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Featured

L’exode de Trump: Three prominent Yale Professors and an acclaimed Heart Surgeon Flee to Canada, citing Exodus due to phobia for ‘Dictator Trump’s Fascist Totalitarianism’

March 29, 2025 7:17 pm
Frontpage, Geopolitics

r/canada - Three prominent Yale professors depart for Canadian university, citing Trump fears

According to Yale Daily News,

Three prominent Yale professors depart for Canadian university, citing Trump fears

History department power couple Timothy Snyder and Marci Shore and philosophy professor Jason Stanley will begin teaching at the University of Toronto’s renowned Munk School in fall 2025.

Three prominent critics of President Donald Trump are leaving Yale’s faculty — and the United States — amid attacks on higher education to take up positions at the University of Toronto in fall 2025.

Philosophy professor Jason Stanley announced this week that he will leave Yale, while history professors Timothy Snyder and Marci Shore, who are married, decided to leave around the November elections. The three professors will work at Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy.

Stanley wrote to the Daily Nous that his decision to leave was “entirely because of the political climate in the United States.” On Wednesday, he told the Guardian that he chose to move after seeing how Columbia University handled political attacks from Trump.

After the Trump administration threatened to deport two student protesters at Columbia and revoked $400 million in research funding from the school, Columbia agreed on Friday to concede to a series of demands from the Trump administration that included overhauling its protest policies and imposing external oversight on the school’s Middle Eastern studies department.

“When I saw Columbia completely capitulate, and I saw this vocabulary of, well, we’re going to work behind the scenes because we’re not going to get targeted — that whole way of thinking presupposes that some universities will get targeted, and you don’t want to be one of those universities, and that’s just a losing strategy,” Stanley told the Guardian.

“I just became very worried because I didn’t see a strong enough reaction in other universities to side with Columbia,” he added.

Yale has not released a statement addressing the revocation of Columbia’s funding. Yale College Dean Pericles Lewis has told the News that he does not anticipate any changes in Yale’s free expression and protest policies. University President Maurie McInnis previously said that she is prioritizing lobbying for Yale’s interests in Washington over issuing public pronouncements.

Shore wrote that the Munk School had long attempted to recruit her and Snyder and that the couple had seriously considered the offers “for the past two years.” Shore wrote that the couple decided to take the positions after the November 2024 elections. However, a spokesperson for Snyder told Inside Higher Ed that Snyder’s decision was made before the elections, was largely personal and came amid “difficult family matters.” The spokesperson also said that he had “no desire” to leave the United States.

Shore wrote that her and Snyder’s children were factors in the couple’s decision.

Snyder and Shore both specialize in Eastern European history and each has drawn parallels between the fascist regimes they have studied and the current Trump administration. Stanley, a philosopher, has also published books on fascism and propaganda, including the popular book “How Fascism Works.”

In 2021, Stanley and Snyder co-taught a course at Yale titled “Mass Incarceration in the Soviet Union and the United States.” Earlier this week, Stanley and Shore joined nearly 3,000 Jewish faculty across the U.S. to sign a letter denouncing the arrest of a Columbia student protester and urging their respective institutions to resist the Trump administration’s policies targeting colleges.

“I know Jason Stanley very well, he’s been one of my most important interlocutors on political, historical and philosophical questions for the better part of a decade now,” Shore wrote to the News on Wednesday. “I am thrilled that he’ll be joining us in Toronto, but also heartbroken at what’s happened to my own country.”

Paul Franks, the chair of Yale’s philosophy department, described the news of Stanley’s departure as a shock, although he knew that Stanley had been considering leaving Yale “for quite some time.” Franks described Stanley as an irreplaceable “pioneer” in analytic philosophy and as a “rare” American philosophical public intellectual.

Angel Nwadibia ’24, who took several classes with Stanley and worked as a research assistant on his latest book on fascism, lauded Stanley’s commitment to including a diverse canon in his classes’ syllabi, and to relating his courses to relevant current events.

“He has a really neat ability to marry the tools of the discipline with the contemporary crises that we as students, as people in the world, are currently facing,” Nwadibia said.

With Shore and Snyder departing, Yale’s faculty will be short two of its most prominent scholars of Eastern Europe. Although Stanley’s academic work was not focused on the region, the philosophy professor has commented and written on the war in Ukraine and taught a course at the Kyiv School of Economics in Ukraine in the summer of 2024.

Olha Tytarenko, a Ukrainian language professor, shared that Snyder and Shore provided a crucial platform for conversations and events focused on Ukraine.

“The departure of Professors Shore and Snyder leaves behind a profound void,” Tytarenko wrote to the News. “The intellectual and moral leadership they offered in advancing public understanding of Ukrainian history, culture, and politics at Yale is, in many ways, irreplaceable.”

Andrei Kureichik, a Belarusian dissident and research scholar at the MacMillan Center, called the professors’ departure “a big loss” for Yale and American education, but urged the University community to carry forward the pro-Ukraine advocacy Snyder and Shore led on campus.

Molly Brunson, Director of the Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies Program, also emphasized the couple’s “tireless” advocacy for Eastern European scholarship on campus.

When Yevhenii Monastyrskyi GRD ’23 studied European and Russian studies at Yale, Shore advised his thesis and Snyder served as his “spiritual guide,” Monastyrskyi said. He described the two professors as “generous scholars” who made time for their students.

“Professor Snyder is always good with conceptual thinking. He helps to grasp the bigger picture students are trying to pursue,” Monastyrski said. “Professor Shore is a person of ideas and language, so she really helps her students to develop the clearest but also the most beautifully written pieces.”

Asked whether she believes other professors might be encouraged to leave the United States, Shore wrote that she believes many of her colleagues will consider relocating due to the current political climate, which she deemed an “American descent into fascism.”

“I don’t feel confident that American universities will manage to mobilize to protect either their students or their faculty,” Shore said.

Franks wrote that he is not aware of other faculty in the philosophy department who are considering leaving the country for political reasons.

This semester, Shore is on leave from Yale to finish a book manuscript, though she has resided in Toronto since the beginning of the academic year. She will begin teaching at the University of Toronto in the fall as the Munk School’s chair in European intellectual history. Snyder will be the school’s inaugural chair in Modern European History.

The University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy was founded in 2010.

Fleeing Fascist Dictatorship For Rampant Corruption?

Welcome to Toronto, Yale Professors.

Your arrival will certainly uplifted Canada spiritually, especially during the tumultuous era of Trade Tariffs. But we wonder if they’re aware the City of Toronto is plagued by “rampant corruption” as the place run by “Crooks and Criminals”?

Ford-Chow

Here are some scandalous details which is only tip of the iceberg:-

Mayor Chow is complicit in Lawbreaking by posing Safety/Life Risks to the general Public knowingly and willfully

chow-caribana1

Details of the SCANDAL HERE

Mayor Chow is complicit in Lawbreaking by posing Safety/Life Risks to the general Public knowingly and wilfully

She couldn’t refute the criminal charges. And we’re asking her again the same question she have been unable to answer for ages:-

“What authorizes the Mayor or the City of Toronto the right to violate multiple safety laws and posing life risks to the general public?“

Mayor Chow seems to send a message the job of a mayor to dance in Woke Skimpy Woke Garb 😡💢🤬

chow-caribana

At the same time, here is her buddy “Corruption In Chief” Dough Ford, the Premier of the province of Ontario… Together, they bring us nothing but “Sold Us All Down The River”:-

Ford-Card

Ontario as a whole has gone to the dogs… Hopeless 😡💢🤬

Related Posts:-

  • The Greenbelt Report proves the Ford government is Corrupt to its core
  • Ontario is not for sale, but Doug Ford track records suggest he’s eveready for corporate sellouts?
  • Take look at some of Doug Ford’s Scandals & Issues before casting your precious vote
  • Doug Ford condones Law Violation that compromised Safety of the general Public knowingly and willfully

At the same time,

Acclaimed heart surgeon Dr. Marc Ruel chooses Canada over U.S. amid political uncertainty

Dr. Marc Ruel inducted into the Order of Ottawa | Faculty of Medicine
Dr. Marc Ruel turns down a move to a top American university hospital following U.S. President Trump’s multiple comments about Canadian annexation.

Dr. Marc Ruel, a world-renowned heart surgeon and innovator, has turned down a prestigious leadership role at a top U.S. hospital, citing concerns over American annexation rhetoric.

The University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI) surgeon was set to become chief of the division of adult cardiothoracic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), a role he accepted in late 2024.

“When I looked at this opportunity in the U.S., there were a few things that were very important to me. One was to work for a public school of medicine or public faculty of medicine who cares and emulates and embodies the same kind of inclusivity principles that are dear to all Canadians,” said Dr. Ruel. “And UCSF is exactly that, the top school of medicine the top research-intensive, and funded, probably in the world. I also felt it’s a good representation of Canadian healthcare institutions, of our healthcare system, and our education system. In a way I was a little bit of an export that Canada could offer to a more global platform.”

But with political discussions in the U.S. questioning Canada’s sovereignty, Ruel made the unexpected decision to stay.

“Many of the internal policies and decisions that they make are frankly none of my business,” he said. “The tipping point was really the notion of annexation, that Canada is not an independent country, especially two countries that have been the closest sister and brother of countries for more than 200 years. That discourse was very troubling to me, and I felt as a proud Canadian in my patriotic conscience I could not partake in that.”

For Ruel, if the notion of loss of sovereignty to his “beloved country” became more inflamed within the U.S., he wanted to be north of the border.

“My mandate, I felt, was something different and we had to rally, embrace together, and elbows up as we love to say,” added Dr. Ruel. “Like all of us Canadian, I felt compelled by that in my own way and wanted to do all I could towards that.”… More @ CTVNews

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