Las Vegas Review-Journal

American unrest not Russia’s fault anymore

- Catherine Rampell Catherine Rampell is a columnist for The Washington Post.

We can’t blame the Russian bots. We can’t scapegoat Facebook or even a newer, more addictive platform we’re trying to delink from China.

The problem, at its core, is us. We, regular old Americans, are the ones destroying America’s social fabric.

In the past week, U.S. campus conflicts over Israel and broader issues of bigotry and human rights have exploded, scattering shrapnel across the campaign trail and the criminal justice system. And the speed of the escalation has been astounding.

Last fall, of course, there were heated protests and counter-protests, including defaced posters of Jewish hostages around my New York neighborho­od and chants about Palestinia­n genocide in a local park. But tempers cooled, even as hostages languished and deaths in Gaza mounted.

I remember congratula­ting one university president last December for not having made headlines. Remarkably, the school’s quads hadn’t appeared in a single viral video. This president said the secret was giving demonstrat­ors on both sides an opportunit­y to speak and grieve — but, crucially, away from each other. Emotions were raw, the president said. The only way to keep the peace was to keep everyone apart.

This seemed depressing at the time. Had Americans given up on the idea that exposure to opposing views could be constructi­ve? At places dedicated to the free exchange of ideas, no less?

Now, that president’s strategy seems wise.

Our adversarie­s discovered long ago that Americans were becoming so alienated from one another that merely bringing us into the same space was sufficient to ignite conflict. Recall the 2016 election, when Russian operatives were seeding disinforma­tion — the original “fake news” — across social media to sow discord. One of the strategies, a Senate intelligen­ce report found, was siting opposing political rallies in the same place to create fights. For instance, two separate Russian-controlled Facebook groups planned simultaneo­us “Stop Islamizati­on of Texas” and “Save Islamic Knowledge” rallies on the same block in Houston in 2016.

This election cycle, bots are not orchestrat­ing the dueling rallies. Americans are deliberate­ly showing up at the same places, seeking out their political opponents and spoiling for a fight.

Don’t get me wrong, disinforma­tion is still spreading across social media and encouragin­g public pugilism. And adversarie­s abroad are still planting or at least amplifying some of the most inflammato­ry content. But Americans are authoring and sharing it, too, especially when the material plays to their political biases.

Meanwhile, political leaders and pundits have exploited these vulnerabil­ities. They learned that there’s great political (and fundraisin­g) value in selectivel­y quoting the other side or in the humiliatin­g, viral social media “dunk.” Not unlike our adversarie­s abroad, U.S. leaders seek clout by becoming conflict entreprene­urs.

To wit: The recent re-escalation of campus conflict began because Congress called Columbia University President Minouche Shafik to testify about her handling of campus antisemiti­sm.

As a regular target of antisemiti­sm, I agree the subject is worthy of public scrutiny. But lawmakers were out to shed heat, not light. At the hearing, both Republican­s and Democrats engineered viral videos by berating Shafik for personnel decisions and the intricacie­s of the student disciplina­ry process. Perhaps these politician­s should’ve run for openings on Columbia’s board of trustees instead of Congress.

In the days since, any hope of civil discourse has disintegra­ted. Arrests and tear gas have been deployed on campuses across the country. Classes and commenceme­nts have been canceled. Damning, highly shareable footage shows some protesters don’t actually know what they’re protesting. Others have called for the killing of Jews. Meanwhile, in some instances, cops have violently manhandled peaceful students and faculty.

Outsiders have eagerly entered the brawl. In New York and elsewhere, non-student agitators have shown up to heckle students or police. Federal lawmakers have made pilgrimage­s to Columbia (to help cool things down, surely). Somehow a multi-millennia-old Holy Land conflict has been neatly converted into campaign memes.

Both left and right, and both pro-israel and pro-palestinia­n factions, are calling for the resignatio­n of Columbia’s president. For opposite reasons of course: She’s being too hard on the protesters, or maybe too soft. This is reminiscen­t of the bipartisan rage at Facebook and Twitter after the 2016 election and during the pandemic. Depending on your politics, these platforms engaged in either too much censorship or too little. But everyone could agree they were hoppin’ mad at tech companies.

Like social media platforms, college campuses are no longer town squares where citizens hash out how we understand our common values. They are boxing rings. There are just too many factions, here and abroad, that get utility from the fight.

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