Why Israel is the one thing you can’t protest against in Western universities
By: Rachel Marsden
The crackdown on pro-Palestine campus protests might just make college kids hate the establishment again
The American university crowd didn’t seem to mind too much when the state was
ushering in authoritarian green policies under the dodgy pretext of reducing the
temperature of the planet. Or when campuses were banning right-wing speakers. Or
when everyone was being forced to comply with their ‘revolution’ over personal
pronoun usage. Or when unvaccinated fellow students were being banned from
campus during the Covid-19 fiasco. But now that the Western establishment, from
North America to Europe, is cracking down on campus protesters demonstrating
against Israel’s ongoing bombing of Gaza civilians, they’re suddenly wondering
where all their rights went.
If those who are now upset with the campus crackdowns had bothered to help
expand the Overton window – that is, the range of acceptable speech and debate –
back when others with whom they disagreed were trying to pry it open as widely
as possible, they’d be reaping the benefits of true free speech now. Instead,
the establishment has enjoyed a culture of impunity, enabled by the woke crowd
and its constant demands for safe spaces. And now the government and
universities have unilaterally decided that it’s Israel that needs a safe space
and protection from college kids.
To that end, the US Congress has just passed a new bill broadening the
definition of anti-Semitism on university campuses to include “targeting of the
state of Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity.” How about another law
banning criticism of Iran because it’s a collective of Muslims? Or of Russia
because it’s a collective of Orthodox Christians? Or of China because it’s a
collective of Buddhists? Can’t have that, because it would enable the state in
question to act with carte blanche impunity by scaring critics into silence.
Not only is the establishment using force to crack down on protesters, but it’s
now formally legislating against dissent, even though 55% of Americans are
against Israel’s actions in Gaza, according to a Gallup poll from March. Not
even the Israeli establishment is going that far to quash dissent when, just a
few days ago, thousands of Israelis rallied around the country in opposition to
the government’s handling of the crisis and in favor of a ceasefire. So are they
just a bunch of anti-Semites, too?
The Western establishment’s constant reductio ad absurdum, conflating
pro-ceasefire and anti-genocide activism with anti-Semitism, is exactly the kind
of thing that the establishment has been doing for years to ram through its
agenda. Don’t like blowing cash on Ukraine? Then you’re doing the Kremlin’s
bidding. Opposed to carbon taxes? You’re a science denier. Didn’t buy the
ever-changing Covid narrative? You’re a threat to society.
While the US establishment is pretending to be scandalized by the
ground-breaking concept of university students actively protesting injustice,
much of the focus in Europe has been on one particular campus – Sciences Po –
where I taught in the master’s program for seven years. It’s basically the
French equivalent of Harvard.
Initially, students faced off against French riot police and refused to budge
when the authorities repeatedly threatened to use force if the students didn’t
move as they blocked the campus with a sit-in to demand a ceasefire in Gaza.
Some students ended up facing disciplinary proceedings as a result. The students
have also been demanding that the university cut all ties with entities related
to the state of Israel, which management has refused to do. There haven’t been
any campus uprisings against Russia amid the conflict in Ukraine, and yet these
same universities, including Sciences Po, didn’t hesitate to cut ties with
Russian universities. So why not with Israel? Because that simply isn’t the
establishment’s position, unlike in the case of Russia. These institutions’
lofty values of “universality, humanity, and tolerance,” as the director of
Sciences Po Strasbourg put it, are apparently selectively imposed. Kind of like
campus free speech these days.
Even when Sciences Po dropped the disciplinary actions against student
protesters in exchange for the students agreeing to attend a formal debate on
campus to air out grievances on all sides, at least one member of the
center-right establishment, the vice president of former President Nicolas
Sarkozy’s party, Les Republicains, was furious about the mere notion of even
entertaining the possibility. “We cannot finance a school which has become the
place of entryism, a mixture of leftism and Islamism, which legitimizes
anti-Semitic remarks and acts of violence,” Francois-Xavier Bellamy said.
Bellamy’s Les Republicains colleague, Valerie Pecresse, president of the Greater
Paris Region, straight-up suspended its own funding of the university.
The end result of this establishment censorship is a safe space that shelters
the establishment’s own rhetoric and ideas from criticism. We’re talking here
about the top university for educating France’s future political elites, so
you’d think it would be a good idea for students to be battle-hardened in the
arena of contentious political debate and conflict. Instead, these soft-handed
elites want the school to protect their narrative at the expense of the most
critical kind of diversity – that of critical thought.
Even French President Emmanuel Macron has recently echoed the students’
concerns in calling out Israel’s actions. “Deep indignation at the images
reaching us from Gaza where civilians have been targeted by Israeli soldiers,”
Macron said on X (formerly Twitter). “I express my strongest disapproval of
these shots and demand truth, justice and respect for international law.”
Earlier this year, Macron said that a two-state solution recognizing a
Palestinian state isn’t taboo for France. Not that he’s actually taken any
actual leadership action on that front. And Sciences Po isn’t the only French
campus to spark controversy on this issue. Cops cleared out a pro-Palestinian
encampment this week at Paris’ Sorbonne University. Why couldn’t they just
pretend that they were one of the migrant camps along the Seine and plaguing
various other parts of the city for years on end? Pretty sure those migrants
aren’t big fans of Israel, either. So why do they get to stay and block the
city?
And when left-wing France Insoumise party leader Jean-Luc Melenchon had his
conference on Palestine at Lille University canceled last month, he compared the
university’s president to Nazi Adolf Eichmann, who famously said he was just
following orders. The French education minister piped up to say that she’d file
a criminal complaint for public injury in support of the university president
and on behalf of the government. Way to prove Melenchon wrong and dispel any
notion of the heavy-handed state in his Eichmann reference.
The Western establishment supports free speech and democratic values – just as
long as you find yourself on the same side as those with the power to redefine
them at any given moment to suit their agenda on any given issue. The real
revolution will be when this is no longer the case. Until then, episodes like
the current campus chaos will only provide glimpses of this hypocritical reality
as the facade of freedom temporarily cracks.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN