LINDSAY MAST, HOST: Today is Thursday, August 15th. Good morning! This is The World and Everything in It from listener-supported WORLD Radio. I’m Lindsay Mast.
MYRNA BROWN, HOST: And I’m Myrna Brown. Cal Thomas now on what getting back to school should look like on campuses disrupted by pro-Palestinian protests this spring.
CAL THOMAS: Not that long ago, students looked forward to beginning, or returning to college. After violent anti-Israel and anti-Semitic demonstrations on some campuses, many fear this semester might see a repeat of the prior ugliness.
This is how bad it has gotten. Police in Montgomery County, Maryland, are investigating after anti-Semitic and pro-Palestinian graffiti was discovered outside Bethesda Elementary School Sunday morning. An elementary school! Rather than condemning the incident, the pro-Hamas lobby group known as CAIR issued a statement that sounded like “what can you expect,” given Israel’s justifiable attempt to wipe out the terrorist group in Gaza.
New York’s Columbia University was the site of some of the worst rioting last semester. It's reportedly considering granting arrest powers to campus police, hoping it will curb the demonstrations. That’s fine, but it’s not just about arrests…most of which have resulted in quick releases. It’s about prosecuting lawbreakers. In liberal New York that has become nearly impossible—thanks to District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who often releases, and fails to prosecute, even violent offenders.
Columbia is also employing a “lockdown” system to keep “non-affiliates, with bad intentions” off campus. Good luck with that. If current laws and regulations are being violated why should anyone believe new laws and regulations will be obeyed, especially when some professors agree with and encourage the demonstrators?
DePaul University in Chicago is preparing to reopen its campus Quad before students return for fall classes. Demonstrations last semester caused $180,000 dollars in damages, resulting in the Quad’s closure for three months for necessary repairs. What’s to prevent a repeat performance?
According to Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Riley: Penn State has “suspended several students who were part of an illegal anti-Israel encampment that ended in May with the arrest of 33 people. Yet Penn looks to be an outlier.” He goes on to say: “Harvard reversed an earlier decision to suspend students who participated in pro-Hamas demonstrations on its campus that violated school policy and local ordinances. It was at least the second time administrators caved in to pressure from student activists and sympathetic faculty members.”
Jewish students wishing to return to certain college campuses aren’t optimistic they will receive better treatment than last semester.
While some university presidents resigned after being accused of aiding and abetting the protests—and anti-Semitism—the problem will remain so long as administrators allow students (and non-students) to dictate to those who are in charge and supposed to be enforcing the rules.
Here’s what might work. If students wish to demonstrate they should be assigned a secure area where their presence won’t impede other students from attending classes, visiting libraries, or exercising other rights. If professors encourage the demonstrators and make anti-Jewish remarks making Jewish students feel unsafe, they should be placed on leave or fired.
By following through on law enforcement and prosecution perhaps students will get the message that a criminal record will likely harm their prospects for future employment and a successful career.
When police in Boston went on strike in 1919, unleashing looting and other criminal activity, Massachusetts governor and later president Calvin Coolidge sent a telegram to American Federation of Labor Samuel Gompers which said in part: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any time.”
The same should be said of rioting students who impede the rights of other students to feel safe and attend classes without mobs confronting especially Jewish students. They have a right to feel safe and protected from persecution.
I’m Cal Thomas.
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