New York Post

ANGER OF THE ‘COVID’ GENERATION

Rallies draw ‘isolated youth’

- By LAUREN ELKIES SCHRAM

Blame it on COVID. Campus protesters roiling colleges across the nation are part of a generation shaped by the pandemic, who grew up isolated and angered by school shutdowns and social distancing and are desperate to find a connection, community and a voice, experts told The Post.

The pro-Palestinia­n cause allows discontent­ed youth to express “long-withheld rage,” said forensic psychiatri­st Carole Lieberman. It gives them an “opportunit­y to identify with the ‘oppressed’ against ‘oppressors.’ ”

These kids are susceptibl­e to propaganda.

“People who offer an escape from this confusion, by promoting a direction they claim will lead to happiness and purpose, have found a hungry audience,” said Lieberman, a California­based trial expert witness.

Protests and encampment­s ostensibly “in solidarity” with Palestinia­ns have ramped up in the past week, starting with embattled Columbia University and stretching as far as Texas and Atlanta. Jewish students have reported feeling harassed and unsafe on campus as protesters chant things like, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.”

It appears many young demonstrat­ors don’t even have a full understand­ing of the movement, Lieberman said.

“The worst example of ignorance is that the protesters do not know that terrorists want global jihad — not just to destroy Israel,”

Lieberman added.

They also don’t know what they are saying, when they chant, “From the river to the sea,” the psychiatri­st said of the phrase advocating for the death of Israel.

Two Columbia students participat­ing in an anti-Israel rally Wednesday at NYU admitted they had no idea what the protest was about and wished they were “more educated.” Their remarks were captured on a video that went viral after it was shared by former Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Another relic of the pandemic has become a common sight at college demonstrat­ions: masks.

Protesters’ clinging to the facial fashion is a sign of fear of the virus, as well a bid to shield their identities, reported news outlet Semafor, which noted the prevalence of covered faces in the current wave of demonstrat­ions.

“To us, the optics are communicat­ing that we deny the Biden administra­tion’s narrative about COVID — that it’s no longer a big deal,” Olan Mijana, a spokesman for the March on DNC 2024 coalition, was quoted as saying. “It’s about collective safety, and it’s also about connecting this COVID neglect to the very issues that we’re marching on the DNC for.”

The communal aspect of the demonstrat­ions may also provide comfort to protesters who were denied socializat­ion at a key point in their lives, said psychologi­st Jennifer Gittleman.

“The protesters may feel angry for the pandemic taking away pivotal, highly anticipate­d experience­s for them — for example socializat­ion in college and missing graduation­s — and, thus, they are using protesting as a way to release their anger,” she said.

 ?? ?? SAVING FACE: A Columbia protester last week wears a face mask, a common sight that, for some, is a statement about “COVID neglect.”
SAVING FACE: A Columbia protester last week wears a face mask, a common sight that, for some, is a statement about “COVID neglect.”

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