laughing dog
Contributor
In other words, in this context”most” means “whatever I think I know about”.I know several universities caved to the anti-Israel creeps. Rutgers, Brown(shirt), Union Theological Seminary are some of them.Since I doubt that level of detail exists, I’d settle for the proportion of protests that were peaceful. I know the big ones with violence get the media attention, but there were and are plenty without violence or any demands.
While you are free to hold any opinion you wish, no rational observer is required to accept your idiosyncratic definition of “caving in” (which includes agreeing to discuss an issue in the future”) or conflate protesting the massive destruction and misery on the civilian population of Gaza as “anti Israel”.
Yes, there are anti- Israel protesters and antisemitic ones snd pro- terrorism ones but they are not the only ones. It is very possible they are not even “most”!
Occupation of quads, in and of itself, is a nothing burger. Peaceful protest on a campus is a learning experience and should be treated as one by the administration of institutions of higher learning, not as an exercise in kneejerk authoritarian dumbness in response to the pearl clutching of goosetepping braying jackasses.Derec said:Also, a protest may be technically "peaceful" but still break the law. For example blockading access or occupying quads. Those are not acceptable tactics whether or not they are classified as "peaceful".
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