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The outside agitators on campus

Police say some of the protesters at Columbia were chaos professionals.

Pro-Palestinian student protesters lock arms at the entrance to Hamilton Hall on the campus of Columbia University on April 30. Picture: Julia Wu / AFP
Pro-Palestinian student protesters lock arms at the entrance to Hamilton Hall on the campus of Columbia University on April 30. Picture: Julia Wu / AFP

Universities across the U.S. are finally inviting police to clear out protesters violating school rules, but that’s not the end of this story. Recent days have shown that the protests aren’t merely bursts of student moral concern about Gaza. They’re often guided by professional leftist groups exploiting students to foment chaos and intimidate President Biden.

Columbia University President Minouche Shafik visits Hamilton Hall on the campus of Columbia University on May 1. Picture: Indy Scholtens/Getty Images/AFP
Columbia University President Minouche Shafik visits Hamilton Hall on the campus of Columbia University on May 1. Picture: Indy Scholtens/Getty Images/AFP

On Tuesday night into Wednesday, the New York Police Department peacefully extricated protesters who had barricaded themselves into Hamilton Hall at Columbia University as well as those at the City College of New York. Nearly 300 were arrested. More than 30 protesters have been arrested at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, 35 at Cal State, 72 at Arizona State and 100 at Washington University in St. Louis.

Schools are doing the right thing when they call the police to re-establish order over unruly mobs. A robust free-speech policy doesn’t conflict with requiring students to follow campus policies or face consequences for actions that threaten Jewish classmates.

WSJ Opinion: The Cookie-Cutter Campus Protests

The key is having lines that are clear from the beginning and then enforcing them. In a letter this week, University of Chicago President Paul Alivisatos wrote that free expression is a “core animating value,” and the school will act to protect “even expression of viewpoints that some find deeply offensive.” But a line is drawn against expression that “blocks the learning or expression of others” or “disrupts the functioning or safety of the University.”

Clear principles are critical because the protests aren’t likely to end soon. Protest networks are building and looking forward to a summer of love heading into the Democratic convention in Chicago in August. Organised leftist groups are now promoting and sometimes leading the protests as they did at Columbia, according to the NYPD and the school.

Pro-Palestinian student protesters look on from a balcony of Hamilton Hall. Picture: Julia Wu/AFP
Pro-Palestinian student protesters look on from a balcony of Hamilton Hall. Picture: Julia Wu/AFP

New York Mayor Eric Adams explained that the Columbia conflagration was fomented by “outside agitators” who have neither the students’ nor the university’s best interests at heart. “There were individuals on the campus who should not have been there,” the mayor said, noting that those who took over Hamilton Hall were “led by individuals not affiliated with the university,” some of whom were “professionals.”

Videos show protesters using tactics that aren’t known by your average English major. Video from UCLA shows protesters surrounding a Jewish girl knocked unconscious by other protesters. This is what happens when school presidents and other leaders let protests persist and grow. They are infiltrated by today’s professional class of left-wing chaos agents.

Members of the NYPD arrest protesters outside the gates of Columbia University while clearing the pro-Palestinian protest encampment. Picture: Alex Kent/Getty Images/AFP
Members of the NYPD arrest protesters outside the gates of Columbia University while clearing the pro-Palestinian protest encampment. Picture: Alex Kent/Getty Images/AFP

The pattern will continue until those in authority put it down, and the schools’ disciplinary process is more important here than any trespassing charges against students. Those joining the mob on the quad may cover their faces with keffiyehs to hide their identity from potential employers, but violating rules after a warning warrants expulsion, not merely slap-on-the-wrist suspensions.

Protestors clash at the University of California Los Angeles on May 1. Picture: Etienne Laurent/AFP
Protestors clash at the University of California Los Angeles on May 1. Picture: Etienne Laurent/AFP

White House Spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre has said that antisemitism on campus is unacceptable, but where is President Biden? His moral equivocation on Israel has the protesters thinking they can change his policies. The protests are a running campaign ad for Donald Trump.

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/the-outside-agitators-on-campus/news-story/c1670260c8b04a3fc506d6df26586192