Post by CrepedCrusader on Apr 27, 2024 0:15:10 GMT
Amy Schumer literally shared a meme implying all Palestinians are rapists, and then jumped on the right-wing bandwagon by calling for universities to be investigated for taking money from Muslim-American groups.
CrepedCrusader is prohibited from having an opinion on the Israel-Hamas War.
Anything to distract from tens of thousands of innocents being slaughtered.
Too bad it's not working to bump up support for genocide.
The more public opinion turns on them, the more desperate they get.
I'm actually very curious to see how far the agitprop goes.
The GOP: More freedom, less government. Also the GOP: The government should ban education I don't like, books I don't like, healthcare I don't like, and outcomes of elections I don't like.
I thought about what would have happened if protesters were instead chanting anti-Black slogans or even something like “D.E.I. has got to die,” to the same “Sound Off” tune that “From the river to the sea” has been adapted to. They would have lasted roughly five minutes before masses of students shouted them down and drove them off the campus. Chants like that would have been condemned as a grave rupture of civilized exchange, heralded as threatening resegregation and branded as a form of violence. I’d wager that most of the student protesters against the Gaza war would view them that way. Why do so many people think that weekslong campus protests against not just the war in Gaza but Israel’s very existence are nevertheless permissible?
Conversations I have had with people heatedly opposed to the war in Gaza, signage and writings on social media and elsewhere and anti-Israel and generally hard-leftist comments that I have heard for decades on campuses place these confrontations within a larger battle against power structures — here in the form of what they call colonialism and genocide — and against whiteness. The idea is that Jewish students and faculty should be able to tolerate all of this because they are white.
I understand this to a point. Pro-Palestinian rallies and events, of which there have been many here over the years, are not in and of themselves hostile to Jewish students, faculty and staff members. Disagreement will not always be a juice and cookies affair. However, the relentless assault of this current protest — daily, loud, louder, into the night and using ever-angrier rhetoric — is beyond what any people should be expected to bear up under, regardless of their whiteness, privilege or power.
I thought about what would have happened if protesters were instead chanting anti-Black slogans or even something like “D.E.I. has got to die,” to the same “Sound Off” tune that “From the river to the sea” has been adapted to. They would have lasted roughly five minutes before masses of students shouted them down and drove them off the campus. Chants like that would have been condemned as a grave rupture of civilized exchange, heralded as threatening resegregation and branded as a form of violence. I’d wager that most of the student protesters against the Gaza war would view them that way. Why do so many people think that weekslong campus protests against not just the war in Gaza but Israel’s very existence are nevertheless permissible?
Conversations I have had with people heatedly opposed to the war in Gaza, signage and writings on social media and elsewhere and anti-Israel and generally hard-leftist comments that I have heard for decades on campuses place these confrontations within a larger battle against power structures — here in the form of what they call colonialism and genocide — and against whiteness. The idea is that Jewish students and faculty should be able to tolerate all of this because they are white.
I understand this to a point. Pro-Palestinian rallies and events, of which there have been many here over the years, are not in and of themselves hostile to Jewish students, faculty and staff members. Disagreement will not always be a juice and cookies affair. However, the relentless assault of this current protest — daily, loud, louder, into the night and using ever-angrier rhetoric — is beyond what any people should be expected to bear up under, regardless of their whiteness, privilege or power.
A Jewish student violently assailed:
CrepedCrusader is prohibited from having an opinion on the Israel-Hamas War.
I thought about what would have happened if protesters were instead chanting anti-Black slogans or even something like “D.E.I. has got to die,” to the same “Sound Off” tune that “From the river to the sea” has been adapted to. They would have lasted roughly five minutes before masses of students shouted them down and drove them off the campus. Chants like that would have been condemned as a grave rupture of civilized exchange, heralded as threatening resegregation and branded as a form of violence. I’d wager that most of the student protesters against the Gaza war would view them that way. Why do so many people think that weekslong campus protests against not just the war in Gaza but Israel’s very existence are nevertheless permissible?
Conversations I have had with people heatedly opposed to the war in Gaza, signage and writings on social media and elsewhere and anti-Israel and generally hard-leftist comments that I have heard for decades on campuses place these confrontations within a larger battle against power structures — here in the form of what they call colonialism and genocide — and against whiteness. The idea is that Jewish students and faculty should be able to tolerate all of this because they are white.
I understand this to a point. Pro-Palestinian rallies and events, of which there have been many here over the years, are not in and of themselves hostile to Jewish students, faculty and staff members. Disagreement will not always be a juice and cookies affair. However, the relentless assault of this current protest — daily, loud, louder, into the night and using ever-angrier rhetoric — is beyond what any people should be expected to bear up under, regardless of their whiteness, privilege or power.
A Jewish student violently assailed:
I'm not seeing anything. Is that the stick flag incident?
I'm not seeing anything. Is that the stick flag incident?
Description: Dumbass walks up to a pro-Palestine demonstration wearing a shirt with the word Jew printed on it in an attempt to get attacked for propaganda purposes. Nobody pays attention to her, and you can see the moment she dies inside.
Edited for autocorrect typos.
CrepedCrusader is prohibited from having an opinion on the Israel-Hamas War.
I'm not seeing anything. Is that the stick flag incident?
Description: Dumbass walks up to a pro-Palestine demonstration wearing a shirt with the word Judah tonight and attempt to get attacked for propaganda purposes. Nobody pays attention to her, and you can see the moment she dies inside.
Oh, I guess that means everything is hunky-dory for all Jewish students on the college campuses.
Description: Dumbass walks up to a pro-Palestine demonstration wearing a shirt with the word Judah tonight and attempt to get attacked for propaganda purposes. Nobody pays attention to her, and you can see the moment she dies inside.
Oh, I guess that means everything is hunky-dory for all Jewish students on the college campuses.
Zionists have been using the "Jewish students are under attack!!!!" ruse as an excuse to curb free speech for years. A few years ago, when New York was considering stripping students of their scholarships if they joined any BDS groups, human excrement Bari Weiss was running phony stories to justify it. Her stories were easily picked apart.
CrepedCrusader is prohibited from having an opinion on the Israel-Hamas War.
Oh, I guess that means everything is hunky-dory for all Jewish students on the college campuses.
Zionists have been using the "Jewish students are under attack!!!!" ruse as an excuse to curb free speech for years. A few years ago, when New York was considering stripping students of their scholarships if they joined any BDS groups, human excrement Bari Weiss was running phony stories to justify it. Her stories were easily picked apart.
I have no problem with free speech. But I draw the line at trespassing, harassment, and vandalism.
Meanwhile, if you are on the side of the protesters, exactly how should Israel deal with Hamas, its October 7 massacre, and its promise to launch more massacres?
Zionists have been using the "Jewish students are under attack!!!!" ruse as an excuse to curb free speech for years. A few years ago, when New York was considering stripping students of their scholarships if they joined any BDS groups, human excrement Bari Weiss was running phony stories to justify it. Her stories were easily picked apart.
I have no problem with free speech. But I draw the line at trespassing, harassment, and vandalism.
Meanwhile, if you are on the side of the protesters, exactly how should Israel deal with Hamas, its October 7 massacre, and its promise to launch more massacres?
Not buy murdering Palestinians children and relief workers, that's for sure.
CrepedCrusader is prohibited from having an opinion on the Israel-Hamas War.
I have no problem with free speech. But I draw the line at trespassing, harassment, and vandalism.
Meanwhile, if you are on the side of the protesters, exactly how should Israel deal with Hamas, its October 7 massacre, and its promise to launch more massacres?
Not buy murdering Palestinians children and relief workers, that's for sure.
Sorry, but trying to destroy a Genocidal anti-Semitic gang, and civilians inadvertently being killed in the process, is not murder. It was not murder during WWII, and it is not murder today.
Meanwhile, answer the question. Exactly how should Israel deal with Hamas, its October 7 massacre, and its promise to launch more massacres? If you have no answer, it means that, even though you feel very strongly about Israel's actions, you have given no thought to what Israel is supposed to do.