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Order Jamie Glazov’s new book, ‘United in Hate: The Left’s Romance with Tyranny, Terror, and Hamas’: HERE.
Much has been made of the advanced education of the latest would-be assassin of President Donald Trump, whom the suspect described in a manifesto as a “pedophile,” “rapist” and “traitor.” He graduated from the California Institute of Technology, one of the most selective schools in the country.
As to Caltech, Daniel McCarthy of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute writes: “In the most recent City Journal college rankings, Caltech took the top spot for ‘value added to career,’ but languished at a dismal 95th place for ‘student ideological diversity.’
“The rankings noted the school’s ‘disproportionately large Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion bureaucracy’ — with ‘roughly ten DEI staff members per 1,000 students’ — and its ‘overwhelmingly liberal’ student body, ’16 liberal students for every conservative.'”
Education, by itself, is not the problem. The problem is something else: ideological certainty reinforced in environments where dissenting views are scarce.
In 2024, The Duke Chronicle wrote: “In the Harvard Crimson’s spring 2023 faculty survey, 31.8% of respondents drawn from Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences identified as ‘very liberal,’ while 45.3% of respondents identified as ‘liberal.’ Fewer than 3% of respondents identified as ‘conservative’ (2.5%) or ‘very conservative’ (0.4%).”
What happens when smart people are surrounded mostly by others who think the same way? Often, it produces not wisdom, but moral certainty — an unshakable belief that one’s conclusions are not just correct, but righteous.
A survey from the Skeptic Research Center suggested those with graduate degrees are nearly twice as likely to believe “violence is often necessary to create social change.” The Skeptic Research Center wrote: “In the politically tumultuous Summer of 2020, PEW reported the results of a survey indicating that 80 percent of Americans have ‘none’ or ‘just a few’ friends with political views different from their own. A few years later, the American Psychiatric Association found that around 20 percent of Americans had become estranged from family due to political disagreements, with an additional 20 percent skipping family events because of political disagreements. Another recent study found that around 1 in 6 Americans have ended or considered ending a romantic relationship because of a political disagreement.”
My closest friend — someone I had known for more than 40 years — ended our friendship over Trump. A law professor, he received a perfect score on his SAT. He has a son with special needs. But he became convinced that Trump had mocked a disabled reporter out of cruelty.
I explained that Trump did mock the reporter, but not because of the reporter’s disability. Trump ridiculed the reporter because, in Trump’s opinion, the reporter distanced himself from his own article when Trump used it to corroborate an assertion Trump made that on 9/11 some Muslims in New Jersey were seen cheering the collapse of the Twin Towers. I referred my friend to a website called Catholics4Trump with video from several other instances where Trump used his hand waving “mocking” gesture to make fun of himself, an able-bodied general and others.
“Why,” I asked my friend, “would I support someone who would do such a thing? Why would his supporters? And what politician would think is a good idea to get votes by mocking a disabled person?”
But this narrative stuck. In 2016, before the election, NBC News wrote: “When asked in a recent Bloomberg poll what bothered them most about Donald Trump — of a slew of controversies — likely voters picked one action above all others: When the candidate mocked a reporter with a disability last November.”
Trump, of course, denied the accusation and insisted he was unaware of the reporter’s disability. The reporter in fact is a calm articulate speaker who does not wave his hands in the comic fashion as Trump did.
None of this mattered to my friend. And it struck me. Once someone, no matter how intelligent or well-educated, is invested in hating Trump, no amount of information or alternative explanation would make him unhate Trump.
As to the would-be assassin, the question is not how much he learned, but whether he ever learned to question his beliefs — and whether in his environment this was encouraged, tolerated or punished.
Photo Credit: Truth Social, Public Domain, Wikimedia Commons.

Good article. The view I use to navigate daily life is that we are all her to live wisely to the best of our ability. I discovered this view myself after a long search. I have shared it for years in connection with the idea of promoting “a big secret for a happy, successful life.” I would say the positive response rate I have received is about 99%. “I am for the wise me, and I am for the wise you” is what I do my best to practice and promote. I have found, I think the same as you, that dyed-in-the-wool ideologies are, unfortunately, barriers to living wisely. To live wisely, you need an open mind, something Trump’s would be assassin obviously did not possess.
Caltech was once the only highly competitive American university that did not do racial preferences. That ended around 15 years ago, under severe social and political pressure. The incompetent assassin is half black, was admitted about 13 years ago, and can be assumed to be well below the usual intellectual standards of Caltech students. His post-university career is also far less impressive than usual for Caltech grads. Basically, he’s a State U. type of fellow who rode his black privilege into a Top 5 university. Result: a superiority-inferiority complex that led to his remarkably stupid assault in DC. The other two assassins, who had no degrees, but were white guys, conceived far more effective plans than Mr. Caltech. This is yet another high profile demonstration of the failure of bio-communism. Mankind cannot be *made* equal.
I was thinking that this clown was trying to be martyr and go out in a “blaze of glory” in rushing into the room where this dinner was occurring and just like the other dumb sh*ts like Alex Pretti and Renee Good, he would see himself elevated to a “true freedom fighter” in the eye of the TDS crowd.
Not even trade technical schools or institutes of technology are immune from grooming young oatmeal minds?
The pattern of his behavior is very much due to the culture of media that openly admires and worships the monsters in society while demonizing its victims.
Think of how many like him and worse are lurking among the population, poised and ready.
In the 1960s, I attended a university with high academic standing surrounded by teaching staff and students who shared both utter disdain for traditional American values and unified opposition to the great foreign policy issue of the era. They exhibited their nonconformity by dressing, talking, and thinking alike. The took many opportunities to mock my time-proven views on matters of importance to the curriculum I followed.
It was good preparation for the workplace, where hidebound practices of little value to the owners of businesses are fiercely defended by go-along-to-get-along managers, and where my outspoken criticism overcame the opprobrium of others because I was right and they were not.
Children do not develop judgment without help from those to whom God has entrusted them. Parents are obligated to raise their children to hold fast to their moral compass, to judge for themselves when opinions are presented as fact, and to persevere faithfully. What is right is right, even if no one is doing it. What is wrong is wrong, even if everyone is doing it.
We will not soon rid our schools and other institutions of the disease of leftism. Only individual strength will lead to a sufficient cadre of truth-tellers to change the future.