Call for anti-Islamic hatred on campuses falls flat
By
Caleb T. Maupin
Published Nov 2, 2007 11:25 PM
When the right wing announced it would attempt to hold an “Islamo-Fascism
Awareness Week” from Oct. 22 to 26 on college campuses throughout the
United States, the left responded.
The founder of this “awareness week” was none other than David
Horowitz. He has founded his own “freedom center” devoted to the
removal of leftists from college campuses. He has published a book called
“The Professors,” which reads like a document of the House
Un-American Activities Committee, listing 101 college professors he sees as
“traitors” and as “un-American.”
Horowitz has in the past claimed that Black people should be grateful for being
enslaved, a blatantly racist statement if ever there was one.
It has now been proven that Horowitz inflated the number of schools
participating in his hate week. He listed Harvard and Yale as participating,
but both schools reported no events in accordance with his campaign.
On the campuses where they did occur, the students responded to Horowitz with a
great amount of disapproval. At Emory University, when Horowitz spoke, the
audience was full of students who turned their backs on him as he spoke.
Horowitz’ vicious anti-Islamic statement, which contained great
falsehoods, was met with laughter from the audience. The student audience
frequently challenged him, engaging in a shouting match with a pundit who
sought to remove their leftist professors from classrooms.
Soon the repressive state stepped in to silence them. A security guard declared
that all students who were standing up with their backs turned on Horowitz
should sit down or be “escorted out.” At this point, dozens of
students then stood up in defiance. The event was declared over; Horowitz was
escorted off the stage as chants of “Racist, Sexist, Anti-Gay, David
Horowitz Go Away!” were heard from students who had shut down a bigot
from spewing his hatred.
At Columbia University, Horowitz was called out strongly by the Black Student
Organization, which was appalled by his comparisons of the treatment of
Republicans to that of African Americans. “We find it particularly
reprehensible,” Tiffany Dockery told the New York Post.
At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Horowitz responded to a student’s
question by accusing her of being anti-American. The student, a young woman,
responded very proudly “Please don’t insult me. I’m not an
idiot!” This drew massive applause from the audience, who clearly
disapproved of Horowitz’s style of childish insults toward dissident
students, a style he was frequently reduced to throughout the week.
When Ann Coulter spoke at the University of Southern California, as part of the
“awareness” week’s efforts, 150 people protested, while only
three hundred attended the event.
In short, this hateful well-known right-wing columnist got half as many
protestors opposing her as she did people wanting to hear her views, according
to the L.A. Times.
At Penn State University popular student outrage forced the college to demand
that the name of the week be changed to “Terrorism Awareness Week.”
When Rick Santorum, the recently defeated bigoted senator from Pennsylvania
spoke, he was met with protests including the displaying of anti-war placards
during his speech.
Horowitz called on his conservative student followers to hold sit-ins in
Women’s Studies Departments in an attempt to force them to take more
anti-Islamic and pro-imperialist stances. As of yet, not a single report of
such a sit-in occurring has been released.
Students have proudly sat in to protest the war in Iraq. The Sept. 15 and 29
protests in Washington, DC, were full of radical youth. The right wing was
totally unable to rally youth to its cause on U.S. college campuses Oct. 22-26.
Horowitz and his right-wing ilk were able to organize just a few speakers who
were challenged at every turn since support for their cause of war and
repression on college campuses is very hard to find in this modern age.
The writer is an organizer of FIST, Fight Imperialism-Stand Together youth
group. Contact [email protected]
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