University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee gives away the farm to protestors

May 13, 2024 • 9:30 am

Here’s the most egregious example yet of a college or university giving up institutional neutrality to capitulate to pro-Palestinian protesters and get them to dismantle their encampment.  The school is the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, (UWM), and a member of the campus community sent me the “agreement” the school made with its protesters. (Note that the system’s flagship campus is not in Milwaukee but Madison.)

The agreement is announced in the first letter below, from the Chancellor. The second document, the capitulation, is below that.

As usual, I have no way of assuring you that these are genuine, but the agreement itself appears on a UWM.edu website.  Given that and the local source, I’m about 99.99% satisfied that this craven capitulation is genuine. You can click on the first link of the Chancellor’s letter below or on the yellow bar at the bottom that says “read the full agreement” to see the capitulation. Read and weep.

May 12, 2024

Agreement reached to resolve encampment

Dear UWM Students, Faculty and Staff,

I’m writing to share that UWM leadership has reached an agreement with representatives of the student protesters encamped on the lawn outside of Mitchell Hall. As a result, students have started dismantling the encampment and will finish doing so by Tuesday morning. The agreement also includes assurances that those involved will not disrupt UWM’s upcoming commencement ceremonies. You can read the full terms of the agreement here.

I’m grateful that the ongoing dialogue with our students has resulted in this peaceful resolution. I want to extend my personal thanks to everyone who played a role in the process. The voluntary dismantling of the encampment is the safest conclusion for everyone. And as I mentioned in my campus message last week, dismantling the encampment in no way infringes upon free speech.

I know this has been a trying time for many, especially for those concerned by the encampment’s presence and those who have been personally impacted by the war. I also recognize that many have criticized UWM for not forcing the removal of the camp earlier. Indeed, the most common question asked of us involved when police would be sent in to break up the encampment. Our consistent answer: UWM leadership prioritized the safety of everyone involved, which meant seeking resolution through dialogue with our students. Today, as this agreement goes into effect and the encampment begins to come down, we are thankful there were no significant safety issues and that counterprotests remained peaceful.

UWM is a public university that serves a broadly diverse community, and our core responsibility is the education of our students. And so, consistent with our mission, we’ve charted a path forward that prioritizes strengthening our community of care, mutual respect, accountability and collaboration for a better future.

Best regards,

Mark A. Mone, PhD
Chancellor

Note how Chancellor Mone pats himself on the back for “prioritizing the safety of everyone involved,” but many schools have resolved such violations  in other ways (e.g. the campus or local cops) without anybody’s safety being compromised. In fact, I’m not aware of anybody in the U.S. being hurt during the takedown of an encampment by force. That was also the case in Chicago; it just takes careful planning.

Note too Mone’s claim that dismantling the encampment in no way infringes upon free speech. That’s true, but dismantling the encampment via cops or threat of expulsion doesn’t infringe on free speech, either, for speech that violates the “time, place, and manner” regulations of colleges isn’t protected free speech as well, or so the courts have ruled.

The protesters are always free to make their chants in ways permitted by UWM, but chose to protest to force the college to capitulate to their demands, not to persuade by rational argument. And the protesters won this one.

But let us look at UMW’s odious “compromise.” The letter is indented and I’ve made a few remarks (flush left).

May 12, 2024

Dear UWM Popular University for Palestine Coalition,

Thank you for meeting with us on May 6th, 8th, and 10th, in addition to our many discussions over the last weeks and months. Together, we have made meaningful progress toward a peaceful resolution of the encampment. We have summarized UWM’s final responses to your demands from your correspondence and our meetings below. If these responses and actions are acceptable, we ask that you communicate your agreement by replying all to this message by 4 p.m. Sunday, May 12, and meeting the remaining terms noted in the Conduct Process section at the end of this letter. We stress that meeting this final deadline and ensuring the encampment comes down by the deadline are essential to ensuring we can continue working together on the action items included in this letter.

Call for a Ceasefire and Condemn Genocide

We join the countless calls by national and international leaders for a ceasefire in Gaza. As of this letter, the UN had reported more than 34,000 innocent Palestinians, approximately 60% of whom were women, children and the elderly, had been killed, and nearly 80,000 more had been injured in the war on Gaza. The ongoing humanitarian crisis has led to dangerous water scarcity and starvation of thousands of civilians. A United Nations (UN) expert and the International Criminal Court have now called this war a “plausible genocide.”

Before we point out the many other mistakes in the first part of the letter, note first that the International Criminal Court did not call this a “plausible genocide”. That’s the wrong court, for one thing. Mone is referring to the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which, unlike the ICC, judges nations, not individuals. And what the ICJ ruled is not that this is a “plausible genocide,” but that, as Joan Donogue, the former head of the ICJ, notes in this video,

“The court decided that the Palestinians had a plausible right to be protected from genocide and that South Africa had the right to present that claim in the court. It then looked at the facts as well. But it did not decide – and this is something where I’m correcting what’s often said in the media – it didn’t decide that the claim of genocide was plausible.”

Note too that even before this letter was written, the UN itself reduced the death toll of women and children to 13,000, or 34% (not 60%) of total deaths.   (See also here.) The proportion of women and children killed given by UWM are based on Hamas’s estimates, which everybody but Hamas admits are inflated.  One thing for sure, though, is that the “34,000 innocent Palestinians” are not all apparently “innocent”, as that figure includes many fighters for Hamas. And that moiety is not “innocent civilians,” but terrorist combatants.

But even the total figures can’t be trusted. First, the total figure given (34,000) is based on Hamas’s Ministry of Health (MOH), which has not disclosed how it estimates death tolls. Whether the true toll is close to 34,000 can’t be known yet.

Further, the ratio of civilians/combatants killed probably varies between 1.2 to 1.5, a figure that is an unprecedented low for modern urban warfare because of IDF’s policy of trying to avoid civilian deaths using a number of methods, including warning civilians in future fire zones. (Note: Netanyahu just claimed that ““Fourteen thousand have been killed, combatants, and, probably around sixteen thousand civilians have been killed,” he tells Dan Senor on the Call Me Back podcast.” But given world opinion, people won’t buy that, though it might be accurate. Again, wait and see—if we ever get an answer.)

The death of any truly innocent civilians, of course, is greatly to be mourned, as each is a noncombatant human being with friends and family. But remember that Hamas increases the number of true civilians killed by using them as human shields.  Still, taking the higher ratio of civilian/combatant deaths, we can estimate that about 40% of those killed were combatants. This figure will, of course, be revised later, but to imply that everyone killed was an “innocent civilian”, as Mone does, is hugely misleading. What was he thinking? He surely can’t think that Hamas fighters are “innocent civilians”!

The letter continues:

We also condemn the attack by Hamas on October 7, 2023, resulting in the killing of 1,200 innocent Israeli civilians, military personnel and police.

Innocent civilians, especially children, must not be the targets of war. This is why we also call for the release of the remaining Israeli and international hostages held by Hamas and the release of Palestinian men, women and children held as hostages in military detention in Israel. We condemn all violence and call for it to end.

Note that Palestinians held in military detention are NOT hostages, or equivalent to them. They were arrested because they were suspected of terrorist activities. They are subject to court decisions—with regular court sessions to decide whether the detention should be prolonged or not. Both Palestinians and Jews are subject to detention (of course there are many more Palestinians than Jews because they engage in terrorist activities much more often, but some Jews are also detained). Many countries in the world (democratic nations as well) use detention when the threat of criminal/terrorist activity is high upon release but the authorities do not have enough evidence to put the suspect on trial. That is known as being held without bail.

Further, Palestinians in detention are NOT kept in underground bunkers, are adequately fed, have access to health care, and their families know where they are and the suspects and their lawyers can act on their own behalf. This is a huge a difference between Palestinians in detentions and Israelis held as hostages.

Denounce Scholasticide

We condemn the destruction of universities in Gaza, including the last remaining one during the military assault as reported by the United Nations in April 2024.

A press release from the United Nations in April 2024 states,

“After six months of military assault, more than 5,479 students, 261 teachers and 95 university professors have been killed in Gaza, and over 7,819 students and 756 teachers have been injured – with numbers growing each day. At least 60 percent of educational facilities, including 2 13 public libraries, have been damaged or destroyed and at least 625,000 students have no access to education. Another 195 heritage sites, 227 mosques and three churches have also been damaged or destroyed, including the Central Archives of Gaza, containing 150 years of history.”

The same press release cites an expert stating that 80% of all schools in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged.

As educators and education administrators, we believe protecting our schools is fundamental to society. We condemn the destruction of the education system and the killing of its students, teachers, faculty and staff.

Here’s another misstatement. In fact, schools and universities in Gaza were destroyed or damaged because they were used by terrorists as bases, weapons-producing entities (universities), for weapon storage or there were tunnels under them. There was simply not a single university or school in Gaza that wasn’t used by terrorists.

Disclosure and Divestment

The UWM Foundation leadership has agreed to meet with up to four students identified by UWM Popular University for Palestine Coalition after the encampment comes down on Tuesday, May 14, to discuss your concerns and requests. UWM administrators will attend and ensure that students will be given the opportunity to express their requests for disclosure and divestment. This offer is in addition to the UWM Foundation financial statements provided to you, as well as our information about UWM’s request to the Foundation Board to review its investments in funds that include weapons manufacturers.

Whether this discussion is of any effect on divestment at all is questionable given the following statement:

Cut Ties with Private Companies

As noted in our previous conversations, UWM is prohibited by law from cutting ties with private companies and organizations that do business in Israel, which includes all the businesses you cite in your demands and most recent letter (Wis. Stat. sec. 20.931). UWM supports the civic engagement of students and encourages protestors to make their concerns heard with lawmakers, as it does with all student advocacy issues.

Cease Collaboration with Institutions & Organizations

1. Study Abroad: As we shared during our last meeting, UWM will review its study abroad policies and programs to ensure compliance with our Discriminatory Conduct Policy. Separate from the lack of recent activity in these programs, a current State Department travel advisory for Israel advises against travel for safety reasons. Over the next academic year, a working group will be formed to review all study abroad programs to ensure compliance with our Discriminatory Conduct Policy and develop a process for students to report discrimination experienced in these programs. Members of the working group include members of the International Committee (the IC will self-determine which of its members will participate), the Office of Equity/Diversity Services and the Office of the Dean of Students. We invite you to recommend three to five faculty or instructional academic staff members to be considered for participation in this working group.

Note that they are using the State Department’s travel advisory as a possible reason to avoid having a “study abroad in Israel” program. And they ask the protesters to nominate faculty to judge the study abroad programs. What are the chances that these faculty wouldn’t be pro-Palestinian? I’d say about zero, though they really should have no allegiance.

2. Third-Party Offerings: Hillel, which sponsors certain trips to Israel, is separate from UWM. These trips are not advertised on UWM.edu.

3. Water Council: As we confirmed while discussing your concerns in our May 8 meeting, it has been determined that the Water Council had relationships with two Israeli-government-owned water companies, Mekorot and Israel Innovation 3 Authority. These companies are accused by international aid organizations, including Amnesty International, of cutting off access to drinking water for thousands of Palestinians in Gaza, exacerbating water scarcity. These are serious concerns that Chancellor Mone addressed with the Water Council president. At the Chancellor’s urging, the Water Council no longer has relationships with these entities, and they have been removed from the global listing on the Water Council’s website.

Note that at best 10% of Gaza’s water comes from Israel, the rest being groundwater or desalination plants. As for Israel “cutting off drinking water to Gaza,” I’m pretty sure that water delivery has been largely restored, but can’t be certain as I can’t ascertain it at this moment.  But at most the loss of all Israel-supplied water would cut Gaza’s water supply only by 10%.

Conduct Processes

UWM has repeatedly noted that camping on university grounds is a violation of state law and the student code of conduct. Given that the encampment is a public demonstration in opposition to what the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia calls the “War on Gaza,” the Chancellor and the Provost have agreed to forgo relevant citations or conduct violations for the Coalition and the student groups copied on this message, if all conditions outlined below are met. This exemption only applies to camping activity and does not apply to activities such as, but not limited to, vandalism or property damage, and only applies if the following conditions are met:

1. The encampment must begin to come down on Sunday, May 12, and must be completely deconstructed no later than 8 a.m. Tuesday, May 14. If there is no meaningful progress, which should include the removal of tents and personal property, towards deconstructing the encampment by 11:59 p.m., Sunday, May 12, UWM will begin student conduct processes immediately. UWM staff will assist on Monday with the removal of larger items, such as pallets and plywood, and clean graffiti from Mitchell Hall (which is a historic building that facilities staff prefer to clean).

2. There must be no disruptions at either of UWM’s commencement ceremonies.

3. The coalition and all student groups copied on this message must agree to meet the terms of this agreement.

Here the University agrees not to punish any students (save those determined to be guilty of vandalism) for encamping, despite that they have violated both state law and the student code of conduct.

The agreement finishes with further some osculation of protesters:

We agree with you that removing the encampment should not be the end of our work together. After the encampment is removed, we propose a series of campus conversations and educational opportunities. We also agree to collaboratively schedule and hold meetings to discuss progress on that. A working group that will include representatives at your suggestion in these educational planning efforts will also be formed.

We join you in thanking the UWM Police Department for their respect for students, while still maintaining their concern for security. Because of the long-term relationships, bridge-building and communication between UWM administration and students, this encampment can end peacefully.

Sincerely,

Mark A. Mone, PhD
Chancellor

Andrew Daire, PhD
Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs

Chia Vang, PhD
Vice Chancellor for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Adam Jussel
Dean of Students

CC: UWM Students for a Democratic Society
UWM Muslim Student Association
UWM Students for Justice in Palestine
UN-PAC (Political Action Committee) at UWM
Young Democratic Socialists of America at UWM

So you can add UWM to the three-school list of Craven, Compromising Colleges (along with Brown and Northwestern).

Although the agreement could have been worse, it couldn’t have been much worse. I suspect the only reason they didn’t allow the protesters to make divestment decisions is that the law prevented that from happening.

This “resolution” is bad in several ways. First of all, it shows the school as historically ignorant. While it does decry the October 7 attack on Israel, it doesn’t mention the ongoing firing of rockets at Israel from Gaza, which are rockets deliberately aimed at civilians, a war crime that Israel doesn’t commit (the same is happening from Lebanon). The “genocide” is clearly the genocide of Israel on Gaza, which is not a genocide at all. As anybody with neurons to spare knows, the real genocide—a stated determination to wipe out a people—is the philosophy held by Hamas, which in its very charter says its goal is to kill Jews.

The statement also seriously distorts what’s happening in Gaza, not only with respect to the genocide and efforts of the IDF to avoid killing civilians, but also in its use of casualty figures which even the UN doesn’t accept.

Worse, this is an arrant example of a university taking sides in a political conflict: the Palestinian side. It’s thus a violation of institutional neutrality, big time.

Finally, and I want to bring this long post to an end, by giving in to the encampers, merely so the protesters don’t mess up graduation and allow the situation to be resolved “peacefully”—and caving isn’t the only way to resolve this peacefully; there is also non-injurious force and, best of all, the threat of suspension and expulsion—UWM heartens the protesters to continue their disruption. With three schools having capitulated this way, in fact, protesters are heartened everywhere, as who knows if they’ll hit the divestment jackpot if they try?

I’ll close with a statement from the UWM community member who sent me the Chancellor’s letter and compromise statement, quoted with permission:

Our UW-Milwaukee administrators have, in their panic about tents and signs, become willing conduits of Hamas propaganda.

Amen.

Amsterdam: Day 1

May 13, 2024 • 7:15 am

Although it’s really the second day since I arrived in Amsterdam, I didn’t do much yesterday because I was exhausted. So today, Monday, really counts as Day 1.

And oy, did I sleep last night!  After chatting with my host and a few people connected with my visit, I took at nap at about 1 p.m., but was restive and woke up without much sleep at about 6 p.m. But then the serious sleeping began. I crashed at 7 p.m., woke up 5 hours later, at midnight, checked my email (there’s a seven-hour time difference from Chicago), and then went back to sleep, waking up totally refreshed at 5 a.m. I got at least ten hours of deep sleep, something unknown to me!

It was too early to make noise or disturb my hosts, so I crept downstairs—two flights of the steepest stairs I’ve ever seen in a house, for Dutch houses are high and narrow. There I found a copy of yesterday’s New York Times, a local map, and a note that there was Balinese food in the fridge from the nearby restaurant (rated one of the best Indonesian places in the city). What could be a better breakfast than Indonesian beef, green beans, other veggies, and chicken atop a bed of rice and heated in the microwave.  I read the NYT as I dined, noticing that Bret Stephens’s column on the U.S.’s poor treatment of Israel was on the front page of the paper edition—something you wouldn’t find in the U.S. (column archived here).

While I finished my food and perused the Times, a wonderful event occurred: a beautiful fluffy and shiny black CAT wandered into the kitchen. In less than a minute we had made friends, and in 2 minutes he was on his back, allowing me to give him belly rubs. (I have a way with cats.) I later found out his name is Toom. Here he is:

As you see above, Toom soon jumped up on the sink and looked expectantly at the faucet. Could it be, I thought, that he wanted a drink? I turned on the faucet lightly, and Toom went to town. First he stuck his paw under the flow until it was wet, and then licked his paw.

Here is a video:

But then Toom put his back under the faucet, too, and then licked the water off his back! Granted, he did use his mouth to drink from the faucet, too, but preferred licking water off his back and paw.

The Back Lick:

After 90 minutes my host came downstairs, taught me how to make coffee with the machine, and we had a cup and chatted for an hour or so until she went to work. (I’m staying with a married couple, but the husband is on a work trip for a few days.)

Here’s Toom with a post-lick blep:

After breakfast I had a leisurely walk around the area (I’m staying in a lovely part of town, a half hour walk from the Museum District).  My host had also having furnished me with a tram/bus/train pass, but I needed a morning constitutional.

I walked to the Museum area, hoping to get into the Van Gogh Museum, one of my favorite museums in the world. (I love the later van Goghs.)’d been told that you have to reserve tickets in advance, which I didn’t have to do the last two times I visited here, and, sure enough, when I showed up everyone had reserved tickets. I asked the guard how long I had to reserve in advance, and he replied “About two weeks.” Oy! But he added that if I went online right at 5 p.m., I may be able to get tickets for tomorrow. I’m not sure I’ll do that as there are things to see in Amsterdam that I haven’t seen twice before. (My first talk isn’t until Thursday.)

Once again the day was lovely: tee-shirt weather. You know you’re in Amsterdam because there are bicycles everywhere:

The obligatory bike-mirror selfie:

My best guess is that the denizen of Amsterdam below is a Western Jackdaw (Corvus monedula), but readers can help out.

This is the smallest car I’ve ever seen, and there are plenty of these in Amsterdam, as parking is quite difficult. It can hold two people in the one seat if you’re squashed up together.

I think it is a LuQi electric mini-car, which runs about 10,000 Euros. It may be made in China but I don’t have enough information.

You can fit them into a space only a few yards wide:

The interior. You better be friendly if you have a passenger.

While looking around the Museum Quarter, I found “The Best Hot Dogs in Town.” I can’t vouch for that, but I’m sure that a good Chicago dog, dragged through the garden, is way better.

Finally, I took the tram to the Central Station (it’s nearly a straight shot from where I live, with an intermediate stop at the museums, to fulfill a long-time craving: Dutch friets with thick mayonnaise. This, along with raw herring, is one of the two great street snacks of Amsterdam.  I was last here a while back, but I remembered the location of a good friets stand near the station, and, sure enough, dead reckoning brought me to my goal:

That was lunch.  And you needn’t tell me that it’s not the healthiest of foods, as I already know. I have tried the raw herring, but couldn’t abide the malodorous fish, and I’m not a piscivore anyway.

Now it’s time to rest a bit, work on my talk, and read the book I brought: Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant.

I have landed!

May 12, 2024 • 9:00 am

This is my 29,000th post on this site!

For some reason my flight to Amsterdam, though nothing out of the ordinary for a west—>east across-Pond flight, was exhausting. Perhaps it was the Person of Size next to me in the middle seat, who tended to ooze over the armrests (I was in the aisle seat) preventing me from sleeping after dinner and two movies: Past Lives (quite good) and the documentary “Being Mary Tyler Moore” (surprisingly good). But my attempt to get three hours of sleep was a dismal failure, doomed by encroaching avoirdupois.

But Amsterdam is lovely, and I’ve never been here at this time of year. It’s sunny and warm (78°F, 26°C) with blue skies and sun. A generous local humanist and skeptic is putting me up for the week, and I’m on a quiet, leafy street near the Museum District. Here’s the view from my bedroom):

Right now I’ll try to recover my energy and;  have a look around; I’m told there’s a good Balinese restaurant nearby.

Oh, and Happy Mother’s Day; there’s a Google Doodle; click to see where it goes.

Today’s Masih: The Iranian Morality Police are at it again, but the tee-shirt wearing girl was saved from their clutches.

Speaking of which, this is Iran before the Revolution, when women could wear what they want (tweet sent by Matthew):

From Malcolm; a cat with a video on its collar chasing another cat:

From Barry; the Peacemaker. As he says, “Such a stern look. “Guys! Cut it out! Behave!”

And from my feed. You’d think the bees would go sleep in the hive, but some apparently don’t:

Sunday: Hili dialogue

May 12, 2024 • 3:47 am

Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili has hit upon a money-making scheme:

A: I’ve never seen such a sundial.
Hili: See, a sundial with a cat would sell very well.


In Polish:

Ja: Takiego zegara słonecznego jeszcze nie widziałem.
Hili: No popatrz, a zegar słoneczny z kotem świetnie by się sprzedawał.

Bill Maher’s latest bit

May 11, 2024 • 11:30 am

Here’s an eight-minute Real Time bit in which Bill Maher goes after the media for blowing up the campus protests out of proportion. To counteract this trend, Maher proposes five rules for proper journalistic coverage of the news.

One such rule is that the media should stay away from quoting the “angriest people on social media with too much time on their hands.” Tell me about it!

At the end of the bit, Maher answers the question, “What do we do if he wins?” (The “he” is obvious.)

Iris and discussion

May 11, 2024 • 10:30 am

I’ll be off for O’Hare soon, but heres a photo of Irises I took on my way home. I don’t know when you’ll hear from me again, but before that I’ll have had a belly full of french fries with mayo or peanut sauce.

In the meantime, feel free to discuss politics or whatever you want. I’ll throw out some starter questions, but you can ignore them. I would, however, like to know the readers’ opinions. Three of the four questions are about the war, as that’s been much on my mind.

a.) What the deuce is Biden up to with Israel? He does know that the IDF considers Rafah important in getting rid of Hamas, right? So why is he trying to prevent a serious military operation there? Does he want Hamas to win and maintain power?

b.) The UN has revised the death toll of Gazan civilians, reducing it considerably and halving the number of women and children killed). Given that, and given the fact that the new ratio of civilians killed to Hamas fighters killed is a bit more than 1:1; AND given that that ratio is lower than any similar ratio in modern warfare (the U.S. is a grim 3:1 in its Middle East conflicts and other fights go up from them, AND, given that these deaths can be imputed largely to Hamas, who encourages Gazans to die for propaganda purposes and uses them as human shields, AND that Israel takes steps to reduce the civilian death toll, including warning civilians of strikes and providing humanitarian aid, then why is the death toll of Gazans considered way too high for this war? So high, in fact, that mostly the whole world hates Israel, falsely accusing it of genocide because of the number of civilian deaths. Is there supposed to “death equity”, so that for every civilian killed and Israeli should die as well? This truly baffles me.

c.) Why is Israel so prominent among conflicts given that in other places, like Yemen and Syria, far more people have died and there is much more starvation? Why don’t we hear more about Syria, where the forces of Bashar al-Assad have killed an estimated 300,000 people, mostly Muslims? This isn’t mere “whataboutery,” for the conflict there is ongoing, serious, and has killed more than ten times the civilians that have died in the war between Israel and Hamas.

d.) Is Donald Trump ever going to be convicted of anything? Will he win this fall’s election, whether or not he’s found guilty? Why do so many Americans vote for a person whose mental illness is palpable, and on display every day?

I will check from O’Hare, and I’m hoping for a plethora of comments.  Say whatever you want.

A prognostication: Biden is sabotaging his re-election

May 11, 2024 • 8:15 am

This article, from Claire Berlinski‘s Substack site was written by her as well as by John Oxley, and paints a picture of Biden as a doddering old fool with no clear take on foreign policy. Biden, they say, has waffled so much on his Israel policy, including his decision to stop most military weapons sold to Israel, that he’ll lose the vote of both Muslims and Jews—a hard thing to do.  It also includes ten summaries of and links to other articles, all criticizing Biden and all worth reading. It’s a valuable piece, and those of you who are so certain that Biden will win should read the whole thing. (Claire abhors Trump, by the way; like me, she just wants the Left on a sane foundation.)

Claire, by the way, is the daughter of evolution opponent David Berlinski, but seems to have a whole lot more common sense.

Clicking on the headline may get you one free read, but you also may wish to subscribe, as I enjoy Berlinski’s prose—and ideas. (The articles are written by Berlinski and other people.) Try clicking on the headline:

I’ll quote a lot of her short article, and be sure to read the Bret Stephens article mentioned in the first sentence (it’s archived here).

I just saw this column by Bret Stephens, who echoes my sentiments almost verbatim. I hadn’t seen that when we recorded this last night, and obviously, he hadn’t listened to this podcast.1 But he wrote more or less exactly what I’ve said here.

All of this is disastrous for Biden, and thus disastrous for us all.

I figured until this that he was basically a savvy politician who understood why the American electorate put him in power quite well. Normalcy. Not extremism. But I was wrong. He’s in a bubble. He doesn’t understand how much of his support comes from people like me.

People like me—and I suspect the majority of Americans, even still—loathe the far right. They also loathe the far left and the Islamists. People like me have for years rejected the argument that Biden is dangerously in the sway of the Islamists and the far left on the grounds that it’s absurd to say so. Befuddled though he may be, Biden is clearly an old-fashioned center-leftist, firmly in the postwar American tradition. He’s not going to do anything grotesquely offensive in office. Trump, meanwhile, is literally—not just metaphorically or hyperbolically—insane, a Clusterfuck B personality disorder on cloven hooves. It really is an open question whether the American republic would survive another term under his aegis.

I still maintain this—passionately. For all his deficits, and there are so many, there’s no option but Joe Biden. The prospect of a second Trump presidency is too terrible to consider.

But until recently, I had allowed myself not to consider it. I believed, in some primitive, unjustifiable way, that it just couldn’t happen. That Americans will somehow come to their senses before Election Day.

I no longer think so. What this tells me is that Biden is so out of touch that he’s confused the campus of Columbia with mainstream American opinion. It’s an unforced and terrible error. It tells me the people around him—including his cabinet—are giving him awful advice. Neither he nor his advisors have properly understood how many Americans want to vomit when they see those spoiled, pampered, Hamas-loving campus imbeciles demanding “humanitarian aid”—for themselves. So they don’t get peckish during their sleepover parties with their little chums.

It’s not just the greasy-pole climbers like Elise Stefanik who feel this way. There’s a broad American center that cannot stand what we’ve recently seen emerging from these institutions. They will instinctively and immediately understand that Biden has decided to pander to them at the expense of our ally, and they will understand that in doing so, he has made us weaker. They may not be able to admit or articulate to themselves what causes them to stay home on Election Day. But it will be this—this, and our withdrawal from Afghanistan, our timidity in arming Ukraine, our misbegotten efforts to coax Iran back into a nuclear deal it clearly does not want. This—and Biden’s infernal mumbling, stuttering, and slurring. This—and the massive, coordinated information war that Russia and China will mount on Trump’s behalf. (There will be a hell of an October Surprise. I promise.) This, and the failure of our judiciary to swiftly put Trump behind bars— not for paying off a porn star, but for attempting a coup. All of this, together, is enough to win Trump reelection.

I have no idea how Biden made this decision, or why. How could he fail to appreciate that it’s the political kiss of death to be lauded by Ilhan Omar? Her words will be on GOP attack ads from now until Election Day.

In capitulating to his party’s loons and cranks, Biden has breathed life into a GOP argument that until now was easy to dismiss—viz., that the crackpots are secretly running his administration.

This is a disastrous headline for Joe Biden:

(The headline below is from a WBMA, an ABC news site in Birmingham, Alabama).

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., speaks at a rally outside an Amazon facility on Staten Island in New York, Sunday, April 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Here’s a new tweet by AOC, echoing the misguided claim that invading Rafah is a “red line”. What she doesn’t say it that crossing that line would make both Israel and the world safer.  In other words, AOC (and Biden) simply want Hamas to persist as the rulers of Gaza.

If AOC, Omar, and the other “squaddies” were in college, they’d be encamped.