The Charlotte Observer (Sunday)

At UNC protests, bringing in police wasn’t the only option

- BY NED BARNETT Robert Lewis, Charlotte Steve Craig, Charlotte Sam Roberson, Fort Mill Jack Matthews, Charlotte Sandra O’Neill, Cornelius

Lee Roberts, interim chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, had his first big test of leadership last week.

He didn’t score well. Roberts’ first error was having police from various UNC campuses clear an encampment of students who want Israel to stop its attacks on the Palestinia­ns in Gaza. Israel is acting in response to the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel by the terrorist group Hamas that killed 1,200 people and resulted in the taking of 240 hostages. Israel’s retaliatio­n, supported by U.S.-supplied arms, has killed more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns, most of them women and children.

Roberts entered the campus fray over Gaza directly on Tuesday. Accompanie­d by police, he marched to a flagpole where protesters had lowered the American flag and raised the Palestinia­n flag in its place. Roberts personally helped put the American flag back up.

“The (American) flag represents all of us,” he said. “To take down that flag and put up another flag, no matter what other enforcemen­t, and the chancellor before removing the U.S. flag, causing general chaos.

Of 30 people arrested, 20 were not UNC students. The chancellor said some protesters were “outside activists.” As we’ve seen across the country, the necessary presence of law enforcemen­t doesn’t foment the chaos, but responds to contain it and restore order.

Coddling disruption and violence isn’t a solution. Activists should adhere to accepted methods of instigatin­g change.

One can’t help wishing the protesters would expand their awareness. Scenes of chaos scare the electorate, and play into the hands of the MAGA bloc. If the election is flag it is, that’s antithetic­al to who we are, what this university stands for, what we have done for 229 years.”

Roberts continued, “That flag will stand here as long as I am chancellor.”

That may be a long time. By getting tough with student protesters, the interim chancellor showed the compliance that could win him the job permanentl­y. Republican­s on the UNC Board of Governors and in the state legislatur­e want a chancellor who will not only disperse protesters, but will push back against the university’s liberal culture overall.

The flagpole scene took another turn when protesters tried to put the Palestinia­n flag back up and a group of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity brothers stepped in to protect Old Glory. Images from that defense led an outsider – not to be confused with an “outside agitator” – to launch a GoFundMe drive to give the fraternity members a thank you party. That appeal brought in more than $500,000.

Protesters were wrong to take down the American flag and put up the Palestinia­n banner. The handed to Trump, does anyone think he will restrain his good buddy Benjamin Netanyahu? How will this all help Gazans?

How noble of the House GOP to pass an antisemiti­sm bill. The Middle-East situation is a complex issue. Republican­s simply want to hail the triumphali­sm of rightwing Christians and discredit legitimate concerns about all the dead Palestinia­ns. Of course, never again applies to Jews. It also applies to innocent Arab children and civilians.

I just read the “RINOs in Congress” letter in the April 28 Forum about the flag should always be treated with respect. Doing otherwise invited the reaction it got and took attention from what the protesters want Americans to focus on – the carnage in Gaza.

But there was no need for the university’s leader to personally get involved. He could have asked a worker accompanie­d by a few of the many cops on hand to put the American flag back up. In the midst of a bitter campus conflict, Roberts placed the weight of his office on one side and inflamed a situation he should have been deescalati­ng.

Student protests against the continuing assault on Gaza were largely under control until the president of Columbia University in New York called in the police to placate her Republican critics in Congress. That predictabl­y led to wider and more intense protests.

As the protests expanded to campuses across the nation, university leaders had two options: send in the police, or agree to consider the protesters’ demands by reviewing university investment­s and programs involving Israel.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott passage of the foreign aid bill. It’s clear the writer’s news sources have failed to enlighten him that there was a comprehens­ive border control bill co-authored by Republican Sen. James Lankford.

However, it appears the former president instructed Speaker Mike Johnson to not put it on the House floor for a vote. Apparently, the GOP presidenti­al nominee feared passage of a border bill could limit his ability to campaign on the issue.

Obviously, something has to be done about our southern border. It really should be a bipartisan issue, not a political one.

While I’m unconcerne­d by the 10% drop in global wine production, the April 27 article about the state of world wine gives food took a hard line, immediatel­y sending in state troopers to clear protesters at the University of Texas at Austin. Seventy-nine people were arrested. Scores of other campuses also had arrests. Meanwhile, Brown University, Northweste­rn, Rutgers and the University of Minnesota saw their pro-Palestinia­n protests end or remain peaceful after administra­tors agreed to consider the protesters’ demands.

At UNC, the peaceful option was available, but UNC went the way of Texas.

The American flag is flying again at Chapel Hill, as it should be, but the values it represents – freedom of speech and assembly – have been as battered as the protesters. Roberts’ crackdown and flag dramatics appeased his sponsors and drew praise from conservati­ve politician­s and media, but it has created a tense and divided campus that he has lost the ability to unify.

Associate opinion editor Ned Barnett can be reached at 919-404-7583, or nbarnett@ newsobserv­er.com for thought.

A warmer winter also reduced Georgia’s peach production by 90% in 2023 and brought a comparable reduction in the Carolinas.

These warm winters are predicted to continue, making peach farming potentiall­y nonviable. Similarly, yields of staple crops such as wheat, soybeans, corn and cotton will be affected by climate change.

As a mother, I worry about food security and our children’s future. Immediate bipartisan Congressio­nal support of a carbon tax would help reduce carbon emissions, securing future food production for all of us.

________

Correction: A letter in the April 28 Forum about RINOs in Congress was written by Jim Cherry, not Trigg Cherry.

 ?? TRAVIS LONG tlong@newsobserv­er.com ?? Interim Chancellor Lee Roberts and police prepare to rehang an American flag after it was brought down by demonstrat­ors and replaced with a Palestinia­n flag Tuesday, April 30, 2024 at UNC-Chapel Hill.
TRAVIS LONG tlong@newsobserv­er.com Interim Chancellor Lee Roberts and police prepare to rehang an American flag after it was brought down by demonstrat­ors and replaced with a Palestinia­n flag Tuesday, April 30, 2024 at UNC-Chapel Hill.

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