Friends,
I’ve been spending the last several weeks trying to find out what’s really going on with the campus protests. I’ve met with students at Berkeley, visited with faculty at Columbia University, and talked with young people and faculty at many other universities.
My conclusion: While protest movements are often ignited by many different things and attract an assortment of people with a range of motives, this one is centered on one thing: moral outrage at the slaughter of tens of thousands of innocent people — most of them women and children — in Gaza.
To interpret these protests as anything else — as antisemitic or anti-Zionist or anti-American or pro-Palestinian — is to miss the essence of what’s going on and why.
Most of the students and faculty I’ve spoken with found Hamas’s attack on October 7 odious. They also find Israel’s current government morally bankrupt, in that its response to Hamas’s attack has been disproportionate. They do not support Palestine as such; most do not know enough about the history of Israel and Palestine to pass moral judgment.
But they have a deep and abiding sense that what is happening in Gaza is morally wrong, and that the United States is complicit in that immorality. Unfortunately, many tell me they are planning not to vote this coming November — a clear danger to Biden’s reelection campaign.
I have sharp memories of the anti-Vietnam War demonstrations, in which I participated some 55 years ago. I remember being appalled at the unnecessary carnage in Vietnam. I was incensed that the First World — white and rich — was randomly killing Third World people — non-white and poor. And at the stupidity of college administrations that summoned police to clear protesters — using tear gas, stun guns, and mass arrests. The response added fuel to the flames.
The anti-Vietnam War movement became fodder for right-wing politicians like Ronald Reagan, demanding “law and order.” The spectacle also appalled many non-college, working-class people who viewed the students as pampered, selfish, anti-American, unpatriotic.
History, as it is said, doesn’t repeat itself. It only rhymes. The mistakes made at one point in time have an eerie way of reemerging two generations later, as memories fade.
I’ve also observed here in Los Angeles, that some of the protesters seem to be in it for an opportunity to raise heck and cause trouble. So, it seems that there’s more than one motive at play here.
I can understand why they wouldn't vote - they are being dismissed, ignored, mocked, beaten and arrested. All for having a moral compass and demanding that their government also have one. And I also understand and respect their means of making these demands because while docile, peaceful protests may have had some impact 60 years ago they sure as hell don't anymore. As I learned when I was an anti-war protestor in 2003 and we were dismissed by Cheney et al as "a focus group". You can't ask politely for your elected government to hear your concerns, you have to break down the doors and force them to listen to you - and exact consequences when they refuse to listen to you. Withholding your vote is a concrete, visible consequence. Why should they show up for a candidate who just today basically told them he doesn't care about their opinions and won't change anything, now shut up and go away.