Tipsheet

Harvard President Committed Another Gaffe While Attending Menorah Lighting Ceremony

Harvard President Claudine Gay is already in hot water over her horrifying answer in front of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce last week concerning whether calling for Jewish genocide violated the campus code of conduct regarding harassment. It’s already bad enough that she couldn’t condemn it, opting to say that everything must be taken in context. That’s liberal speak, for we endorse pro-Hamas propaganda. Gay wasn’t alone. UPenn’s Liz Magill and MIT’s Sally Kornbluth said similar things, though Magill was forced to resign over this public relations meltdown. Ms. Gay is also facing what appears to be a serious plagiarism scandal, but to suggest as much is racist: 


Harvard has announced that Gay won’t be fired or asked to step down. So, the school decided to keep its long and sordid history of enabling and promoting antisemitism alive. The Harvard president thought attending a menorah lighting ceremony could help smooth over her pro-terrorist trip-up on the Hill. She did apologize somewhat, but no one serious should buy this as a genuine act. Also, she used a tiki torch, which was probably not the best idea either. 


Using something popularized by white nationalists in Charlottesville who famously chanted “Jews will not replace us” is something that would happen on an uber-liberal campus where faculty and students accused Trump of being a Nazi for years. Now, these same folks are using the tiki torch, famously used by said proto-Nazis in Charlottesville, while harassing Jews on the street, making Jewish students fear for their lives, and targeting Jewish-owned businesses. Harvard, UPenn, MIT, and a host of other higher education institution has exposed themselves as pro-Hamas. And they’re brimming with students of all races and creeds who are supportive and calling for things that some Germans were calling for in the 1930s. That’s what happens when almost 25 percent of young Americans think that the Holocaust was a myth.