Toronto Sun

Just having ‘fun’

Younger generation­s seem content on their island of hate

- WARREN KINSELLA

ere’s a scene in William Golding’s Lord of the Flies that applies, and doesn’t, to the madness that now grips the civilized world.

In Golding’s famous book, a plane full of boys crashes on a deserted island during a nuclear war. e pilot dies, the boys survive. e boys soon realize that they need to fend for themselves — no one has come for them.

One of the boys addresses the others. Says he: “is is our island. It’s a good island.

Until the grown-ups come to fetch us, we’ll have fun.”

“We’ll have fun.” erein lies the contradict­ion. e boys want adults to rescue them, but they also don’t. So they start to form their own society, one that is replete with extreme violence and factionali­sm.

It’s just a book, yes, one that Golding later said readers can take from it what they will. But, observing the epidemic of antisemiti­sm and anger that is now seemingly everywhere, things look quite a bit like Golding’s book. at is, young people are o… on an island on their own these days, and they’re descending rapidly into violence and hatred.

But here’s the key di…erence: ey don’t want to be rescued.

e statistics — in Canada, the United States and Europe

— all show the same depressing thing: Vast swaths of younger generation­s hate the Jewish state and they increasing­ly hate anyone who doesn’t feel as they do. Poll after poll shows the same thing: Shockingly large segments of generation Z and younger millennial­s have moved to their own island, one where Jew hatred and hatred of the trappings of modern society are the rule.

Some of the polling, from across the West:

A Harvard poll, conducted right after the carnage of Oct. 7, found more than half of American gen Z support Hamas. A “fth of them regard the Holocaust as “a myth.”

A March Leger poll found

22% of Canadian gen Z have “a positive view of Hamas,” and they’re eight times more likely to doubt or deny the Holocaust than older Canadians.

A fall Ekos poll found that half of gen Z regard Israel as an apartheid state. Angus Reid found three times as many young women in Canada side with the Palestinia­ns and Hamas over Israel.

A December Harvard-harris poll found more than half of American gen Z say “Israel should be ended and given to Hamas.”

at isn’t all. Other polling, unpublishe­d to date, shows nearly 40% of Canadian gen Z “support the destructio­n of

Israel.” More than 40% of them say the “extreme violence” of

Hamas on Oct. 7 was “justi“ed.”

You don’t need to be a pollster to know these things. Turn on your TV or glance at your computer screen and you’ll see it: e protests and rallies — some violent, many antisemiti­c — are “lled with young people, white young people, mostly. But why?

All of us were as young once. When you’re young, it’s normal to be opposition­al — to oppose your parents, your teachers, your government­s. Opposing war is something every generation does, from Vietnam onward.

And now, it’s the Israel-hamas war — but with a di…erence.

RMG Research in the U.S. has attempted to answer the “why” question. Young people, the pollster found, regard Israelis and Jews as wealthy and powerful, and that is why their war on Hamas is unjust — they’re the oppressors, the powerful, wreaking vengeance on the weak. eir hatred for Israel and Jews dovetails with the hatred we now see them expressing about western society, says one of the poll’s sponsors: “Gen Z is so embarrasse­d about being American that a large swath of them have become terrorist sympathize­rs.” It isn’t an exaggerati­on.

e anti-semitic trope that Jews are wealthy and all powerful is part of it, but so too is the racial dimension. Even though more than 60% of Israel’s population is nonwhite, many North American and European gen Z and millennial­s falsely depict it as a racist state (in fact, Israeli Apartheid Week got its start on Canadian campuses).

So, a recent investigat­ion by

PBS saw youthful anti-israel protesters repeatedly citing race as a motivator, too. Previously, they participat­ed in Black Lives Matter and Native American protests. Now they’re protesting for Gaza and against the Jewish state. It’s all connected, to them.

Can it all be “xed? Can we get back the gen Z and millennial­s who seem to be drifting away into hate?

Perhaps, maybe — but, for now, they’re on their own little island, “having fun.”

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? New York University students and faculty take part in an anti-israel protest in Washington Square Park.
SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES New York University students and faculty take part in an anti-israel protest in Washington Square Park.
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