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Honestly with Bari Weiss

Rethinking Higher Ed with Harvard’s Former President

Honestly with Bari Weiss

The Free Press

News, Society & Culture

4.67.8K Ratings

🗓️ 21 July 2023

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Last week I found myself in Sun Valley, Idaho, at a conference with a lot of big wigs. Among them was Larry Summers—an economist, the Secretary of the Treasury under Bill Clinton, and a former president of Harvard University. The timing was fortuitous. Last month, Harvard went before the Supreme Court to defend its race-based admission policies—and lost the case, thus overturning the legality of affirmative action. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that those admissions programs quote, “cannot be reconciled with the guarantees of the Equal Protection Clause” of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. This ruling has led to a debate in American life about the future of higher education, and it’s caused many to question another admissions policy that numerous American universities have long taken for granted: legacy admissions, the policy of giving preference to college applicants whose family has already attended the school. In light of the Supreme Court ruling, legacy admissions have been scrapped at top schools including Johns Hopkins, Carnegie Mellon, and just this week at Wesleyan University. So I wanted to sit down with Larry Summers to talk about the future of American higher education, whether eliminating legacy admissions actually goes far enough, what he thinks admission departments will do in the wake of the Supreme Court decision, and what he might have done differently as president of Harvard if he could go back in time. And lastly, what makes American higher education worth saving in the first place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Sometimes you can feel a vibration in Orkney. It takes over the whole island.

0:06.0

Based on the memoir by Amy Lipprot's, critics are calling the Outrun a masterpiece.

0:11.0

I miss it. I miss how good it made me feel.

0:16.7

Sasha Ronan gives a magnificent performance.

0:19.8

The waves roll into the shore in time with my beating heart.

0:24.4

The Outrun in cinema September 27th.

0:28.7

Book tickets now.

0:31.3

We recording?

0:31.9

I think that's looking great. That's looking good. If you

0:33.8

stay there, if you move it closer, it goes real up. I'm not moving. I'm sitting

0:37.3

right here. I'm Barry Weiss and this is honestly.

0:40.3

Are you sure? A hundred percent maximum right now. Last week I found myself in Sun Valley, Idaho at a conference with a lot of big wigs.

0:48.8

As you might be able to tell, I didn't have my regular producers with me.

0:52.8

So my wife Nellie stepped in as my field engineer.

0:55.8

So it's quiet.

0:56.8

Yeah, I see it.

0:58.8

Nice to see it, but among those big wigs was former honestly guest Larry Summers.

1:04.3

Larry's also the former secretary of the Treasury, an economist, and the former president of

1:09.2

Harvard University.

1:11.5

The timing was fortuitous.

1:13.0

That's because last month, Harvard went before the Supreme Court to defend its race-based admissions policies.

1:20.0

The US Supreme Court dealt a major blow to affirmative action in higher education, striking

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