US Universities Struggle as Pro-Palestinian Demonstrations Grow - Dozens were arrested Monday at N.Y.U. and Yale, but officials there and at campuses across the country are running out of options to corral protests that are expected to last the rest of the school year.

Universities Struggle as Pro-Palestinian Demonstrations Grow
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Alan Blinder
2024-04-23 04:48:02GMT

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Police arrest protesters outside of New York University on Monday night. Credit...Adam Gray for The New York Times

At New York University, the police swept in to arrest protesting students on Monday night, ending a standoff with the school’s administration.

At Yale, the police placed protesters’ wrists into zip ties on Monday morning and escorted them onto campus shuttles to receive summonses for trespassing.

Columbia kept its classroom doors closed on Monday, moving lectures online and urging students to stay home.

Harvard Yard was shut to the public. Nearby, at campuses like Tufts and Emerson, administrators weighed how to handle encampments that looked much like the one that the police dismantled at Columbia last week — which protesters quickly resurrected. And on the West Coast, a new encampment bubbled at the University of California, Berkeley.

Less than a week after the arrests of more than 100 protesters at Columbia, administrators at some of the country’s most influential universities were struggling, and largely failing, to calm campuses torn by the conflict in Gaza and Israel.

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Despite arrests at Columbia last week, protests continued on campus on Monday.Credit...C.S. Muncy for The New York Times

During the turmoil on Monday, which coincided with the start of Passover, protesters called on their universities to become less financially tied to Israel and its arms suppliers. Many Jewish students agonized anew over some protests and chants that veered into antisemitism, and feared again for their safety. Some faculty members denounced clampdowns on peaceful protests and warned that academia’s mission to promote open debate felt imperiled. Alumni and donors raged.

And from Congress, there were calls for the resignation of Columbia’s president, Nemat Shafik, from some of the same lawmakers Dr. Shafik tried to pacify last week with words and tactics that inflamed her own campus.

The menu of options for administrators handling protests seems to be quickly dwindling. It is all but certain that the demonstrations, in some form or another, will last on some campuses until the end of the academic year, and even then, graduation ceremonies may be bitterly contested gatherings.

For now, with the most significant protests confined to a handful of campuses, the administrators’ approaches sometimes seem to shift from hour to hour.

“I know that there is much debate about whether or not we should use the police on campus, and I am happy to engage in those discussions,” Dr. Shafik said in a message to students and employees early Monday, four days after officers dressed in riot gear helped clear part of Columbia’s campus.

“But I do know that better adherence to our rules and effective enforcement mechanisms would obviate the need for relying on anyone else to keep our community safe,” she added. “We should be able to do this ourselves.”

Protesters have demonstrated with varying intensity since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel. But this particular round of unrest began to gather greater force last Wednesday, after Columbia students erected an encampment, just as Dr. Shafik was preparing to testify before Congress.

At that hearing in Washington, before a Republican-led House committee, she vowed to punish unauthorized protests on the private university’s campus more aggressively, and the next day, she asked the New York Police Department to clear the encampment. In addition to the more than 100 people arrested, Columbia suspended many students. Many Columbia professors, students and alumni voiced fears that the university was stamping out free debate, a cornerstone of the American college experience.

The harsher approach helped lead to more protests outside Columbia’s gates, where Jewish students reported being targeted with antisemitic jeers and described feeling unsafe as they traveled to and from their campus.

The spiraling uproar in Upper Manhattan helped fuel protests on some other campuses.

“We’re all a united front,” said Malak Afaneh, a law student protesting at University of California, Berkeley. “This was inspired by the students at Columbia who, in my opinion, are the heart of the student movement whose bravery and solidarity with Palestine really inspired us all.”

The events at Columbia also rippled to Yale, where students gathered at Beinecke Plaza in New Haven, Conn., for days to demand that the university divest from arms manufacturers.

Yale’s president, Peter Salovey, said Monday that university leaders had spent “many hours” in talks with the protesters, with an offer that included an audience with the trustee who oversees Yale’s Corporation Committee on Investor Responsibility. But university officials had decided late Sunday that the talks were proving unsuccessful, and Dr. Salovey said, they were troubled by reports “that the campus environment had become increasingly difficult.”

The authorities arrested 60 people on Monday morning, including 47 students, Dr. Salovey said. The university said the decision to make arrests was made with “the safety and security of the entire Yale community in mind and to allow access to university facilities by all members of our community.”

In the hours after the arrests, though, hundreds of protesters blocked a crucial intersection in New Haven.

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Students protesters occupied an intersection near the campus of Yale University on Monday.Credit...Adrian Martinez Chavez for The New York Times

“We demand that Yale divests!” went one chant.

“Free Palestine!” went another.

Far from being cowed by the police, protesters suggested that the response at Beinecke Plaza had emboldened them.

“It’s pretty appalling that the reaction to students exercising their freedom of speech and engaging in peaceful protest on campus grounds — which is supposed to be our community, our campus — the way that Yale responds is by sending in the cops and having 50 students arrested,” said Chisato Kimura, a law student at Yale.

The scene was less contentious in Massachusetts, where Harvard officials had moved to limit the possibility of protests by closing Harvard Yard, the 25-acre core of the campus in Cambridge, through Friday. Students were warned that they could face university discipline if they, for instance, erected unauthorized tents or blocked building entrances.

On Monday, Harvard’s Palestine Solidarity Committee said on social media that the university had suspended it. National Students for Justice in Palestine, a loose confederation of campus groups, said it believed the decision was “clearly intended to prevent students from replicating the solidarity encampments” emerging across the United States. Harvard said in a statement that it was “committed to applying all policies in a content-neutral manner.”

Elsewhere in the Boston area, protesters had set up encampments at Emerson College, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Tufts University. But those protests, for now, appeared more modest than the ones at Yale and in New York, where demonstrators constructed an encampment outside N.Y.U.’s Stern School of Business.

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Protesters outside of New York University, before police arrived.Credit...Adam Gray for The New York Times
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“Students, students, hold your ground!” protesters roared. “N.Y.U., back down!”Credit...Adam Gray for The New York Times

N.Y.U. officials tolerated the demonstration for hours but signaled Monday night that their patience was wearing thin. Police officers gathered near the protest site as demonstrators ignored a 4 p.m. deadline to vacate it. As nightfall approached, sirens blared and officers, donning helmets and bearing zip ties, mustered. Prisoner transport vans waited nearby.

“Students, students, hold your ground!” protesters roared. “N.Y.U., back down!”

Soon enough, police officers marched on the demonstration.

“Today’s events did not need to lead to this outcome,” said John Beckman, a university spokesman in a statement. But, he said, some protesters, who may not have been from N.Y.U., breached barriers and refused to leave. Because of safety concerns, the university said it asked for assistance from the police.

At Columbia, Dr. Shafik ordered Monday’s classes moved online “to de-escalate the rancor.”

She did not immediately detail how the university would proceed in the coming days, beyond saying that Columbia officials would be “continuing discussions with the student protesters and identifying actions we can take as a community to enable us to peacefully complete the term.”

Some students and faculty members said support for Dr. Shafik was eroding, with the university senate preparing for the possibility of a vote this week to censure the president. Supporters of the censure complained that Dr. Shafik was sacrificing academic freedom to appease critics.

But Dr. Shafik was castigated on Monday by the very people she was accused of appeasing when at least 10 members of the U.S. House of Representatives demanded her resignation.

“Over the past few days, anarchy has engulfed Columbia University,” Representative Elise Stefanik, Republican of New York and one of Dr. Shafik’s chief interrogators last week, wrote with other lawmakers. “As the leader of this institution, one of your chief objectives, morally and under law, is to ensure students have a safe learning environment. By every measure, you have failed this obligation.”

A university spokesperson said that Dr. Shafik was focused on easing the strife and that she was “working across campus with members of the faculty, administration, and board of trustees, and with state, city, and community leaders, and appreciates their support.”

Amid the acrimony, and with scores of green, blue and yellow tents filling the Columbia encampment, parts of the campus sometimes took on an eerie, surreal quiet on a splendid spring day.

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Some faculty members said support for Dr. Shafik was eroding.Credit...CS Muncy for The New York Times
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At Columbia, many Jewish students stayed away from campus for Passover.Credit...Bing Guan for The New York Times

The unease was never all that far away, though, even with many Jewish students away from campus for Passover.

“When Jewish students are forced to watch others burning Israeli flags, calling for bombing of Tel Aviv, calling for Oct. 7 to happen over and over again, it creates an unacceptable degree of fear that cannot be tolerated,” Representative Daniel Goldman, Democrat of New York, said outside Columbia’s Robert K. Kraft Center for Jewish Student Life.

By then, in another symbol of the crisis enveloping Columbia, Mr. Kraft, an alumnus and owner of the New England Patriots, had launched his own broadside and suggested he would pause his giving.

“I am no longer confident that Columbia can protect its students and staff,” he wrote in a statement, “and I am not comfortable supporting the university until corrective action is taken.”
 
The idea that you must be an islamist to oppose genocide is conservacuck propaganda. Grow up.
Yet again people who clutch pearls about genocide refuse to queation why "indiginous" Palestinians no longer worship their indiginous gods, no longer speak their indiginous language, and no longer have an indiginous bloodline distinct from their Arabian neighbours.
You don't have to be an islamist to oppose genocide, but being one is evidently the single easiest way to get away with 1500 uninterrupted years of perpetuating it.
 
Yet again people who clutch pearls about genocide refuse to queation why "indiginous" Palestinians no longer worship their indiginous gods, no longer speak their indiginous language, and no longer have an indiginous bloodline distinct from their Arabian neighbours.
And what is the answer seeing you have posted this several times without follow up.

And furthermore what does this have to do with the ongoing genocide of the Palestinians by the illegitimate terror state of “israel”?
 
Protest whites for years and you're given keys to the castle.
Protest jews for a night and you're thrown in the oubliette.
Kinda makes a fella wonder, dont it?

Also, what would be more fitting of Clownworld_Sim_V666.2025.04.20.exe ; zoomer insurgents having a righteous Jihaad on American soil or the formation of the National Soycialist Party led by stunning and brave Adolphina Hitlerina, the first black, wheelchair bound transsexual?
 
Yet again people who clutch pearls about genocide refuse to queation why "indiginous" Palestinians no longer worship their indiginous gods, no longer speak their indiginous language, and no longer have an indiginous bloodline distinct from their Arabian neighbours.
Reminder that Egypt survived as a consolidated and near unchanged ethnic group for over 3000 years, with their culture and history remaining strong through Nubians, Africans, Greeks, Alexander the Mothafuckin' Great, Romans, ect, all the way until Arab Muslims invaded. Now nobody knows a language that lasted for nearly as long as half of human civilization, the Egyptian pantheon is only worshipped by white witches, and the native Egyptian population is an insignificant minority in their own nation and only in a few villages that the Muslims didn't bother invading.

Muslim Arabs are one of the most successful genocidal cults in human history.
 
The right half unironically looks like something Sam Hyde would put on a World Peace bumper.
Actually looked closely at this. The watermelon next to the pally flag is curious. Is this to get the nigger attention after all the actual politicians kneeling and cities burning for fentanyl floyd?

There’s already a pally flag emoji. So it’s not like they need to be subversive about it.

You need significant amounts of water to grow watermelon, so a dirt country in a dirt region like palestine has no real connection to the fruit.

Sidenote, I dream of a world where there could be apple iPhones but actually have them come with superstraight flags and the swastika flags without mods. Sigh
 
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And what is the answer seeing you have posted this several times without follow up.

And furthermore what does this have to do with the ongoing genocide of the Palestinians by the illegitimate terror state of “israel”?
That if you gave a damn about genocide you're centuries too late and willfully ignoring history's single most efficient perpetrators. There's nothing left in the Palestinians to 'genocide', even if every man woman and child in Gaza happened to be wiped out of existence there are over a billion linguistically/theocratically/culturally/genetically identical drones spread across 1/3 of Eurasia left untouched and free to outbreed and outmurder their competition. It's as ludicrous a proposition as proposing to wipe out Ghengis Khan's bloodline by targeting a small patch of Mongolia.
 
UT-Austin students hold pro-Palestinian protest on campus, at least 20 protesters arrested
Austin American-Statesman (archive.ph)
By Lily Kepner and Skye Seipp
2024-04-24 22:01:45GMT
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University of Texas police officers arrest a man at a pro-Palestinian protest at UT Wednesday April 24, 2024. Jay Janner / American-Statesman

At least nine protesters were handcuffed and loaded into police cruisers at a peaceful, pro-Palestinian protest Wednesday at the University of Texas hosted by the Palestine Solidarity Committee, a registered student group and a chapter of the national Students for Justice in Palestine. And several more were arrested at the university's South Lawn.

PSC planned the protest in solidarity with students across the U.S. who have been demanding their universities to divest from Israeli businesses and for the federal government to stop backing Israel's military, as more than 30,000 people in Gaza have been killed amid the Israel-Hamas war.

As students walked out of class at 11:40 a.m. Wednesday to begin protesting, state and university police descended on horse back, bikes, motorcycles, cars and on foot to meet the rally goers.

Dozens of Texas Department of Public Safety troopers in riot gear marched down Speedway Mall once the protestors started marching. UT police were also on hand. After about 45 minutes of the crowd marching south on the Speedway Mall from the Gregory Gym area, police ordered the protesters to disperse or "be arrested as per the penal code."

A protest organizer repeated the officer's order, and people began to disperse. A UT police spokesperson and university spokespeople did not immediately respond to American-Statesman questions about why the protesters were told to disperse as the march had been peaceful.

As students walked back, they began to chant and regather on Speedway, which resulted in multiple arrests. The Statesman witnessed nine individuals get handcuffed and placed into police cars or a van over the following hour. By 2 p.m., as police began dispersing protesters from Speedway, the students moved toward the UT Tower and to the South Lawn where they began setting up tents for an encampment, which the PSC has said is its intention.

Police, first led by UT officers and later joined by state troopers and Austin cops, confronted the crowd, each time seemingly indiscriminately arresting protesters at the front of the pack.

The Statesman witness at least 11 protesters be arrested on the South Lawn. UT police spokesperson Stephanie Jacksis declined to comment on what charges the protesters faced, stating that all communications would be coming directly from the university.

Police then pushed protesters back, knocking down a large pop-up tent station that had water and food for protesters. Law enforcement then created a large circle on the South Lawn and pushed protesters to the sides.

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State troopers in riot gear try to beak up a pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024. Jay Janner / American-Statesman

Just after 4 p.m., mounted officers and a line of troopers with riot shields and batons began a push to get protesters of the South Lawn. Multiple arrests were made during this push, including a photographer with Fox 7 Austin, a local TV news outlet.

Mere Villanueva, a third year student at UT, said her back was injured when she was pushed into a pole as police moved protestors off the South Lawn. “We’re here to lift up Palestinian voices,” she said. “Without protests, there’s no freedom.”

"UT Austin does not tolerate disruptions of campus activities or operations like we have seen at other campuses," the UT Division of Student Affairs said in a statement before the protest. "This is an important time in our semester with students finishing classes and studying for finals and we will act first and foremost to allow those critical functions to proceed without interruption."

At Columbia University on April 18, 100 pro-Palestinian students who set up encampments to demand their university to divest from Israel were arrested. Yale University arrested 44 students and four others for a similar encampment Monday night after the university gave warnings and determined the protests were unsafe and disruptive, the president said. Students at New York University were also arrested. Protests have also broken out at several other universities across the country this week.

PSC's protest, according to an Instagram post, intended to "reclaim" the lawn in front of the tower, but they did not make it there before police began making arrests.

Officials with the Dean of Students Office on Tuesday sent the PSC a letter saying its protest was not authorized to proceed on campus. In the letter, Aaron Voyles, executive director for student involvement, and Melissa Jones-Wommack, acting executive director of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity, said that though UT supports free speech, its first priority is to "protect our educational mission."

"Simply put, the University of Texas at Austin will not allow this campus to be 'taken' and protestors to derail our mission in ways that groups affiliated with your national organization have accomplished elsewhere," the letter said.

Anachí Ponce, a UT student who attended the protest, said as students first dispersed that the police presence at the protest was unnecessary.

"The university would rather enforce and put money into policing our communities and policing their own students then they would to supporting them," Ponce said. "These are students who are protesting a genocide and the lack of action from UT administration for the way that they haven't been super helpful against hate crimes against Muslim students on campus."

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Demonstrators chant at a pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024. Mikala Compton/American-Statesman

The protests across university campuses have called for their institutions to divest from Israeli businesses and weapons manufacturers — a demand the PSC also listed in its November walkout that had more than 1,000 students participating. UT's investments are controlled by UTIMCO, which manages the investments for both Texas A&M and University of Texas systems.

Gov. Greg Abbott on March 27 issued an executive order calling for universities to curb antisemitism by revising their free speech policies — specifically mentioning the Palestine Solidarity Committee and Student Justice for Palestine as groups to enforce the policies against, including up to expulsion.

The protests come as the Jewish community celebrates Passover, something UT's Texas Hillel, a hub for Jewish student life on campus, noted in its statement offering safety resources ahead of the protest.

"The timing of this protest is not lost on us — making use of a Jewish holiday and observance to promote a hateful agenda — and we quickly contacted our university and security partners to begin coordinating a response plan to keep our campus and our students safe," Hillel's statement said.

"The university has assured us there will be no tolerance for disruption or behaviors misaligned to University policy and the governor's executive order," it added.

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Pro-Palestinian protesters march at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024. Jay Janner / American-Statesman

Students chanted "Free Palestine," and against the occupation of Gaza and police who were present at the rally. They also chanted against UT President Jay Hartzell and Abbott, who they say are complicit in the violence in Gaza.

At UT, students have held peaceful protests in support of Israel and Palestinians without incident. But this semester, students have been punished for pro-Palestinian activism that the university said was extreme and inappropriate, including four students who entered a dean's office to advocate for two teaching assistants who were removed from their positions after sending a pro-Palestinian message to their class's messaging page. The teaching assistant's grievances against the school, alleging that their academic freedom was violated by their job reassignments, were denied by Hartzell in March.

State Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, posted on X prior to the protest warning students that police will take any act of violence seriously and that "An Aggie Senator's advice to these students is simply while the right of freedom of speech is a Constitutional guarantee in the United States, reclaiming something you don't own is not!"

State troopers arrest a man at a pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024.


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State troopers arrest a man at a pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Texas Wednesday April 24, 2024. Jay Janner / American-Statesman

'This is wrong'
Austin City Council Member Zohaib “Zo” Qadri, who represents downtown Austin where UT is located, told the Statesman in an interview Wednesday that it was shocking and hard to watch “the physical violence being used on students.”

“The fact that now we have DPS troopers on our flagship university on the ground hurting people and taking away their voices – I think we should all be able to say this is wrong,” Qadri told the Statesman.

In a statement released Wednesday afternoon, Qadri said, “We need answers as to why such a flagrant and wasteful show of force by DPS was authorized, and if any peaceful protestors had their 1st Amendment Rights violated.”

Statesman City Hall reporter Ella McCarthy contributed to this report.

This is a developing story; please check back for updates.
VIDEO: NYU pro-Gaza protesters chase NYPD chief into campus building
New York Daily News (archive.ph)
By Thomas Tracy
2024-04-24 14:56:00GMT

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Police intervene and arrest more than 100 students at New York University (NYU) who continue their demonstration on campus in solidarity with the students at Columbia University and to oppose Israel’s attacks on Gaza, in New York, United States on April 22, 2024. (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

An NYPD chief and several of his officers were chased down a Manhattan street by pro-Palestinian NYU protesters who forced the cops to retreat into a campus building, startling video shows.

NYPD Assistant Chief James McCarthy, the head of Patrol Borough Manhattan South, was helping two cops in riot gear complete the arrest of a protester in their custody Monday night when they were pursued by more than a dozen outraged activists demanding the woman’s release, the video shows.

Cops arrested 120 protesters at NYU in total that night during a heated stand off with pro-Palestinian protesters who created an encampment on university grounds. The college asked the NYPD to clear out the protesters.

“You f—ing fascist!” one protester screams repeatedly while several demonstrators, including one with a drum hanging from his neck, record McCarthy leading his team down the street.

The chief attempts to open a set of glass doors but they were locked as the protesters swarm behind them.

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Assistant Chief James McCarthy is seen as police intervene Monday and arrest more than 100 students at New York University (NYU) who continue their demonstration on campus in solidarity with the students at Columbia University and to oppose Israel’s attacks on Gaza. (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

“F— you pigs!” another protester screams as McCarthy speaks into his radio and one officer tries to move the protesters back.

The chief is recorded speaking into his radio, giving his location, and leading his officers down the street to another building as the protesters continue to follow him, screaming “Let her go! Let her go!”

“Mccarthy is seen attempting to get inside the NYU Catholic Center, but couldn’t open the door,” @peterhvideo wrote when he posted the video Tuesday night.

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NYPD officers arrive Monday to disperse pro-Palestinian students and protesters who set up an encampment on the campus of New York University to protest the Israel-Hamas war. (ALEX KENT/AFP via Getty Images)

McCarthy ultimately leads his officers further down the block and into a building that already has a few cops inside, the video shows.

“He eventually finds an unlocked door around the corner,” @peterhvideo said. “Security guards have to hold the doors closed as Mccarthy calls for backup.”

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NYPD officers detain pro-Palestinian students and protesters Monday who had set up an encampment on the campus of New York University to protest the Israel-Hamas war. (ALEX KENT/AFP via Getty Images)

At one point a protester tried to grab one of the cops’ hands but her hand is batted away, the video shows.


McCarthy and the officers were trying to figure out where to bring their prisoner when the protesters moved towards them, an NYPD spokesman said. They first went to the wrong spot, forcing McCarthy to use his radio and find the right location.

The person the officers took into custody received a summons, NYPD officials said.

A high-ranking NYPD official said McCarthy has responded to scores of protests and didn’t feel threatened Monday.

“McCarthy has been around for a long time,” said the official, who asked not to be named. “He’s in charge of Manhattan South, which has handled more protests than any other borough.”

“He’s very experienced in these matters,” the official said. “If he felt that he needed backup or help he would have put it over the radio and we would have addressed it.”

On Tuesday, NYPD brass blamed faculty and “professional agitators” for causing most of the trouble the night before.

The NYU campus chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine said they were “met with violent arrests” during Monday’s protests. At least two reporters say they were pepper sprayed, including from the NYU student newspaper and local outlet HellGate.

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https://twitter.com/Chris_Kuhlman00/status/1783246503907311936 (archive.ph)
 
That if you gave a damn about genocide you're centuries too late and willfully ignoring history's single most efficient perpetrators. There's nothing left in the Palestinians to 'genocide', even if every man woman and child in Gaza happened to be wiped out of existence there are over a billion linguistically/theocratically/culturally/genetically identical drones spread across 1/3 of Eurasia left untouched and free to outbreed and outmurder their competition. It's as ludicrous a proposition as proposing to wipe out Ghengis Khan's bloodline by targeting a small patch of Mongolia
You’re just being silly now and really not worth replying to.

1) The English are everywhere yet a targeted war with the explicit, stated mission of killing as many Canadian women and children as possible is still genocide. Yet the “i”DF do it and you revel in it, you nazi fuck.

2) crimes do not justify crimes you would have learnt this in school had you graduated.

3) I sincerely hope the Canadian injuns take up arms and start shooting white phosphorus at your kids schools, bomb your kids at the beach, barge into your home with their gun set to “family killer” mode and then openly discuss turning your entire country into a trump beach resort.

Get fucked jewish Nazi
 
Actually looked closely at this. The watermelon next to the pally flag is curious. Is this to get the nigger attention after all the actual politicians kneeling and cities burning for fentanyl floyd?

There’s already a pally flag emoji. So it’s not like they need to be subversive about it.

You need significant amounts of water to grow watermelon, so a dirt country in a dirt region like palestine has no real connection to the fruit.

Sidenote, I dream of a world where there could be apple iPhones but actually have them come with superstraight flags and the swastika flags without mods. Sigh
I'm guessing the blacks are being forced out of South Central by either gentrification or the Hispanics and they're trying to say one is as bad as the other? I don't speak Leftist, sadly.
 
Police tangle with students in Texas and California as wave of campus protest against Gaza war grows
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Nick Perry, Jim Vertuno, and Acacia Coronado
2024-04-24 23:14:36GMT
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Police tangled with student demonstrators in Texas and California while new encampments sprouted Wednesday at Harvard and other colleges as school leaders sought ways to defuse a growing wave of pro-Palestinian protests.

At the University of Texas at Austin, hundreds of local and state police — including some on horseback and holding batons — clashed with protesters, pushing them off the campus lawn and at one point sending some tumbling into the street. At least 20 demonstrators were taken into custody at the request of university officials and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, according to the state Department of Public Safety.

A photographer covering the demonstration for Fox 7 Austin was arrested after being caught in a push-and-pull between law enforcement and students, the station confirmed. A longtime Texas journalist was knocked down in the mayhem and could be seen bleeding before police helped him to emergency medical staff who bandaged his head.

And at the University of Southern California, police got into a back-and-forth tugging match with protesters over tents, removing several before falling back. At the northern end of California, students were barricaded inside a building for a third day at California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt. The school shut down campus through the weekend and made classes virtual.

Harvard University in Massachusetts had sought to stay ahead of protests this week by limiting access to Harvard Yard and requiring permission for tents and tables. That didn’t stop protesters from setting up a camp with 14 tents Wednesday following a rally against the university’s suspension of the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee.

Students protesting the Israel-Hamas war are demanding schools cut financial ties to Israel and divest from companies enabling its monthslong conflict. Dozens have been arrested on charges of trespassing or disorderly conduct. Some Jewish students say the protests have veered into antisemitism and made them afraid to set foot on campus.

Columbia University averted another confrontation between students and police earlier in the day. The situation there remained tense, with campus officials saying it would continue talks with protesters for another 48 hours.

On a visit to campus, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, called on Columbia University President Minouche Shafik to resign “if she cannot bring order to this chaos.”

“If this is not contained quickly and if these threats and intimidation are not stopped, there is an appropriate time for the National Guard,” he said.

Shafik had set a midnight Tuesday deadline to reach an agreement on clearing an encampment, but the school extended negotiations, saying it was making “important progress.”

On Wednesday evening, a Columbia spokesperson said rumors that the university had threatened to bring in the National Guard were unfounded. “Our focus is to restore order, and if we can get there through dialogue, we will,” said Ben Chang, Columbia’s vice president for communications.

Columbia graduate student Omer Lubaton Granot, who put up pictures of Israeli hostages near the encampment, said he wanted to remind people that there were more than 100 hostages still being held by Hamas.

“I see all the people behind me advocating for human rights,” he said. “I don’t think they have one word to say about the fact that people their age, that were kidnapped from their homes or from a music festival in Israel, are held by a terror organization.”

Harvard law student Tala Alfoqaha, who is Palestinian, said she and other protesters want more transparency from the university.

“My hope is that the Harvard administration listens to what its students have been asking for all year, which is divestment, disclosure and dropping any sort of charges against students,” she said.

Police first tried to clear the encampment at Columbia last week, when they arrested more than 100 protesters. The move backfired, acting as an inspiration for other students across the country to set up similar encampments and motivating protesters at Columbia to regroup.

On Wednesday about 60 tents remained at the Columbia encampment, which appeared calm. Security remained tight around campus, with identification required and police setting up metal barricades.

Columbia said it had agreed with protest representatives that only students would remain at the encampment and they would make it welcoming, banning discriminatory or harassing language.

On the University of Minnesota campus, a few dozen students rallied a day after nine protesters were arrested when police took down an encampment in front of the library. U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, whose daughter was among the demonstrators arrested at Columbia last week, attended a protest later in the day.

A group of more than 80 professors and assistant professors signed a letter Wednesday calling on the university’s president and other administrators to drop any charges and to allow future encampments without what they described as police retaliation.

They wrote that they were “horrified that the administration would permit such a clear violation of our students’ rights to freely speak out against genocide and ongoing occupation of Palestine.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lashed out at the pro-Palestinian demonstrations on U.S. college campuses in a video statement released Wednesday, saying the response of several university presidents has been “shameful” and calling on state, local and federal officials to intervene.

Students at some protests were hiding their identities and declined to identify themselves to reporters, saying they feared retribution. At an encampment of about 40 tents at the heart of the University of Michigan’s campus in Ann Arbor, almost every student wore a mask, which was handed to them when they entered.

The upwelling of demonstrations has left universities struggling to balance campus safety with free speech rights. Many long tolerated the protests, but are now doling out more heavy-handed discipline, citing safety concerns.

At New York University this week, police said 133 protesters were taken into custody and all had been released with summonses to appear in court on disorderly conduct charges. More than 40 protesters were arrested Monday at an encampment at Yale University.
The guy with the camera was a Fox7Austin employee:
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https://twitter.com/AaronTorres_/status/1783246380556845312 (archive.ph)

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https://twitter.com/thedoctorjulio/status/1783256132326178844 (archive.ph)
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https://twitter.com/GraceReaderTV/status/1783245077373980723 (archive.ph)
 
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Actually looked closely at this. The watermelon next to the pally flag is curious. Is this to get the nigger attention after all the actual politicians kneeling and cities burning for fentanyl floyd?

There’s already a pally flag emoji. So it’s not like they need to be subversive about it.

You need significant amounts of water to grow watermelon, so a dirt country in a dirt region like palestine has no real connection to the fruit.
It's a pro Palestinian meme because it has the same colors as their flag. They use it to stage mobs to pester social media influencers to pledge support of Palestine / Hamas.
 
Certified Woman-Moment.

Pretty stunning and brave how you brain-broken progs will inconvenience your fellow students but won't head downtown to the Israeli consulate in NY and test your 'peaceful protest' out there.
What are you getting at?
 
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