Protesters will be crushed like Arab cockroaches under the feet of the US War Machine in Israel. |
There have been campus protests over the last 6 decades that dwarf the genocide in Gaza protests in size and disorder (Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images). |
Jewish Israelis against Bibi's war, for peace deal. |
About 2,500 arrests have been made as cops and university administrators try to save Jewish funding by appearing to crack down on protesters.
The widespread activism bears similarities to past student movements — but also key differences.
- Pacifica Radio’s Capitalism, Race & Democracy (capitalismraceanddemocracy.org)
- VIDEO: The Lobby, Part 1: Young Friends of Israel | Investigation | Al Jazeera
- Biden and Bibi odds again after US president dares to say Israeli PM not doing enough in ceasefire-hostage release talks
- CYBER WALL: Israeli spies infest social media firms
- The Lobby (TV series) on Israeli crimes on campus
- Netanyahu blasts 'despicable' burning of murderous IDF soldier in effigy | The Times of Israel
Come back soon, Friend. I need you dictator-to-dictator, felon-to-felon. You get me. |
I got your back, Bitch. - Uh, 'Bibi.' - What did I say? - You said 'Bitch.' - Right, whatever. |
Bibi the Baby Killer is backed by Blinken and US |
Law enforcement mostly stand by but university administrators attempt to quell the disorder, using paramilitary police departments to shut down encampments and scaring students by conducting mass arrests.
C'mon, I'm a good leader. Y'know you love it. |
As of Monday (Labor Day, Sept. 2, 2024), more than 2,500 people have been detained or arrested in connection with the protests, according to data collected by [the corrupt paper of record] The New York Times.
The recent spread of student activism has led some to compare it to major student movements over the US War on Vietnam and racist South African apartheid.
While the recent demonstrations are still ongoing after several weeks, they are still far from the scale and disorder of movements in recent decades.
- Protesters block Tel Aviv's Ayalon highway on Sept. 1, 2024, during an anti-government rally calling for the release of Israelis held hostage in Gaza (OREN ZIV/Getty Images).
Massive protests have erupted in Israel over the government's failure to secure a hostage deal.
Public outrage followed the discovery of six hostages' bodies in Gaza over the weekend.
Bibi's blood libel lying to the world and Israel |
A nationwide strike has caused disruptions to banks, schools, transportation, and hospitals.
Nearly 11 months have passed since the October 7 [Israeli set up to allow] Hamas [to] attack Israel [as a pretext for an invasion and genocide] that killed over 1,000 people and resulted in 251 hostages being seized, triggering a brutal revenge by Israel that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians [far more than have been officially reported, many of them innocent children, most of them buried under rubble and not being counted].
Now, public sentiment in Israel appears to have reached a breaking point, with strikes across the country.
"It's a mix of grief and anger," Niv Keidar, who helped to block a major intercity highway in Tel Aviv on Sunday night, told Business Insider.
He said the mood had resulted in hundreds of thousands of people taking to the streets all over Israel and making the demand: "There must be a deal that will bring back alive those people that are still possible to rescue."
"For a good time call Kamala" - Trump |
According to The Times of Israel, some 280,000 gathered in Tel Aviv overnight. Large protests also took place in Jerusalem and Ra'anana.
I promise whatever Trump promises: wall, war... |
Israel said an autopsy showed that the hostages had been shot at close range [because of encroaching IDF murderers increasing their abuses in new surges].
A group representing the hostages' families criticized Bibi Netanyahu's government, claiming the hostages could still be alive if a deal had been reached.
- Business Insider via MSN, 9/2/24; Shauna Schwartz, Pfc. Sandoval, Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
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