Adam Harris
@adamhsays.com
5K followers 600 following 420 posts
Writer exploring education, history, politics, and the South. Author of The State Must Provide. Writing Is This America? | Senior Fellow, New America. Work in The Atlantic, NYT, Guardian, and more. www.harrisadam.com
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adamhsays.com
almost exclusively listen to the radio broadcast cause it’s just so much more vivid 😭
adamhsays.com
it's* (the morning, etc. etc.)
adamhsays.com
always talking about the south.
A screen capture of the HBCU braintrust conversation
Reposted by Adam Harris
olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social
eventually politicians need to start advocating for criminal and civil penalties for people involved in fabricating stories to get citizens incarcerated.

or, put another way: a society that would like to keep functioning has to discourage baldfaced lying, especially by authorities
Reposted by Adam Harris
chrisgeidner.bsky.social
BREAKING: "For all of the reasons" given in Saturday's TRO, Immergut grants plaintiffs' second motion for a TRO.

"Based on the conduct of the defendants, ... in direct contravention" of Saturday's TRO, the second TRO bars relocation or federalization of National Guard from "any state or D.C."
Reposted by Adam Harris
kissphoria.bsky.social
One of the largest school districts in the nation, which was taken over by the state of Texas, deciding to shut out local media (us at chron.com and the Houston Chronicle included) should be a bigger story imo
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Reposted by Adam Harris
Reposted by Adam Harris
adamhsays.com
Setting aside the philosophical questions about the relationship between higher ed and democracy, accepting this compact is to accept lies about the history of higher education. I wrote a whole book about it. adamhsays.substack.com/p/a-raw-new-...
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bakerdphd.bsky.social
I told y'all that this last line in particular stood out to me because it means you can lose more than you got from the feds
Screenshot of the article that reads: Adherence to this agreement shall be subject to review by the Department of Justice. Universities found to have willfully or negligently violated this agreement shall lose access to the benefits of this agreement for a period of no less than 1 year. Subsequent violations of this agreement shall result in a loss of access to the benefits of this agreement for no less than 2 years. Further, upon determination of any violations, all monies advanced by the U.S. government during the year of any violation shall be returned to the U.S. government. Finally, any private contributions to the university during the year(s) in which such violation occurred shall be returned to the grantor upon the request of the grantor.
adamhsays.com
Yeah, the paywall can be frustrating. I tried to share as many reflections on the piece as possible in the thread. Here‘s a gift link, though, if you’re still interested in reading the full article. (And thanks for reading!) www.theatlantic.com/education/ar...
The Undoing of a Tennessee Town
Jo Ann Allen Boyce and 11 other students desegregated their high school in Clinton, Tennessee. Then the riots came.
www.theatlantic.com
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lizneeley.bsky.social
Just writing about this for tonight's newsletter. Here's the published version - facultysenate.virginia.edu/resolution-o...
adamhsays.com
administration’s*
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adamhsays.com
The Trump administration compact with higher education turns a manifesto of conservative grievances into policy, sprinkled with cost-cutting measures, and violates the very principles it claims to protect. I wrote about it here. It's free: adamhsays.substack.com/p/a-raw-new-...
A Raw New Deal
The administration’s proposed compact would seek to remake higher education in its own image
adamhsays.substack.com
Reposted by Adam Harris
adamhsays.com
George Washington articulated a vision for higher ed shortly after the nation's founding. A national uni. to form citizens bound by a shared devotion to preserving democratic principles. Trump’s plan imagines a network to train America in a conservative image. adamhsays.substack.com/p/a-raw-new-...
A Raw New Deal
The administration’s proposed compact would seek to remake higher education in its own image
adamhsays.substack.com
adamhsays.com
A local white minister coaxed them back to school with the promise of his protection. White supremacists dribbled his head off the fender of a car and broke his nose for the act. He preached with a black eye and swollen nose that Sunday: “There is no color line around the cross of Jesus.”
adamhsays.com
Desegregation wasn't just a court decision, it was actions by individuals: The students stopped going to school not long after the year started because someone set off an explosion outside of one of the student's houses and shot through the windows of another student's.
adamhsays.com
I felt so lucky to be accompanied by Bethany Mollenkoff who took some really incredible portraits of Jo Ann and others who desegregated the nation's schools.
Jo Ann Allen Boyce Sonnie Hereford III Hugh Price
adamhsays.com
One of the most jarring things I remember from this reporting, and after listening to everything they had to go through as teenagers in the 50s: Clinton's schools, today, are 1% Black.
adamhsays.com
I went to visit Jo Ann Allen Boyce for an extended interview about the Clinton 12's experience. Children integrated America. www.theatlantic.com/education/ar...
On her first day, Boyce had worn her hair long, proud. But after that, white students would walk up behind her in the halls and yank it. “You would never know who it was,” she said. “They would make plenty of space by the time you had recovered and turned around.” On the third day of that first week, the ruckus outside the school grew. Inside, students would step on the back of the Black students’ heels. Gail remembers her heels being stepped on until they bled.

John Kasper, a 26-year-old segregationist and Ku Klux Klan member, had also started organizing in town. The walk to school became treacherous for the Black students as the mob threw rocks, bottles, sticks, and rotten tomatoes and eggs at them. “It felt like you were being squeezed” walking into the building, Boyce said. “They weren’t that close, but it felt that way, like you were being smothered by these rows of people on the side of the road.”