Pro-Israel protesters destroy pro-Palestine encampment at UCLA
— Shadyyee (@chockietee) May 2, 2024
Pro-Israel protestors attack and destroy pro-Palestine encampment at UCLA in the early hours of Wednesday morning
pic.twitter.com/wh96j2WLqz
You can laugh about their no bananas policy and their third-night Passover seder, but these students at the UCLA Palestine Solidarity Encampment just humiliated a phalanx of advancing LAPD officers by forcing them to retreat.pic.twitter.com/xuiY69LPyo
— Louis Keene (@thislouis) May 2, 2024
The timeline appears to be, roughly:
Pro-Palestine protestors seized control of the center of the UCLA campus (the Royce Hall area) and set up a fortified shanty town.
The college administration allowed the Pro-Palestine people to block foot traffic and classes until 4pm yesterday, when Gene Block ordered it shut down.
Then pro-Israel counterprotestors attacked the pro-Palestine encampment.
The authorities sent in the LAPD. After letting the combatants whale on each other for awhile, the cops eventually got between the pro-Israel and pro-Palestine people.
After multiple charges, the cops finally got through the barricades and cleared out the pro-Palestine folks.
An almighty mess was left on UCLA’s superbly landscaped campus.
Or something like that.
With UCLA becoming the epicenter of the national battle between the Diverse and the Jews, I recall my Taki’s column from 9 years ago on that fault line in UCLA student politics:
Are Jews Losing Control of the Campus?
Steve Sailer
March 11, 2015I never paid much attention to the growing BDS movement because I’m not into bondage, domination, and submission. But it turns out that BDS is actually a decade-old Palestinian rights movement that targets Israel for boycott, divestment, and sanctions. These are the same tools that student protestors, such as Barack Obama, demanded be implemented against white rule in South Africa in the 1980s.
That worked out well for Obama (although not so well for the Boers).
While fairly mainstream in other parts of the world (for example, physicist Stephen Hawking boycotted a conference in Israel to protest occupation of the West Bank), BDS hasn’t yet become respectable in the United States. The main exception has been in the playpen of student government on California college campuses, where the much-celebrated diversity has proven fertile ground for undergraduate demagogues. …
In California, the state with the largest number and greatest diversity of newcomers, immigration is destabilizing the American order in which Jews have thrived.
… Passage of BDS resolutions at Berkeley and, especially, UCLA has proven disturbing to moderate Jews.
… A minor incident of UCLA student council politics epitomizes growing Jewish anxieties over whether the fringe leftist resentments cynically unleashed by the Obama campaign in 2012 against core Americans will remain manageable, or will eventually be bad for the Jews.
UCLA is located near Beverly Hills at the heart of what had long ranked behind only New York City as the largest and richest Jewish community in the world. In the early 1960s, UCLA student politics ha[d] been the launching pad for Democratic Congressmen Henry Waxman and Howard Berman, who were strong supporters of Israel over their aggregate of 70 years in the House.
But even with a major influx of Israeli, Persian, and Eastern European Jews (along with numerous Russians and Ukrainians of ambiguous ancestry) into the Hollywood Hills region, Jewish influence on the UCLA campus has waned since the Waxman-Berman glory days. After all, only 27 percent of UCLA entering freshmen officially identify as white, so that doesn’t leave Jewish students much room on a campus obsessed with identity politics, even one as long identified with Jewish success as UCLA.
UCLA student politics was already becoming like that when I earned an MBA at UCLA in 1980-82, and the almost random conflicts between California’s countless ethnic groups have only intensified since then. A friend who was at UCLA around 2000 says that in his day the big student government war was Mexicans v. Armenians. I know a current UCLA student politician, and the tribal passions elicited by these student elections are stunning.
You may be wondering if student government resolutions are of any real world importance. After all, UCLA chancellor Gene Block, a former Borscht Belt pianist, is hardly in a hurry to insult many of his biggest donors, such as entertainment mogul David Geffen, who has given over $300 million to UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine. …
But in 1981, the Boers probably scoffed at American campus blowhards, such as the young Obama, who delivered his first political speech at Los Angeles’s Occidental College in favor of using BDS against Pretoria.
Plus, it’s fun to fight your enemies, no matter how trivial the stakes. So Jewish organizations put up a terrific battle at UCLA last fall against the BDS resolution, collecting money from outside funders such as Israeli-American real estate tycoon Adam Milstein.
The previous spring, Sikh Sunny Singh had run for UCLA student government president on the issue of making the “campus climate” more comfortable. Now you may think the weather at UCLA is pretty pleasant already, but “campus climate” and “comfort” are code words for competitive complaining about the white male power structure. However, Devin Murphy narrowly won by arguing that Singh was biased because he had accepted a free trip to Israel from the Anti-Defamation League.
Just before the BDS vote last fall, however, Murphy unexpectedly resigned, announcing:
As an Afro-Cuban queer male, the toll that the stresses of this campus has [sic] had on my mental, physical and emotional health is nothing any student should ever have to go through—but this is unfortunately something with which many students of color deal.
Murphy was automatically succeeded by the vice president Avinoam Baral.
Still, the pro-BDS student council members had the votes to pass their anti-Israel resolution, much to the frustration of the new president, who declared:
I just want to reflect as the only person on this council who is actually invested in this conversation in the sense that I am an Israeli citizen and that I was born in Israel 21 years ago … Do not ever, ever frame this conflict as an indigenous versus non-indigenous [issue], and I don’t care where you stand on this issue because when you frame this issue in that way you’re saying that I don’t actually matter, that I don’t have a place in my homeland, and I would never, ever take that from anybody. …
Baral was just getting warmed up:
I’ll say this: being president actually sucks and being not able to really voice your opinion when you’re up here. … It’s so hard to be here and it’s so hard to be in this role and this is for the people that put me here and the people that I represent and the people that have done everything for me. I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, and I’m sorry …
Come on, Avinoam, tell us how you really feel.