Seth Mandel: How Trump’s Anti-Semitism Crackdown Has Already Changed Education
The secretary of education is Linda McMahon, and she has moved fast. As the Times notes, four days after her confirmation hearing she had the department announce its prioritization of campus anti-Semitism. McMahon, like the rest of the Trump team, hit the ground running.Seth Mandel: Hamas Supporters Know Exactly What They Are Defending
Indeed, the speed with which the new administration has taken action on numerous fronts has frequently caught the White House’s targets and the Democratic opposition completely off-guard.
And the higher-education landscape was already changing by the time Trump took office. As of today, 148 schools representing 2.6 million students have adopted policies of “institutional neutrality,” according to the Heterodox Academy. Rather than putting out institutional statements on every passing piece of news, schools officials have balked at such activism ever since the American intifada began. Officials were caught between not wanting to align their schools with Hamas and their fear of student anger at any acknowledgement of Israel’s right to exist.
Fear, cowardice, whatever you want to call it, the universities have succumbed to it rather than stand up for their Jewish students. All those 148 schools adopted neutrality before Trump brought the hammer down on Columbia. Institutional neutrality, therefore, is only going to grow.
Meanwhile, Trump’s executive orders limiting DEI—so-called diversity, equity and inclusion programs that have ended up turning U.S. institutions into playgrounds of racial and ethnic power struggles and a major catalyst of anti-Semitism on campus—have already seen some schools close certain administrative offices. The University of Virginia dissolved its DEI office just days ago.
Focusing on the institutions has, and will continue to have, profound effects on university responses to anti-Semitism. That doesn’t mean the White House is wrong to punish students where appropriate, especially if the universities won’t do so. But so far, Trump’s White House is well on its way to getting schools to discipline their own—or lose the gravy train of taxpayer money. Either eventuality would mark a significant departure from the prevailing, and unacceptable, status quo.
During the course of the 2008-2009 war, Operation Cast Lead, Hamas hid among the civilian population and then ghoulishly embraced the fauxtography trend to deflect blame for the Palestinian deaths that Hamas was responsible for.The Government Has a Strong Case for Deporting Hamas Sympathizers
In early 2009, the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg wrote a fiery post about the world’s “pornographic” obsession with anything that can be labeled Jewish moral failure. Goldberg specifically mentioned Hamas’s parading of dead Palestinian babies:
“Why are these pictures so omnipresent? I’ll tell you why, again from firsthand, and repeated, experience: Hamas (and the Aksa Brigades, and Islamic Jihad, the whole bunch) prevents the burial, or even preparation of the bodies for burial, until the bodies are used as props in the Palestinian Passion Play. Once, in Khan Younis, I actually saw gunmen unwrap a shrouded body, carry it a hundred yards and position it atop a pile of rubble — and then wait a half-hour until photographers showed. It was one of the more horrible things I’ve seen in my life. And it’s typical of Hamas. If reporters would probe deeper, they’d learn the awful truth of Hamas. But Palestinian moral failings are not of great interest to many people.”
I recount all this because—as Oct. 7, 2023 and its aftermath showed—the amount of support for Hamas and the obsession with demonizing the Jews, all with the willing collaboration of the media, is a song played on repeat. The details get worse, sure: Both Hamas and the Western media reached new depths of depravity in their own ways over these past 16 months. Hamas’s supporters in the West, meanwhile, gathered in celebration of evil in unprecedented numbers.
One does not want to believe that all or most of these people know what it is they are supporting. One does not want to believe that members of the media are aware of the egregious ethics breaches their outlets routinely engage in. One does not want to believe that the only way to put a stop to this long-running cycle of horror is to destroy Hamas.
But we are now nearly two decades into the era inaugurated by Hezbollah and Hamas in 2006. Supporters of Hamas didn’t abandon their cause when they saw Hamasniks dancing around with the dead bodies of captive children, because it’s what one expects of Hamas. News organizations didn’t institute reforms in 2006 precisely because they expected to be using those same tactics again and again. And Hamas itself is immune to change.
Sure, there’s the occasional ignoramus on the Internet or a college campus. But for the most part, everyone knows what they’re doing here. It’s a depressing realization, but it is our unambiguous reality. And we cannot change that reality unless we face it.
Here in the U.S., the Trump administration has been cracking down on the pro-Hamas movements that have established themselves in the universities. On Saturday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents detained Mahmoud Khalil, a foreign national holding a green card and affiliated with Columbia University. ICE apparently intends to revoke his residency status for his role in violent campus protests, but yesterday a federal judge ruled that he cannot be deported without his case being heard. Andrew C. McCarthy examines the legality of the deportation attempt:
The Trump administration has . . . chosen a tough case to start with: a lawful permanent resident alien (LPR)—a status in which the alien enjoys the most robust protection that our law provides for non-Americans. Still, the administration should prevail for the reasons best articulated by Secretary of State Marco Rubio: an alien privileged to reside in the United States, even a green-card holder, should not be able to engage in activities that would form a legal basis to exclude the alien from entering our country in the first place.
Section 1182 of federal immigration law controls the categories of aliens who may be excluded from the United States. In the category of national security, the statute mainly targets aliens who have “engaged in terrorist activity,” who are “members” of terrorist organizations, or who have received paramilitary training from terrorist organizations. Fortunately, though, there is additional latitude: an alien may be excluded if he has “endorsed” or “espoused” terrorist activity. . . . The statute defines terrorist activity to include violent attacks and the planning of such attacks. That should be sufficient to bar from entry into the United States aliens who support Hamas.
If the government can prove that Khalil was in a campus group that endorsed or espoused Hamas’s atrocities against Israel, it should be able to deport him regardless of his LPR status. And if it can deport him, there are likely to be thousands of others who can be deported, too—and should be.