This means that something has gone fatally wrong in the education system of the "developed West".
Sofia is a linguistics university student; at the invitation of far-left organizations, he came to the otherwise unlicensed march organized in Lyon with the slogan "Palestine will win",
as it considers the attack by Hamas to be "justified".
This is the first demonstration of Lina's life, who is preparing to become a human resources manager, she had previously only participated in a high school climate march. "They say Hamas is a terrorist organization, but I think it's the opposite. The Israelis are the terrorists - he analyzes the situation decisively, illustrating the phenomenon of the »Dunning-Kruger effect«. "It's sad that children and civilians are dying... but something has to happen."
The two girls are happy to note that the movement in Lyon was mostly attended by young people, among whom there were only a few Muslims.
One of the students of the Institute of Political Studies in Lyon notes that he was mainly driven to the streets by his indignation that a few days earlier the conservatives at his university banned a lecture on "Israeli apartheid" by a member of the Marxist-oriented Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, declared a terrorist organization - the speaker ended up in the audience took a seat and spoke from there to the enthusiastic young people who participated. According to the French political science student, anyway
Condemning Hamas' move over the weekend is like condemning Ukraine's response to the Russian invasion.
An isolated case, the movement of 100-200 semi-educated university students sensitized by Marxist student organizations, let's turn the page - we could say, if the 34 student organizations of Harvard University had not already issued a joint statement , in which they hold "the Israeli regime in its entirety" responsible for all violence. After a sufficiently one-sided summary of the events of the last decades, the students of the fourth best university in the world, cooperating under the name "Palestinian Solidarity Groups", state: "The only fault is the apartheid regime".
The declaration was originally Amnesty International's Harvard organization, but they quietly removed themselves from the list of signatories by Monday evening.
In the wake of outraged reactions—including political analyst Ian Bremmer asking Harvard parents to talk about these things with their well-educated children, and a Princeton professor sadly noting that "something is deeply, deeply wrong on campus"—Harvard University finally issued a statement on Tuesday , in which he states that the students have the right to express themselves, but they do not do so on behalf of the university.
Mandiner / Francesca Rivafinoli
Featured image: Anas Mohammed/Shutterstock