The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - The 'Baseball Bomb' Falling on a School Near You
Episode Date: January 9, 2024A battle over academic freedom is boiling over, beyond Harvard, and Florida governor Ron DeSantis and his cronies have already taken over one college in their effort to win the culture war. But the wi...ldest part is how they're weaponizing an absolutely enormous baseball team to do it. Correspondent Jeb Lund reports on accusations of unconstitutionality — and mascot duplicity — at his alma mater, with a warning about how right-wing activists might use their sports blueprint next. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/IqNPY0pnQ2E Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Tore finds out I am Pablo Tore and today we're going to find out what this
sound is.
I'm reminded of the quote from a deep throat from all the president's men.
These are not very bright guys and this got out of hand.
Right after this ad. King's Network. a Rhondasantis episode. Okay, I ask again, why is that? Why are we doing a Rhondasantis episode on this podcast?
Look, I am also exhausted by Rhondasantis, right?
Like, he's not gonna be president, he's annoying,
he's lazy, he's a coward.
And Florida has been talking about him for so long,
and I get all of that, and yes, laziness and cowardice
also apply.
We're doing this because the way he has been using baseball,
specifically, his favorite sport is really important
and fascinating in a way that I did not appreciate
before we reported this, and it's not even reliant
on whether he's gonna be the president of the United States at all.
I didn't know he's a baseball guy,
didn't know he was a real baseball.
Yes, yes.
He was a little eager, he went to the quarterfinals
of the 1991 Little League World Series,
he was the captain of his college baseball team.
Bonafide is okay.
That's fine.
He's a baseball guy, okay.
But I also think he is playing up the baseball stuff
to be a, yes, a man of the people.
He's just like your favorite jocks,
even though he's not my favorite jock.
Well, it might be somebody's favorite jock.
And the fact that he could be that,
while also having gone to Yale is part of the strategy.
I bet your rival.
That's right.
You know, I mean, I was a good division one player.
I think I, I had three 36.
My senior year, I always hit them.
I was a four year starter.
I always hit the middle of the lineup.
Third, fourth, fifth.
Look, I could hit a fastball, throw me 94.95.
And I faced guys that got picked in the first
round. People, people that pitched in the big leagues. I never had any problem hitting
them if they tried to throw it past me. Okay, I got the episode now. It's about you finding
out whether he could actually hit 94.95. That's what you want to do. No, I do want to be
clear that this is not what this episode is about. We're not just doing this investigation,
but of course, we hear a public Tory finds out out could he actually hit 94 95 like what's this
counting report? So we reached out to a dozen members of the Yale baseball team.
His contemporaries his teammates and none of them agreed to go on camera.
No, but what a bunch of cowards. Every single one of actual cowards in this
case. But we did find a pitcher who played against Ron DeSantis, who would actually talk.
Little League World Series didn't impress me.
Yale baseball team didn't impress me.
Captain of the team didn't impress me, but they started to be growing shadow.
It started to get interesting by the time of the game, and it was more out of annoying
Rather than anything else. So this is former Morehouse College picture
Cedric Richmond Cedric Richmond also former congressman
But the game that Cedric Richmond is remembering there is the 2013 congressional baseball game
Okay, this is the famous event the notorious matchup every year. Democrats play Republicans,
members of Congress, play against each other, and they do it for charity. Okay. And this is why
and how Cedric Richmond came to take the mound against then congressman Ron DeSantis.
Vagely remember the first that bad he hit a pop up. And I think it was right in Fowl territory. I came off to
my own to catch it. And I remember that he grounded out to Linda Sanchez to end the game.
That's Congresswoman Linda Sanchez from California. Yeah, get that right.
After Linda fills the ball cleanly throwing it to first base. He grabs his hands string and
throwing it to first base. He grabs his hands string and you know goes down with a supposed injury.
I don't know if he was hurt. I don't know if he wasn't, but I know one thing, his ego was certainly hurt
by the way that Linda just scooped up his ground ball through it to first and ended the game and ended all of the noise of the great baseball Ryan DeSantis.
And I thought it was kind of, you know, chicken crap to, in my opinion, faking injury on the
last out when it appears that you're certainly going to be out.
So, you know, it was just moment, all the hype, you know, not very different from today,
where he finds himself.
A supposed injury and chicken crap
are the two things that stood out to me most in that class.
Those are big allegations from the former congressman
from Louisiana.
But I want to point out that this is about
a lot more than just like the politics of all of this.
And what Cedric Richmond brings up,
that sort of symbolism here,
like where DeSantis is right
now, how this all sort of speaks to it, where is he right now?
He is polling second in the, yes, looking up at Donald Trump, who is way, way ahead.
He's polling second for the public nomination.
There's another presidential debate tomorrow.
The Iowa caucuses on Monday, No one expects him to win those,
but it's worth noting here.
Baseball is actually a larger part,
a way larger part of his identity and his mission here.
A lot of the right wing's mission today
is to win the culture war
by remaking the American educational systems
and in their crosshairs are American universities
in particular. And it turns out,
of course, as there is one specific college where Rhonda Sanders has been using his favorite
sport somehow, directly using it to remake their identity and to, yeah, accomplish this
larger goal.
Well, the fact that you're interested, it makes me wonder if that college is Harvard.
Uh, no, although, spoiler alert, Harvard does figure in at the very end.
Shocker.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah these are valid reasons. God bless. Yeah, you actually host the podcast
about Hallmark movies, which unfortunately
is not why you're here today.
Well, they can't all be happy endings, right?
Not with that attitude.
However, there's not a gazebo on this podcast.
It's spoiler alert.
Ron to say this is not building a gazebo by the end of this,
but he might or might not be building
other key architectural features.
For the college that you attended, Jeb Lund, where did you go to college?
Where is your alma mater?
That's why I wanted to talk to you today.
Well, I went to the new college of Florida.
I transferred in in 1997.
It is in Sarasota and all my classes were held in former Ringling, the circus Ringlings
mansions.
And my dorm room was designed by IMP and it had a certain furor bunker chic.
To it.
So I just, I'm now just processing the mad lib of things you've just explained, which
it feels like there's both a high end IMP, architectural sensibility and also a circus energy.
Yeah well the students definitely bring the circus energy.
New college is an intellectual, spiritual, and social playground. It's like a summer camp.
You choose what you want to do based on your passions. A lot of students are very progressive,
they're very forward thinking.
Quote, politically correct,
drugies, weirdos.
This idea that everything is barefoot and crunchy
at New College is, I mean, it's a wonderful image,
but that's not the way it was.
My faculty advisor was a monarchist.
The guy who was my thesis advisor wanted to restore the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Right? And he was a fierce anti-communist. You took your life in your hands. When you wrote
a paper for him and said, you know, I kind of like what those communists did. There's
a diversity of opinion and perspective. It's not just woke. You can have a monarchist,
professor. Yeah. Yeah. And so you graduated in what year?
I didn't.
My thesis was destroyed in a flood.
A likely story, Jeb.
What was your thesis going to be about?
How did survive the flood?
Re-evaluating the role of signals intelligence
in the battle of the Atlantic from 1941 to 1943.
Basically, everybody who wrote about decrypting the Enigma code was somebody who worked on
that in World War II in England.
And curiously, they all argue that that won the war for them.
And I thought, well, you know, I'd probably say that if that was my job too, I wonder
if they're full of s**t.
So that was my thesis.
The pedagogical system that underlines New college is over half a millennium old.
It's medieval.
It's modeled after the Oxford and Cambridge tutorial system.
If you want to take something, you can just go read for it in a faculty advisor will walk
you through.
I guess I should also ask this question.
What's the mascot situation at your new college?
The mascot, when they were drafting the proposals
for what sort of student activities
and student signifiers would be supposedly,
somebody put in a null set,
which basically just means zero.
And whatever pattern you might put in there,
the result of that is going to be zero.
And I think it was meant to be a placeholder.
In the, you know, in suing decades,
it's come to have, you know, sort of vaguely,
I guess, spiritual or intellectual meaning for students,
you know, sort of from this empty space,
anything can be created.
But I think it just means TBD.
Well, I'm getting in totality here from you and the way you described your school, is
that you guys are a bunch of nerds.
That's the vibe that I'm getting as well, that there is some real bookishness running
through this institution.
There is.
It's the line I use when trying to explain it to people is it's a lot like grad school
for undergrad. And you see that in terms of the academic progression of our students, new college graduates,
for every 10 students who graduate, nine of those 10 will complete a doctorate.
Wow.
There have been years where new college has outperformed Harvard Yale, Princeton and Stanford in terms
of per capita,-bright scholars.
And it's a punishing reading schedule.
When I applied, you had to submit four different essays,
not pick one or four.
You got to do all of them.
What's it like now?
Well, I think that depends on what kind of student you are.
There's been a recent influx of student athletes
that if you go by alumni and current students and instructors is meant to change the character of the campus.
If you go by the verdict of the Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis and the people that he appointed to the Board of Trustees there, it's correcting a sort of
out of control wokeness at the school. It's sort of a demographic correction.
New college has really embraced that, and that's part of the reason I think it hasn't been successful in the aromance down so much,
because I think people want to see true academics, and they want to get rid of some of the political window dressing
that seems to accompany all this.
All you guys writing about World War II signal decrypting just been running them up for
too long.
Right.
I was very concerned about LGBTQ submarines and high frequency non-binary direction finding all that kinds of woke stuff about the battle, the Atlantic.
Yes, yes, yes. But okay, I need to understand though, Ron DeSantis, Governor of Florida, obviously,
how does he have the power slash ability to get into new college and remake it in the ways that we're going to discuss today. Well, as the governor of the state of Florida, he has the power to replace trustees at public
colleges and universities, of which New College is one. So he essentially just replaced the board
with people that were more amenable to his way of thinking politically.
way of thinking politically. I saw some of the protesters out there.
I was a little disappointed.
I was hoping for more.
But, you know, yeah, I'm looking at some of the board members.
And there are a couple of members of right wing think tanks.
There is the founder of a Christian sports academy.
And there's a new president, it seems.
I don't know who the president was when you were there, but it seems like it definitely isn't this guy
Richard Corcoran. Richard Corcoran has a new name. So Richard Corcoran will be
the president. Richard Corcoran has been here for the last year. He was formerly the
speaker of the Florida House. He was also the Commissioner of Education, but he
is being paid $500,000 more per year to be the president of
New College then Ben Sass is being paid to be the president of U of F
Which has 60 times the number of students that New College does this is a 1.3 million dollar a year salary for Richard Corcoran
A man who has been with DeSantis
Working to establish what kind of an agenda
would you say broadly when it comes to education as a concept?
Well, you know, if you followed the sort of the conservative
argument about the culture war of education,
all universities are sort of hot beds of people changing
their gender identity and loathing the United States, and that needs
to be remediated as soon as possible.
If you want to do things like gender ideology, go to Berkeley, go to some of these other
places.
That's fine.
It's fine.
And there's nothing, if that's what you wanna do,
there's nothing wrong with that per se,
but for us with our tax dollars,
we wanna focus on the classical mission
of what a university is supposed to be.
In terms of the immediate effects on the school,
the diversity, equity, and inclusion process
and I guess department, you would say
or office at New College was stripped away and we saw the firing of the then president
of New College at Patricia Aucker replaced with Corcoran, of course the replacement of
the trustees, dozens of instructors have already left. With the understanding that basically
they're not going to be able to teach what they're there to teach. So there's no reason to be there anymore.
And so the people who are there in numbers that are mind blowing to me, the reason why
I wanted to do this story are baseball players.
And so why why are baseball players, specifically why are athletes generally, why are they a part
of this larger political plan?
How does that part of it work?
For one thing historically,
New College has been majority female,
and I think by focusing on student athletes
where you're gonna get an overwhelmingly male cohort,
there's the perception that you can correct
what's going on at New College presumably,
because it got too estrogenic,
and it needs some real balls to fix the problem.
But I think there's a perception, you know, I think you understand this too Pablo rightly that
the athletes will be overwhelmingly conservative. So I think there's a perception that you can
demographically kind of bomb the school with a whole bunch of people who are on the other side of
the ideological fence just by going and shopping for athletes at private Christian schools,
and just athletes in general.
Right, so there's this idea that
the barefootedness,
all the women, the nerds,
the way to do a bit of a great replacement of them
would be to hand pick the jocks,
the guys that we can actually identify
and hand pick through recruiting as truly like-minded
to a Rhonda Santas.
Yeah, no, I mean, I think that's a pernicious phrasing
that you used, but it's probably, it's right on.
And so the admissions department and the athletic department,
how are they working together as a matter of a top- down strategy to make sure you get the right kids?
I was able to speak to a former admissions officer named Andrew Prey and he told me about a meeting that he had on March 31st with President Corcoran,
where effectively Corcoran came in and had a very positive conversation with them. It was very encouraging. Corp and Kim and started off the conversation.
Very positive, saying how we're like,
is 18, we're a SEAL team six.
He wanted the admissions officers to be like his SEAL team six,
which I don't really get,
because I don't think that as an admissions officer,
you're supposed to double tap all the students.
The final sort of encouragement after this kind of chummy get-together was telling
everyone that they needed to accept as many athletes as possible and that there would
be effectively reward for the admissions officers if they hit a certain target.
Over the course of that conversation it led up to him yelling and making sure that we
understood that we are to accept as many people as possible, regardless of the application,
regardless of the requirements that they have or don't have.
It was made very clear to us that the reason why we're accepting as many people as possible
is not only to reach that goal, that number that he was trying to get to, but also to accept
as many athletes as possible.
At the end of it, after kind of yelling, being very loud and exasperatory, now slamming
his fists on the table, making sure we all understood the situation, he'd been left
through him and then kind of peeked his head back in and said, oh, and by the way, if
we hit that 300 number, which is an unacceptable, like we've never reached that before, everybody
gets 5K bonus.
And this is for a school that has about 700 students.
I mean, the SEAL team, six metaphor fields, like he's trying to get people to hunt down
his preferred targets.
Right.
And, you know, this is not particularly hard in Florida.
Florida has a lot of great athletes. What was the athletics department like when you were there? There wasn't one.
When did they make one? Pretty much about a half an hour after that first meeting with
Corcoran where he went into the admissions office. They had to do it overnight for the incoming
semester. And so they're starting
on that that meeting was on March 31st. So I guess that meant that they started on April
Fools day. I'm getting the sense of of how on the nose the contrast is between the old
new college as it were and the new new college because when you were there, it was it was again
nerds, bookish people. And now they're trying to basically get all of you guys out of there and replace you
with Ron DeSantis aligned conservative jocks. And my mystery here is like, how do you convince
those athletes to join a baseball team at a school that did not have an athletics department.
Right, so New College made a pitch to join the NAIA, which is sort of the step child or
the junior to the NCAA. And so a lot of promises were made to students that they were going to have top-notch
facilities for multiple sports. The idea was you're going to be part of a top-notch NAIA school and you're going to have all the
perquisites and bells and whistles that come with that, including you're going to be able
to pursue the kind of academic degree that you would hope to get as a student athlete.
So you're going to be able to do sports medicine and sports management, both of which are not taught at New College.
The admissions officer I spoke to said, those people on operating through corporate through to Santhus
went and pressured our admissions team to lie to athletic students, lied to students in general to increase the amount of
enrollment that we had at the college
to the level that you wanted, no matter what.
No matter their application materials,
the things that they had, their level of academic rigor
that could allow them to come to our college.
The real estate pitch here,
of like we're gonna build you all these facilities,
you'll have high class everything
because we care about this and there's money here and you'll get scholarships too
and all that stuff. How does that manifest as you're reporting led you to understand when it
came to the admissions department and the practices of like who we can take and what standards there were.
Basically all bets are off. President Corcoran effectively told them, if it's gray, let it play.
During this meeting where he came in to encourage this, he even said that if it's, you know,
with the black and white version of like, what is okay and what's absolutely illegal, if
it's gray, go for it.
That those were like, nearly his words verbatim.
If it's in the clear or anywhere in the gray
as long as it's not clearly illegal, I want you to do it to get those numbers up.
And yeah, that's absolutely not allowed. I mean, let alone to hear it from our president.
So we should say that a spokesperson for New College did insist to Pobletauri finds out that Richard Corcoran, the president, quote,
never advocated for nor will he ever advocate for operating in the gray.
End quote, and that Corcoran also never encouraged admissions officials to lie to students.
But the spokesperson did acknowledge that the school's president did float
increased pay for hitting admissions numbers and and he did assemble, in his words, a SEAL Team 6,
just not, apparently, with military connotations.
Now, when it comes to Christianity, New College provided this blunt statement that I want
to read you here.
Quote, we're a public university. We don't recruit students on the basis of
religion." End quote.
Now, I'll remind you, Jeff, you said you had to write four essays, four f**king essays to get
into New College. And now, what's that like? Well, the admissions officer I spoke to said,
and you know, maybe this is not representative of
all of them, but this really just jumped out that he got an essay that was effectively
a screenshot of the notes app that comes standard with the iPhone.
And that he saw something that sort of attempted a paragraph that was riddled with grammatical
errors, noun verb inconsistencies, just sort
of like, you know, spin the wheel, take your pick punctuation.
And the essay amounted to, I'm a baseball player.
I love God, you know, just put me in coach.
But in fairness to all the baseball players who, you know, have agency and maybe aren't Republicans
or at very least, Rhonda Santis Republicans, how do
you make sure as the new college admissions department that you're getting the people
that you want?
Right.
Well, I think it's contingent on who you're looking for and who you're sending out looking.
So one of the details that we learned was that of the new coaches recruited for this year,
five that were brought in by the athletic director, all five of them, worked at Christian schools
like Liberty University or Bob Jones.
You don't need only people accredited at Christian schools
to find athletes in the state of Florida.
How many kids, how many athletes
did they end up bringing in?
Well, of the 338 incoming students this year,
153 of them are student athletes.
So this is a radical, truly like virtually overnight shift
in the identity of the school.
And of those, 150 three student athletes,
one in every two of these new students,
how many of those are baseball players specifically?
73, man.
And to go ahead and contextualize those numbers again for you
The University of Florida which again has 60 times the number of students that new college has has about 35
Baseball players so half the number that new college of school that is 160th its size has right
I mean the average like college baseball roster is about like 35 players.
40 it's at most.
It's, it's, it's dozens more than is on an MLB roster, right?
Right.
The Padres don't carry this many people.
The Yankees don't carry this many people.
So how does the athletic director, the leader of the athletics department that was just
born?
How does he explain the fact that new
college now cares more about baseball in terms of its roster size than literally every other baseball
team I have ever heard of? Well, we spoke to the athletic director, Mariano Jimenez, and he struck
us a little bit differently than we'd expected. I didn't realize your new college grad. That's awesome.
I'm really excited about this call knowing that you're a new college grad. We've been told that he was kind of a
contemptuous interviewee and had a tendency to eat popcorn and talk about his relationship with
God, but he was very well composed and very insistent on talking about, he referred to it almost as
a kind of kumbaya sentiment of using sports to improve everyone's lives and also draw the campus together.
And oddly, he kind of sounded like an old new college student.
I think civil discourse is the way forward.
I think being able to relate to people who don't have,
who don't have your background is the best way to go forward.
Many times going into a situation, I assume I'm wrong.
And I think that just it diffuses things.
I'd love to see this be the blueprint
for all universities going forward.
I think this is the blueprint.
We have people from all sides coming in together,
being a merit-based place where people can come in and grow and learn and serve together
in a place of this course.
So just to be clear, what he's saying is never mind the 73 baseball players that we have now,
this is a laboratory for democracy.
That's what he's telling you.
Right.
On the other hand, we did do a public records request for his communications, and we found
one from director Jimenez that read,
quote, our top priority right now is recruiting coaches and players who line up with our core values.
But this struggle over what our refers to here is that your new college,
Jeb Lund, or is it Rhonda Santis and President Corcoran, and their new new college?
How do they define the core values that they were referring to?
You know, I think those values are an extension of their existing war on woke.
I think the purpose is to create a kind of Trojan horse of a demographically of people
who align with their political interests in a way that is antagonistic to or maybe overbearing
on the existing culture at New College.
And in fact, when we spoke to the admissions officer, he said that it ended up being a
large population of athletes that generally Christian, generally more than about than our
typical student population.
So I think that level of culture change
is kind of what they were going for.
This time around, we have the governor
who instituted the changes that happened at our college
saying the same rhetoric as the people that he put into our college
saying, we want to change the culture here.
It's become too quote, quote, quote,
and that's we've moved away from what he calls
the classic liberal arts, Akadiyah. How he describes a classic liberal arts environment is actually what
we had in the first place. Free ability to say whatever you would like to discuss any topics
you're interested in. There's no censorship. Conversely, that censorship is what he actually brought to our school.
And I should be clear as a buffet Catholic myself.
I feel like wrong, yeah, with being Christian.
But I am reminded that this is a public school, is it not?
So the whole, we're favoring a specific religion in admissions very explicitly feels like
a bit of an issue.
Yeah, no, I mean, it's explicitly unconstitutional as a public entity.
And again, just a tie back to the baseball thing here.
The baseball players are how they're smuggling in the religiosity.
They're preferred type of religiosity.
That's right.
And in fact, of the 180 presidential honors scholarships that were conferred this year,
85 of them went to the athletic department, despite the fact that the ACT, SAT, and GPA
scores for all the student athletes are down relative to the average at New College.
You know, I'm reminded, as I listen to you talk about this, that the right loves to rail
against affirmative action because of the different standards on standardized test scores.
And this was a whole movement that resulted in the Supreme Court, of course, changing what's
legally possible when it comes to racial minorities being rated on a curve, so to speak, when
it came to those tests.
So what was the admissions department of the new new college doing when it came to, you
know, the SAT?
Well, in this case, it seems that they had no problem with lower scores.
We've heard of student athletes who were personally contacted by athletic director
Jimenez, essentially telling them, don't worry about the ACT and SAT.
That's not an issue.
There are even students coming up to us being told that the coach
who had reached out to them over social media, which is unheard of,
saying that they did not need an SAT or an ACT, that that was not a requirement.
To see him do that, bring them in straight office social media,
reaching out to them on there, and then misleading them on the admissions program
and like how that works,
right? We have to have an essay. We have to have an essay to your ACT by law. They're like, well,
Coach said that we could apply and not have one of those and it'd be totally fine, that we work
something out. When we spoke to him, director Jimenez assured us that he personally reviews every single file to know why a kid to quote,
no, why this kid is not up to standards. He said, now, that was probably a community college
transfer. They don't have to take those tests, but the overall sort of sloppiness and disregard
for standards and the rest of the process makes that also seem a little bit dubious.
The way it's sounding to me so far, Jev, is that this is both incredibly orchestrated,
like a truly top down system from DeSantis to the president, to the athletics director,
and the admissions department all sort of like working in ideological concert.
And yet at the same time, it doesn't seem especially like slick or subtle.
Right, I'm reminded of the quote from deep throat
from all the president's men.
These are not very bright guys, and this got out of hand.
The truth is, these are not very bright guys,
and things got out of hand. The trick, of course, about shielding your entire campus from outside scrutiny also is
that there are some kids, presumably still, who are more Jeb Lund, than they are Ron DeSantis.
And so how do the remaining students
from the previous administration, so to speak,
how do they feel about what's happening to their school?
Well, they're trying, they're trying to put a game face on it
and they're trying to make it work
because they don't really have any choice.
We spoke to Colin Jeffery's student body,
a co-president last year.
And he told me that basically, you know, the first interaction he got with Richard Corcoran
was, guess what, you're getting a new mascot.
We have been working with the president to come up with a list of like mascots.
But the list of mascots was contingent on.
We would keep the null set as the official mascot of the school, just because of all that
it's represented over the years.
And then we would work together to come up with an athletics mascot.
None of our suggestions were taken and it ended up being, okay, the athletics mascot is also
going to be the entire school mascot.
And also we are going to ask the students what mascot they want.
We're just going to like come up with our own mascot.
The mighty banyans was drawn up by one student
given to the president and then without input from the students
or without the student government seal of approval.
It was just, okay, this is our mascot.
Wait a minute, so you're beloved terribly dorky Null set.
Right.
Has now become, unfortunately, its name,
it is nothing now.
Yeah, no, it's been replaced by the mighty Banyan.
This tree is jacked.
Like this tree has been doing a lot of steroids
in what I'm inferring from the musculature of said tree.
But wait, the arrangements though,
the living situation, the life of a student
who's not one of these favored nation status baseball players
or athletes, what is that like now
in terms of just like day-to-day stuff?
Well, academically, it's tough for them
because about a third of their faculty are gone.
And so if you needed a particular instructor to complete your major and graduate and do
your thesis defense and they're not there, good luck.
So some of them are transferring, some of them are obviously going to have to rethink
what they learn.
In terms of student life, though, in the last 20 years or so, it's evolved that once you become more of an upperclassman, you go to the dork and goldstein dorms, they are sweets.
Those have been given over entirely to the student athletes.
And so, in other words, there are upstairs people and downstairs people at New College now, and the people with the amenities and the fancy
life, those would be the jocks.
Yes, and for everybody else, they're kind of scrambling because the pay dorms, which
are very old, have a persistent mold problem so they can't be used.
So you have just tons of students who are living off campus at the garden in about 25 minutes from school and there's about
200 of them there. These were not set up for long-term living, they're hotels.
Looking at these people who are now getting special treatment, different than returning
students who are like the people living in the housing that we were all assigned to in the spring. We definitely saw, like,
there was going to be some tension. So we could come up with a Unity project, which was
like events that were supposed to bring people together. It did not work, essentially.
We held a bunch of events, I remember to showcase New College culture and showcase the New College we knew, but we ended up having no athletes coming to those events.
There was a stark divide, and I would say the divide was also maybe worsened by the fact
that they were in a separate building.
It almost felt like two classes.
So I'm getting this idea of a segregated campus where they're the Jocks and they're the rest of the kids and by the way, like I,
unlots of sports crazed campuses like the athletes do sort of like live off in
better conditions elsewhere like that's not totally unusual but this feels
extreme in a bunch of ways the athletics department and the baseball team is
being used to, um,
yeah, truly weaponize a political agenda from the very top down, from the governor to the
president, on down upon the student body. And I also wonder, what do the professors think
about what's happened to, um, the school? Well, I think all the ones that left have, uh, express
themselves very clearly with their feet.
We spoke to Amy Reed who is a long time professor there of French and gender studies.
I've been at New College since 1995. I wear multiple hats. I'm a professor of French and Director
of the Gender Studies Program. I'm currently chair of the faculty and that means I sit on the
new College Board of Trustees. She's been able to see this up close as these changes have been
happening in meetings abruptly without warning and with no small amount of contempt. She watched
up close as a board member just made a motion to get rid of the Gender Studies Department out of
nowhere, no discussion, and that was it. The motion is to direct the president's staff
to take the necessary and proper steps
to terminate the Gender Studies program.
And so there went some of what she contributed
to the college and the community
that she had helped to build there.
She's watched up close as taxpayer dollars
paid for coffee cups at the student cafe
that have Christian verses printed on them.
She's also watched up close as, you know, conservative activists on the board have called for,
and I quote here, recruiting a new cohort of mostly male student athletes
who will begin to rebalance the hormones and the politics on campus.
You can't do that. You're not allowed to do that.
And she's watched, again, you know,
one of the knocks on New College for much of its history
has been the price per graduate, right?
How many dollars go into each student?
And the sort of finger wagging from conservatives in Tallahassee
that New College isn't being run like a business.
And yet, we have spent $50 million this year,
including $1.9 million for the athletic budget to bring in more men than women and a lot
more money for men's teams, which was potentially a title 9 violation.
Their motivation for what they've done is deeply misogynistic. They created an athletic program that is skewed towards male athletes
because they felt like there were too many women on the faculty and amongst the student body
here at New College. The NCAA says you're not supposed to be resetting a gender balance
through the creation of sports teams.
We were over 65% female identified students,
which is not 50-50, but it's actually within,
within the parameters of a lot of other liberal arts
colleges across the country.
So they brought in primarily male athletes
so that this year our incoming class was majority male, majority male.
And to have people crowing about this is profoundly troubling.
Okay, so we should also say here that the spokesperson for New College did
claim that the athletic department signed up so many male athletes because the
athletic director was also the baseball coach.
And that that whole thing about proudly rebalancing
the hormones and the politics on campus,
that was simply representative of, quote,
hitting the ground running on the recruiting trail.
End quote.
This is one word that I heard
him and as the athletic director say to you, because he called
this whole thing a blueprint, right?
So as messy, as symbolic as it is, this is a plan that he seems to want to replicate,
to export.
What's your sense of where the ronda sent us approach to college education
via the new college
in sarasota uh... might go next
well it's already gone to f.i.u here in the state of florida
and you can already see it in the state of was constant the republican jerry
mandered all the hell legislature
is withholding funding for state universities in less they scour those
universities of diversity, equity,
and inclusion.
So, it may not have worked efficiently and beautifully here, right?
But like any prototype, one of the reasons why you take it out and you test it is to see
how it's f***ed up.
So the next time, you don't f*** up that way.
Because any governor who has the ability to remove trustees from a state institution
could effectively do this.
And now they're going to know, thanks to new college where the pitfalls are.
You know, it seems impossible at this point to ignore that freedom has been the political
promise by Rhondis Antis academic freedom.
We rank number one in education freedom.
Give us a new birth of freedom.
Citadel of freedom.
Citadel of freedom. The nation's Citadel of freedom. Give us a new birth of freedom. Citadel of freedom. Citadel of freedom. The nation's Citadel of freedom.
We've become the focus point of freedom. We don't think that the purpose of
universities is to impose an ideological agenda. There should be
freedom of discussion, freedom of speech, and there shouldn't be an imposition of
an orthodoxy. And we've just been very clear on that. The idea that sensorious PC culture
is preventing you from knowing the truth.
The idea that we need to let people have freedom of speech.
And yet everything you've described
in terms of those freedoms seems to be almost
diametrically the opposite from what is being promised by Florida's politicians.
No, that's absolutely true. I haven't mentioned it before, but it's the new college model
and new colleges and institution as it existed before it was interfered with. Did a very good job
of letting kids run wild with finding out whatever answers they wanted to.
The son of the founder of Stormfront, the number one white supremacist website
in the United States, went to New College and he was accepted.
And he was there.
He was there to do race research.
And he was given free reign of every archive to conclude what he wanted and research what he wanted.
And what he found out was he was wrong, right? But he was given the reign of every archive to conclude what he wanted and research what he wanted. And what he found out was he was wrong, right?
But he was given the freedom to do that.
So what's troubling about the DeSantis blueprint
in a word that appears in his campaign book
is that authoritarian impulse
that can be applied to any school in the United States
where the governor has the ability to remove the trustees
and change
the character of a public institution.
Certain people on the board of trustees have been very clear that this is their plan
to export this not just across the state of Florida, but across the country.
So yes, this is exportable.
And it's imperative that we all take measure of what's going on and stand up against this.
The ideological imposition and elimination of choice that is under this program that is
being imposed upon us is going to have really long-term consequences for the health of our
democracy. Jeff, as we mull over the terrible forecast for education in democracy in America, I am led
to the sports of this.
I am a sports reporter.
Let's not forget.
Pablo Dory finds out as a sports show.
And I want to find out at the very end, is this 73 person baseball team at New College
actually going to be any good?
Well, that's a great question, Pablo. I think, probably chiefly of concern is they don't have a
baseball field. Wait, hold on, hold on. Because the promise again was facilities was upgrades.
And you're saying that there is not a field.
Well, there was a plan maybe to buy out the lease
of the classic car museum that's right next to the campus
so they could put a baseball field there,
but that seems to have been scuppered.
Yeah, look, Jeb, I'm not,
I'm no World War II military tactician.
Okay, but my understanding is,
if your team doesn't have a baseball field
Probably at a competitive strategic disadvantage. Yeah, a little bit a little bit
Yeah, in fact when we spoke to Colin Jeffries the former student body co-president
He said that he got an email specifically from an international student who was coming all the way to Florida to play baseball
for new college and he said hey
What's going on with those upgraded facilities that I was promised?
And Colin just had to say, nope.
I hate that I'm feeling this way, but all of it does make me kind of want to root for
what is like objectively an underdog story, right?
Like this baseball team is not gonna be good.
And they are given actually none of the things
they were promised by Rhonda Santas
and all the cronies that have been empowered by him.
And I just, I'm feeling a little conflicted
given that in that group might be like the next Rhonda Santas.
Right, yeah, maybe this is the sense of betrayal
that is gonna send him on a
eventual path toward infiltrating baseball into all kinds of other public institutions.
Libraries, for instance. Yes. The DMV.
Jeb Lund noted non-graduate of New College.
Thank you for telling me about your thesis
and your reporting.
Yeah, thank you for providing me an opportunity
in front of a broadcast audience,
a wide swath of human beings to admit
that I'm lying in that part of my resume.
Hahaha.
Finally, finally the truth comes out. So at the end here, I am thinking not merely about the demographic baseball bomb that
Rhondis Antis dropped on New College, Jeblun's alma mater.
I am also thinking about the bomb that just got dropped on mine.
And yeah, reset the, you know, Dazen's Pablo mentioned he went to Harvard side to zero.
Fair.
But Claudeine Gay, the first black woman to ever be president of Harvard, was ousted
just last week.
And if you want to know my reasoning for why President Gay actually did need to go,
concerning her alleged plagiarism slash academic misconducts
and her earlier congressional testimony about campus speech codes,
which was disastrous.
I talked about all of that on MSNBC.
It's nuanced, but I'll put a link to it in today's newsletter
at www.pablo.show.
The reality, though, is that pretty much every university president now needs to be a war
time president.
The reality is that education is now the biggest front in the culture war, baseball bombs,
and all.
In fact, something you should know is that the right-wing activists who orchestrated the
campaign against Claudine Gay is also, of course, on the board of New College of Florida,
personally installed by Ron DeSantis.
He's the guy who had said this.
Recruiting a new cohort of mostly male student athletes who will begin to rebalance the hormones and the politics on campus.
And that guy Chris Rufo is awful to be clear, but he is a cunning and
shameless strategist, someone who may have even appreciated Jeb Lund's thesis on World War II code breaking.
Which is why every school must now be prepared to publicly defend itself
and the mission of genuine academic freedom
from the greatest weapon that these strategists all have in their arsenal. The fact that they don't care
about genuine academic freedom, at all.
This has been Pablo Tore finds out a metal-lark media production. And I'll talk to you next time.
you.