For a second, imagine that black students at Columbia were taunted with chants of "Go back to Africa." Or imagine that a gay student at Yale was surrounded by homophobic protesters and hit in the eye with a flagpole. Or imagine if a campus imam told Muslim students that they ought to head home for Ramadan because campus public safety could not guarantee their security. There would be relentless fury from our media and condemnation from our politicians. Just remember the righteous—and rightful—outrage over the white supremacist “Unite the Right” march in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, where neo-Nazis chanted “The Jews will not replace us.” This weekend at Columbia and Yale, student demonstrators did all of the above—only it was directed at Jews. They told Columbia students to “go back to Poland.” A Jewish woman at Yale was assaulted with a Palestinian flag. And an Orthodox rabbi at Columbia told students to go home for their safety. What will the response be? thefp.com/p/they-were-as…
@bariweiss Or imagine cities tearing down statues of important figures from history. Or college professors lecturing students on the evils of “white privilege” and teaching that “America is a racist nation filled with white supremacists.” Or protestors demanding we “abolish whiteness.”
@KeenanPeachy @bariweiss "Or imagine cities tearing down statues of important figures from history." Which important figures specifically? And why were they important? And when, and for what explicit purpose, were those statues erected?