Anonymous ID: a34c3c Feb. 18, 2021, 5:43 p.m. No.12993985   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12993837

>>12993837

>Reach of Supremacist Groups

continuing to demonize the military

knowing what's coming

 

who the fuck runs military.com anyway?

 

n 2004, Military.com joined forces with Monster Worldwide to change the playing field for career and educational opportunities for service members, veterans, and military spouses. Monster's vision is bringing people together to advance their lives which compliments Military.com's goal of connecting the military community to all the benefits of service.

 

Monster, in turnis owned by Randstad North America, a subsidiary of Randstad N.V., a global provider of flexible work and human resources services.

Anonymous ID: a34c3c Feb. 18, 2021, 5:56 p.m. No.12994109   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12993934

lets use Harvard's endowment to pay for it

 

Harvard, With a $40 Billion Endowment, Will Receive $8.7 Million in Aid

Eddy Rodriguez 4/17/2020

Returning home to protesters at his door, Ted Cruz says he regrets…

New COVID-19 strain discovered in Finland, researchers claim

 

Harvard University in Boston will receive $8,655,748 in federal aid for coronavirus relief despite having a $40 billion endowment.

 

>https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/02/understanding-harvards-ties-to-slavery/

Campus & Community

Understanding Harvard’s ties to slavery

 

In a discussion prior to a major conference, Faust amplifies the expanding effort to document a painful part of the University’s past

 

By Colleen Walsh Harvard Staff Writer

 

DateFebruary 28, 2017

 

Last spring, Harvard President Drew Faust joined with Civil Rights icon and U.S. Rep. John Lewis to affix a plaque on Harvard’s Wadsworth House in honor of Titus, Venus, Bilhah, and Juba, who lived and worked there as enslaved persons during the presidencies of Benjamin Wadsworth and Edward Holyoke in the 1700s. “Today we take an important step in the effort to explore the complexities of our past and to restore this painful dimension of Harvard’s history to the understanding of our heritage,” said Faust during the unveiling. “The past never dies or disappears. It continues to shape us in ways we should not try to erase or ignore.”

 

This Friday, the University will take another step in exploring its long-ago ties to slavery with a major daylong symposium at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study that will examine the relationship between slavery and universities.

 

Leading into the conference, the Gazette spoke with Faust about Harvard’s ongoing commitment to acknowledging and understanding the grimmer aspects of its past.

 

GAZETTE: Last year you, along with Congressman John Lewis, unveiled a plaque on Wadsworth House in honor of four enslaved persons who worked and lived there during the 18th century, and you urged in a Crimson editorial that the University more fully acknowledge and understand its links to slavery. Is the upcoming conference at Radcliffe a next step in that commitment?

 

FAUST: We started planning the conference at the same time we were talking about and planning for the plaque, recognizing that we knew something about the history of slavery at Harvard — the four individuals honored on the plaque are a bit of our knowledge — but we knew there was much more. And we also knew that it would be beneficial to have a way of understanding what our peer institutions have learned about slavery on their campuses and how they’ve responded to it. And so the whole genesis of the conference was to bring the attention of the community here at Harvard to this part of Harvard’s past, to explore it more fully, and to understand the ways other institutions have responded to the history of slavery in their environments. So it’s as much an effort to raise awareness as it is an effort to learn more.

 

GAZETTE: How does Harvard come to grips with its early involvement in slavery?

 

pay reparations with it's endowment