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.”
 
Say what you will about the 1960s antiwar protests, they were people who either were at risk of being drafted themselves or they were at risk of having male relatives and friends drafted. College-age kids and draft-age kids are the same age.
This is not true in the slightest. College-aged students were heavily in favour of the Vietnam War.
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The older generations were actually the ones who opposed the Vietnam War because they actually went through the hell that was WWII.
 
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This is not true in the slightest. College-aged students were heavily in favour of the Vietnam War.
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The older generations were actually the ones who opposed the Vietnam War because they actually went through the hell that was WWII.
Stupid gullible young people easily manipulated by the ruling class and then getting exactly what they deserve never changes.
 
The protesters are anti-white colonialist settlers apartheid state. That’s what their whole message slogan is. Israel is just a stand-in for this. If you really think they’re doing it because they hate Jews you’re dumb. They associate Israel specifically as a white supremacist state that is “founded on colonialist genocide and apartheid.”

Where have you heard this rhetoric applied before?

I don’t like Jews, far from it, but this idea that these protestors are nobly acting against ZOG is dumb.
If they protest against Israel, even for "mistaken" reasons, they will quickly come to learn that there are rules about who you can and can't protest that are never spoken aloud. All but the most boneheaded ones will connect at least a few dots.

Kind of like the people who, ten years ago, protested that "it's not fair for all gamers to be condemned for the actions of a few" and ended up tumbling down a rabbit hole they never expected.
 
If they were so keen on stopping this war why arent they bussing people to the Lockheed Martin headquarters or another defense contractor for protests? I think its in Maryland so all these east coast students just need to take a quick car ride.

This shit is gonna fuel jews for the next 10 years to pass all sorts of laws in the guise of protecting them from "anti-semitism"
 

Columbia University has failed to protect Jewish students during anti-Israel protests, lawsuit claims

Archive

Columbia University has been accused in a new lawsuit of failing to protect Jewish students amid a wave of anti-Israel protests roiling the Ivy League campus.

The class action lawsuit, filed Monday by an anonymous student, recognizes the right to protest and that colleges have long been a place for lively debate of opposing viewpoints.

But the plaintiff alleged that while some protesters at Columbia are peaceful, a number of others “continue to commit acts of violence.”

“They are intimidating and harassing Jewish students and faculty members, they are inciting demonstrators to engage in hate speech,” the suit reads.

“[They] also commit acts of violence which has been taking place, and they have even called for terrorist attacks against the United States and the State of Israel.”

According to the filing against university trustees, Jewish students have been physically attacked and targeted by pro-Hamas hate speech.

The suit also accuses protestors of inciting violence against Jewish students and pro-Israel counter-protestors while on campus.

“Before a couple weeks ago, Columbia would tell anyone who would listen that it offered a safe space to its students to learn, debate, and even protest,” Jay Edelson, one of the attorneys in the lawsuit told News Nation.

“But now Jewish students are being pushed off campus by open threats and harassment from extremists within the protest movement, whose incitements are becoming increasingly violent.

“Rather than protect its students, Columbia has been complicit, offering an ‘internet-optional’ university that only the students it can’t protect have to use. We’re fighting for safe passage for all Columbia students on the campus that they all have a right to.”

Lawyers have argued that listening to encampment demands, negotiating and moving to a hybrid learning model is “unfair” creating further tension between Jewish and non-Jewish students.

The student bringing forward the lawsuit has not been named and also represents all other Columbia students forced to online studies as a result of protests.

Columbia has been asked in the suit to abide by policies regarding student safety and to return to in-person learning as well as compensatory and punitive damages.

Took 'em long enough.
 
The protesters have taken over Hamilton Hall in Columbia University. They have begun smashing out windows and using picnic tables to barricade themselves in, supposedly their might be facility members stuck in their with them.

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Negotiating with communists: not even once
 
NorthWestern protestors have raised $12K on Go Fund Me. Archived their manifesto below.

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Support the Northwestern Divestment Coalition​

*donations paused*
Northwestern Divestment Coalition stands in solidarity with Palestine and demands an end to the genocide. We demand that Northwestern University discloses investments and divests from war, ends partnerships that legitimize occupation and genocide, and protects student civil liberties and safety. Read our People's Resolution here: https://tinyurl.com/peoplesresnu

We are endlessly grateful for the support our community has shown, but we are a small part of this fight. Please consider donating to one of the following places to more directly help the people of Gaza.
Help the Ibrahim Family: https://gofund.me/a0dac743 https://www.instagram.com/salameh.ibrahiem
Help Hanan's Family: https://gofund.me/963e451f

Donate to Palestine Children's Relief Fund: https://www.pcrf.net/
Donate to Middle Eastern Children's Alliance: https://www.mecaforpeace.org/
Donate to Gaza Mutual Aid: https://www.instagram.com/gazamutualaid/
Donate to Care for Gaza: https://www.gofundme.com/f/careforgaza

Funds will be used to supply us with food, supplies, legal aid, and more. If you are interested in donating hot food, please fill out this form: https://cryptpad.fr/sheet/#/2/sheet/edit/QpcN1QTryfnklcfHvoGgA1kV/
If you would like to donate material supplies, please check out our instagram @nudivestmentcoalition to get up-to-date information on what our camp needs or check out @sjpchicago to see if other Chicago-area encampments need support.

Follow our instagram and telegram for updates and supply requests: https://www.instagram.com/nudivestmentcoalition/
https://t.me/nuliberationzone

We thank you for your support. From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.

The Manifesto.

Northwestern People’s Resolution​

Northwestern University must stop supporting Israeli apartheid and occupation. We, students, staff, and community members demand that Northwestern

  1. PROTECT STUDENT CIVIL LIBERTIES AND SAFETY
American academic institutions have become hostile spaces for anti-war, anti-apartheid, and pro-Palestine speech. Northwestern University is no exception, curtailing speech and intimidating students and educators. We call on President Schill to condemn the targeted harassment of students and the disproportionate censorship of pro-Palestine speech, to affirm and protect student civil liberties, and to build a safe environment for intellectual and political expression.


  1. END PARTNERSHIPS THAT LEGITIMIZE GENOCIDE AND OCCUPATION
Through academic partnerships such as the Israel Innovation Project (IIP), Northwestern contributes to the legitimation of occupation and genocide, and of the large apparatus of propaganda, white-washing, and scholasticide that support it. The IIP routinely platforms right-wing Zionist officials, including former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert, who openly endorses ethnic cleansing. Furthermore, as a STEM partnership, the IIP is complicit in strengthening the Israeli military-industrial complex and its capacity for surveillance and AI-powered apartheid. We demand that Northwestern University immediately cease the IIP and other collaborations with Israeli institutions that maintain and support apartheid and that it take a public stance for a permanent ceasefire.



  1. DISCLOSE AND DIVEST FROM WAR AND APARTHEID
The Northwestern administration chooses to hide its direct and managed investments, failing its own commitments to transparency and accountability. Students, faculty, staff, and other stewards of the university’s success ask that our tuition, labor, care, and trust not be misused to enrich institutions and companies that support and maintain apartheid, occupation, and the oppression of the Palestinian people. We demand that Northwestern divest from all defense stocks and investments and from all companies that support Israeli apartheid. To this end, we demand that all future investment decisions be made with input from a recurring committee of students, staff, and community stakeholders.





———————————————————————————————————————

ONGOING ATROCITIES

For the last 6 months, the people of Gaza have been victims of one of the most atrocious and monstrous sieges in modern history, as Israel has brutally killed over 33,000 Palestinians (400+ in the West Bank). After months of tightening what has–for the last 76 years–been a brutal and insufferable occupation, Israel is leading a multifront war on the people of Palestine that can only be described as ethnic cleansing and genocide.

Despite the immense loss of life and all that sustains it, US diplomatic, military, and top academic institutions have chosen to stand firmly on the side of terror. Northwestern is no exception. At a time when the international are raising their voices to denounce Israel’s disregard for human dignity and international law, the leadership of Northwestern has chosen to silence anti-war voices, intimidate students and scholars, platform Zionist narratives and provide cultural and material support to institutions that participate in the oppression of the Palestinian people.

STUDENT RIGHTS UNDER THREAT

Northwestern’s prioritization of its donors and financial stakeholders over the liberty of political expression on campus has come at the expense of the safety of Arab, Muslim, Jewish, Black, Indigenous, and other voices of dissent against occupation, apartheid, and genocide. Egregiously, two Black Northwestern students were arrested under an obscure anti-KKK law for distributing a parodied cover of The Daily Northwestern that critiqued the paper’s coverage (or lack thereof) of the genocide; the charges were later dropped by Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office after public pressure from students and faculty. This instance is not an isolated, apolitical act but rather part of the more general disproportionate censorship of pro-Palestine speech on campus.

On November 13th, President Schill announced the appointment of an Advisory Committee on Preventing Antisemitism and Hate. As stated in the President’s letter, this decision emerged from a series of conversations, including a discussion with Michal Cotler-Wunsh, Israel’s Special Envoy for Combating Antisemitism, who openly argues for the equivalence of anti-Zionism and antisemitism. In the same November letter, President Schill stated that the Northwestern community should “emphatically reject statements or banners that significant parts of our community interpret as promoting murder and genocide,” including the slogan “From the River to the Sea.” To unilaterally assert that this statement should fall outside the bounds of university-protected free speech disregards its history as a call against “the fragmentation of Palestinian land and people by Israeli occupation and discrimination.” As Harvard faculty have argued, the attack on this slogan as inherently eliminationist is both inaccurate and irresponsible. It asymmetrically delegitimizes pro-Palestine speech and fails to mention the removalism and eliminationism proper to various statements associated with the Israeli state and, more importantly, with its concrete actions. As legal scholar Noah Zatz points out, censoring this phrase on campuses “relies on pervasive racist and anti-Muslim stereotypes of Palestinians as endemically hateful, violent, deceptive, and hostile to Jews” and constitutes a violation of Palestinian students’ civil rights.

More recently, the president established yet another advisory body, the Committee on Free Expression and Institutional Speech, whose stated goal is “to examine what are the boundaries, if any, for free expression and academic freedom.” Between establishing bodies to police our tone, arresting students for exercising their rights, and openly calling for the silencing of pro-Palestinian voices, it is clear that our institution’s singular response has been one of censorship of any and all voices deemed uncomfortable or challenging to the status quo.

These intimidation and censorship tactics have had a nefarious effect on our campus culture, and on our ability to express ourselves freely and to responsibly exercise our intellectual and ethical duties as students and educators. This is a moral, epistemic and pedagogical failure, which threatens the very core of the university’s mission. Yet the problem is not limited to asymmetric silencing and censorship, as Northwestern is complicit in the active production of narratives that legitimize and sustain oppression.

PARTNERS IN GENOCIDE

The university continues to maintain its institutional partnerships with Israel through study-abroad programs, dual degree programs, and research projects. This renders our institution complicit in legitimizing, arming, and promoting a colonial regime built on apartheid and ethnic cleansing. As Maya Wind details in her book Towers of Ivory and Steel, Israeli universities actively sustain Israeli settler colonialism and have for decades enacted “scholasticide,” a term coined by Karma Nabulsi in 2009 to describe attacks on Palestinian scholars, students, and educational institutions, and which now includes the recent bombing and destruction of every Palestinian university in Gaza. Our university is complicit in this violence and erasure.

Through the Israel Innovation Project (IIP), Northwestern collaborates with Israeli academic institutions in the areas of biology, computer science, artificial intelligence, and engineering. Due to the strong relationship between the IDF and Israeli academia, such technological advancements contribute to the strengthening of the Israeli military-industrial complex and its capacity for surveillance and oppression of Palestinians.

Furthermore, Northwestern has chosen to actively participate in the production of propaganda and misinformation. The IIP constantly operates beyond its stated mission of scientific cooperation –“to advance Northwestern’s technological and scientific partnerships with Israeli institutions of higher learning”– and acts instead as a mouthpiece of the Israeli government. It sponsored the Chicago Festival of Israeli Cinema, an event that openly promotes Zionist propaganda; and it routinely platforms Zionist officials, such as former Vice Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who directly denied Israeli responsibility for the safety of civilians in Gaza, and former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whose stated solution to the “demographic problem” is to “minimize the number of Palestinians.” Given the International Court of Justice’s preliminary ruling on the matter of genocide in Gaza, Northwestern University could be found guilty by association as a public relations partner of the settler colony of Israel.

ESCAPING ACCOUNTABILITY

Finally, in spite of its formal commitment to UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment, the university withholds public access to its investments, thereby evading accountability from its community, student, and staff stakeholders. Without the university ever disclosing its investments or those of its investment managers, we cannot hold the administration accountable. The Board of Trustees even goes so far as to state that “on very rare occasions, a continued investment may be so morally reprehensible, such as investments that directly support slavery, apartheid, or genocide, that such investment would necessitate the University’s divestment.” Echoing the Board of Trustees’ own commitments, we do not consent to the misuse of university resources for morally reprehensible investments. We, the true stewards of this institution, have a right to know that our tuition and labor are not being invested to fund companies that materially support the genocide and dispossession of Palestinians.

Signed,

NU Educators for Justice in Palestine
NU Students for Justice in Palestine
NU Jewish Voice for Peace
 
I’m kind of surprised we’re not seeing any mugshots of the people arrested. Wouldn’t those things be the pictures of revolution for these people? Hell, I’m willing to bet that they’re trying to keep this going for so long that the only way to stop the encampments is to bring in the Army.
Publishing their mugshot probably ruins a lot of narratives and also gives the protestors exactly what they want in terms of martyrdom.
Really what we should bring back to rob these idiots of any dignity is a good ol' paddlin'.
 
This is all a warmup for the two party conventions this summer, both of which will see the return of antifa outta nowhere and mass rioting in Milwaukee and Chicago, in an attempt to cause good TV shots for the evening news of them halp halp being opprassed by police
 

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Protesters getting arrested at Cal Poly Humboldt.

The NYT article is short and boring without a lot of details.


The KRCR article says 25 arrests and allegedly the protesters have been cleared from the buildings they were occupying. There's some video I haven't seen yet.


Mad River Union appears to be reprinting a press release from the school that says the clearance happened at 2:30 AM.


Redheaded Blackbelt has a bunch more that I haven't seen/archived yet.

 
The protesters have taken over Hamilton Hall in Columbia University. They have begun smashing out windows and using picnic tables to barricade themselves in, supposedly their might be facility members stuck in their with them.

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See, now this is what the Columbia President should have been praying for. Up until this point there was always a sort of fog in what was actually happening in Columbia. Were there really large scale threats to Jewish kids, or was it just a couple a bad apples? There were Jewish students doing Passover stuff in the encampment, so it couldn't have been that bad. Was the encampment just standard college protests, or were there more maniacal and problematic aspects to it? This caused the administration to have to be more careful with how they went forward as they don't want another "innocent protester gets maced, look at this picture and cry" incident. But now there is no fog, these people are breaking windows and taking over buildings, that should give the cucked Egyptian president more than enough reason to send in the dogs and firehoses on everyone, whether you were participating in the building take over or not. If the police do not immediately start arresting people, "freedom of assembly" be damned, the President should be fired as she is obviously a lost cause.
 
See, now this is what the Columbia President should have been praying for. Up until this point there was always a sort of fog in what was actually happening in Columbia. Were there really large scale threats to Jewish kids, or was it just a couple a bad apples? There were Jewish students doing Passover stuff in the encampment, so it couldn't have been that bad. Was the encampment just standard college protests, or were there more maniacal and problematic aspects to it? This caused the administration to have to be more careful with how they went forward as they don't want another "innocent protester gets maced, look at this picture and cry" incident. But now there is no fog, these people are breaking windows and taking over buildings, that should give the cucked Egyptian president more than enough reason to send in the dogs and firehoses on everyone, whether you were participating in the building take over or not. If the police do not immediately start arresting people, "freedom of assembly" be damned, the President should be fired as she is obviously a lost cause.
It’s kind of crazy how quickly this went to Full CHAZ. Never go Full CHAZ because most won’t shed a tear when cops and military come in.
 
I’m kind of surprised we’re not seeing any mugshots of the people arrested. Wouldn’t those things be the pictures of revolution for these people? Hell, I’m willing to bet that they’re trying to keep this going for so long that the only way to stop the encampments is to bring in the Army.
might not be a THEM! incident, mugshot releases vary heavily by state
people are used to Florida's massive sunshine laws where every mug shot is public basically immediately
 
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Protesters getting arrested at Cal Poly Humboldt.
"Cal Poly".
In my day "Cal Poly" meant something. There were two semi-decent schools in the California State University system which is the lower tier California state schools versus University of California.

Now they've given the name to the pot heads up in Eureka, sorry, Arcata. On the plus side the police are used to dealing with stupid shit up there.
 
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