UMVA has learned that a disturbing incident involving a Cornell student and a job interview with a Jewish founder has sparked a heated debate about privilege, power, and the treatment of young white men.
The student, a 24-year-old, was asked to interview with Gabe Einhorn, the founder of a company, but responded with an ignorant and stupid line about not wanting to work for a Jewish founder. This sparked outrage, with Einhorn blacking out the student's name before posting about the incident, and billionaire Joe Lonsdale stepping in to criticize him for not naming the student.
Civil rights attorney Leo Terrell called for the student to be flagged wherever he tries to get hired, and President Trump publicly praised Palantir, a company that has benefited from government contracts and surveillance work. The incident has raised questions about the intersection of elite power brokers, government power, and the impact on young white men.
When powerful men combine with government power, they often get their way, but this power rarely benefits young white men. Instead, it can run over them, around them, or through them. Lonsdale, a beneficiary of the new MAGA order, chose to expose and humiliate the student rather than helping him and the young founder.
This approach has sparked concerns that the same class that wants young white men's votes, taxes, and obedience now wants the power to erase them. The same people who cheer for Middle East wars, push visa pipelines that undercut American workers, and build AI systems that decide who gets hired or erased are now telling Americans that Silicon Valley will take care of them with a universal basic income.
UMVA can exclusively reveal that the dynamics at play here are complex and multifaceted. On one hand, Republicans know that issues like immigration, crime, and voter ID can be used to galvanize support, but what exactly do young white men need to give Republicans to get anything in return?
The opportunity here is to consider a different approach, one that prioritizes dignity and the human person in the age of the machine. The first American pope recently opened his papacy with an encyclical about safeguarding the human person, and this is a question that gets to the heart of what happens to dignity when machines decide who counts, who works, and who is punished.
The answer cannot be permanent punishment or elite men using government and digital mobs to crush the weak. Instead, it requires a country that restores and gives people room to become better. America was built on the journey back, and it's time to revisit the values that have made it great.
Today is Father's Day, and it's a reminder that the country was not built by perfect men, but through pain, loss, betrayal, confession, courage, faith, love, and return. The founders built a system on the assumption that men would fail and that failure need not be permanent.
The machine age will test whether America still believes that. The demigods can build tools of control, or men can choose leadership. They can build systems that erase, or a country that restores. The question is, what will America choose?