Here is a screenshot of the sophomiric design for Chelsea Clinton's new project
Of Many Institute for Multifaith Leadership. Scribbled words tell us to
"get our newsletter," and now! The links are designed like a "tag cloud."
But what does the larger "CLUBS" mean - that there is
more activity in that section than in the other sections? No, it is a
"hip" design to attract all those adolescent twenty-something year-olds
who seem to be the target for the organization.
Chelsea Clinton, the odd daughter of Hillary and Bill, who isn't as smart as either of her parents, has started an "interfaith" organization at New York University.
The New York Post's gossipy Page Six informs us:
Multitasking, job-hopping Chelsea Clinton has quietly taken on a big new job at New York University.And Frontpage Magazine's Daniel Greenfield answers his own questions:
The former first daughter has tackled what the school calls a “multifaith” role as co-founder and co-chair of its brand-new Of Many Institute. The program is described by the university as aiming to “develop multifaith dialogue and train multifaith leaders.”
[...]
She’s recently spoken of a desire to lead a program discussing faith and academics. Back in September, Clinton — who’s married to banker Marc Mezvinsky — told Time of her desire to study faith and education: “With all candor, because my husband is Jewish and I’m Christian, and we’re both practicing, it’s something that’s quite close to home,” she said.
What is a multi-faith leader you may ask? Does this mean that Chelsea Clinton is now an Imam, Pope and Rabbi? It’s entirely possible.A commenter under this article quips:
Multi-faith, shake and bake, we're all one big happy family.I've written several posts on Chelsea, and here is one titled Busy Chelsea, Married Lady that summarizes most of my observations, where I write:
She is newly hired to work for the NBC Nightly News "Rock Center with Brian Williams" and its "Making a Difference" series.Such is the life of Busy Chelsea.
[..]
Commentators who are calling her debut a "journalistically-bankrupt decision" may be exaggerating, and are surprisingly mean-spirited, but Breitbart is a little more informative:Her delivery sounds more fit for an obscure web series than broadcast television; she mumbles and low talks through her questions and response. This, coupled with her name and the general knowledge of how she got her job, strikes a discordance against the sort of story she’s reporting. A tale of elite privilege sharing the story of poverty.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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