The Sword of Damocles

Published: July 3, 2025

By Jim Lichtman
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Harvard University now stands at an ethical crossroads—not just for itself, but for every educational entity in the country.

While I never attended Harvard, you don’t need a Harvard degree to see the deadly sword hanging over all of education. The moment universities start compromising their core values to appease an administration obsessed with control, they surrender more than autonomy—they surrender the soul of American education. And yes, that’s exactly what’s at stake. Trump is already dismantling the Department of Education, cutting staff and core functions. However, a federal court has paused the effort, for now.

Harvard—a bastion of higher learning—has stood up to the Trump administration with the courts repeatedly vindicating its commitment to academic freedom and civil liberties. But as behind-the-scenes talks resume, the university now faces a harder question: can it compromise without betraying its core principles?

From law firms to tech giants, many have settled with political powers… some to protect profits, others to shield reputation. The fallout is familiar: accusations of capitulation and compromise. Harvard is watching—and being watched. The University’s decision may define its character for years to come.

In an attempt to appease Trump, the debate inside Harvard centers on three non-negotiables: admissions, hiring, and “viewpoint diversity”—a Trump rationalization due to its fervent disdain of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion—this from a hypocrite whose father was an immigrant.

Government audits—even under the name of “diversity”—risk cutting into Harvard’s independence. Letting outsiders decide who teaches or what gets taught crosses a dangerous line. As former Columbia president Lee Bollinger put it, “How you conduct yourself in these moments will say a lot over the future.” Giving government a say in hiring, he warned, strikes at “a core, core academic freedom principle.”

Many institutions bowed quietly to Trump-era pressure, only to face deeper demands later. Harvard fears the same trap–that early concessions will invite more interference. It began in April, with a government letter demanding audits and the dubious rationalization called “viewpoint diversity”—a move Harvard described as a serious breach of academic independence.

Former president Larry Summers urges caution, not capitulation. “No one at Harvard is saying we don’t need to work at diversity of perspective.” But reform doesn’t require relinquishing principle.

Yet Summers cautions: any proposal that grants authorities say over hiring, admissions, or curriculum would be unacceptable. If no compromise protects these red lines, then negotiations lose moral purpose. Harvard may gain a legal reprieve, but sacrifice its moral credibility.

An alumnus group, “Crimson Courage,” wrote to President Garber: “Standing strong…is a moral imperative. The world is watching and needs Harvard’s leadership and courage now…We cannot stand for veritas if we refuse to stand up for truth when the moment demands it.” For them, Harvard’s motto demands unwavering integrity—not incremental deals of convenience.

Harvard has taken financial hits—grants pulled, visa threats looming. One proposal: a court-enforced deal with clear limits and judicial oversight. But will that be enough in a world where Trump’s Justice Department answers only to him? Of course not.

Columbia, Penn, Brown, and Princeton have all faced fallout. But Harvard stands alone. It filed a suit against the Trump administration. Its stand is bigger than one school. It’s a test of principle, and what happens next could shape how others respond when values are on the line.

If Harvard yields, whether in language or in spirit, the impact won’t stop at Harvard Yard. It will echo through every lecture hall, faculty meeting, and admissions office where hard choices must be made under watchful eyes.

The cost? Trust……among students, scholars, and citizens who still believe that universities should stand apart from politics, not kneel before it.

For now, the sword still hangs—suspended by a single thread of resolve. Whether it falls, or is quietly lowered to the table, will reveal not only the depth of Harvard’s convictions, but whether it still has the courage to live by its motto: Veritas.

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