"University".... the very name implies the pretentiousness of the idea that everything in the universe can be found through collectivist schooling by "professors", which means ones that profess, avow, or declare.
Universitas is a Latin word meaning "the whole, total, the universe, the world", or in Roman law a society or corporation; the latter sense is where the word university is derived from, in the the Latin phrase "universitas magistrorum et scholarium", which roughly means "a society or community of teachers and scholars", with an underlying connotation that such a society covers all subjects.
What do graduates aka "alumni" (Latin, literally "foster sons") call the university they attended? They call it their "alma mater". The alma mater, meaning "nourishing mother" in Latin, is one of the most enduring symbols of the university. The phrase was first used to describe the University of Bologna, Italy, founded in 1088, and has since become common parlance. The messaging here can't be denied: "The school is your real parent, nevermind those uneducated people who gave you life."
The first official universities in Europe were established by Catholics. What does "Catholic" mean? The word Catholic comes from the Greek meaning "through the whole," that is "universal," "world-wide," "all inclusive." Some people are confused thinking that "Catholic" simply refers to a member of the Catholic Church, but it actually refers to a universalist worldview, one within which a Church exists.
"The university arose around mutual aid societies (known as universitates scholarium) of foreign students called "nations" (as they were grouped by nationality) for protection against city laws which imposed collective punishment on foreigners for the crimes and debts of their countrymen. These students then hired scholars from the city's pre-existing lay and ecclesiastical schools to teach them subjects such as liberal arts, notarial law, theology, and ars dictaminis (scrivenery).
The lectures were given in informal schools called scholae. In time the various universitates scholarium decided to form a larger association, or Studium—thus, the university. The Studium grew to have a strong position of collective bargaining with the city, since by then it derived significant revenue through visiting foreign students, who would depart if they were not well treated. The foreign students in Bologna received greater rights, and collective punishment was ended.
There was also collective bargaining with the scholars who served as professors at the university. By the initiation or threat of a student strike, the students could enforce their demands as to the content of courses and the pay professors would receive."--Wikipedia
Yes, you read that right. What we now refer to as "communist" tactics such as collective bargainings and strikes were originally used by foreign students at the University in order to subvert local laws against foreigners, degrading the integrity of the host nation, all the while retaining their own ethnic integrity.
The University of Bologna currently has campuses in Cesena, Forlì, Ravenna and Rimini as well as branch centres abroad in Buenos Aires, Argentina, New York, Brussels, and Shanghai.
Are you smelling the globalism yet or should I turn up the heat?
Let's go further back. Way back. Let's go back to the Mouseion, Alexandria's famous ancient University.
Modern knowledge of the ancient Mouseion comes primarily from ancient texts. The ancient texts state that the Mouseion was part of the palace complex at Alexandria, Egypt. The original Mouseion is believed to have been built by the earliest (pagan) Greek rulers of Egypt, specifically Ptolemy I Soter, near his palace.
Tour Egypt, an organization that facilitates Egypt tourism says: "Properly, the Mouseion was a shrine of the Muses, the goddesses of literature and the arts, and its head was a priest of the Muses, first nominated by the kings of Egypt, and later by the Roman emperors. We believe that the facility was dedicated in about 300 BC, but it was Soter's successor, Ptolemy II Philadelphus, who called the most learned men in all fields to come to Alexandria and lecture."
Read the previous paragraph again. The Mouseion, the world's first ancient university, was a pagan shrine dedicated to pagan goddesses. Rather than recognizing skills in the arts and sciences as being G-d given gifts, the Greek cultists attribute these talents to a group of nymph like goddesses. Then they erect a hall of study dedicated to these mythological goddesses and invite scholars to lecture there, to strengthen the association of human talent and intelligence with these pagan symbols.
The entire original purpose of a university is the DENIAL OF THE UNITY OF G0D!
Nearly every problem that we complain about in modern society can be traced back to this viewpoint which posits that idolaters are the truly enlightened and those who believe in views like the Lord of Abraham are somehow unintelligent and superstitious.
Tour Egypt also talks about some of the scholars and their notable works that came from The Mouseion : "In Astronomy, Aristarcus of Samos (310-230 BC) was the first astronomer to prove heliocentricity (as against geocentricity). He was persecuted by the religious authorities, who refused to believe that the earth and planets circled the sun and not the other way around. "
"In the field of geography, Eratosthenes proved the earth was spherical and measured its circumference by an ingenious but quite simple method. His calculation was within one percent of the present measurement. "
Every "modern", anti-biblical narrative seems to have originated from this Pagan temple in Alexandria.
Read: "Ancient Alexandria and the dawn of medical science":
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3991212/
"As for the Mouseion, Mostafa El-Abbadi writes in Life and Fate of the ancient Library of Alexandria (Paris 1992):
"The Mouseion, being at the same time a 'shrine of the Muses', enjoyed a degree of sanctity as long as other pagan temples remained unmolested. Synesius of Cyrene, who studied under Hypatia at the end of the fourth century, saw the Mouseion and described the images of the philosophers in it. We have no later reference to its existence in the fifth century. As Theon, the distinguished mathematician and father of Hypatia, herself a renowned scholar, was the last recorded scholar-member (c. 380), it is likely that the Mouseion did not long survive the promulgation of Theodosius' decree in 391 to destroy all pagan temples in the City."
Further: "....there is a growing consensus among historians that the Library of Alexandria likely suffered from several destructive events, but that the destruction of Alexandria's pagan temples in the late 4th century was probably the most severe and final one. The evidence for that destruction is the most definitive and secure. One certainty is that the "Daughter Library" at the Serapeum (the Temple of Serapis) was sacked during the Jewish revolt of 115 AD, and again destroyed by the monks of Theophilus in 391. "
It's clear that this original University served as a major influence for the University of Bologna and all subsequent universities. The messaging has always been anti-monotheist, anti-family, and pro-globalist.
Why now should anyone act surprised when thousands of University brainwashed students March in support of demonic rape and violence by a foreign terrorist cult and promote the rejection of all biblical values?
At several points in history, clearly, groups of religious people, both Jew and Christian, realized the pagan origins of the University / Library & set upon the "campus" in righteous anger. Let's bring back that energy.