- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
Is the college sure that’s the real reason?
The only other protests I’ve ever seen put down with such veracity was Occupy Wall Street.
It’s like these protesters are striking a real nerve on this particular topic.
For some reason, this gives me echoes of the labor union protests, but I can’t figure out why business owners would be so against protests in support of human rights for Palestinians.
It’s about rich donors. There are a small number of influential and wealthy Jewish donors that give a lot of money to universities. There are a far larger number of wealthy religious conservative donors who are more interested in the advancement of Israel for their apocalypse beliefs. Some are just old wealthy donors who grew up in an era when Israel was much more of an underdog than a brutal colonial occupier (or at least could more easily be portrayed as such.)
High-level admins like university presidents spend most of their time hobnobbing with wealthy donors and potential donors. Their primary job IS to secure donations. That’s what they spend the vast majority of their time thinking about and prioritizing. And those donors are perfectly willing to cut off those dollars if they see things happening on a campus they don’t like.
Universities have let private donors gain way too much power over them. Academic freedom has been severely degraded by their over-reliance on wealthy benefactors. That is unfortunately just the sad state of modern academia.
And then immediately fined for putting it down when asked.
The Intercept - News Source Context (Click to view Full Report)
Information for The Intercept:
Wiki: reliable - There is consensus that The Intercept is generally reliable for news. Almost all editors consider The Intercept a biased source, so uses may need to be attributed. For science, editors prefer peer-reviewed journals over news sources like The Intercept.
Wiki: reliable - There is consensus that The Intercept is generally reliable for news. Almost all editors consider The Intercept a biased source, so uses may need to be attributed. For science, editors prefer peer-reviewed journals over news sources like The Intercept.
MBFC: Left - Credibility: High - Factual Reporting: Mostly Factual - United States of America
Search topics on Ground.News
https://theintercept.com/2024/10/22/swarthmore-protest-palestine-expulsion-bullhorn/