Greg Lukianoff
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
you know, one out of only a couple, like 100 people can pass.
Some other way of actually of not going through these massive, bloated, expensive institutions that people can raise their hands and say, I'm smart and hardworking.
I think that could be an incredibly healthy way.
I think we need additional streams for creative people to be solving problems, whether that's on X or someplace else.
I think that there's lots of things that technology could do to really help with this.
I think some of the stuff that Sal Khan is working on at Khan Academy could really help.
So I think there's a lot of ways, but they exist largely around coming up with new ways of doing things, not just expecting the old things that have, say, $40 billion in the bank that they're going to reform themselves.
And here's my โ I've been picking on Harvard a lot, but I'm going to pick on them a little bit more.
I talk a lot about class again.
There's a great book called Poison Ivy by Evan Mandry, which I recommend to everybody.
It's outrageous.
It sounds like me on a rant at Stanford.
I think the stat is elite higher education has more kids from the top 1% than they have from the bottom 50% or 60%, depending on the school.
And when you look at how much they actually replicate class privilege, it's really distressing.
So everybody should read Poison Ivy.