As expected, 66% of the members of the American Studies
Association voted to boycott Israel. (See yesterday’s post on the topic.)
Thereby the ASA has proved that they have become a radical
advocacy group, a group that, incidentally hates America.
Jonathan Marks wrote in the Wall Street Journal today:
Over a
decade ago, the sociologist Alan Wolfe wrote about the rise of a cohort of
American Studies scholars who had "developed a hatred for America so
visceral that it [made] one wonder why they [bothered] studying America at
all."
Marks continued to explain what the boycott was about:
Make no
mistake: Supporting the U.S. boycott campaign is not merely a way of
criticizing Israel or expressing solidarity with Palestinians. The campaign
calls for boycotting "Palestinian/Arab-Israeli collaborative research
projects or events." In other words, it actively discourages opportunities
for cooperation and mutual understanding. And while the campaign does not
condone a blacklist of Israeli academics, it does warn that "all academic
exchanges with Israeli academics do have the effect of normalizing Israel and
its politics of occupation and apartheid."
Obviously, the boycotters are far more radical than progressive Democratic politicians.
The Debka File reports:
New
York Rep. Eliot Engel, the most senior Democratic member on the House Foreign
Relations Committee, said: "I simply fail to see how cutting off ties to
Israeli universities furthers the interests of peace and coexistence,"
he said. "Ironically, many within the Israeli academic community
are strong and vocal proponents of peace -- and are simply being boycotted due
to their nationality and academic affiliation."
"I
would note that Israel is the first country to be boycotted by this academic
organization, which has chosen to stay silent on the slaughter in Syria, the
continued imprisonment of democracy activists in Iran, or the scores of other
dictatorships around the world," the congressman said. "Yet once
again we see this unfair double standard applied to Israel.”
What do members of the ASA have to say about that?
Debka adds:
One
member ASA member replied: "You have to start somewhere."
Anyone who believes that the ASA will now launch a boycott of the real enemies of freedom in this world should go back on his meds.
If you are going to start somewhere, wouldn’t it make sense to start at the top of the list of worst human-rights offenders, rather than at the middle? Suppose you were to, say, try to get your co-worker fired for tardiness, it would seem important to establish that this co-worker has arrived late more often than others. If you are campaigning to fire the cubicle-mate who arrived fifteen minutes late twice last week, rather than the other co-worker who missed the entire previous month of work for no reason, one might suspect an agenda is at work.]
can of peas, I think you belong living in a sewer with the rest of the ASA members who voted for this racist hateful boycott which goes against the ASA charter. I am glad you mentioned Mandela and sad that apparently none of the ASA members know how to read because if they did they would know what apartheid is and what it isn't and what Mandela said about Israel: “I understand completely well why Israel occupies these lands. There was a war.” and "I cannot conceive of Israel withdrawing if Arab states do not recognize Israel within secure borders.” credit to tendingcentral and Raheem Kassam. You lie.
ReplyDeleteThe best answer is:
ReplyDeleteWho cares what the American Studies Association thinks about anything?
I don't.
Tip
Keep in mind these people are teaching the next generation at America's finest universities.
ReplyDelete