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BlueWaveNeverEnd

(13,290 posts)
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 01:05 AM 7 hrs ago

David Brooks says goodbye to his job at the nytimes..to teach humanism at Yale??

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/opinion/david-brooks-leaving-columnist.html?unlocked_article_code=1.I1A.KVB0.2TT2FKuHhZ9H&smid=url-share

It’s been the honor of a lifetime to work here, surrounded by so many astounding journalists. But after 22 wonderful years, I’ve decided to take the exciting and terrifying step of leaving in order to try to build something new.

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It’s tempting to say that Trump corrupted America. But the shredding of values from the top was preceded by a decades-long collapse of values from within. Four decades of hyperindividualism expanded individual choice but weakened the bonds between people. Multiple generations of students and their parents fled from the humanities and the liberal arts, driven by the belief that the prime purpose of education is to learn how to make money.


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Trump is that rare creature, a philistine who understands the power of culture. He put professional wrestlers onstage at the last Republican convention for a reason: to lift up a certain masculine ideal. He’s taken over the Kennedy Center for a reason: to tell a certain national narrative. Unfortunately, the culture he champions, because it is built upon domination, is a dehumanizing culture.

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One of the most exciting things in American life today is that a humanistic renaissance is already happening on university campuses. Trump has been terrible for the universities, but also perversely wonderful. Amid all the destruction, he’s provoked university leaders into doing some rethinking. Maybe things have gotten too preprofessional; maybe colleges have become too monoculturally progressive; maybe universities have spent so much effort serving the private interests of students that they have unwittingly neglected the public good. I’m now seeing changes on campuses across America, from community colleges to state schools to the Ivies. The changes are coming in four buckets: First, a profusion of courses and programs that try to nurture character development and moral formation. Second, courses and programs on citizenship training and civic thought. Third, programs to help people learn to reason across difference. Fourth, courses that give students practical advice on how to lead a flourishing life.


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I look at these efforts with growing admiration and enthusiasm. My questions are: How can I get involved? Where do I go to enlist? (In my particular case, the answer turns out to be New Haven, Conn.)
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David Brooks says goodbye to his job at the nytimes..to teach humanism at Yale?? (Original Post) BlueWaveNeverEnd 7 hrs ago OP
As a resident of New Haven for almost 30 years, I have learned a lot about Yale. CTyankee 7 hrs ago #1
"It's tempting to say that Trump corrupted America." J_William_Ryan 6 hrs ago #2
Yeah but Al Gore's suit and he was "boring" PCIntern 6 hrs ago #3
,I'd like to be more cheerful but David Brooks seems to me to be a smarmy, mush-mouthed, smirking struggle4progress 5 hrs ago #4
If he doesn't include a sincere choie 44 min ago #5

CTyankee

(67,885 posts)
1. As a resident of New Haven for almost 30 years, I have learned a lot about Yale.
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 01:34 AM
7 hrs ago

What Brooks is seeking is exciting. I get his point and hope this move signals something of great value to our country going forward. We should applaud, not sneer, at what he is trying to do.

Thanks for posting this. Learning "to reason across difference" is a good thing. We should applaud and encourage, not deride, what he decided to do with his life.

J_William_Ryan

(3,392 posts)
2. "It's tempting to say that Trump corrupted America."
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 02:23 AM
6 hrs ago

America was corrupted long before Trump – corrupted by conservative dogma hostile to, and fearful of, positive, beneficial change, diversity, inclusion, and expressions of individual liberty.

Corrupted by nativist, reactionary conservativism seeking to return to an ideal American past that never actually existed and was far from ideal – a past that embraced racism, bigotry, and hate.

And corrupted by conservativism that abandoned America’s democratic norms for expedited partisan advantage.

PCIntern

(28,064 posts)
3. Yeah but Al Gore's suit and he was "boring"
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 02:34 AM
6 hrs ago

Brooks, you stupid bastard. You are seeking to redeem yourself in the final stages of your work life

But you are no different from any other major player at the Times, some of whom I’ve been acquainted with (Yes, that clause contains questionable grammar) like your buddy Richard Meislin. Snotty dilettantes.

You can kiss my petunia.

struggle4progress

(125,634 posts)
4. ,I'd like to be more cheerful but David Brooks seems to me to be a smarmy, mush-mouthed, smirking
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 02:45 AM
5 hrs ago

mug-wump whose game is to disguise bad behavior by white-washing it

Trump has been terrible for the universities, but also perversely wonderful is typical Brooksian apologetics: a layer of perfumed bullshit intended to keep everybody from thinking clearly

Nobody ever gets a usable humanistic analysis from this guy: what you get is an icepick lobotomy delivered with soporific happy-sounding nonsense

choie

(6,777 posts)
5. If he doesn't include a sincere
Sun Feb 1, 2026, 07:57 AM
44 min ago

Apology for his role in destroying our democracy, I don’t give a shit what he says.

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