At the University of California at Settler Colonial --

UCSC for short. Friday my electronic mailbox received this message from the Chancellor of the University of California at Santa Cruz, no doubt sent to the entire Alumni Association:

Dear UC Santa Cruz Community,

I write this morning to share with you that after repeated unanswered calls to have the unlawful encampment voluntarily disband and remove the dangerous blockade from the campus entrance, we made the decision to request law enforcement to remove the blockade and encampment. Law enforcement removed the barricade and the encampment; however, some demonstrators remain at the main entrance of campus. We continue to ask the campus and the community to avoid that area.

You wouldn't want to be persuaded or anything dangerous like that.

We understand there is much grief, anger, and frustration about the events that continue to unfold in Gaza and Israel, and the immense suffering of innocent people. I believe that many who have engaged in these protests over these many weeks are well-intentioned and attempting to make change through their spheres of influence. Unfortunately, the disruptions we experienced these weeks were harmful to others in our community. This decision was not made because individuals demonstrated; it was because they have chosen to do so through unlawful actions.

You know, when I attended UCSC beginning in the Autumn of 1980, we were obliged to attend a core course. And one of the highlights of that core course was reading and discussing Thoreau's essay on civil disobedience. Perhaps if the Chancellor took that forty-year-old core course, she might catch up with UCSC's students, who would appear to have at least gotten something out of the text I read.

As for the grief and anger, much of it has to do with the genocide in Gaza and the fact that you, Ms. Chancellor, are complicit in it. Honesty might have compelled a different message out of you: "my Zionist trustees want to destroy the lives of those who speak up, so I'm doing this deed," or something like this. But this is not an era of honesty.

The road blockades, with fortified and chained barricades made of pallets and other materials, and other unlawful actions disrupted campus operations and threatened safety, including delaying access of emergency vehicles. We have attempted to avoid conflict or the involvement of law enforcement to address the encampment disruptions over the past month. We have consistently communicated to encampment organizers that campus safety and security are our highest priorities. In one particularly worrisome incident Tuesday, an emergency medical vehicle was prevented from entering a facility in which a toddler was in distress. Minutes and seconds can be the difference between life and death in an emergency. Actions such as this demonstrate a continued lack of regard for our campus community.

Genocide is okay, you see, because some story about a toddler "in distress." You could at least have negotiated past the one week you claim you spent on the matter.

Since the encampment began, first at the Quarry Plaza and then at the main entrance, participants have been given repeated, clear directions to address safety issues, cease camping and cease blocking access to numerous campus resources and to the campus itself. Early this morning, they were also given multiple warnings by law enforcement to leave the area and disband to avoid arrest. Unfortunately, many refused to follow this directive and a number of individuals were arrested.

Indeed, you and the IDF are "only doing your jobs." I wonder, where else have I read about that alibi? I think it was in the abovementioned core course. I won't say it out loud here.

Having law enforcement remove the unlawful encampment from campus is not an action we wanted to take or have taken lightly. For the past month, we have sought to de-escalate campus disruptions and road blockades, and encouraged the voluntary disbanding of the unlawful encampments. The individuals at the encampments have been repeatedly informed about the policies that their actions violated. They continued to ignore university directives, including those related to safety, and have sought conflict, actively escalating tensions within our campus community, harming those who are simply trying to learn, teach, and do their jobs in support of our educational mission.

It's so simple, you see. Unfortunately the educational mission means investing in genocide, which is to say, Israel.

Despite negotiating in good faith over the course of a full week when the encampment first began at the Quarry Plaza in an effort to reach its voluntary removal, we were unable to come to an agreement that was within our authority and aligned with the values of UC Santa Cruz.

So you stopped negotiating and issued an ultimatum to the protesters.

As the chancellor for the entire university, I must be firm when the demands of one group undermine the rights of others. In this case, the demonstrators demanded that we end relationships with organizations that support our Jewish students and funders that support important student success work and happen to be Jewish organizations. They demanded that UC Santa Cruz divest from and boycott companies affiliated with Israel, a demand that the UC Office of the President has already addressed and deemed unacceptable. Most worryingly, they demanded that we curtail the foundational right of academic freedom by condemning the use of funding from select federal agencies. Functionally, the encampment wanted to prevent our researchers from pursuing research related to topics with which they disagree. This is a dangerous precedent and to give in to it would undermine academic freedom and make our academic community vulnerable to the values of whatever political force seeks to prevent free inquiry.

As we have shared in previous messages, we continue to be ardent supporters of free speech. While some actions by individuals fall within First Amendment protection, many other activities over the past weeks did not, and should be called what they were: unlawful disruptions, vandalism, and intentional harming of our community. Because of this morning’s events, the campus community will continue to notice a higher presence of law enforcement on campus.

We know there will be disagreement about this decision and the steps taken to support campus safety. However, our ultimate responsibility is for the safety and well-being of this campus. It was a necessary decision at a critical time.

Sincerely,

Cindy

Cynthia Larive
Chancellor

Was refusing to negotiate further a "necessary decision at a critical time"?

At any rate, I visited the encampment at UCSC a few times when visiting the area. I suggested, to anyone there who would listen, a propaganda effort: one side of the leaflet would discuss BDS, the other side would discuss media with which one would find out the truth about Gaza. I have no idea if anything came of my efforts; I talked with different people each time I went to the Quarry entrance to discuss my proposal.

I am now at home, more than 400 miles away. If you want to find out what is happening to the encampment or encampments at UCSC, you may wish to peruse Keith McHenry's Facebook page. McHenry leaves us with:

‘This is not the end’: Pro-Palestinian demonstrators retake UC Santa Cruz entrance after 16-hour police standoff

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if only professionally.
planning on being in the quarry (my favorite place, at least before it deteriorated so much)
on June 23rd.
Hope nothing interferes with that.

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Cassiodorus's picture

@kelly Or maybe the question is, "who cares?" The education business has become a cruel farce. Is the role of a chancellor to make sure that it is that cruel farce?

As I pointed out to the encampment people (or, rather, whomever would listen), there is no "media committee" in a Gaza encampment. The WHOLE THING is a media production, and EVERYONE is in charge of media. The point of a Gaza encampment is to give the system a "mask off" movement, and to force the chancellors to reveal themselves as the pieces of work that they in fact are.

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The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.

@Cassiodorus @Cassiodorus far as I know, they greet the incoming freshman who make the trek down there on that first night. Other than that, take good care of their friends and lovers.

I am proud they have the backs of the victims of this slaughter.
Ashamed of my own limitations back when.
Sitting on a lawn boycotting class in opposition to constructive engagement was not much of an offering. Especially since there were no repercussions to doing so.
It felt inconsequential.
I would BDS those fuckers all day, from the river to the sea, these days.
cheap talk.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

At any rate, I visited the encampment at UCSC a few times when visiting the area. I suggested, to anyone there who would listen, a propaganda effort: one side of the leaflet would discuss BDS, the other side would discuss media with which one would find out the truth about Gaza. I have no idea if anything came of my efforts....

.
I lean toward publishing, when it comes to getting things done and making changes.

Once human groups had a written language and some literacy — only then did organized, complex civilization really become possible. A measure of independence also became possible for individuals and artists. And the concept that people could shape a future into something different, better, freeing, and expanding was born. Could a planned future could sever itself from the bondage, and patterns, the laws and superstitions, and the classes and unhelpful customs of the past? With the rise of literacy, the planned future became both a hope for humankind, and a threat to established powers and the priesthood, which enjoyed a stranglehold over literacy, imagination, enlightenment, and change. The two sides have been been fighting over it ever since. The genocide in Gaza is at the crux of the issue — it is the icon of the deadly battle between the forced Rules and mighty gods of the Past and the creation of a better future for humanity that has been marginalized, oppressed, and excluded.

Everyone should be busy writing down their own experiences of this time. The combined feelings of humans who experienced the social evolution are more powerful than any academic history-telling.

Western Civilization is frantically banning information, cutting down the connections between people, things, and ideas — and burying inconvenient political and moral histories in unmarked graves. Thus, the West seems to be headed into another Dark Age of economic and intellectual suppression. That's a very large cycle to predict with accuracy, however, the contrast between the social values that are held by the West, and those that are emerging in the global South as it rapidly develops, points to divergence. The Global South aspires to replace conflict with consensus and achieve a shared prosperity for the benefit of the People. The Western model creates massive wealth for the select few and economic security for those with a substantial stock portfolio, and shared hardship for the lower classes, especially for those who cannot afford to buy their own Human Rights, such as affordable housing, health care, a complete education for modern employment, and child care and family leave for working parents.

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next @Pluto's Republic twenty to thirty
years or so then we’ll drop
completely back beyond the
stone age since Very few
know how to make something
to be able to make Anything
else

humans might get lucky?

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Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .

Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .

If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march

The Liberal Moonbat's picture

@Tall Bald and Ugly It'd explain a LOT about religion and mythology, wouldn't it???

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In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man is declared mentally ill for describing colors.

Yes Virginia, there is a Global Banking Conspiracy!

Cassiodorus's picture

@Pluto's Republic it is only because an alternative to US hegemony appears on the horizon in the form of BRICS, and that the US and the various CIA-nominated "leaders" of Europe are busy destroying their own advantages through pointless war.

The actual lesson to be derived from all this is likely to be something along the lines of "build lots of defenses against the US and you will succeed." BRICS promises the world not ecotopia, but rather a less extortionate capitalism which is (and which will be) still nonetheless capitalism.

Perhaps all of this activity is a prelude to a postcapitalist world order. But that has yet to be shown.

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The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.