Difference between revisions of "Harvard/Center for Public Leadership"
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{{group | {{group | ||
− | |wikipedia= | + | |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_Public_Leadership |
|sourcewatch= | |sourcewatch= | ||
|constitutes=deep state milieu,deep state recruitment network | |constitutes=deep state milieu,deep state recruitment network | ||
− | |logo= | + | |logo=Center for Public Leadership.png |
− | |start= | + | |start=2000 |
− | |description= | + | |description=Leadership training center founded with money from [[Jeffrey Epstein]]'s puppet [[Les Wexner]]. |
− | | | + | |locations=Harvard Kennedy School,Massachusetts, United States |
|website=https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl | |website=https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl | ||
− | |founders= Ron Heifetz,David Gergen | + | |founders= Ron Heifetz,David Gergen,Wexner Foundation,Les Wexner |
|num_staff= | |num_staff= | ||
− | |members=Marla Malcolm Beck,Yousef Al Otaiba,Mohammed Alardhi,Omar Alghanim,Patricia Arvielo,Gabrielle Bacon,Josh Bekenstein,Nicolas Berggruen,Ben Black,Joshua Boger,Nathan Bruschi,Tushara Dilanie Canekeratne,Chris Galvin,Eric Gertler,James Gertler,Carol J. Hamilton,Donald Kaberuka,Richard M. Krasno,Dina Powell McCormick,Precious Moloi-Motsepe,Randy Peeler,David M. Rubenstein, | + | |members=,Glenn Dubin,Marla Malcolm Beck,Yousef Al Otaiba,Mohammed Alardhi,Omar Alghanim,Patricia Arvielo,Gabrielle Bacon,Josh Bekenstein,Nicolas Berggruen,Ben Black,Joshua Boger,Nathan Bruschi,Tushara Dilanie Canekeratne,Chris Galvin,Eric Gertler,James Gertler,Carol J. Hamilton,Donald Kaberuka,Richard M. Krasno,Dina Powell McCormick,Precious Moloi-Motsepe,Randy Peeler,David M. Rubenstein,,Jacinda Ardern,Juliette Kayyem,Barbara Kellerman,Joe Kim,Christine Kim,Nancy F Koehn,Elan Kogutt,Shriya Kumar,Matthew Lee,Herman B. Leonard,Emily Lin,Joy Liu,Robert Livingston,CJ LoConte,Fredrik Logevall,Junaid Lughmani,Brian Mandell,Zoe Marks,Tarek Masoud,Lia Mastrogiacomo,Amanda Matos,Amanda Matos,Nick Maynes,Nesrine Mbarek,Timothy Patrick McCarthy,Clayton McCleskey,Liz McKenna,Laura Medina,Sarah Melendez,Daniel Mellow,Julia Minson,Antanea Mitchell,Mohamed Mohamed,Hector Moncada,Brandon Moore,Mark Moore,Babak Mostaghimi,Mo Navas,Nina Nedrebo,Kote Nogin,Ike Nwaelele,Joseph Nye,Kenneth Rogoff,Bethany Russell,Tamim Saad,Caroline Sabatt,Soroush Saghafian,Juan Saldaña,Devin Samuels,Josh Sandler,Alex Santangelo,Wendy Sherman,Gage Sitzmann,Alice Soewito,Jake Sortor,Abdulkareem Alolama,Anna Tayag,Graves Tompkins,Anastasia Trainque,Andy Vargas,Carolyn Vincent,Charlotte Wagner,Rochelle Walensky,,Barbara Bush (1981),Joshua Baltodano,Tommy Amaker,Larry Bacow,Don Baer ,Matthew Barzun,Colette Pichon Battle,Deborah Borda,LaTosha Brown,Michael Brown (Public Purpose Strategies),Carol Browner,Geoffrey Canada,Carol Caruso,Alice Chen,Carmen Yulín Cruz Soto,Nicholas Ehrmann,Paul Grogan,Claude Grunitzky,Jane Harman,David Ignatius,Donald Kaberuka,Tawakkol Karman,Nicholas Kristof,John Kroger,Mitchell Landrieu,Michael Lomax,Susana Malcorra,Linda Mason,Desmond Meade,Bruce Mehlman,Karen Gordon Mills ,Shivshankar Menon,Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka,Vivek Murthy,Ellen Ochoa,Regis Pecos,Dan Pallotta,Emily Kernan Rafferty,Paola Ramos,Maria Ressa,Leni Robredo,Sima Samar,Dov Seidman,Henry Timms,Doug Ulman,Alexander Vindman,Nadja Y. West,Mark Wolf,Sheryl WuDunn |
}} | }} | ||
+ | The '''Center for Public Leadership''' (CPL) is an academic research center at [[Harvard University]], located at [[Harvard Kennedy School]]. It was founded in the year [[2000]] with money from [[Jeffrey Epstein]]'s puppet billionaire [[Les Wexner]]. | ||
==Own words== | ==Own words== | ||
− | Our mission is to inspire and enhance the capacity for principled, effective public leadership in government, politics, civil society, and business.<ref>https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/what-we-do</ref> | + | Our mission is to inspire and enhance the capacity for principled, effective public leadership in government, politics, civil society, and business.<ref>https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/what-we-do</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20191104190906/https://cpl.hks.harvard.edu/files/cpl/files/2019-20_profile_book_final.pdf</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | ==Criticism== | ||
+ | [[Joshua Baltodano]] a fellow at the Center in 2020, pointed out that "the fellowship had a very loose definition of facing adversity. Most, if not all, CPL fellows come from extreme forms of privilege. Many fellows came from families with parents working as venture capitalists or partners for large companies and institutions. CPL repeatedly showed that the mission of the program was more about teaching students how to assimilate into a culture of entitlement and privilege than it was about teaching students how to lead systemic change. I was dismayed to discover that CPL chooses not to speak out about economic, political, and social challenges, if those challenges infringe upon or threaten in any way the existing structures of entitlement and privilege in our society."<ref>https://medium.com/@baltodano415/why-i-am-boycotting-harvards-center-for-public-leadership-2023-reunion-5b1bad74879d</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Jeffrey Epstein== | ||
+ | Glenn Dubin, a hedge fund billionaire, was mentioned in the [[Jeffrey Epstein]] lawsuits. Despite no formal ties to Harvard, he donated $5 million to the Kennedy School to endow the Dubin Graduate Fellowship for Emerging Leaders. It was housed at the Center for Public Leadership, which [[Les Wexner|Les]] and [[Abigail Wexner]] had helped found in 2000.<ref>https://www.thenation.com/article/society/jeffrey-epstein-harvard-summers/</ref><ref>https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/harvard-kennedy-school-s-center-for-public-leadership-receives-3-million</ref> by then, Les Wexner had given control over his finances to [[Jeffrey Epstein]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In February 2020, Dubin's name was quietly removed from the advisory board of the Center for Public Leadership, and the Dubin fellowship was allowed to lapse. Wexner’s name was also removed from the center’s board, but it remains on one of the Kennedy School’s buildings and on the [[Wexner Israel Fellowship]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Hauser Leaders Program== | ||
+ | The Hauser Leaders Program at Harvard Kennedy School hosts a portfolio of high-profile leaders from across government, [[nonprofit]], and private sectors. Hauser Leaders spend their time on campus advising students and engaging with faculty during "richly-programmed" visits throughout the academic year. Such leaders include [[Rochelle Walensky]], [[Jacinda Ardern]] and [[Wendy Sherman]]. Its not stated how much they get paid for what in effect is a sinecure, before moving on to other positions as deep state operatives<ref>https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/leaders-in-practice/hauser-leaders-program</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==People== | ||
+ | Board and a selection of fellows, including former Hauser fellows.<ref>https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/people/search As of December 2024</ref> | ||
{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 11:22, 11 December 2024
The Center for Public Leadership (CPL) is an academic research center at Harvard University, located at Harvard Kennedy School. It was founded in the year 2000 with money from Jeffrey Epstein's puppet billionaire Les Wexner.
Contents
Own words
Our mission is to inspire and enhance the capacity for principled, effective public leadership in government, politics, civil society, and business.[1][2]
Criticism
Joshua Baltodano a fellow at the Center in 2020, pointed out that "the fellowship had a very loose definition of facing adversity. Most, if not all, CPL fellows come from extreme forms of privilege. Many fellows came from families with parents working as venture capitalists or partners for large companies and institutions. CPL repeatedly showed that the mission of the program was more about teaching students how to assimilate into a culture of entitlement and privilege than it was about teaching students how to lead systemic change. I was dismayed to discover that CPL chooses not to speak out about economic, political, and social challenges, if those challenges infringe upon or threaten in any way the existing structures of entitlement and privilege in our society."[3]
Jeffrey Epstein
Glenn Dubin, a hedge fund billionaire, was mentioned in the Jeffrey Epstein lawsuits. Despite no formal ties to Harvard, he donated $5 million to the Kennedy School to endow the Dubin Graduate Fellowship for Emerging Leaders. It was housed at the Center for Public Leadership, which Les and Abigail Wexner had helped found in 2000.[4][5] by then, Les Wexner had given control over his finances to Jeffrey Epstein.
In February 2020, Dubin's name was quietly removed from the advisory board of the Center for Public Leadership, and the Dubin fellowship was allowed to lapse. Wexner’s name was also removed from the center’s board, but it remains on one of the Kennedy School’s buildings and on the Wexner Israel Fellowship.
Hauser Leaders Program
The Hauser Leaders Program at Harvard Kennedy School hosts a portfolio of high-profile leaders from across government, nonprofit, and private sectors. Hauser Leaders spend their time on campus advising students and engaging with faculty during "richly-programmed" visits throughout the academic year. Such leaders include Rochelle Walensky, Jacinda Ardern and Wendy Sherman. Its not stated how much they get paid for what in effect is a sinecure, before moving on to other positions as deep state operatives[6]
People
Board and a selection of fellows, including former Hauser fellows.[7]
Known members
13 of the 133 of the members already have pages here:
Member | Description |
---|---|
Jacinda Ardern | New Zealand PM quickly feted by the rich and powerful around the world after her 2017 election. Worked for Tony Blair. Responsible for sealing off New Zealand during Covid-19. |
Colette Pichon Battle | Climate activist and lawyer; Obama Foundation Fellows/2019 |
Nicolas Berggruen | Sponsor of influential think-tanks |
Jane Harman | Ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee and caught her coordinating with an Israeli agent. |
David Ignatius | Attender of spooky "security" conferences |
Donald Kaberuka | Rockefeller foundation economist picked as one of 4 African Union Special Envoys on Covid-19, took part in Catastrophic Contagion |
Juliette Kayyem | |
Nicholas Kristof | WEF Rhodes Scholar nominated for the 2017 Horace Greeley Award for Best Fake News Journalist |
Joseph Nye | US deep state connected academic who wrote in June 2021 that Vaccinating the world against Covid-19 is in America’s national interest |
Dina Powell | American financial executive and political advisor. |
Maria Ressa | Founder of the Philippine news website and "fact checker" Rappler. 'Author-in-Residence at the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research. |
Kenneth Rogoff | Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund 2001-3, WEF AGM regular |
David Rubenstein | Billionaire Bilderberger Brookings co-founder and Managing Director of the Carlyle Group |
References
- ↑ https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/what-we-do
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20191104190906/https://cpl.hks.harvard.edu/files/cpl/files/2019-20_profile_book_final.pdf
- ↑ https://medium.com/@baltodano415/why-i-am-boycotting-harvards-center-for-public-leadership-2023-reunion-5b1bad74879d
- ↑ https://www.thenation.com/article/society/jeffrey-epstein-harvard-summers/
- ↑ https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/harvard-kennedy-school-s-center-for-public-leadership-receives-3-million
- ↑ https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/leaders-in-practice/hauser-leaders-program
- ↑ https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cpl/people/search As of December 2024