You’ll never believe who beat the fabled Harvard debate team

You’ll never believe who beat the fabled Harvard debate team

Or maybe you will if you have been following the descent of this premier American Ivy League university into a bastion of liberal thinking (if “thinking” is the correct word). Nowadays professors there are free to bash the U.S. by comparing it with ISIS and the administration blinks when the presence of vending machines made in Israel is viewed a microaggression.

The left, which proclaims itself the ideology of intellect, would be the first to tell you this is all for the good. Oh yeah? Then why did the school’s hallowed debate team lose to a pack of prison inmates?

CNN reports:

Inmates from the Eastern New York Correctional Facility defeated the prestigious Harvard debate team in mid-September as part of the Bard Prison Initiative, a program run by Bard College to provide college education to qualifying prisoners, according to the Wall Street Journal. If you knew the prison debate club’s record, you might have voted for the inmates. They’ve defeated a nationally ranked team from the University of Vermont and the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York. (They lost a rematch against West Point, and it’s become something of a rivalry.)

[…]

Inmates face any number of challenges preparing for debate, including a lack of access to the Internet and a requirement for prison administration approval of necessary written materials, which can delay access to information. But they have perspective that college students on the outside may not have. They know their Bard education is an opportunity most inmates do not have, and they know it can be life-saving.

The Bard Prison Initiative, which has 300 students enrolled across New York state, reports that less than 2% of its formerly imprisoned students return to prison. By comparison, nearly 68 out of every 100 prisoners across the country are rearrested within three years of release, with more than half returning to prison.

While nobody can erase the actions of the past, it is inspiring to watch a group of people taking control of their futures and empowering themselves to be productive members of society. Through education, there is hope and opportunity, and the Bard Prison Initiative is proof of that.

Cross-posted at DeneenBorelli.com

Deneen Borelli

Deneen Borelli

Deneen Borelli is Outreach Director for FreedomWorks, a grassroots organization dedicated to limited government. She is a contributor at Fox News and has written for The Blaze, The Daily Caller, Los Angeles Times, and dozens of other publications. She is the author of the book ”Blacklash: How Obama and the Left are Driving Americans to the Government Plantation.”

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