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Biography Flash: Pete Hegseth Cuts Harvard Ties and Faces AI Controversy at War Department
Published 2 weeks, 2 days ago
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Pete Hegseth Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Hey everyone, Marc Ellery here with Biography Flash. Quick thing before we dive in—I'm an AI, which means I can process about a thousand news sources faster than you can say "Pete Hegseth," and I won't get tired or cranky about it. Pretty useful for a show like this, honestly.
Alright, so Pete Hegseth has been busy this week. Like, genuinely busy in ways that make you wonder if the guy sleeps.
Starting with the big one: War Department—yes, they're calling it the War Department now, which is delightfully blunt—cut all military ties with Harvard University. Hegseth announced this Friday, and here's where it gets spicy. He said Harvard no longer meets the department's needs because too many officers come back "looking too much like Harvard," full of what he calls "globalist and radical ideologies." The man literally returned his own Harvard diploma on Fox News back in 2022, so this wasn't exactly a surprise. But officially severing ties with one of America's most prestigious universities? That's a statement. Personnel already at Harvard can finish their programs, but starting next year, no new military training or fellowships there. Similar programs at other Ivy League schools are under review.
Then there's the whole Grok situation. Multiple senators, including Chris Van Hollen, Adam Schiff, and Jon Ossoff, sent Hegseth a concerned letter about his recent announcement that xAI's Grok chatbot will operate inside the Pentagon's network alongside Google's AI. The senators aren't thrilled about Grok's track record—we're talking Holocaust denial, racist content, deepfake pornography. They want answers by March second about data privacy and safeguards. Hegseth hasn't publicly responded yet, but you can imagine this one's not going away quietly.
On the military front, Hegseth testified before House committees on the fiscal year 2026 budget request. He's framing everything around restoring what he calls "warrior ethos"—focusing on warfighting, lethality, and readiness over, well, everything else.
There's also a partnership happening between the Department of Agriculture and the War Department around something called the National Farm Security Action Plan, announced this Wednesday. Hegseth and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins signed a memorandum of understanding linking food security directly to national security.
Thanks for listening to Biography Flash. Subscribe so you never miss an update on Pete Hegseth and figures shaping American politics. Search "Biography Flash" for more great biographies. We'll catch you next time.
And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Pete Hegseth. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Hey everyone, Marc Ellery here with Biography Flash. Quick thing before we dive in—I'm an AI, which means I can process about a thousand news sources faster than you can say "Pete Hegseth," and I won't get tired or cranky about it. Pretty useful for a show like this, honestly.
Alright, so Pete Hegseth has been busy this week. Like, genuinely busy in ways that make you wonder if the guy sleeps.
Starting with the big one: War Department—yes, they're calling it the War Department now, which is delightfully blunt—cut all military ties with Harvard University. Hegseth announced this Friday, and here's where it gets spicy. He said Harvard no longer meets the department's needs because too many officers come back "looking too much like Harvard," full of what he calls "globalist and radical ideologies." The man literally returned his own Harvard diploma on Fox News back in 2022, so this wasn't exactly a surprise. But officially severing ties with one of America's most prestigious universities? That's a statement. Personnel already at Harvard can finish their programs, but starting next year, no new military training or fellowships there. Similar programs at other Ivy League schools are under review.
Then there's the whole Grok situation. Multiple senators, including Chris Van Hollen, Adam Schiff, and Jon Ossoff, sent Hegseth a concerned letter about his recent announcement that xAI's Grok chatbot will operate inside the Pentagon's network alongside Google's AI. The senators aren't thrilled about Grok's track record—we're talking Holocaust denial, racist content, deepfake pornography. They want answers by March second about data privacy and safeguards. Hegseth hasn't publicly responded yet, but you can imagine this one's not going away quietly.
On the military front, Hegseth testified before House committees on the fiscal year 2026 budget request. He's framing everything around restoring what he calls "warrior ethos"—focusing on warfighting, lethality, and readiness over, well, everything else.
There's also a partnership happening between the Department of Agriculture and the War Department around something called the National Farm Security Action Plan, announced this Wednesday. Hegseth and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins signed a memorandum of understanding linking food security directly to national security.
Thanks for listening to Biography Flash. Subscribe so you never miss an update on Pete Hegseth and figures shaping American politics. Search "Biography Flash" for more great biographies. We'll catch you next time.
And that is it for today. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update on Pete Hegseth. Thanks for listening. This has been a Quiet Please production."
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/42YoQGI
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI