At Harvard certain students are treated guilty, automatically, for oftentimes doing nothing wrong.
So-called “blaming the victim” runs rampant at Harvard–if you don’t belong to the “right” category of student. Those are protected at all costs. Instead, Harvard uses their power and money to get rid of students if they think there’s even a microscopic chance it can affect its “precious” brand–or lose a single cent in value in its “endowment.”
And they don’t hesitate to use unethical, even outright illegal, tactics to make sure they keep quiet–discredited, humiliated, bankrupted. At any cost.
This video tells the story of one such incident–one of many egregious, ridiculous cases like this I’ve experienced in my time here.
You’ll learn how Harvard acts–even if it means seriously harming one of its own students’ life. In this case: for being, literally, attacked on the street. That’s right: for being the victim of a crime. To make things worse, with ample proof of being the victim of a serious crime–and ignoring that evidence, their own rules, and even local and federal law in the process.
But does this happen to all students? You guessed it. Depends on whether you’re a regular student or a “special” (and protected) student.
In other words: if you’re a middle- or working-class student–who had the audacity to speak up at some point, if you don’t fit the narrative that Harvard wants to push forward about itself, or whose “usefulness” has worn out for them–you’re going to end up working five times as hard for half as much.
In the process: Harvard ignores state, and federal law, but also even its own published “Code of Conduct.” Pointing this out is pointless. Because they will ignore you, and use their leverage to get you evicted, manipulate your finances until you’re bankrupted, have your reputation destroyed, and a long list of other seedy (and secret) tactics. As I’ve mentioned before: I thought it was just me. Not even close. I’m frankly surprised, which is hard to do with how things are nowadays, at just how widespread these kind of antics by Harvard are.
They have a gigantic team of administrators and fancy lawyers and law firms whose job it is to do exactly that–to, you guessed it–protect the sacred Harvard brand, at any cost. Even if that cost is you.
