Antisemitism has risen across the nation, but it is most noticeable on college campuses since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023. The massacre of Jews – mostly civilians – ended with more than 1,200 people being killed and more than 100 taken hostage. How did students and professors on America’s campuses react to the terrible news? They cheered the terrorists! Suzanne Bates reported on the events in an article published in The Deseret News.
“In nearly 50 years of @Harvard
affiliation, I have never been as disillusioned and alienated as I am today,”
former Harvard President Lawrence Summers wrote on X on Oct. 9. “The
silence from Harvard’s leadership, so far, coupled with vocal and widely
reported student groups’ statement blaming Israel solely, has allowed Harvard
to appear at best neutral towards acts of terror against the Jewish state of
Israel.”
The
U.S. House of Representatives and/or the U.S. Senate have passed several resolutions
condemning the Hamas attacks (412-10 vote) and/or “condemning Hamas for sexual
violence, calling on Hamas to release hostages, and condemning antisemitism on
college campuses.”
Representative
Burgess Owens (R-UT) “has spoken out repeatedly about the rise in antisemitism”
both publicly and in committee hearings in the House with another hearing
scheduled for tomorrow. Bates reported on an interview that Owens had with the
Deseret News today when he said the following.
“We need to continue to let people know
that what we’re up against is not just something that happened on Oct. 7. We
have administrators, we have people in DEI offices, and indoctrination of
divisiveness and hatred. We have allowed them to come into our college
campuses, and increase what it costs to go to college,” he said.
Owens said he doesn’t think things will
change until the American people “educate themselves” on what is going on, and
he thinks Republicans in the House, by shining a light on the issue, are doing
their part to increase understanding of the issue….
Owens said he thinks Congress should withhold
funds from college campuses that allow antisemitism and other bigotry to
fester. But while legislation along those lines may pass the Republican-controlled
House, it is unlikely to clear the Democratic-controlled Senate or White House….
“We are at a time now where we understand
our education is at risk,” he said.
Americans are losing trust in universities
after witnessing the protests on campuses, he said.
“We’ve got to end this, taxpayer dollars
shouldn’t pay for that kind of craziness,” he said of DEI programs, which he
said also teach Black Americans to hate white Americans. “I have seen it. But
we just call it teaching – one race to hate another, not matter what race, what
religion. That’s not the American way.”
Owens criticized the student protests of
the war in Gaza. He said that the “vandalism associated with student
encampments on campus shows they “feel entitled, they don’t understand respect
for other people’s property.” He concluded, “And this is where it’s up to us to
make sure that we’re teaching accountability.”
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