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.”
 
There must be some really tense rooms full of DNC shills right now wondering how the fuck to shut this down.

This issue is so perfectly calculated to split the Democratic Party down the middle that they might as well roll out the red carpet for DJT Part II early if they don't figure out a way to stop this by June. The number of zoomers who will stay home rather than vote for anyone who has a realistic solution regarding Israel/Palestine will be enough to make winning an election very difficult.
 
Anyone who knows their value is going through a trade school or apprenticeship of some kind anyways. This is pretty much a "you get what you deserve" moment

Still, it's tiresome watching people protest stupid shit overseas while ignoring all the issues in their respective home countries. It's infuriating that foreigners can hate and be parasites in the countries that host them. Our education system in the US needs a massive reform, but honestly, I'd rather an American have a spot in our institutions instead of...fucking Sudanese who have no business here? Give me a break
 
There must be some really tense rooms full of DNC shills right now wondering how the fuck to shut this down.

This issue is so perfectly calculated to split the Democratic Party down the middle that they might as well roll out the red carpet for DJT Part II early if they don't figure out a way to stop this by June. The number of zoomers who will stay home rather than vote for anyone who has a realistic solution regarding Israel/Palestine will be enough to make winning an election very difficult.
I'm sure everyone's going to get together at the convention and sing Kumbayah.

Nothing bad has ever happened in Chicago.
 
According to the AJC article, the protestors at Emory were also protesting "Cop City." They made a vague statement yesterday. Definitely something to keep an eye on, because those people are professional protestors who are from all over the US.
It's really interesting because for Antifa watchers like myself, the Emory protest is an attempt by glowie handlers to get the golem back under control and following marching orders, but it's all too little too late. Palestine has captured the imaginations of the mob, and nothing is going to redirect it back to Cop City, or the other various ops they were workshopping (Rojava, Artsakh, Myanmar, etc).

I do note that it seems that the State Department has completely cut funding for their ops, so what's left comes from the alphabet agencies and big money NGOs, who ironically, are much worse at agitprop, planning and logistics than the State Department handlers. This has led to much less strategic and tactical finesse in protestor direct actions, even though ironically, ideological infighting among protestor groups is at an all time low and motivation is very high.

Despite having larger numbers of motivated foot soldiers, I'm going to call it now. Between the lack of skilled leadership, which was mostly in the government pocket, and the cops being told they have free reign, DAs being warned about catch and release, and college administrators pissing their pants about enrollment and liabilities, there's not going to be a Summer of Love 2024 rerun.

Then again, clownworld, so I could be completely fucking wrong.
 

USC cancels main commencement ceremony as campus is roiled by protests​

The University of Southern California canceled its main commencement ceremony, citing new safety measures put in place in the days since the Los Angeles school has been rocked by student-led protests against the war in Gaza.

The university announced the cancellation of the May 10 main-stage ceremony Thursday, one day after more than 90 students were arrested on campus. USC is among the dozens of colleges and universities to have protests unfold on campus just weeks before commencement; several have resulted in violence and arrests as police attempt to clear student encampments that have cropped up on school grounds.

Thursday’s cancellation of the main commencement ceremony also comes amid tensions after school officials recently announced that they would not have this year’s valedictorian, who is Muslim and had shared pro-Palestinian views, speak at commencement, citing vague concerns over security.


Imagine being a 3 or 4-year undergrad who graduated high school during COVID that now has had both their in-person high school commencement and college commencement cancelled.
 
These protests sound kinda fun. You get to burn Israeli flags and talk about how much you hate the (((Zionists))) who control the government. I'm kind of amazed the government hasn't tried planting their pet Nazis in these protests like they do literally every other protest.
The Fed Nazis are only used against right-wingers because it gives an excuse for the antifa types to chimp out. Here, the antifa types are chimping out incorrectly and the goal is to put the genie back in the bottle. Feds won't use an escalating tactic yet.
 
The Fed Nazis are only used against right-wingers because it gives an excuse for the antifa types to chimp out. Here, the antifa types are chimping out incorrectly and the goal is to put the genie back in the bottle. Feds won't use an escalating tactic yet.
For such conniving faggots it sure is weird that they haven't tried paying the local homeless $50 and a 40 oz apiece to just go there and shoot up heroin/smoke meth. It's not like they don't have the funding.
 
Fairly comprehensive list of protests in this article:
Pro-Palestinian Encampments Spread, Leading to Hundreds of Arrests
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Anna Betts
2024-04-26 00:13:47GMT
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In the week since Columbia University started cracking down on pro-Palestinian protesters occupying a lawn on its campus, protests and encampments have sprung up at other colleges and universities across the country. Police interventions on several campuses have led to more than 400 arrests so far.

Student protests against the war in Gaza and against their schools’ financial and academic ties to Israel and to weapons manufacturers have intensified since Columbia initially cleared the encampment, on April 18. Scores of people have been arrested in recent days at Emerson College, the University of Southern California and the University of Texas at Austin.

Here is where encampments and protests have been reported over the last week by local news, student newspapers, social media posts and others. The New York Times has not been able to independently verify every report.

Where the police have intervened​

  • Columbia University in Manhattan: New York City police officers arrested 108 demonstrators on April 18. Administrators set a deadline of midnight on Friday for protesters to dismantle their encampment and disband.
  • Emory University in Atlanta: Several dozen protesters set up tents on a campus lawn on Thursday, and police officers moved in, using what the Atlanta police later described as “chemical irritants” to disperse the demonstrators. An Emory official said that at least 28 people had been arrested, including 20 with ties to the school.
  • University of Southern California in Los Angeles: After students set up an encampment on Wednesday, Los Angeles police officers ordered them to disperse and arrested 93 people. Rocked by protests, the university announced on Thursday that it was canceling this year’s main commencement ceremony.
  • Emerson College in Boston: Students pitched tents on Sunday evening, according to the school’s student newspaper, The Berkeley Beacon. On Wednesday night, the Boston police arrested 108 people and cleared out the encampment. On Thursday, a spokeswoman for Emerson said that classes had been canceled for the day.
  • University of Texas at Austin: After students protested on Wednesday, the police arrested 57 people who refused to disperse, according to the Travis County Sheriff’s Office. All of those who were arrested have already had their cases disposed, and most have been released from custody, the sheriff’s office said.
  • Indiana University in Bloomington: Student groups announced on Thursday that they had set up an encampment. According to the university police department, 33 people were removed from the encampment and taken to a county jail.
  • Princeton University in New Jersey: Students started to pitch tents on Thursday, according to a university spokeswoman. Officials said they had sent the protesters repeated warnings to clear the area, and two graduate students were arrested. The tents were voluntarily taken down afterward, officials said.
  • California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt in Arcata: Dozens of protesters were occupying an academic and administrative building on Wednesday morning, university officials said. The campus has remained closed since Monday after an attempt by the police to remove the protesters from the building turned violent, leading to three arrests. On Thursday, officials said that the campus would remain closed at least through Sunday.
  • University of Minnesota, Twin Cities: Nine people were taken into custody after they erected an encampment on Tuesday. The encampment was cleared Wednesday morning, but a student protester said it returned on Thursday. Among those who were detained, there were seven current and former students, one staff member and one person not affiliated with the university, a spokesman for the university said. All of the university-affiliated people were allowed back on campus, and the civil trespass warnings they received were “set aside.”
  • Ohio State University in Columbus: Protesters on Thursday formed an encampment, which a university spokesman said was in violation of school policy. They were asked to clear the tents, and three protesters who refused were arrested. Earlier in the week, two students were also arrested during an on-campus demonstration, university officials said.
  • Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.: About 200 students began setting up an encampment on campus Thursday, and police officers were present. When asked if any arrests will be made, an Evanston police officer said, “That’s Northwestern’s call.” Later in the day, university officials said demonstrators had removed their tents. When some protesters refused, they were cited by the Northwestern police, the university said.
  • Washington University in St. Louis: The police disbanded a protest and encampment on campus on Wednesday, according to the school’s newspaper.
  • University of Connecticut in Storrs: University police officers removed at least one tent from a rally on Thursday and arrested at least one person.
  • New York University in Manhattan: The New York Police Department made dozens of arrests late Monday after students occupied a plaza on campus.
  • Yale University in New Haven, Conn.: Hundreds of people have come out to protest since last week. On Monday, the police arrested more than 40 people.

Other schools where protesters have set up encampments​

  • Harvard in Cambridge, Mass.: Students set up an encampment on Wednesday after the school closed Harvard Yard for the week. A pro-Palestinian group, the Harvard Palestinian Solidarity Committee, announced earlier in the week on social media that it had been suspended.
  • Brown University in Providence, R.I.: About 90 students set up an encampment on Wednesday morning and said that they would stay until they were forced to leave. The protest violated university policy, officials said in a statement, adding that the demonstrators had been informed they would face “conduct proceedings.”
  • University of California, Los Angeles: On Thursday morning, there were around 30 tents pitched on campus.
  • Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.: A coalition of student groups announced on Thursday morning that students had gathered before dawn to create a “liberated zone” on the campus. School officials have told the demonstrators to remove their tents by 1 p.m. on Thursday or face discipline, including suspension.
  • Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan: Videos posted on social media on Thursday showed an encampment had formed inside a university building, with protesters running inside.
  • Florida State University in Tallahassee: On Thursday morning, students began forming an encampment on campus. Later on Thursday, local media reported that the campus police made the students take down a handful of tents.
  • City College of New York in Manhattan: Videos on Thursday showed students erecting a “Gaza solidarity encampment.”
  • George Washington University in Washington: Nearly 70 students from George Washington University, along with students from nearby Georgetown University, established an encampment on Thursday. Later in the day, school officials notified students that they had requested the assistance of the D.C. Metropolitan Police to “relocate” the “unauthorized protest encampment.”
  • University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia: Student groups announced on Thursday that they were establishing an encampment on campus.
  • Michigan State University in East Lansing: Around 35 students set up an encampment with about 18 tents on Thursday morning, according to the school’s student newspaper, The State News.
  • University of Rochester in Rochester, N.Y.: Students set up an encampment on the school’s River Campus on Tuesday, according to local news.
  • Tufts University in Medford, Mass.: About a dozen tents had been set up on the university’s academic quad by Wednesday morning. The Tufts encampment was not fenced off or surrounded by police officers or security personnel. A protester said he was unaware of any contact between protesters and the administration.
  • University of Delaware in Newark: Around 300 university students, staff and faculty members protested the war in Gaza on Wednesday, according to local news outlets. Social media posts suggested that an encampment had also been set up, but a university official denied that there had been one.
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.: Students set up an encampment earlier this week. On Thursday morning, there was a small police presence around the encampment but no signs of tension between officers and protesters.
  • The New School in Manhattan: Protesters set up tents inside a school lobby, and two dozen students formed a picket line on Tuesday.
  • The University of California, Berkeley: Students have set up an encampment, according to local news reports.
  • University of Michigan in Ann Arbor: About 40 students set up an encampment on Monday morning, according to the school newspaper, The Michigan Daily.
  • University of North Carolina at Charlotte: An encampment was set up earlier this week, according to the school’s student newspaper, The Niner Times. But on Thursday, local media reported that school officials made students remove their tents.
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Students set up an encampment on campus shortly after the Columbia students were arrested last week.
  • Rice University in Houston: Members of the Rice chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine formed what they called a “liberated zone” on campus on Tuesday, according to the school’s student newspaper. Student organizers posted videos and photos on Wednesday night showing that tents were still pitched there.
  • University of Pittsburgh: Videos posted online on Wednesday showed an encampment and tents pitched on the school’s campus.
  • Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pa.: After students built an encampment on campus, school officials on Tuesday said that they would work with the organizers “to try to bring the situation to a peaceful conclusion.”

Schools with other forms of protest​

  • University of Florida in Gainesville
  • University of Maryland in College Park
  • American University in Washington
  • University of Texas at Dallas
  • University of Texas at San Antonio
  • University of New Mexico in Albuquerque
  • University of Texas at Arlington
  • University of Southern Maine in Portland
  • Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.
  • Loyola University in Chicago
  • University of California, Santa Barbara
Columbia University Senate Is Said to Be Redrafting Resolution Admonishing Its President
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Stephanie Saul
2024-04-25 23:31:10GMT
Columbia University’s faculty senate, fearing the repercussions of a censure vote against the school’s president, Nemat Shafik, plans instead to vote on a watered-down resolution expressing displeasure with a series of her decisions, including summoning the police last week to arrest protesting students on campus.

Senators worried that a censure vote could result in Dr. Shafik’s removal at a time of crisis. And some feared that such a vote would be perceived as yielding to Republican lawmakers who had called for her resignation, according to interviews with several members of the senate who attended a closed-door meeting on Wednesday, some of whom requested anonymity to talk about a private meeting.

The senate is scheduled to meet again on Friday to vote on a resolution.

Carol Garber, a senate member, was among those who questioned the perception of a censure vote with so much political pressure to remove Dr. Shafik.

“It really isn’t a precedent any university wants to set,” said Dr. Garber, a professor of behavioral sciences. “We shouldn’t be bullied by someone in Congress."

The plan to step away from a harshly worded censure resolution followed a presentation by Dr. Shafik at the meeting of the senate, an official university body of more than 100 faculty, students, administrators and staff members. The university did not respond to a request for comment.

Emerging from the meeting, Dr. Garber said that some faculty members were “upset and hurt” by Dr. Shafik’s performance during a congressional hearing on campus antisemitism, in which she seemed to capitulate to the demands of members of Congress. Dr. Shafik told the House members that the university’s leaders agreed that some protesters had used antisemitic language and that certain contested phrases — like “from the river to the sea” — might warrant discipline.

At the faculty meeting, senators who attended the meeting described a polite but pointed exchange, with some angry over Dr. Shafik’s decision to call in the New York Police Department to break up an encampment protesting the war in Gaza.

Some expressed concern over the implications for more than 100 students who now have arrest and suspension records after having participated in the encampment, including students who were poised to graduate.

During the meeting, Dr. Shafik defended her decision to call in the police, citing worries about hazards from makeshift cooking equipment, as well as sanitation concerns.

“There were hundreds of people sleeping out in an unsafe environment,” Dr. Shafik told the group.

But she admitted that she had not visited the encampment, saying she had not been invited, according to one senator who took notes during the meeting.

That prompted another senator to ask for a show of hands of members who had visited. At least half the group raised their hands.

In something of a mea culpa, Dr. Shafik acknowledged that the police action had been ineffective, with a new protest camp quickly set up in another section of the lawn.

She also described a shift in tactics, with the university now using negotiations rather than force to clear the central lawn on campus where the students have set up camp.

One priority, she said, is to have the camp cleared before Columbia’s undergraduate ceremonies, scheduled on the lawn for May 15.

In calling the police, the administration ignored the wishes of the senate’s 13-member executive committee, which unanimously disapproved of the idea during an emergency meeting. A day before police arrived, they advised Dr. Shafik’s office that she did not have their endorsement and advised her to negotiate.

Dr. Shafik’s decision to go forward in summoning the police against the committee’s wishes, an apparent violation of university regulations, prompted the campus chapter of the American Association of University Professors, a liberal faculty group, to draft a resolution censuring her for presentation to the senate.

The resolution cites the arrests on campus, and chastises Dr. Shafik for her congressional testimony a day earlier, when she capitulated to Republican lawmakers and broke protocol by discussing internal campus investigations of specific professors, some accused of antisemitism.

But Sheldon Pollock, a member of the A.A.U.P. executive committee at Columbia, said that the campus visit on Wednesday by Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, was a historically singular episode of attempted outside interference.

“My sense is the faculty have been put in a very difficult situation,” said Dr. Pollock, a retired professor who is not a member of the senate. “We do not want politicians intruding on the shared governance procedures of Columbia University. At the same time we are deeply disturbed by the actions our president has taken in the last week.”

The emergency senate meeting on Wednesday was an attempt to defuse tensions before a vote on the proposal.

Dr. Shafik said she was concerned about restoring trust between the administration and faculty, which she argued had eroded even before she was appointed.

Dr. Shafik, who had served as the president of the London School of Economics, arrived at Columbia last July. She told the Columbia senate that she had “been in crisis mode ever since,” starting with the scandal over the former Columbia physician Dr. Robert A. Hadden, who was convicted of sexually assaulting patients, and now with the war in Gaza.

Describing herself as a strong advocate for free speech and academic freedom, she also said she was concerned that, in some cases, free speech had become harassment.

“We have had those incidents on campus and I have seen them, and we need to figure them out together,” she told the group.

A day after the meeting, members of Columbia University’s senate were busy redrafting a resolution, to be voted on Friday during the final senate meeting of the year.

While expressing disapproval with Dr. Shafik’s actions, it will stop short of a full censure.
 
These protests sound kinda fun. You get to burn Israeli flags and talk about how much you hate the (((Zionists))) who control the government. I'm kind of amazed the government hasn't tried planting their pet Nazis in these protests like they do literally every other protest.
Swastika flag fresh from alibaba, vacuum packed for freshness. It's standard in every glowworm's kit!
 
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See I hate this kind of protest. The drum circles, the screeching, the shutting down roads, all of it.

But the fact that this is being framed as a crisis because it "makes Jews feel unsafe" and because it is somehow "antisemitic"- with no real evidence being put forth to support these assertions- that makes me pause before telling the protestors they can go to hell like I normally would.

Because no one ever cared about making entire neighborhoods, entire cities "feel unsafe" when we were besieged by little antifa brats for months on end.

Even when they were setting up checkpoints and literally pulling people out of their cars and beating them unconscious and leaving them for dead.

Even when they were shooting men dead in the street for the crime of being a republican.

Even when they were stabbing journalists in the kidneys, beating journalists unconscious, for the sin of filming a newsworthy event, and being let go with a slap on the wrist despite prior felony convictions.

In fact if we said we "felt unsafe" when people were marching down our residential streets saying they were going to set the whole thing on fire, we were told we were delusional! That no such threat existed, and if it did, it was justified, because (singsong) BLACK lives MATter!

So now? I just want to know what makes "Jews" so special that we are supposed to give a shit about how they "feel."

They burned down entire neighborhoods in Minneapolis. They shot a little girl in Atlanta. They got away with a double homicide at CHAZ.

Why do we care now?

What is it they say- "let it burn"?
 
Someone might have posted the clip here at some point but there was someone interviewing one of the pro Palestinian protesters and she didn't even know why was protesting and neither did her two friends. Free speech is free speech, as long as you are being peaceful and not blocking entrances or roadways I don't care what you are saying, you should be allow to say it. As for Palestine and Israel, I feel really bad for the individual citizens and children who are caught up in all this and will be blown to pieces but I really cannot pick a side. Palestinians are typically insane Muslims who I feel are still a major threat to the world, and the Jews who continue to egg this on and had a hand and helped create the situation we see ourselves in. Of course the US giving insane amounts of money to both sides to keep the killing going as well, not to mention these issues have been boiling for years. If you said anything or questioned anything about the Jews you were a racist and anti semite, if you said anything against Palestinians you were also a racist. I do find it kind of funny the Democrat Party had been calling Trump an anti semite for years, now has to kiss Palestinian ass to save Joe Biden's ass and kind of let the mask slip a bit.

This is exactly my opinion on the conflict. Apparently this is A Wrong Thing and I Must Pick a Side. It’s insane how people cannot manage it when people say they aren’t ’on Anyone’s side.’

I'm with you there. I'm tired of this whole "my team vs your team" mentality. Neither "team" is my team. Neither mean anything to me on any level. The only thing trying to force people to pick a side is doing, is making people take the third "fuck the both of them. Let them kill each other" option.
Since these protests have started, it's hard to find a news outlet that is. This is basically a repeat of the Russia/Ukraine conflict.
 
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