Revolt in the Universities

The student protesters demonstrate moral and physical courage, shaming major institutions, and exposing their complicity.

By Chris Hedges

Where Have All the Flowers Gone – by Mr. Fish

Note from Tom

Forgive the interruption, Information Clearing House really needs your help. All we ask is that you click this link  http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/support.htm  and provide what ever you can to support our work. We ask you humbly: please don’t scroll away.

Low income readers: DON’T send money, just encourage others to subscribe.

Peace and Joy Tom Feeley

PS. You may prefer to mail a donation (U.S. Funds) to. Information Clearing House, Po Box 365. Imperial Beach, California. 91933 USA

==========

PRINCETON, N.J. — Achinthya Sivalingam, a graduate student in Public Affairs at Princeton University did not know when she woke up this morning that shortly after 7 a.m. she would join hundreds of students across the country who have been arrested, evicted and banned from campus for protesting the genocide in Gaza.

She wears a blue sweatshirt, sometimes fighting back tears, when I speak to her. We are seated at a small table in the Small World Coffee shop on Witherspoon Street, half a block away from the university she can no longer enter, from the apartment she can no longer live in and from the campus where in a few weeks she was scheduled to graduate.

She wonders where she will spend the night.

The police gave her five minutes to collect items from her apartment.

“I grabbed really random things,” she says. “I grabbed oatmeal for whatever reason. I was really confused.”

Student protesters across the country exhibit a moral and physical courage — many are facing suspension and expulsion — that shames every major institution in the country. They are dangerous not because they disrupt campus life or engage in attacks on Jewish students —  many of those protesting are Jewish — but because they expose the abject failure by the ruling elites and their institutions to halt genocide, the crime of crimes. These students watch, like most of us, Israel’s live-streamed slaughter of the Palestinian people. But unlike most of us, they act. Their voices and protests are a potent counterpoint to the moral bankruptcy that surrounds them.

Not one university president has denounced Israel’s destruction of every university in Gaza. Not one university president has called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire. Not one university president has used the words “apartheid” or “genocide.” Not one university president has called for sanctions and divestment from Israel.   

Instead, heads of these academic institutions grovel supinely before wealthy donors, corporations — including weapons manufacturers — and rabid right-wing politicians. They reframe the debate around harm to Jews rather than the daily slaughter of Palestinians, including thousands of children. They have allowed the abusers — the Zionist state and its supporters — to paint themselves as victims. This false narrative, which focuses on anti-Semitism, allows the centers of power, including the media, to block out the real issue — genocide. It contaminates the debate. It is a classic case of “reactive abuse.” Raise your voice to decry injustice, react to prolonged abuse, attempt to resist, and the abuser suddenly transforms themself into the aggrieved.  

Princeton University, like other universities across the country, is determined to halt encampments calling for an end to the genocide. This, it appears, is a coordinated effort by universities across the country.

The university knew about the proposed encampment in advance. When the students reached the five staging sites this morning, they were met by large numbers from the university’s Department of Public Safety and the Princeton Police Department. The site of the proposed encampment in front of Firestone Library was filled with police. This is despite the fact that students kept their plans off of university emails and confined to what they thought were secure apps. Standing among the police this morning was Rabbi Eitan Webb, who founded and heads Princeton’s Chabad House. He has attended university events to vocally attack those who call for an end to the genocide as anti-semites, according to student activists. 

As the some 100 protesters listened to speakers, a helicopter circled noisily overhead. A banner, hanging from a tree, read: “From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will be Free.”

The students said they would continue their protest until Princeton divests from firms that “profit from or engage in the State of Israel’s ongoing military campaign” in Gaza, ends university research “on weapons of war” funded by the Department of Defense, enacts an academic and cultural boycott of Israeli institutions, supports Palestinian academic and cultural institutions and advocates for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire.

But if the students again attempt to erect tents – they took down 14 tents once the two arrests were made this morning – it seems certain they will all be arrested.

“It is far beyond what I expected to happen,” says Aditi Rao, a doctoral student in classics. “They started arresting people seven minutes into the encampment.”

Princeton Vice President of Campus Life Rochelle Calhoun sent out a mass email on Wednesday warning students they could be arrested and thrown off campus if they erected an encampment.

“Any individual involved in an encampment, occupation, or other unlawful disruptive conduct who refuses to stop after a warning will be arrested and immediately barred from campus,” she wrote. “For students, such exclusion from campus would jeopardize their ability to complete the semester.”

These students, she added, could be suspended or expelled.

Sivalingam ran into one of her professors and pleaded with him for faculty support for the protest. He informed her he was coming up for tenure and could not participate. The course he teaches is called “Ecological Marxism.”

“It was a bizarre moment,” she says. “I spent last semester thinking about ideas and evolution and civil change, like social change. It was a crazy moment.”

She starts to cry.

A few minutes after 7 a.m, police distributed a leaflet to the students erecting tents with the headline “Princeton University Warning and No Trespass Notice.” The leaflet stated that the students were “engaged in conduct on Princeton University property that violates University rules and regulations, poses a threat to the safety and property of others, and disrupts the regular operations of the University: such conduct includes participating in an encampment and/or disrupting a University event.” The leaflet said those who engaged in the “prohibited conduct” would be considered a “Defiant Trespasser under New Jersey criminal law (N.J.S.A. 2C:18-3) and subject to immediate arrest.”

A few seconds later Sivalingam heard a police officer say “Get those two.”

Hassan Sayed, a doctoral student in economics who is of Pakistani descent, was working with Sivalingam to erect one of tents. He was handcuffed. Sivalingam was zip tied so tightly it cut off circulation to her hands. There are dark bruises circling her wrists.

“There was an initial warning from cops about ‘You are trespassing’ or something like that, ‘This is your first warning,’” Sayed says. “It was kind of loud. I didn’t hear too much. Suddenly, hands were thrust behind my back. As this happened, my right arm tensed a bit and they said ‘You are resisting arrest if you do that.’ They put the handcuffs on.”

He was asked by one of the arresting officers if he was a student. When he said he was, they immediately informed him that he was banned from campus.

“No mention of what charges are as far as I could hear,” he says. “I get taken to one car. They pat me down a bit. They ask for my student ID.”

Sayed was placed in the back of a campus police car with Sivalingam, who was in agony from the zip ties. He asked the police to loosen the zip ties on Sivalingam, a process that took several minutes as they had to remove her from the vehicle and the scissors were unable to cut through the plastic. They had to find wire cutters. They were taken to the university’s police station.

Sayed was stripped of his phone, keys, clothes, backpack and AirPods and placed in a holding cell. No one read him his Miranda rights.

 He was again told he was banned from the campus.

“Is this an eviction?” he asked the campus police.

The police did not answer.

He asked to call a lawyer. He was told he could call a lawyer when the police were ready.

“They may have mentioned something about trespassing but I don’t remember clearly,” he says. “It certainly was not made salient to me.”

He was told to fill out forms about his mental health and if he was on medication. Then he was informed he was being charged with “defiant trespassing.”

“I say, ‘I’m a student, how is that trespassing? I attend school here,’” he says. “They really don’t seem to have a good answer. I reiterate, asking whether me being banned from campus constitutes eviction, because I live on campus. They just say, ‘ban from campus.’ I said something like that doesn’t answer the question. They say it will all be explained in the letter. I’m like, ‘Who is writing the letter?’ ‘Dean of grad school’ they respond.”

Sayed was driven to his campus housing. The campus police did not let him have his keys. He was given a few minutes to grab items like his phone charger. They locked his apartment door. He, too, is seeking shelter in the Small World Coffee shop.

Sivalingam often returned to Tamil Nadu in southern India, where she was born, for her summer vacations. The poverty and daily struggle of those around her, to survive, she says, was “sobering.”

“The disparity of my life and theirs, how to reconcile how those things exist in the same world,” she says, her voice quivering with emotion. “It was always very bizarre to me. I think that’s where a lot of my interest in addressing inequality, in being able to think about people outside of the United States as humans, as people who deserve lives and dignity, comes from.” 

She must adjust now to being exiled from campus.

“I gotta find somewhere to sleep,” she says, “tell my parents, but that’s going to be a little bit of a conversation, and find ways to engage in jail support and communications because I can’t be there, but I can continue to mobilize.”

There are many shameful periods in American history. The genocide we carried out against indigenous peoples. Slavery. The violent suppression of the labor movement that saw hundreds of workers killed. Lynching. Jim and Jane Crow. Vietnam. Iraq. Afghanistan. Libya. 

The genocide in Gaza, which we fund and support, is of such monstrous proportions that it will achieve a prominent place in this pantheon of crimes. 

History will not be kind to most of us. But it will bless and revere these students.

The Chris Hedges Report is a reader-supported publication.

Please Support Information Clearing House: We Can’t Do It Without You

Click Here To Get Your FREE Newsletter No Advertising – No Government Grants – This Is Independent Media

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Information Clearing House has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is Information ClearingHouse endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)

Views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.


Posted

in

by

Comments

16 responses to “Revolt in the Universities”

  1.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Democracy will never win against Zionism. Sorry

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Zionism has already lost.

    2.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      It would be pretty difficult for Nutty Yanoo to claim that these protestors “beheaded babies and raped women”. If they could they would!

  2.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    As long as the students understand that their efforts will have NO effect on gov. policies and actions, I fully stand with and support and cheer them on. Just as I and others did in the 60s and 70s by refusing the draft and protesting in many different ways, they are doing what they know to be the right thing. The real point of all this is to be true to oneself; as my best friend said in 1969 to his FBI chaperones driving him to his federal trial when asked if he thought his actions would “stop the war”, he had the perfect answer: “YES, It did for ME”!

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      It makes me wonder just how many narcs are embedded in these protests.

  3. Woopy Avatar
    Woopy

    Of course the white Zionist Jews are already accusing the protesters of being “anti-Semitic”. Probably most of the protesters are anti-genocide, certainly not anti-semitic. They are rioting against genocide, however if being against genocide means that the protesters are anti-Semitic then so be it. Anti-semitic means anti-genocide and under this definition most people are “anti-Semitic” and justifiably so.

    1. hotrod31 Avatar
      hotrod31

      Don’t allow the fake ‘Jews’ to mess with your head … if you really think about it – it is the fake ‘Jews’ who are anti-Semitic, or as they have deceitfully twisted the definition of Semitic (Arabic) people into an artfully co-opted description which Eastern-Europeans could wrap around themselves. 99.99% of these buggers labelling themselves as Semitic people wouldn’t know what the term described even if it bit them on the arse. It is all part of the kabuki and they really believe that they are so wonderfully-smart when they’re spinning their web of deceit for us lowly ‘Goyim’.

  4. gloria Avatar
    gloria

    Horrifying that an Institution of higher learning hires a bunch of no doubt, idiot cops, to come in and arrest people who live on the campus. How peculiar the horrid idiots of the law and apparently the head of that university have students thrown off campus for protesting. Perhaps there should be a major pubic trouncing of the head of university and the idiot police. Imagine that , parents who paid for this experience for their child, but then idiot police drag your child off to jail and leave them without their personal items, or money and how will they find a place tp slee?. So the parents already paid and now their kids are homeless as the university has decided to punish them. HOPEFULLY a lot pf parents will demand their money back and as for telling them they cannot attend a graduation—–GREDD, proper GREED once again cares not a whit for humanity
    Better FIRE the inane leader of that institution of higher—-or more correctly “lower” learning!

  5. Rondo Hatton Avatar
    Rondo Hatton

    Our so-called institutions of higher learning have become like a punchline to a truly tasteless joke!!!

  6. 6th Army redux Avatar
    6th Army redux

    “This false narrative, which focuses on anti-Semitism, allows the centers of power, including the media, to block out the real issue — genocide. It contaminates the debate. It is a classic case of “reactive abuse.” Raise your voice to decry injustice, react to prolonged abuse, attempt to resist, and the abuser suddenly transforms themself into the aggrieved.”

    The specific ‘real’ issue to me seems to be that, tactically, you ‘cant get there from here’ based on the alleged goals of the IDF stratagem. If I wanted to accomplish the goal of detaching Hamas from control over the postage stamp sized Gaza Strip, all I need to do is ‘seize-clear-hold-rinse-repeat’, in bite sized segments of this tiny landmass. This also negates the vast majority of ambush casualties to IDF forces, because a super-majority of the population are not combatants, and and do not factor into what is effectively a police action.

    This is because – notably – this is NOT a ‘war’, and like the use of the term ‘genocide’, the term ‘War’ actually means a certain set of specific facts. There are no state-actor ‘front lines’ in the Gaza conflict, and other than some rocket emplacement of little more than symbolic value, there is nothing to assault. The Hamas allied forces cannot face even a single IDF division in a true ‘War’ confrontation, because they totally lack any ability to sustain a front, they have no air cover of any sort, no mech units, they would be enveloped immediately, there is no marshaling area that is safe to resupply from.. The very last thing – tactically – that you would want to do in this exact scenario is to demolish everything so that the ENTIRELY Guerilla / ambush ersatz forces that you will face can fight ‘tractor factory’ style out of the concealment of the rubble. Notably, that is where nearly ALL of the IDF casualties have come from.
    If they had patiently taken out bite size areas under an aerial overwatch, they could have avoided most casualties and armor losses.

    The actual goal of the policy makers directing this conflict is to clear the civilian population to whatever degree possible from the land, and they do not much care about a ‘genocide’ outcome, they just want to control the land for themselves. While this may initially seem like a distinction without a purpose, or one that is not any more complementary than the accusation of genocide, it actually is a different purpose and intent. If you use terms that are not actually accurate, (war / genocide) it plays into the goals of bad actors on both sides who would like to derail discussion or meaningful analysis, and funnel that into serving their own agenda.

    The target audience for the anti-protest effort are around 70 years old on average, while the protestors, and those who anti-protest media cannot reach, are going to take control of the levers of power within a decade.. so this only goes one way. The vast majority of uninvolved people from any background or age range simply reach a point in which they are not interested in entertaining nonsensical tribal conflict anymore, even if they tend to side with the Israeli civilians on Oct. 6 as well as with Gaza civilians murdered in St Porphyrius or elsewhere.

    In the long run, the student protests will win domestically, (internationally its over) because they will adapt and overcome, while the efforts to shut down the protests are static and result in over-reach in the case of most of the protesters who have an absolute right to say what they want as long as it is not a literal threat. The only real stop gap I see for the Israeli side is to turn over the strip to a multinational peacekeeping force, and get out, and this is the one thing that they really do not want to do.

    If the Hamas side was smart, let Goldberg-Polin go, and announce we want nothing for him, we are sending him to get medical treatment due to his catastrophic injuries. This type of humanitarian gesture is also something that they really do not want to do.

  7. Gene Avatar
    Gene

    This tells you how fierce and complete is the Jews’ control of all aspect of Americans life. From politicians to the media (including “social media”) and from education to the entertainment industries, barbaric Jews control every thing. Students who are courageously protesting against this transparent Genocide of Palestinian women and children by Jews should be applauded. “It is not ‘antisemitic’ or pro-HAMAS to point out that, in a little over six months, Israel’s extremist government has killed over 37,000 Palestinian, mostly women and children and wounded more than 78,000 [in what is certainly the worst televised mass murder of defenceless civilians in human history]”, said U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, stressing that 70% of these were women and children. Sanders added that, the “antisemitism [label used by Jews and their supporters] is a vile and disgusting form of bigotry that has done unspeakable harm to many millions of people.” Sanders concluded: “But please, do not insult the intelligence of the American people by attempting to distract us from the immoral and illegal policies of your extremist and racist government. … It is not antisemitic to hold you accountable for your actions.” In a civilised world, Israeli barbaric leaders and U.S. politicians who are supporting them must be held accountable for their complicity in the ongoing Palestinian Genocide. They must be put an Nuremberg-like war crimes tribunal.

  8.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    It’s critical to understand that this is very different from the Soros ID politics obsessed BLM riots and violent mayhem of 2020.

    With the BLM chaos and vandalism, it was obvious that that culture war trip had the unvarnished support and hundreds of millions of dollars in funding from the Zionist dominated Wall Street and corporate America. Even institutions of the federal govt’s “deep state” supported BLM to the hilt.

    With today’s amazing and heartening anti-genocide demonstrations, we see respected professors harshly tossed to the ground by heavy handed cops, we see harmless students in tents uprooted and forced to flee, we see major corporate employers threatening the students with a disgusting employment blacklist.

    During BLM the rioters were allowed to torch cities and businesses with virtual impunity. During these pro-Palestine protests one’s barely allowed to say “from the river to the sea” without the threat of possible eviction or unemployment hovering in the background.

  9.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    It’s critical to understand that this is very different from the Soros ID politics obsessed BLM riots and violent mayhem of 2020.

    With the BLM chaos and vandalism, it was obvious that that culture war trip had the unvarnished support and hundreds of millions of dollars in funding from the Zionist dominated Wall Street and corporate America. Even institutions of the federal govt’s “deep state” supported BLM to the hilt.

    With today’s amazing and heartening anti-genocide demonstrations, we see respected professors harshly tossed to the ground by heavy handed cops, we see harmless students in tents uprooted and forced to flee, we see major corporate employers threatening the students with a disgusting employment blacklist.

    During BLM the rioters were allowed to torch cities and businesses with virtual impunity. During these pro-Palestine protests one’s barely allowed to say “from the river to the sea” without the threat of possible eviction or unemployment hovering in the background.

  10.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    If the “9/11 Dancing Israel” can get away with dancing on the graves of 3000 Americans on 9/11, then the Israelis can get away with the genocide of the Palestinians. The self-respecting Jew Dr Gideon Polya had the moral courage to protest like the students are doing now to write this article:

    Lying America Did 9/11 And Then Killed Over 30 Million Muslims
    by Dr Gideon Polya
    https://countercurrents.org/2021/09/lying-america-did-9-11-and-then-killed-over-30-million-muslims/

    1. mjsenglish Avatar
      mjsenglish

      This Noami Kline woman is a provocater. Beware. She is a Jew.Beware. Jews have no right to be in Palestine. They must be deported back to their miserable origins. They have destroyed all hope for the USA. Always wailing about their plight yet they never ask themselves why in all history they have been persecuted and deported and yet manage to survive. Like the plague.

  11. mjsenglish Avatar
    mjsenglish

    courtious is that how you spell it ! I am all for slurs when they are true.

Leave a Comment – Now is not the time to remain silent. Be courtious to others, ignore those who engage in racist, ethnic or religious slurs

Discover more from Information Clearing House.info

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from Information Clearing House.info

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading