Victimology 101 at UC San Diego

Another failed Israel divestiture campaign turns to tired, irrational Marxist trope
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Adding to the evidence that California campuses have become the epicenter for anti-Israel, anti-Semitic, and anti-American activism, student groups at UC San Diego led by Students for Justice in Palestine introduced — for the third time — an initiative aimed at divesting university funds from “U.S. companies that profit from violent conflict and occupation.”

This year, the divestment call was aimed specifically at General Electric and Northrop Grumman — firms that “produce parts of Apache helicopters used by the Israeli Defense Forces against Palestinians” — with the empty ambition that “by removing investments from companies who assist in perpetuating the violence in the area [supporters would be instrumental in] setting up a forum where peace is achievable.”

As had happened on two earlier occasions on the UCSD campus when a similar divestment initiative was presented, the proposal was roundly defeated in a 20-13 vote, stunning its supporters.

The rejection of calls for divestment from companies doing business with Israel mirrors what has happened elsewhere on campuses, where such campaigns represent the continuing effort by some activist members of the academic Left — joined happily by Islamists and other ideological enemies of the Jewish state — to prolong and enhance the demonization of Israel for the purpose of delegitimizing, weakening, and, it is hoped by these advocates, eventually extirpating Israel altogether. Positioned as a morally upright effort to assert and protect the rights of the long-suffering Palestinians, these efforts at demonizing Israel are not, in fact, benign gestures of peace activists and well-meaning academics in pursuit of social justice for the Palestinians.

But a telling, if not unexpected, thing happened once the student groups who had sponsored this odious divestment resolution actually lost their bid to implement it: supporters of the divestment initiative immediately proclaimed that the initiative had failed because opponents of the resolution were “racists” and bigots. They claimed opponents pressured the student government representatives to vote down the campaign in a manner that created a “hostile campus climate … for students of color and students from underserved and underrepresented communities,” suffering victims who are now “hurt, [and] feel disrespected, silenced, ignored and erased by this University.”

These victimized students and faculty also self-righteously proclaimed in a letter to the UCSD administration that the pro-Israel faculty and staff who spoke against the resolution at the meeting should not even have had a voice in the proceedings: “The fact that they can state whatever they like at public meetings because of academic freedom but while also using their positions of authority as professors or staff for power and intimidation is not acceptable.”

The language of the whining memo to the UCSD administration, like the language of the divestment resolution itself, is revealing. Both are laced with the tired Marxist, post-colonial vocabulary depicting a Manichean world view in which Israel is the brutal oppressor and the Palestinians are the innocent Third-World oppressed, and that the absence of peace in the region is only the fault of the militaristically mighty Jewish state. “The reality is,” the memo clarified for those on the administration who might not know, “that [the Israeli/Palestinian conflict] is a human rights issue where the oppressed are fighting against the oppressor.”

The language of human rights has, of course, been exploited to promote the Palestinian cause by many in the West and in the Arab world who wish the struggle to be seen not for what it actually is — a decades-old campaign to extirpate the Jewish state and “drive the Jews into the sea” — but instead as merely a process by which the Palestinian Arabs throw off the yoke of colonial oppression by Israel and achieve self-determination and statehood. But that formula requires that the Palestinians always remain victims, for it is in that way that they are able to acquire support in furtherance of their cause.

That same designation of victimhood had obviously become a tool for Students for Justice in Palestine and other student groups and faculty members who wrote the scolding entreaty to UCSD administrators. Nowhere in their accusatory memo did they address the central point of the resolution; that is, whether it had any merit at all and whether the vote to defeat it was handled transparently and fairly (which it obviously was). Instead, their reaction to losing the vote was not to look at the vacuity of their campaign but rather to make themselves into victims who now “feel uncomfortable” on campus because of the rejection of their ideas. In other words, on campuses today, feelings trump ideas.

“In the society of victims,” Charles Sykes observed in his engaging book A Nation of Victims, “individuals compete not only for rights or economic advantage but also for points on the ‘sensitivity’ index, where ‘feelings’ rather than reason are what count.”

As victim groups become aware of their supposed classification as “authentic” victims, they are prone to contradict the stated goal of diversity by limiting real dialogue and interchange between opposing points of view such as those expressed by some pro-Israel, anti-divestment faculty and students at the February 29 meeting. Thus, while “social justice” proponents, who claim a high moral ground because they fight for the rights of the oppressed, adamantly defend free speech for themselves in order to define their own world views, they are clearly uncomfortable with the speech of others and exempt themselves from having to live by the suppressive rules of expression they craft for others.

In fact, the UCSD students claimed, the mere presence at the meeting of those with alternate views of the divestment resolution resulted in a “hostile campus climate being created for students of color and students from underserved and underrepresented communities,” something that served to “erase the existence of many individuals in the room,” presumably only those who hoisted the hateful resolution on this campus in the first place.

This technique is effective for those who make themselves victims on campus because it helps to insulate them from criticism and sanction for their often radical ideologies. As the signatories of the memo — members of the Muslim Student Association, Students for Justice in Palestine, MEChA, Student Affirmative Action Committee, and the Black Student Union, among them — had already made clear, the failure of the divestment resolution was the fault of others, not them, due to the racism and bigotry of pro-Israel faculty and students who obviously lack concern for social justice, Palestinians, and “students of color” like them. In his insightful book Illiberal Education, Dinesh D’Souza noted that campus groups regularly “seek the moral capital of victimhood” as the UCSD students are doing. Why? Because, he said, “by converting victimhood into a certificate of virtue, minorities acquire a powerful moral claim that renders their opponents defensive and apologetic, and immunizes themselves from criticism and sanction.”

Of course, proponents of boycotts, divestments, and sanctions against Israel are never apologetic about their efforts to hobble the Jewish state; in fact, they profess high moral purpose for their efforts to confront the racism, apartheid, and other vagaries of the Zionist regime. What they fail to admit, or what they clearly do not care about, of course, is that divestment resolutions like this one, which if successful would strip Israel of its ability to defend itself, are clearly not efforts that will bring peace at all, only help insure that Israel’s jihadist foes can attack it more successfully and that its destruction can thereby be facilitated.

There is, of course, no mention in the divestment resolution of Palestinian terrorism and the random slaughter of Jewish civilians by Arabs on buses and at cafes, or the 10,000 rockets and mortars fired from Gaza into southern Israeli towns over the past six years (and that continues even today in a new round of violence). No acknowledgement was forthcoming as to the reasons why “the use of force against the civilian Palestinian population” existed as part of daily life for Israeli citizens as well as Arab ones; that is, that Israel’s so-called “brutal occupation” and its military incursions were necessitated by Arab aggression and terrorism, and the use of force had not been a random occurrence based on the whims of a sadistic Israeli military.

In fact, by targeting firms which supply arms to Israel, the UCSD divestment effort was not more morally sound than other divestment calls that have included non-military firms as well; the participants were actually helping to achieve what Israel’s Arab foes have long-wanted — a militarily-weak Israel whose defenseless citizens could be massacred and the Jewish state weakened so it can be replaced by a new, Islamist state. More disingenuously, the UCSD divestment proponents fell into the morally convenient trap which ascribed the root cause of terrorism not where it belongs — with the homicidal madmen who perpetrate it in the name of jihad — but once again to Israel, due to its very presence in the Levant as an oppressor of the ever-suffering, always innocent Palestinians.

If the tendentious student and faculty activists at UCSD who purport to seek peace in the Middle East actually wanted to take steps to effect that noble goal, instead of seeking to deprive a sovereign nation from its ability to defend itself they might consider some alternate tactics. Perhaps, for example, rather than obsessing about the defects of Israel and only Israel, they could focus on the pathologies of Palestinian society, crystallized and made more malevolent by the rule of Hamas itself, in which Palestinian children are inculcated nearly from birth, with seething, blind, unrelenting, and obsessive hatred of Jews and the “Zionist regime,” so that kindergartners graduate with blood-soaked hands while toting plastic AK 47s and dedicating their lives to jihad, and older children are recruited to hide explosives on their bodies to transform themselves into shahids — a new generation of kindling for radical Islam’s cult of death.

They might speak to Palestinian parents, who glorify death and martyrdom and seek the death of their children if they distinguish themselves by murdering Jewish civilians. Perhaps they could also advise Palestinian leadership not to incite violence against Jews, and name summer camps and town squares after homicidal “martyrs” who slaughtered Jewish civilians. They could suggest that Hamas not broadcast children’s TV shows with animal characters who repeat hateful propaganda about Israel and who encourage children to attack and kill Jews, and that it is morally perverse to produce Palestinian elementary textbooks that depict Jews as apes and pigs, that erase Israel from history and geography books, and that demonize Israelis in particular and Jews in general as subhuman monsters who are swindlers, thieves, and murderers.

“If you cannot answer a man’s argument,” Oscar Wilde once quipped, “do not panic. You can always call him names.”

That advice has clearly been followed by the UCSD divestment proponents who, once they were defeated in their attempt to promote their odious divestment campaign, took to accusing their opponents of being racist victimizers of underrepresented students of color, as if that argument had anything to do with the core sentiment of the divestment initiative in the first place. The tactic of trying to demonize the thought of your ideological opponents and accusing them of having immoral motives for supporting their own views is obviously antithetical to the free and open debate that universities have traditionally sought.

Concern for the Palestinians may be a commendable effort, but the exclusion and demonization of support for the viability and continued existence of the Jewish state as a tool for seeking social justice for that one group “represents a profound betrayal of the cardinal principle of intellectual endeavor,” observed commentator Melanie Phillips, “which is freedom of speech and debate,” something universities should never stop diligently defending. And neither UCSD nor any other university should certainly ever abandon that pursuit due to the baleful whining of ideological bullies intent on suppressing the views of others while simultaneously cloaking their enmity and loathing of Israel with their own victimhood.

Richard L. Cravatts, PhD, director of the Program in Publishing & Digital Media at Boston University, just finished a book, Genocidal Liberalism: The University’s Jihad Against Israel & Jews.

Victimology 101 at UC San Diego

Another failed Israel divestiture campaign turns to tired, irrational Marxist trope
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AUTHOR

Richard L. Cravatts

Richard L. Cravatts, Ph.D., author of six books, including Dispatches From the Campus War Against Israel and Jews, Jew Hatred Rising: The Perversities of the Campus War Against Israel & Jews, and Weaponizing Our Schools: Critical Race Theory and the Racist Assault on America’s Students is President Emeritus of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME).

He is currently a Freedom Center Journalism Fellow in Academic Free Speech.

The creator and founding director of Boston University's Program in Publishing & Digital Media at BU’s Center for Professional Education and former Professor of Practice and Director of the master’s program in Communications Management at Simmons College’s School of Management, Dr. Cravatts has also taught more than 20 courses in advertising, marketing, consumer behavior, advertising, and other areas at Tufts University, UMass/ Boston, Suffolk University, Babson College, Boston University, Wentworth Institute, Emerson College, Northeastern University, Florida Atlantic University, Emmanuel College, and others.

Dr. Cravatts has published over 550 articles and book chapters on campus anti-Semitism, the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, campus free speech, terrorism, Constitutional law, Middle East politics, and social policy in the Boston Globe, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, Chicago Tribune, Palm Beach Post, Baltimore Sun, Boston Herald, Orange County Register, American Thinker, Jewish Press, Human Events, Harvard Crimson, FrontPage Magazine, Times of Israel, and many others.

He also lectures nationally on the topic of higher education, academic freedom, and the Middle East, and has spoken at, among others, Columbia University, UCLA Law School, Harvard University, Brandeis University, University of Toronto, Stanford University, UC Berkeley, University of Haifa, NYU Law School, Tel Aviv University, and University of Miami.

In addition to serving as a member of the board of directors of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East, Dr. Cravatts is also a board member of The Journal for the Study of Antisemitism, The AMCHA Initiative, The Israel Group, The Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, Alliance for Israel, and the Florida chapter of the Zionist Organization of America, an advisory board member of the Endowment for Middle East Truth, the Abraham Global Peace Initiative, and The Gross Family Center for the Study of Antisemitism and the Holocaust, and a member of SPME’s Council of Scholars.


Read all stories by Richard L. Cravatts