the government was waiting in the wings with a ready-made plan that accomplished this goal. If states refused to comply, the federal money was retracted.

Luckily, private institutions are not subject to the same rules as the public sector. For those organizations that operate solely on private funds, it is much more difficult for the federal government to interfere, although not impossible.

If, for example, the student body was opposed to the idea of hosting a speaker they strongly disagreed with, a private university would have every right to deny that speaker access to campus facilities.

However, so long as federal funding is given and received by institutions of higher education, campuses have little to no recourse when it comes to censoring certain individuals on campus.

While President Trump does not actually have the authority to cut federal funding from U.C. Berkeley, every threat, substantial or not, comes with a hurricane of hysteria and fear over what the new president may do.

The only way to really stay autonomous without binding yourself to federal conditions is to simply stop accepting and stop offering this money altogether.

Brittany Hunter is an associate editor at FEE. This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

Espaol On Thursday, February 9th, Reuters revealed that the Venezuelan state-run oil company PDVSA has not sent oil and fuel that it owes to China and Russia for months. "Delayed shipments to these crucial political allies and trade partners, which have given Venezuela at least US $55 billion in credit, provide a new vision of PDVSA's operational failures and its impact on the country's socialist economy," Reuters reports. Read More: Venezuelan Oil Ships Stranded at Sea Because PDVSA Can't Pay Port Fees Read More: US to Confiscate Assets of Venezuelans Involved in PDVSA Corruption Scandal This media outlet also pointed out, "oil represents nearly all of Venezuela's export earnings." Therefore, "the PDVSA crisis" strongly affects "a nation suffering from three-digit inflation and a food shortage that reminds us of the Soviet Union." In fact, the latest estimates suggest that 87% of the country's income comes from selling oil. "The total value of the past due shipments to China and Russia's state-owned companies is about US $750 million," according to the Reuters agency's analysis of PDVSA's documents. googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1459522593195-0'); }); Meanwhile, by the end of January of this year, PDVSA owed these companies at least 10 million barrels of oil. This amounts to a 10 month delay, according to the British agency's information. The statement said, "Shipments to China and Russia are critical forPDVSA's financial health because companies in both countries buy around a third of PDVSA's total oil and fuel exports." For years, the credit that both nations provided has been indispensable for Nicols Maduro. In fact, infrastructure and social investment in Venezuela has been financed mainly by China. Maduro is facing a domestic firestorm over economic collapse, threats to ban opposition political parties, and major social unrest that has gripped the nation in the wake of a collapse in global petroleum prices. Source: Reuters

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Trump Threatens to Cut Off Government Funds to Universities, and Why Not? - PanAm Post

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