One
of the people watching college students cheer Hamas and tear down
posters of kidnapped Israeli children commented that this was not just
“dumb kids wearing Che t-shirts”.
But it is.
The ‘dumb
college kids wearing Che t-shirts” were supporting mass murder,
atrocities and ethnic cleansing in Latin America. They were cheering on
the murder of women and children. And an international Communist
movement responsible for the deaths of millions.
Before they were
supporting Hamas, they were backing BLM while cities burned, streets
filled with broken glass and people were violently assaulted. And before
BLM, there was Mumia Abu Jamal and the Gitmo terrorists, further back
there were the Sandinistas, the PLO, the Weathermen, the BLA and the
Viet Cong. And before them Mao and the Bolsheviks.
‘Dumb college kids’ have been supporting the mass murder of millions for at least a century.
There is something different here.
Never
before have the atrocities been as graphically documented with so many
videos taken by the monsters themselves committing their crimes that
were broadly distributed in graphic and gory detail to the public in
ways that could not be censored or suppressed.
The
victims of Marxist dictatorships or the Soviet Union and China were
mostly faceless figures, sometimes caught in grainy black and white
photos, often with no names or backstories. Here there are full color
photos and videos, personal stories of families, mothers and children,
and the elderly, all looking from the ‘Kidnapped’ posters being torn
down from college campus walls.
But the smiling children looking
back from the posters might as well have been kulaks in Russia or
intellectuals in Cambodia for all the empathy they elicited. Seeing them
only infuriates college kids busy righteously advocating for Hamas as a
queer liberation movement. It spoils their plans for a class walkout
while chanting, “Free Palestine” and waving their puny fists in the air
conditioned air.
Hamas understood that documenting its atrocities
would make it more appealing, not only to fellow Islamists, but also to
leftists. The ‘dumb college kids’ aren’t alienated by atrocities,
they’re drawn to them. And it’s a fundamental misunderstanding of the
last century to think otherwise.
The dumb college kids may be
dumb, but so was your average Nazi goose stepper or Bolshevik thug. The
mobs who clamored to see heads roll around the guillotine were not
geniuses. But much like the Gaza civilians that crossed the fence to
take part in the murder and rape, they know what they like. And what
they like is chaos, violence and seeing things burn.
Your average
dumb college kid isn’t born evil because she misses BLM rallies and
traded in her black power fist banner for a PLO flag, but neither were
the German teens who filled stadiums to listen to Hitler or their
Chinese counterparts who giggled while their teachers were beaten during
Mao’s Cultural Revolution. As Alinsky said, “a good tactic is one your
people enjoy.” And, “If you push a negative hard enough, it will push
through and become a positive.”
Consequences are things that come
along later. Some people grow up enough to realize that they had been
part of something monstrous.
“It was quite fun,” a former Red
Guard member recalled. Then she was actually told to beat people and ran
away. “God bless me, I didn’t beat anyone back then. If I had beaten
anyone how could I have lived with myself all these years?”
Some of the college kids cheering Hamas now may have their moments of reckoning. Or not.
But
dismissing them as just ‘dumb college kids’ is how campus extremism
becomes softened, normalized and even celebrated. Decades of pop culture
turned seventies domestic terrorists into activists who never meant to
hurt anyone and were just upset about the Vietnam War. Che went from a
symbol of mass murder and repression to slightly edgy youthful
rebellion. The old Communists were idealists who wanted to make America
into a just and equal society.
These are some of the examples
that today’s campus radicals cite when arguing that history will
vindicate them. Eventually the bodies are buried and the radical artists
and writers turn out to be much more important than all the dead in
Russia, China, Cuba and Cambodia. Everyone can name Ernest Hemingway and
Noam Chomsky, but who can name a million corpses?
Supporting mass murder isn’t a phase. It’s evil.
The
Hitler Youth weren’t just ‘dumb kids’ even if they were dumb kids.
Patronizingly dismissing leftist extremism as a phase or a coming of age
ritual normalizes our version of the Hitler Youth. And then we wonder
at the spectacle of crowds of college kids cheering “armed resistance”
against the ‘Zionist occupiers” and wonder over how they could possibly
do such things.
What do we think has been the norm on college campuses for at least 50 years?
Liberals
utterly failed to draw a red line with the Left. The constant
dismissals of leftists as passionate but misguided, as having the right
views but the wrong tactics, led to this. The liberals fell to the Left.
And then the most extreme parts of the Left cannibalized the rest.
College campuses, always radical, became nests of the most extreme
politics in the country.
Dismissing all of this as ‘dumb college kids’ or ‘youthful passion’ is how we got here.
An
18-year-old, never mind a 22-year-old, is old enough to go fight a war,
yet we act as if he has no moral agency because we’ve accepted the idea
that college is a time to test out political extremism. Or at least
leftist adjacent political extremism. (College kids advocating for white
supremacist groups don’t meet with the same kind of tolerance as
advocating for Hamas.)
Morality doesn’t come from the absence of standards, but the insistence on them.
Americans
spend countless billions each year subsidizing higher education. We
deserve more from universities and from their graduates. What we are
seeing is not just an immediate failure, but a century of betrayal by
academia which has been serving up apologetics for politically correct
mass murder since the days of Lenin and Stalin. When its views are
unpopular, it hides behind free speech, and when it feels its strength,
it purges dissenting students and professors.
The greatest
extremist threat in this country isn’t coming from a few KKK members
living in trailer parks, but from the nation’s most prestigious Ivy
League universities. It’s time for either academia to rethink its
relationship to political extremism or for the country to rethink its
relationship to a system of higher education that teaches students to
support mass murder.
The Nazi party had its strongest base of
support in German universities. As did the Communists of the Soviet
Union. Our ‘Hitler Youth’ on both sides of the political spectrum are
invariably college graduates. We broke up the KKK, it may be time to
break up Harvard.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation.Thank you for reading.
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