New York Post

The ‘Nonviolent’ Lie

Anti-Israel students are bullies

- NICOLE GELINAS Nicole Gelinas is a contributi­ng editor to the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal.

HOW “nonviolent” are nonviolent protests? The cliché from left-wing politician­s and academia is that the last two months’ worth of campus mob actions have been a marvel of nonaggress­ion. Yet actually, the mobs are “nonviolent” only because everyone else is nonviolent, surrenderi­ng to the agitators’ use of physical bodily force to get their way.

The nonviolenc­e line is common on New York’s left. After Columbia University first called the police on its campus lawbreaker­s in midApril, city Comptrolle­r Brad Lander said such action against “nonviolent protest” violated the university’s protection of speech. AOC added that “calling in police enforcemen­t on nonviolent demonstrat­ions . . . is dangerous.”

“Nonviolent” has also become the go-to neutral term. “The one thing” Columbia protesters “have not been in these days is violent,” Columbia prof Mark Mazower, in a neutral diary for the Financial Times, observed.

These accounts ignore the reality: Protesters use physical bodily force to bully others and to subvert the rule of law. Even when the mobs are looking peaceful, they’re not really peaceful.

As Michael Powell observed in The Atlantic of the “liberated zone” on the Columbia lawn, self-appointed, keffiyahma­sked leaders formed a “human chain” to keep “Zionists” from “entering the camp.” These “liberated zone” occupiers had no legal or moral right to prohibit other people, including people with different viewpoints or different physical emblems (like an Israeli flag) from using the lawn. It is a space open, theoretica­lly, to everyone affiliated with Columbia.

The only thing keeping out the “Zionists” was the credible threat of mob violence: that “human chain” wall of bodies. Push against the human chain, the mob implied, to assert your legal or moral right to access the lawn, and the chain will push back — why else make a human chain?

You can see this for yourself in a video of a UCLA student attempting to breach a wall of masked students blocking his path last Tuesday. “My class is over there,” the self-identified Jewish student told the mob, but

they refused to budge from the common right of way.

In doing so, they used physical force, and only physical force, to assert their will: Might makes right. The scene only looked nonviolent because the student didn’t meet their physical force with physical force of his own.

If he had pushed them out of the way to cross a path that should have been open to him, the story, inevitably, would have been: “Jewish student violently assaults peaceful protesters.”

As Zack Thibodeaux, a blind Yale student, wrote of his own attempts

to avoid the mobs, “It is a significan­t burden when they block others’ access to campus,” as he must take unfamiliar routes and expose himself to danger. The student is blocked for the sole reason that he is the physically weaker party. He understand­ably can’t or won’t muster sufficient force to overcome the people who are using unauthoriz­ed physical force to control the campus.

This precept holds when “nonviolent” protests are even more obviously violent. After a Columbia agitator used a hammer — not exactly a symbol of nonviolenc­e — to break into Hamilton Hall last week, another masked, gloved intruder got into what the Times termed a “shoving match” with a maintenanc­e staffer inside the building. The worker then “left.”

It’s good that this incident didn’t escalate into serious injury. But that’s not because the “protester” chose nonviolenc­e; it’s because the maintenanc­e worker kept his cool, wisely surrenderi­ng to not just the threat of violence but to the reality of violence.

Similarly, the only reason Vanderbilt students could occupy a campus building in March was because, after the students shoved past a guard, the guard physically yielded to their superior strength.

None of this is nonviolent protest. Nonviolent protesters would not use physical force to deter other people from common space, and nonviolent protesters would turn away at a guard’s insistence that they leave, not physically overpower him. Nor does surrenderi­ng to riot-gear police make a mob nonviolent. All it means is that the mob rationally realizes the police are stronger.

Students and other campus protesters are free to engage in nonviolent protests: They can write letters and articles, engage in campus and public debate and organize campus demonstrat­ions. But that’s not what they’re doing: This isn’t free speech via peaceful protest, but threatenin­g and menacing the rest of us — which often works, because we are nonviolent.

 ?? ?? Plenty violent: Breaking into Columbia’s Hamilton Hall.
Plenty violent: Breaking into Columbia’s Hamilton Hall.
 ?? ??

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