Alan Dershowitz on College Protests: “Fog of Fascism Is Descending," “These Students Are Book-Burners.” Video. Real Clear Politics, November 13, 2015. Also at Fox News Insider. YouTube.
Selective Outrage on Campus. By Alan M. Dershowitz. Gatestone Institute, November 12, 2015.
The Campus Purges Are Only Going to Get a Lot Worse. By Michael Ledeen. PJ Media, November 12, 2015.
The Cultural Revolution Comes to America’s Campuses. By Roger L. Simon. PJ Media, November 13, 2015.
Students for Justice in Palestine hijacks #MillionStudentMarch, blames Zionists for tuition problems. By William A. Jacobson. Legal Insurrection, November 13. 2015.
Shocked at Yale and Mizzou? Pro-Israel students have lived with intimidation for years. By William A. Jacobson. Legal Insurrection, November 10, 2015.
Selective Outrage on Campus. By Alan M. Dershowitz. Gatestone Institute, November 12, 2015.
The Campus Purges Are Only Going to Get a Lot Worse. By Michael Ledeen. PJ Media, November 12, 2015.
The Cultural Revolution Comes to America’s Campuses. By Roger L. Simon. PJ Media, November 13, 2015.
Students for Justice in Palestine hijacks #MillionStudentMarch, blames Zionists for tuition problems. By William A. Jacobson. Legal Insurrection, November 13. 2015.
Shocked at Yale and Mizzou? Pro-Israel students have lived with intimidation for years. By William A. Jacobson. Legal Insurrection, November 10, 2015.
Dershowitz (Real Clear Politics):
These are the same people who claim they are seeking diversity. The last thing these students want is real diversity, diversity of ideas. They may want superficial diversity, diversity of gender, diversity of color, but they do not want diversity of ideas.
We are
seeing a curtain of McCarthyism descend over many college campuses I don’t want
to make analogies to the 1930s, but it was the college students who first
started burning books during the Nazi regime. These students are book
burners...
By
expressing my opinion, I am “harassing students.” This is becoming a very
serious problem not only in American universities, but around the world. It is
having a terrible impact on the education of students...
It is
the worst kind of hypocrisy. They want complete control over their personal
lives, over their sex lives, over the use of drugs, but they want mommy and
daddy dean to please give them a safe place, to protect them from ideas that
maybe are insensitive, maybe will make them think...
When I
spoke at Johns Hopkins University, the same students who were talking about a “safe space,” painted a Hitler mustache on my posters, it is an absolute double
standard.
It is
free speech for me, but not for thee. Universities should not tolerate this
kind of hypocrisy, double standard…
If you’re
going to be a college administrator or a professor, if you have tenure, you
have to speak back to the students, you have to call these things what they
are: double standards, hypocrisy, bigotry, McCarthyism, and the fog of fascism
is descending quickly over many American universities.
Dershowitz (Gatestone Institute):
Following the forced resignations of the President and Provost of the University of Missouri, demonstrations against campus administrators has spread across the country. Students – many of whom are Black, gay, transgender and Muslim – claim that they feel “unsafe” as the result of what they call “white privilege” or sometimes simply privilege. “Check your privilege” has become the put-down du jour. Students insist on being protected by campus administrators from “micro-aggressions,” meaning unintended statements inside and outside the classroom that demonstrate subtle insensitivities towards minority students. They insist on being safe from hostile or politically incorrect ideas. They demand “trigger warnings” before sensitive issues are discussed or assigned. They want to own the narrative and keep other points of view from upsetting them or making them feel unsafe.
These
current manifestations of a widespread culture of victimization and grievance
are only the most recent iterations of a dangerous long-term trend on campuses
both in the United States and in Europe. The ultimate victims are freedom of
expression, academic freedom and the free exchange of ideas. Many faculty
members, administrators and students are fearful of the consequences if they
express politically incorrect or dissident views that may upset some students.
So they engage in self-censorship. They have seen what had happened to those
who have expressed unpopular views, and it is not a pretty picture.
I know,
because I repeatedly experienced this backlash when I speak on campuses. Most
recently, I was invited to deliver the Milton Eisenhower lecture at Johns
Hopkins University. As soon as the lecture was announced, several student groups demanded that the invitation must be rescinded. The petition objected to
my mere “presence” on campus, stating that my views on certain issues “are not
matters of opinion, and cannot be debated” and that they are “not issues that
are open to debate of any kind.” These non-debatable issues include some of the
most controversial concerns that are roiling campus today: sexual assault,
academic integrity and the Israel-Palestine conflict. The protesting students
simply didn’t want my view on these and other issues expressed on their campus,
because my lecture would make them feel unsafe or uncomfortable.
The
groups demanding censorship of my lecture included Hopkins Feminists, Black
Student Union, Diverse Sexuality and General Alliance, Sexual Assault Resource
Unit and Voice for Choice. I have been told that two faculty members urged
these students, who had never heard of me, to organize the protests, but the
cowardly faculty members would not themselves sign the petition. The petition
contained blatant lies about me and my views, but that is beside the point. I
responded to the lies in my lecture and invited the protesting students to
engage me during the Q and A. But instead, they walked out in the middle of my
presentation, while I was discussing the prospects for peace in the Middle
East.
According
to the Johns Hopkins News-Letter, another petition claimed that “by denying
Israel’s alleged war crimes against Palestinians,” I violated the university’s “anti-harassment
policy” and its “statement of ethical standards.” In other words, by expressing
my reasonable views on a controversial subject, I harassed students.
Some of
the posters advertising my lecture were defaced with Hitler mustaches drawn on
my face. Imagine the outcry if comparably insensitive images had been drawn on
the faces of invited minority lecturers.
I must
add that the Johns Hopkins administration and the student group that invited me
responded admirably to the protests, fully defending my right to express my
views and the right of the student group to invite me. The lecture went off
without any hitches and I answered all the questions – some quite critical, but
all polite – for the large audience that came to hear the presentation.
The
same cannot be said of several other lectures I have given on other campuses,
which were disrupted by efforts to shout me down, especially by anti-Israel
groups that are committed to preventing pro-Israel speakers from expressing
their views.
The
point is not only that some students care less about freedom of expression in
general than about protecting all students from “micro-aggressions.” It is that
many of these same students are perfectly willing to make other students with
whom they disagree with feel unsafe and offended by their own micro- and
macro-aggressions. Consider, for example, a recent protest at the City
University of New York by Students for Justice in Palestine that blamed high
tuition on “the Zionist Administration [of the University that] invests in
Israeli companies, companies that support the Israeli occupation, hosts
birthright programs and study abroad programs in occupied Palestine [meaning
Israel proper] and reproduces settler-colonial ideology throughout CUNY though
Zionist content of education.”
Let’s
be clear what they mean by “Zionist”: they mean “Jew.” There are many Jewish
administrators at City University. Some are probably Zionists. Others are
probably not. Blaming Zionists for high tuition is out and out anti-Semitism.
It is not micro-aggression. It is in-your-face macro-aggression against City
University Jews.
Yet
those who protest micro-aggressions against other minorities are silent when it
comes to Jews. This is not to engage in comparative victimization, but rather
to expose the double standard, the selective outrage and the overt hypocrisy of
many of those who would sacrifice free speech on the altar of political
correctness, whose content they seek to dictate.