The Jewish Chronicle

Why we shouldn’t shut down student protests for Palestine

- Josh Kaplan’s generation gap MILLENNIAL MAN

ONE OF my strongest-held beliefs is that every university student deserves the chance to be a moron. It’s a foundation­al part of growing up, transition­ing from a child to an adult, developing thoughts and opinions that will haunt you for years to come.

Usually, this transforma­tion from puerile to mature happens in clubs and bars and at parties. You date the wrong people, have sex with even worse people and generally bumble your way through stupid capers that teach you that actions have consequenc­es. I, for example, was discipline­d by my university for throwing water balloons out of my fourth-floor flat window at foreign-exchange students returning from lectures. Antisocial? Sure, but hardly criminal.

Today we have a vocal but very small minority of students who, on both sides of the Atlantic, have decided to cosplay Palestinia­ns and barricade themselves on their campuses. The ensuing chaos has created scenes so ripe for satire that Armando Iannucci could learn a thing or two. There was the keffieyeh-ed protest leader at Columbia who demanded the university catered their violent takeover, the groups who erected borders and checkpoint­s in protest of borders and checkpoint­s, and the “Jewish” group who wrote Hebrew backwards on a seder plate. It was all sadly hilarious.

Obviously I don’t endorse damage to property, and Jewish students feeling intimidate­d on campus is horrible, but these people have a right to embarrass themselves — it’s what university is for. And the more the world sees of their shallow politics, their narcissist­ic obsession with making themselves the stars of the show, the more normal people are turned off to their cause. When they’re given the attention they crave, the lack of critical thought is laid bare for everyone to see.

The intersecti­onal aspect of their arguments, the idea that all leftist causes are part of the same struggle is the most obvious example. The ludicrous spectacle of Queers for Palestine and LGBT marchers supporting Houthis, is just that. But it’s not until they dominate the headlines that people can see through the academicsp­eak and realise the abundant failures of logic.

These protests have also been a reminder that the majority of students are not a) this lame or b) this stupid. At the university of North Carolina, members of the school’s fraterniti­es not known for their politics took it upon themselves to defend their campuses’ American flag from anti-Israel protesters intent on tearing it down. A picture of the incident went viral and a GoFundMe to throw them a party in thanks reached half a million dollars in about two days, with thousands of small donors. It was nice to remember that the majority of Americans look at scenes of campus chaos and see them for what they are: violent for the sake of it, violence masqueradi­ng as social justice.

This isn’t just true for the onlookers, it’s true for the majority of students. As the encampment movement tiptoes its way across the pond, I say we let it run its course. Do you think there are bigger queues for nightclubs or to join Gaza protests? Are more students buying keffiyehs or Jägerbombs? If you think about it for more than a second, the idea that a handful of students is seen as representa­tive of a campus’s politics is really quite silly. Bristol has an undergrad population of more than 60,000. At the time of writing, there were no more than a dozen tents in their encampment.

It sounds like a cliché, but the right to protest is important, and should be protected, even if the “cause” is stupid and contradict­ory. But it should not come at the expense of normal students, who deserve to not be accosted, and Jewish students, who should be free to look identifiab­ly so at a university they pay far too much money to attend.

But at the end of the day, if a few Warwick undergrads want to camp in this resolutely wet May, let them. If the good people of Bristol want to further demonstrat­e their disdain for showers go ahead, say I – when people see what they actually believe, their cause will be diminished.

When they’re given the attention they crave, their lack of critical thought is laid bare

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Tower above: Bristol University
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Tower above: Bristol University
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