With all that is occurring in our political and cultural life, there are signs some Americans have had enough.
Google recently fired 28 employees from its New York and Sunnyvale, California, offices for protesting the company's cloud-computing contract with Israel. The reason given by the company's vice president for global security, Chris Rackow, as reported in The Wall Street Journal, was that the sacked employees "took over office spaces, defaced our property and physically impeded the work of other Googlers," violating company policies. They apparently aren't familiar with this sage advice: don't bite the hand that feeds you.
Another optimistic sign. Columbia University decided they had enough of protesters disrupting the campus and shouting antisemitic, anti-Israel and pro-Hamas slogans. Police were called and arrested 108 protesters who had set up shanty-like tent camps on school property. Columbia President Minouche Shafik said the occupiers posed a "clear and present danger to the substantial functioning of the University." After those arrests, more people joined the demonstrators, keeping students from attending class. All should be arrested and the violent and antisemitic ones expelled.
The definition of "student" ought to bring some humility to these don't-know-it-alls: "a person formally engaged in learning." For too long and in too many places - and not only on many college campuses - adults have ceded their leadership responsibilities to teenagers and twenty-somethings, too many of whom regurgitate what they have been told by leftist professors and friends on social media.
At Columbia, at least three tenured professors dispense propaganda about the history of the Middle East. The New York Post identified them: "Joseph Massad, a professor of modern Arab politics and history, has faced widespread calls to be fired ever since he referred to the Oct. 7 attack inflicted by Hamas terrorists (on Israel) as 'awesome.'"
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Mohamed Abdou, who is described on Columbia's website as "a North African-Egyptian Muslim anarchist interdisciplinary activist-scholar of Indigenous, Black, critical race and Islamic studies, as well as gender, sexuality, abolition and decolonization." Abdou declared on social media, "Yes, I'm with Hamas and Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad."
There is also Hamad Dabashi, a professor of Iranian studies. The Post reports Dabashi "has come under fire in recent years for a slew of controversial social media posts, including a since-deleted one in which he blamed Israel for every "dirty" problem in the world: "Every dirty treacherous ugly and pernicious happening in the world just wait for a few days and the ugly name 'Israel' will pop up in the atrocities,' Dabashi wrote in a 2018 Facebook post, cited by the Jewish Journal."
There are likely more professors with views like these at Columbia and elsewhere, but you get the picture.
It may be a generalization, but too many young people have been treated as though they were the font of all wisdom while older, wiser, and more experienced people have been sidelined and their views silenced. Few speak of responsibility or accountability for actions once deemed illegal, immoral, impractical, uninformed, duped and just plain stupid.
Students who take out big loans to learn propaganda and worthless subjects at too many universities now expect those loans to be forgiven at taxpayer expense.
When I flunked out after my freshman year at American University in Washington, my father said he wasn't going to pay the bills anymore. When I went back a year later and paid my own way a remarkable thing happened. My grades went up because I was now invested in my education and had to take responsibility for the outcome. I also paid back my student loan.
Let's hope that others follow the lead of Columbia's president and Google management and we stop wet nursing kids who for too long have demonstrated their ignorance and in some cases denounced America while reaping its benefits.