Arendt as political theorist
In 1946 political theorist Hannah Arendt wrote a short essay, The Image of Hell. Arendt's best known works are her 1951 book The Origins of Totalitarianism, her 1963 book Eichmann in Jerusalem and her 1958 book The Human Condition. Her essay was an analysis of the Nazification of German universities in the 1930s. Arendt attended Nazi SS Otto Adolf Eichmann’s war crimes trial in Israel, inspiring her to coin the label the banality of evil. Eichmann inspired that conception of evil due to Eichmann’s utterly thoughtless role in committing mass murder under the guise of just following the law and following orders. He failed to think. He really believed, or expertly pretended to believe, that he was just following the law and following orders, which was nothing out of the ordinary. Eichmann held the SS rank of Obersturmbannführer, roughly a lieutenant colonel in the US military.
Hell in academia
In The Image of Hell, Arendt focused on how professors and administrators quickly adapted themselves to the aggressive Nazi regime instead of resisting it. She argued that the speed and eagerness of this adaptation constituted a moral collapse in the academic class, not only something from external political coercion.
She described how academic self-government and scholarly standards were hollowed out as universities became loyalty to the new power, displacing truth and intellectual integrity. The essay’s core claim is that universities under dictatorship become laboratories of opportunism, servility, and conformism when academics willingly trade intellectual honesty for career safety or advancement.
Does that sound familiar?
As one would expect, when in power both dictators and totalitarians purge and replace recalcitrant and disloyal personnel. Faculty, administrators, and students were generally seen as politically unreliable, Jewish, or otherwise undesirable. They were dismissed, forced out, or worse, and their posts filled with corrupt, incompetent loyalists or opportunists.
Obviously, scholarship was made subordinate to Nazi ideology. Research topics, curricula, and appointments are reorganized around the regime’s ideological priorities; disciplines that encourage critical thinking (especially philosophy, political theory, and independent social sciences) are marginalized or redefined. Although The Image of Hell is about Nazi Germany, Arendt intended it to be a general warning about how quickly academic institutions can be turned into instruments of authoritarian rule if the academics lack a robust sense of morality and professional responsibility in the face of authoritarian threats.
Arendt’s Hell essay pointed out that institutions, including academic institutions, hollow out and collapse faster when internal elites are willing collaborators or opportunists, not just victims of external force.
Does that sound familiar?
The status of the Trump and MAGA threat
Right now in America, and with limited success so far, Trump and virulent MAGA authoritarian ideology are trying to turn American academic institutions into instruments of authoritarian rule. There is clear evidence that Trump and organized MAGA authoritarianism are engaged in a coordinated project to poison universities and knowledge‑producing institutions, and bring them under loyalist authoritarian control. The attacks and goal are far reaching beyond merely getting rid of wokeness in academia. The MAGA effort includes federal executive actions in Trump’s current term, state‑level legislation, and pressure campaigns on elite universities framed as fights over “free speech,” “DEI,” or “anti‑Semitism”. The overall effect has been to weaken institutional autonomy and academic freedom. Link, link
At the federal level, cuts and freezes to research funding are not hypothetical threats. They’re already halting projects and closing programs. That poison has already inflicted serious long‑term damage to America’s research infrastructure system. Link, link
If Trump and MAGA elites get their way by taking the power of academic freedom from universities to make them into instruments of servitude to MAGA tyranny and corruption, they will destroy American universities. Our academic institutions will be converted into moral cesspools of loyalist garbage. In the long run, the damage to American society, international competitiveness and commerce will be enormous. Link, link
What are the chances that Trump and MAGA elites will get their way and take power of academic freedom for themselves? That is unknowable at present. The results of the 2026 mid-term elections might clarify which way this country is likely going to go, either pro-democracy and rule of law, or pro-tyranny and rule of shamelessly corrupt tyrants.