FreeSpeech &mdash; Fight Back! News https://fightbacknews.org/tag:FreeSpeech News and Views from the People's Struggle Fri, 28 Mar 2025 10:33:27 +0000 https://i.snap.as/RZCOEKyz.png FreeSpeech &mdash; Fight Back! News https://fightbacknews.org/tag:FreeSpeech New Orleans unites to defend campuses from Trump and stop repression against students https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-unites-to-defend-campuses-from-trump-and-stop-repression-against?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Hakm Murad, an activist from Palestinian Youth Movement New Orleans, speaks to the press in front of Tulane University’s barricaded lawn. New Orleans, LA – On Wednesday, March 19, a broad group of activists congregated at Tulane University for a press conference. The groups presented an open letter addressed to the administrations of all local universities demanding they protect students, staff and faculty from the White House’s recent slew of attacks against college campuses. They demanded protections for immigrants, freedom of speech and DEI programs. !--more-- “We are united in our commitment to justice, human dignity and freedom,” said Hakm Murad of the Palestinian Youth Movement. The letter also calls for universities to demand the immediate release of pro-Palestine activists and New York ‘s Columbia University students Mahmoud Khalil and Leqaa Kordia, and that students be protected from any similar violations by the Department of Homeland Security and the Trump administration. Mahmoud Khalil continues to be held in an ICE detention center at Jena, Louisiana. Washington DC’s Georgetown University researcher Badar Khan Suri was also detained by ICE and sent to a detention facility in Alexandria, Louisiana. Suri’s detention is a continuation of Trump’s stated goals of targeting and deporting pro-Palestinian students and faculty at universities. Tulane and Loyola University's repression of student activists since last year has given the solidarity movement for Khalil particular urgency. Tulane complied with new directives from the White House and shut down the school’s DEI office. But student activists bravely stood up to defend DEI. In reaction, the university arrested (and later released) one activist due to a pro-DEI sign on her backpack. Also, minutes before the March 19 press conference, several Tulane student protesters received notice that they were under investigation by administration. “It is no coincidence the emails were sent out right as we were set to raise awareness about Tulane’s cowardly compliance with the racist Trump agenda and its attacks on students’ freedom of speech at this press conference,” said Maya Sanchez, a former Tulane student, reading a statement written by local members of Students for a Democratic Society. Tulane alumni and member of New Orleans for Community Oversight of Police Vonne Burton added, “DEI programs were won by students during the Civil Rights Movement, any student who defends it today should be applauded, not arrested.” The open letter circulated by the New Orleans for Palestine Coalition has received notable public support. Signatories include multiple contenders for the upcoming city council elections, as well as current council member and mayoral candidate, Oliver Thomas. The organizations say they are continuing to urge Louisiana’s U.S. Representative Troy Carter, and the remaining members of the city council to sign on and take action to defend local campuses. #NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #SDS div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Hakm Murad, an activist from Palestinian Youth Movement New Orleans, speaks to the press in front of Tulane University’s barricaded lawn.

New Orleans, LA – On Wednesday, March 19, a broad group of activists congregated at Tulane University for a press conference. The groups presented an open letter addressed to the administrations of all local universities demanding they protect students, staff and faculty from the White House’s recent slew of attacks against college campuses. They demanded protections for immigrants, freedom of speech and DEI programs.

“We are united in our commitment to justice, human dignity and freedom,” said Hakm Murad of the Palestinian Youth Movement.

The letter also calls for universities to demand the immediate release of pro-Palestine activists and New York ‘s Columbia University students Mahmoud Khalil and Leqaa Kordia, and that students be protected from any similar violations by the Department of Homeland Security and the Trump administration. Mahmoud Khalil continues to be held in an ICE detention center at Jena, Louisiana. Washington DC’s Georgetown University researcher Badar Khan Suri was also detained by ICE and sent to a detention facility in Alexandria, Louisiana. Suri’s detention is a continuation of Trump’s stated goals of targeting and deporting pro-Palestinian students and faculty at universities.

Tulane and Loyola University's repression of student activists since last year has given the solidarity movement for Khalil particular urgency. Tulane complied with new directives from the White House and shut down the school’s DEI office. But student activists bravely stood up to defend DEI.

In reaction, the university arrested (and later released) one activist due to a pro-DEI sign on her backpack. Also, minutes before the March 19 press conference, several Tulane student protesters received notice that they were under investigation by administration.

“It is no coincidence the emails were sent out right as we were set to raise awareness about Tulane’s cowardly compliance with the racist Trump agenda and its attacks on students’ freedom of speech at this press conference,” said Maya Sanchez, a former Tulane student, reading a statement written by local members of Students for a Democratic Society.

Tulane alumni and member of New Orleans for Community Oversight of Police Vonne Burton added, “DEI programs were won by students during the Civil Rights Movement, any student who defends it today should be applauded, not arrested.”

The open letter circulated by the New Orleans for Palestine Coalition has received notable public support. Signatories include multiple contenders for the upcoming city council elections, as well as current council member and mayoral candidate, Oliver Thomas. The organizations say they are continuing to urge Louisiana’s U.S. Representative Troy Carter, and the remaining members of the city council to sign on and take action to defend local campuses.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #SDS

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https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-unites-to-defend-campuses-from-trump-and-stop-repression-against Mon, 24 Mar 2025 20:19:09 +0000
Second Palestinian student activist at Columbia University detained by Homeland Security https://fightbacknews.org/second-palestinian-student-activist-at-columbia-university-detained-by-homeland?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Minneapolis, MN - A second Palestinian student protester at Columbia University, Leqaa Kordia, has been detained by Department of Homeland Security agents. She is an international student on a student visa and comes from the Palestinian West Bank. Similar to Mahmoud Khalil, the Palestinian student detained last week despite having a permanent legal status, she played a role in the pro-Palestine student protests at Columbia, including the Hind's Hall building occupation. !--more-- Authorities claim that this is normal protocol related to her visa status. That is not true. It is part of a pattern of repression that includes Khalil's case, and the investigations carried out by Trump's Task Force to Combat Antisemitism. These arrests come hot on the heels of the university suspending or expelling 22 students at Columbia University. Emergency campus protests to "Free Mahmoud Khalil" are underway across the U.S. 1000 students walked out on Tuesday in New York City alone. More protests are springing up. "It's political repression of campus activists who want to use their free speech to talk about Palestine, plain and simple," said Erin Boyle, the vice president of national Students for a Democratic Society. "Trump promised deportations of Palestinian and pro-Palestine students to quench the movement, and now he's trying to deliver. But it won't work. As long as the student movement is alive and Israel occupies Palestinian land, we will never be silent." #MinneapolisMN #MN #StudnetMovement #AntiWarMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #MahmoudKhalil #LeqaaKorida div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Minneapolis, MN – A second Palestinian student protester at Columbia University, Leqaa Kordia, has been detained by Department of Homeland Security agents. She is an international student on a student visa and comes from the Palestinian West Bank.

Similar to Mahmoud Khalil, the Palestinian student detained last week despite having a permanent legal status, she played a role in the pro-Palestine student protests at Columbia, including the Hind's Hall building occupation.

Authorities claim that this is normal protocol related to her visa status. That is not true. It is part of a pattern of repression that includes Khalil's case, and the investigations carried out by Trump's Task Force to Combat Antisemitism. These arrests come hot on the heels of the university suspending or expelling 22 students at Columbia University.

Emergency campus protests to “Free Mahmoud Khalil” are underway across the U.S. 1000 students walked out on Tuesday in New York City alone. More protests are springing up.

“It's political repression of campus activists who want to use their free speech to talk about Palestine, plain and simple,” said Erin Boyle, the vice president of national Students for a Democratic Society. “Trump promised deportations of Palestinian and pro-Palestine students to quench the movement, and now he's trying to deliver. But it won't work. As long as the student movement is alive and Israel occupies Palestinian land, we will never be silent.”

#MinneapolisMN #MN #StudnetMovement #AntiWarMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #MahmoudKhalil #LeqaaKorida

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https://fightbacknews.org/second-palestinian-student-activist-at-columbia-university-detained-by-homeland Sat, 15 Mar 2025 11:31:37 +0000
MN: Halimy Hall hearing outcome announced, suspensions dropped! Major win for the students https://fightbacknews.org/mn-halimy-hall-hearing-outcome-announced-suspensions-dropped-major-win-for?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[ Fight Back News Service is circulating the following statement from UMN Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). On March 10, after 10 days of deliberation, the University of Minnesota’s panel for the disciplinary hearing of the students arrested during the occupation of Halimy Hall decided that the student protestors were found not responsible for the unjust charges of violation of local, state or federal laws, theft, property damage, and vandalism because of the absolute lack of evidence. !--more-- The sanctions decided by the panelists involve a one-year disciplinary probation, 40 hours of community service, prohibition of entry to Morrill Hall for one year, and a restorative justice resolution that will involve writing a letter to the Morrill Hall employees impacted by the protest and engaging in a listening circle with them. All students were offered a restorative justice option instead of punitive justice. The dropping of suspensions and restitutions, as well as the panel finding the protestors not guilty on a majority of the initial Student Code violations, is a huge win for pro-Palestinian student activism. The panel also notably found the protestors not guilty of violating local, state, or federal laws, further delineating the illegitimacy of the current bogus felony charges on protestor Robyn Harbison. This is especially meaningful coming after Rebecca Cunningham’s most recent email to the university body, stating that the university will fully comply with the Anti-Defamation League’s investigation into anti-semitism on the university campus. We are in a moment of increased political repression and fear, people are becoming afraid to use their voice to protest the injustices around them. In this moment, it is especially vital that we keep standing up and protesting Trump’s attacks and that we keep fighting for Palestinian liberation. The hearing results constitute a major victory for the entire student movement, but we must keep fighting against the repression that is rampant on campuses across the country, especially following the kidnapping of Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil by ICE. We will continue to stand up and support all protesters facing unjust repression because as long as our University or country remains complicit in genocide it is our duty to fight back. While the University and Rebecca Cunningham continue to preemptively appeal to Zionist bodies and Trump’s increasingly repressive executive orders, the students and the pro-Palestine movement stand strong. When placed under the intense scrutiny of a proper legal procedure and the strong support of the community to back the students, the university’s case crumbled due to a lack of evidence. Despite every effort to harass and intimidate the students into a guilty verdict, the university’s attempt to capitulate to Zionism failed. During an era of heightened repression for student activists, including the involuntary detainment of pro-Palestinian foreign student activists by the Department of Homeland Security, it is vitally important for students to continue showing up to fight for Palestine and to fight for their fellow students. As we continue to see increased repression against people’s movements at large, we must remember to stay loud about our repression because this victory was only possible thanks to the tireless struggle of the students and the community at large. We will continue to struggle against all political repression and for a free Palestine! Dare to struggle! Dare to win! #MinneapolisMN #MN #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS #Statement div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]>

Fight Back News Service is circulating the following statement from UMN Students for a Democratic Society (SDS).

On March 10, after 10 days of deliberation, the University of Minnesota’s panel for the disciplinary hearing of the students arrested during the occupation of Halimy Hall decided that the student protestors were found not responsible for the unjust charges of violation of local, state or federal laws, theft, property damage, and vandalism because of the absolute lack of evidence.

The sanctions decided by the panelists involve a one-year disciplinary probation, 40 hours of community service, prohibition of entry to Morrill Hall for one year, and a restorative justice resolution that will involve writing a letter to the Morrill Hall employees impacted by the protest and engaging in a listening circle with them. All students were offered a restorative justice option instead of punitive justice.

The dropping of suspensions and restitutions, as well as the panel finding the protestors not guilty on a majority of the initial Student Code violations, is a huge win for pro-Palestinian student activism. The panel also notably found the protestors not guilty of violating local, state, or federal laws, further delineating the illegitimacy of the current bogus felony charges on protestor Robyn Harbison. This is especially meaningful coming after Rebecca Cunningham’s most recent email to the university body, stating that the university will fully comply with the Anti-Defamation League’s investigation into anti-semitism on the university campus.

We are in a moment of increased political repression and fear, people are becoming afraid to use their voice to protest the injustices around them. In this moment, it is especially vital that we keep standing up and protesting Trump’s attacks and that we keep fighting for Palestinian liberation. The hearing results constitute a major victory for the entire student movement, but we must keep fighting against the repression that is rampant on campuses across the country, especially following the kidnapping of Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil by ICE. We will continue to stand up and support all protesters facing unjust repression because as long as our University or country remains complicit in genocide it is our duty to fight back.

While the University and Rebecca Cunningham continue to preemptively appeal to Zionist bodies and Trump’s increasingly repressive executive orders, the students and the pro-Palestine movement stand strong. When placed under the intense scrutiny of a proper legal procedure and the strong support of the community to back the students, the university’s case crumbled due to a lack of evidence. Despite every effort to harass and intimidate the students into a guilty verdict, the university’s attempt to capitulate to Zionism failed.

During an era of heightened repression for student activists, including the involuntary detainment of pro-Palestinian foreign student activists by the Department of Homeland Security, it is vitally important for students to continue showing up to fight for Palestine and to fight for their fellow students. As we continue to see increased repression against people’s movements at large, we must remember to stay loud about our repression because this victory was only possible thanks to the tireless struggle of the students and the community at large.

We will continue to struggle against all political repression and for a free Palestine!

Dare to struggle!

Dare to win!

#MinneapolisMN #MN #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS #Statement

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https://fightbacknews.org/mn-halimy-hall-hearing-outcome-announced-suspensions-dropped-major-win-for Tue, 11 Mar 2025 22:18:30 +0000
New Orleans: Loyola University students rally against political repression of student activist Carson Cruse https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-loyola-university-students-rally-against-political-repression-of?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Students hold a banner in front of Loyola University that reads "Defend student free speech, Protesting is not a crime." New Orleans, LA – On Thursday, February 20, around 30 Loyola students and New Orleans community members rallied in front of Loyola University to demand that university administration drop the semester-long suspension of student activist Carson Cruse. The action was organized by the Liberate and Unite New Orleans chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (LUNO SDS). !--more-- At the rally, the crowd chanted slogans such as “We want justice, you say how? Drop the suspension now!” and “Hold that line, yeah hold that line! Hold that line for student rights!” Cruse was set to graduate in May, but if his suspension is maintained, he will be set back from graduating for another six months, if not longer. Cruse told the crowd, “We understand that students will get absolutely nothing that we are not willing and organized to take. Through protracted campaigns and direct action, we can unite around our common needs as students to demand administration do their jobs for once!” Several current and former students at Loyola gave speeches. Nat Arredondo with LUNO SDS pointed out that the resources used to prosecute Cruse could have been better spent on stopping sexual abuse. “Since my freshman year I have lived in the same dorms as sexual abusers, I have watched friends come out with disgusting testimonies that the administration heard and punished them for. But the abuser? They get to walk free,” stated Arredondo. Loyola University administration issued Cruse’s suspension after he was reported for giving a public comment at a board meeting for the Port of New Orleans. His comment was part of an ongoing campaign by a local organization, New Orleans Stop Helping Israel’s Ports (NOSHIP), to demand the port stop sending weapons and aid to Israel. The woman who reported Carson’s comment, Sharonda Williams, is both on the board of the Port of New Orleans and a lawyer for Loyola University. Before her report, Cruse had been on academic probation due to his involvement in the Tulane University encampment for Palestine in April 2024. Under the terms of his probation, one more strike against him meant he would face suspension or full expulsion from Loyola. Near the end of the rally, the protesters picketed and blocked the entrance to the school until they were shut down by the university police. #NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Students hold a banner in front of Loyola University that reads "Defend student free speech, Protesting is not a crime."

New Orleans, LA – On Thursday, February 20, around 30 Loyola students and New Orleans community members rallied in front of Loyola University to demand that university administration drop the semester-long suspension of student activist Carson Cruse. The action was organized by the Liberate and Unite New Orleans chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (LUNO SDS).

At the rally, the crowd chanted slogans such as “We want justice, you say how? Drop the suspension now!” and “Hold that line, yeah hold that line! Hold that line for student rights!”

Cruse was set to graduate in May, but if his suspension is maintained, he will be set back from graduating for another six months, if not longer.

Cruse told the crowd, “We understand that students will get absolutely nothing that we are not willing and organized to take. Through protracted campaigns and direct action, we can unite around our common needs as students to demand administration do their jobs for once!”

Several current and former students at Loyola gave speeches. Nat Arredondo with LUNO SDS pointed out that the resources used to prosecute Cruse could have been better spent on stopping sexual abuse. “Since my freshman year I have lived in the same dorms as sexual abusers, I have watched friends come out with disgusting testimonies that the administration heard and punished them for. But the abuser? They get to walk free,” stated Arredondo.

Loyola University administration issued Cruse’s suspension after he was reported for giving a public comment at a board meeting for the Port of New Orleans. His comment was part of an ongoing campaign by a local organization, New Orleans Stop Helping Israel’s Ports (NOSHIP), to demand the port stop sending weapons and aid to Israel.

The woman who reported Carson’s comment, Sharonda Williams, is both on the board of the Port of New Orleans and a lawyer for Loyola University. Before her report, Cruse had been on academic probation due to his involvement in the Tulane University encampment for Palestine in April 2024. Under the terms of his probation, one more strike against him meant he would face suspension or full expulsion from Loyola.

Near the end of the rally, the protesters picketed and blocked the entrance to the school until they were shut down by the university police.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression

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https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-loyola-university-students-rally-against-political-repression-of Fri, 21 Feb 2025 16:23:55 +0000
Louisiana State University students rally against firing of law professor over free speech https://fightbacknews.org/louisiana-state-university-students-rally-against-firing-of-law-professor-over?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Louisiana State University students stand up for free speech. Baton Rouge, LA - On Tuesday January 28, about 20 students gathered in front of Louisiana State University (LSU) Law Center to demand the university reinstate Professor Ken Levy. Levy was suspended for criticizing Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry and explaining Trump’s presidency would have implications for certain amendments to the constitution during one of his lectures. Professor Levy’s attorney, Jill Craft, explained Levy revealed he was a Democrat and expressed a dislike for Trump. However, Craft believed Levy said nothing to warrant suspension. !--more-- Students stood on the steps of LSU’s law center holding signs that read “Leave Levy alone!” and “Protect free speech!” while listening to Kristen Graham-Winkles, a current student of Professor Levy, speak. “This is the second time in just two semesters that a professor has faced reprimand for nothing more than expressing a progressive viewpoint,” said Graham-Winkles, referring to a similar incident that resulted in the Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry publicly demanding LSU take action against law Professor Nicholas Bryner. Bryner expressed his dislike for Landry and Trump, and the university moved to launch an investigation that is still ongoing. The news of Levy’s suspension was met with outrage from students who had taken his courses. Peach Hadley, a former law student of Professor Levy, said, “The truth is, Professor Levy and I didn’t always agree politically. But that was the thing about Levy. He didn’t care. He genuinely, out loud, encouraged students to express opinions that those students knew he might not agree with.” Graham-Winkles stated, “Political conformity is being demanded, intellectual diversity is being crushed, and dissent is being punished. How valuable is admission and graduation from an institution that is unabashedly taking these actions?” The rally at LSU’s Law Center was followed by a student-led march to the president’s office to hand-deliver a petition demanding Professor Levy’s reinstatement, a public apology, and full transparency on the investigation. The petition had collected over 750 signatures in just five days. As the crowd of students approached the office, LSU Police Department could be seen barricading the doors. One law student attempted to enter the building to hand the petition to the front desk but was denied. The crowd began to chant “Shame on LSU!” and “Let him hand in the petition!” Winston DeCuir, vice president of Legal Affairs and the general counsel for LSU, exited the building to greet the students, saying, “As law students, I actually think it’s important that you voice your opinion and speak out. I remember being a student myself and engaging in similar activities. I will definitely deliver this to the president.” Two days later, a Louisiana district judge ordered LSU to reinstate Levy through a temporary restraining order lasting from January 30 till February 10. This will allow Professor Levy to return to his position and prohibits LSU from taking any action against him. Decuir, LSU VP of Legal Affairs who had taken the student’s petition, submitted his letter of resignation after being asked to leave by the university. Professor Levy’s reinstatement, although temporary, demonstrates the importance of struggling against administration and proved that LSU students are capable of winning their demands. Students are prepared to continue to fight any attacks on free speech the university will throw their way. #BatonRougeLA #LA #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech #Trump div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Louisiana State University students stand up for free speech.

Baton Rouge, LA – On Tuesday January 28, about 20 students gathered in front of Louisiana State University (LSU) Law Center to demand the university reinstate Professor Ken Levy.

Levy was suspended for criticizing Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry and explaining Trump’s presidency would have implications for certain amendments to the constitution during one of his lectures.

Professor Levy’s attorney, Jill Craft, explained Levy revealed he was a Democrat and expressed a dislike for Trump. However, Craft believed Levy said nothing to warrant suspension.

Students stood on the steps of LSU’s law center holding signs that read “Leave Levy alone!” and “Protect free speech!” while listening to Kristen Graham-Winkles, a current student of Professor Levy, speak.

“This is the second time in just two semesters that a professor has faced reprimand for nothing more than expressing a progressive viewpoint,” said Graham-Winkles, referring to a similar incident that resulted in the Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry publicly demanding LSU take action against law Professor Nicholas Bryner. Bryner expressed his dislike for Landry and Trump, and the university moved to launch an investigation that is still ongoing.

The news of Levy’s suspension was met with outrage from students who had taken his courses. Peach Hadley, a former law student of Professor Levy, said, “The truth is, Professor Levy and I didn’t always agree politically. But that was the thing about Levy. He didn’t care. He genuinely, out loud, encouraged students to express opinions that those students knew he might not agree with.”

Graham-Winkles stated, “Political conformity is being demanded, intellectual diversity is being crushed, and dissent is being punished. How valuable is admission and graduation from an institution that is unabashedly taking these actions?”

The rally at LSU’s Law Center was followed by a student-led march to the president’s office to hand-deliver a petition demanding Professor Levy’s reinstatement, a public apology, and full transparency on the investigation. The petition had collected over 750 signatures in just five days. As the crowd of students approached the office, LSU Police Department could be seen barricading the doors.

One law student attempted to enter the building to hand the petition to the front desk but was denied. The crowd began to chant “Shame on LSU!” and “Let him hand in the petition!” Winston DeCuir, vice president of Legal Affairs and the general counsel for LSU, exited the building to greet the students, saying, “As law students, I actually think it’s important that you voice your opinion and speak out. I remember being a student myself and engaging in similar activities. I will definitely deliver this to the president.”

Two days later, a Louisiana district judge ordered LSU to reinstate Levy through a temporary restraining order lasting from January 30 till February 10. This will allow Professor Levy to return to his position and prohibits LSU from taking any action against him. Decuir, LSU VP of Legal Affairs who had taken the student’s petition, submitted his letter of resignation after being asked to leave by the university.

Professor Levy’s reinstatement, although temporary, demonstrates the importance of struggling against administration and proved that LSU students are capable of winning their demands. Students are prepared to continue to fight any attacks on free speech the university will throw their way.

#BatonRougeLA #LA #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech #Trump

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https://fightbacknews.org/louisiana-state-university-students-rally-against-firing-of-law-professor-over Sun, 02 Feb 2025 01:15:46 +0000
Minneapolis: Pretrial hearing packed, demanding charges be dropped against campus pro-Palestine protester https://fightbacknews.org/minneapolis-pretrial-hearing-packed-demanding-charges-be-dropped-against?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Protesters pack pretrial hearing demanding felony charge against pro-Palestine protest be dropped. Minneapolis, MN - On January 17, supporters held a press conference and packed the room for Robyn Harbison’s pre-trial hearing. He is currently facing a fourth degree felony assault charge after his arrest alongside ten other protestors at the occupation of Morrill Hall at the University of Minnesota. The University of Minnesota Students for a Democratic Society (UMN SDS) was protesting the university’s continued refusal to divest from Israel. Protesters renamed the building to Halimy Hall, after Palestinian student killed by Israel in August 2023. !--more-- At the press conference after the rally, several speakers from organizations in the Twin Cities , such as UMN SDS, Minnesota Abortion Action Committee, and Women Against Military Madness spoke out against the unjust political repression being faced by the arrestees, most of whom are current students at the University of Minnesota. Jess Sundin from Twin Cities Coalition for Justice said about the police response to the Halimy Hall protest, “It is the job of the police to uphold the current status quo. They are violently arresting students, throwing them to the ground and setting bogus charges against them,” adding that the police and the system, “have a vested interest in continuing the genocide.” Harbison’s trial date has been set for May 5. #MinneapolisMN #MN #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #Palestine #SDS #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Protesters pack pretrial hearing demanding felony charge against pro-Palestine protest be dropped.

Minneapolis, MN – On January 17, supporters held a press conference and packed the room for Robyn Harbison’s pre-trial hearing. He is currently facing a fourth degree felony assault charge after his arrest alongside ten other protestors at the occupation of Morrill Hall at the University of Minnesota. The University of Minnesota Students for a Democratic Society (UMN SDS) was protesting the university’s continued refusal to divest from Israel. Protesters renamed the building to Halimy Hall, after Palestinian student killed by Israel in August 2023.

At the press conference after the rally, several speakers from organizations in the Twin Cities , such as UMN SDS, Minnesota Abortion Action Committee, and Women Against Military Madness spoke out against the unjust political repression being faced by the arrestees, most of whom are current students at the University of Minnesota.

Jess Sundin from Twin Cities Coalition for Justice said about the police response to the Halimy Hall protest, “It is the job of the police to uphold the current status quo. They are violently arresting students, throwing them to the ground and setting bogus charges against them,” adding that the police and the system, “have a vested interest in continuing the genocide.”

Harbison’s trial date has been set for May 5.

#MinneapolisMN #MN #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #Palestine #SDS #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/minneapolis-pretrial-hearing-packed-demanding-charges-be-dropped-against Sun, 19 Jan 2025 23:46:08 +0000
Panel in Donaldsonville discusses defending the right to protest under Trump https://fightbacknews.org/panel-in-donaldsonville-discusses-defending-the-right-to-protest-under-trump?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Panelists at anti-repression events speak at Rosenwald School in Donaldsonville , Louisiana. Donaldsonville, LA - At 1 p.m. on Saturday, January 11, about 20 people huddled together in the former Rosenwald School for African American children. The building is now part of the River Road African American Museum and hosted a panel titled, “Defending our Right to Protest.” Attendees came to hear about how to defend our movements from political attacks. Participants drove in from the host town of Donaldsonville and surrounding cities of New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette. !--more-- Panelist Tuere Burns from Bar None by Design, a nonprofit that supports Black individuals and families impacted by incarceration, spoke about her past as a survivor of police brutality and her work as an organizer for political prisoners. “This wasn’t about individual police,” Burns stated. “This was about the police as a racist institution.” Toni Jones, the chair of New Orleans for Community Oversight of the Police agreed. “Everywhere Black people are taking the lead in fighting for their rights the police are there to repress them,” she said. Juleea Berthelot, of Liberate and Unite New Orleans Students for a Democratic Society (LUNO SDS) and a student at Loyola University of New Orleans, stated, “We can’t do marches, rallies, even educational events on campus. So, we moved off campus. Now they’re saying we can’t do anything off campus either, or we’ll be suspended.” Colin Leonard, a member of the Louisiana National Lawyers Guild, also saw political violence on the rise, stating, “The New Orleans Police Department has historically treated protests like a second line. That has begun to change in relation to the protests for Palestine.” Leonard also spoke about what you can do before arrests happen, stating, “We train people to be legal observers, to take detailed notes on what the police are doing in case anyone gets arrested or the police violate our rights. It can be anyone, not just lawyers.” The panel also provided attendees with concrete steps to take in case of arrest. “Planned political arrests are an important tool, but you have to be prepared,” said Juleea Berthelot. Toni Jones spoke about her own arrest at a protest of Tulane University in March of 2024, stating, “It’s really important to pressure the jail from the moment that people are arrested. That looks like jail support, going to the jail in person, and call-ins.” Remarking on the success of political defense, Jones said, “They were convinced I wasn’t gonna get out of there, I had the orange jumpsuit on and everything. But what political defense does is it lets us take the initiative. I got out that night and was back in the movement.” Juleea Berthelot also spoke about their trial after their arrest at the Loyola and Tulane encampment last May, stating, “We packed the courts for every court date. At my trial, people were taking turns waiting in the hallway so everyone got a chance to sit in the courtroom with us.” Berthelot also gave advice on how to build up to court appearances, stating, “You need to be out there and be public about it. Lawyers will tell you not to, but you need to put a face and a name to your case because it characterizes it for people. And you are a person, you’re a part of a community that is under attack.” Participants concluded by discussing how important it is to unite the movements for change, especially considering the upcoming Martin Luther King Jr. Day. This panel will be the first of a series hosted by the museum. #DonaldsonvilleLA #LA #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Panelists at anti-repression events speak at Rosenwald School in Donaldsonville , Louisiana.

Donaldsonville, LA – At 1 p.m. on Saturday, January 11, about 20 people huddled together in the former Rosenwald School for African American children. The building is now part of the River Road African American Museum and hosted a panel titled, “Defending our Right to Protest.”

Attendees came to hear about how to defend our movements from political attacks. Participants drove in from the host town of Donaldsonville and surrounding cities of New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Lafayette.

Panelist Tuere Burns from Bar None by Design, a nonprofit that supports Black individuals and families impacted by incarceration, spoke about her past as a survivor of police brutality and her work as an organizer for political prisoners. “This wasn’t about individual police,” Burns stated. “This was about the police as a racist institution.”

Toni Jones, the chair of New Orleans for Community Oversight of the Police agreed. “Everywhere Black people are taking the lead in fighting for their rights the police are there to repress them,” she said.

Juleea Berthelot, of Liberate and Unite New Orleans Students for a Democratic Society (LUNO SDS) and a student at Loyola University of New Orleans, stated, “We can’t do marches, rallies, even educational events on campus. So, we moved off campus. Now they’re saying we can’t do anything off campus either, or we’ll be suspended.”

Colin Leonard, a member of the Louisiana National Lawyers Guild, also saw political violence on the rise, stating, “The New Orleans Police Department has historically treated protests like a second line. That has begun to change in relation to the protests for Palestine.”

Leonard also spoke about what you can do before arrests happen, stating, “We train people to be legal observers, to take detailed notes on what the police are doing in case anyone gets arrested or the police violate our rights. It can be anyone, not just lawyers.”

The panel also provided attendees with concrete steps to take in case of arrest. “Planned political arrests are an important tool, but you have to be prepared,” said Juleea Berthelot.

Toni Jones spoke about her own arrest at a protest of Tulane University in March of 2024, stating, “It’s really important to pressure the jail from the moment that people are arrested. That looks like jail support, going to the jail in person, and call-ins.”

Remarking on the success of political defense, Jones said, “They were convinced I wasn’t gonna get out of there, I had the orange jumpsuit on and everything. But what political defense does is it lets us take the initiative. I got out that night and was back in the movement.”

Juleea Berthelot also spoke about their trial after their arrest at the Loyola and Tulane encampment last May, stating, “We packed the courts for every court date. At my trial, people were taking turns waiting in the hallway so everyone got a chance to sit in the courtroom with us.”

Berthelot also gave advice on how to build up to court appearances, stating, “You need to be out there and be public about it. Lawyers will tell you not to, but you need to put a face and a name to your case because it characterizes it for people. And you are a person, you’re a part of a community that is under attack.”

Participants concluded by discussing how important it is to unite the movements for change, especially considering the upcoming Martin Luther King Jr. Day. This panel will be the first of a series hosted by the museum.

#DonaldsonvilleLA #LA #InJusticeSystem #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/panel-in-donaldsonville-discusses-defending-the-right-to-protest-under-trump Thu, 16 Jan 2025 21:57:03 +0000
Loyola University suspends student for exercising free speech https://fightbacknews.org/loyola-university-suspends-student-for-exercising-free-speech?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[ Fight Back News Service is circulating the Liberate and Unite New Orleans Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) statement on the suspension of Carson Cruse. On December 13, Loyola University student and SDS member Carson Cruse was suspended for speaking at the Port of New Orleans public hearing in October. Carson was there supporting New Orleans Stop Helping Israel’s Ports (NOSHIP) and their demands which included that New Orleans stop shipping arms to Israel, ends its ties to the Port of Ashdod in Israel, and to suspend its contracts with entities that do business with Israel, i.e. Møller-Mærsk. !--more-- During his time speaking, Carson called out Sharonda Williams, Loyola’s General Counsel and a member of the Port of New Orleans Board, for punishing protesters and supporting the genocide as a member of the board. As retaliation, Williams reported Carson to Loyola for allegedly “promoting an unregistered student organization.” This is yet another blatantly obvious attack on student free speech as Loyola attempts to quell our opposition to the genocide in Palestine. This code of conduct report resulted in Carson’s suspension from Loyola and banning from campus until May of 2025, when he was set to graduate. Carson was previously on probation for attending the Popular University for Gaza encampment, where he was arrested but subsequently found not guilty on all charges. Despite the not guilty verdict, Loyola upheld his disciplinary probation feeling as though they are above the law. Sharonda Williams’ position as a port board member shows that Loyola and administrators of Loyola have very direct ties to Israel. Loyola giving their students sanctions and suspensions for speaking out against Loyola’s ties to genocide is a clear sign of administrative overreach and free speech suppression. SDS stands for free of speech and demands that Loyola immediately reinstate Carson Cruse and drop all current sanctions on students for Palestine activism. #NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #Palestine #AntiWar div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]>

Fight Back News Service is circulating the Liberate and Unite New Orleans Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) statement on the suspension of Carson Cruse.

On December 13, Loyola University student and SDS member Carson Cruse was suspended for speaking at the Port of New Orleans public hearing in October. Carson was there supporting New Orleans Stop Helping Israel’s Ports (NOSHIP) and their demands which included that New Orleans stop shipping arms to Israel, ends its ties to the Port of Ashdod in Israel, and to suspend its contracts with entities that do business with Israel, i.e. Møller-Mærsk.

During his time speaking, Carson called out Sharonda Williams, Loyola’s General Counsel and a member of the Port of New Orleans Board, for punishing protesters and supporting the genocide as a member of the board. As retaliation, Williams reported Carson to Loyola for allegedly “promoting an unregistered student organization.”

This is yet another blatantly obvious attack on student free speech as Loyola attempts to quell our opposition to the genocide in Palestine.

This code of conduct report resulted in Carson’s suspension from Loyola and banning from campus until May of 2025, when he was set to graduate.

Carson was previously on probation for attending the Popular University for Gaza encampment, where he was arrested but subsequently found not guilty on all charges. Despite the not guilty verdict, Loyola upheld his disciplinary probation feeling as though they are above the law.

Sharonda Williams’ position as a port board member shows that Loyola and administrators of Loyola have very direct ties to Israel. Loyola giving their students sanctions and suspensions for speaking out against Loyola’s ties to genocide is a clear sign of administrative overreach and free speech suppression.

SDS stands for free of speech and demands that Loyola immediately reinstate Carson Cruse and drop all current sanctions on students for Palestine activism.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #Palestine #AntiWar

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https://fightbacknews.org/loyola-university-suspends-student-for-exercising-free-speech Tue, 07 Jan 2025 21:10:34 +0000
Tampa, FL: Pro-Palestine students file Title VI complaint against USF https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-fl-pro-palestine-students-file-title-vi-complaint-against-usf?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Tampa, FL - On Tuesday, December 17, Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) held a press conference to announce a Title VI complaint against the University of South Florida had been filed, to demand that USF reverse the expulsion of Tampa Bay SDS, and to defend the right to protest the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Members of a local organization, the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, attended the press conference and gave statements in solidarity with Tampa Bay SDS. !--more-- “It is clear that political repression at USF is directly tied to our support and activism around Palestine and DEI initiatives. While we are filing this with the Office of Civil Rights, we know that the power lies in the hands of the people,” said Connor Jaap of Tampa Bay SDS in a statement read out to the gathering. The complaint was filed through the Office of Civil Rights in response to the University of South Florida discriminating against Palestinians and pro-Palestine solidarity, a direct violation of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964. The USF administration, including Rhea Law, Danielle McDonald, and Will Weatherford, have continuously retaliated and fostered a hostile environment against Palestinians and pro-Palestine student activists, including members of Tampa Bay SDS. Tampa Bay SDS demands that USF reverse the expulsion of Tampa Bay SDS, and reinstate Tampa Bay SDS as an official registered student organization, remedy the direct harm that the USF administration has caused students by reversing any expulsion, suspension and conduct charges against Tampa Bay SDS members, disclose all investments and divest from all companies that are connected to the Israeli Zionist state, and to drop policy 6-028, a policy that is specifically retaliatory, anti-Palestinian and anti-SDS. Tampa Bay SDS will continue to organize around the Title VI and its developments and around the ongoing struggle against USF administration and their continuous and political repression directed at the Palestinian cause. #TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #AntiWarMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Tampa, FL – On Tuesday, December 17, Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) held a press conference to announce a Title VI complaint against the University of South Florida had been filed, to demand that USF reverse the expulsion of Tampa Bay SDS, and to defend the right to protest the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Members of a local organization, the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, attended the press conference and gave statements in solidarity with Tampa Bay SDS.

“It is clear that political repression at USF is directly tied to our support and activism around Palestine and DEI initiatives. While we are filing this with the Office of Civil Rights, we know that the power lies in the hands of the people,” said Connor Jaap of Tampa Bay SDS in a statement read out to the gathering.

The complaint was filed through the Office of Civil Rights in response to the University of South Florida discriminating against Palestinians and pro-Palestine solidarity, a direct violation of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964. The USF administration, including Rhea Law, Danielle McDonald, and Will Weatherford, have continuously retaliated and fostered a hostile environment against Palestinians and pro-Palestine student activists, including members of Tampa Bay SDS.

Tampa Bay SDS demands that USF reverse the expulsion of Tampa Bay SDS, and reinstate Tampa Bay SDS as an official registered student organization, remedy the direct harm that the USF administration has caused students by reversing any expulsion, suspension and conduct charges against Tampa Bay SDS members, disclose all investments and divest from all companies that are connected to the Israeli Zionist state, and to drop policy 6-028, a policy that is specifically retaliatory, anti-Palestinian and anti-SDS.

Tampa Bay SDS will continue to organize around the Title VI and its developments and around the ongoing struggle against USF administration and their continuous and political repression directed at the Palestinian cause.

#TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #AntiWarMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-fl-pro-palestine-students-file-title-vi-complaint-against-usf Sat, 21 Dec 2024 14:05:12 +0000
New Orleans Municipal Court dismisses charges against two Gaza encampment protesters https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-municipal-court-dismisses-charges-against-two-gaza-encampment?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[A police officer arresting a protester. New Orleans, LA - About 25 people filled the benches at Municipal Court, December 12, to witness proceedings against two protesters from the Tulane-Loyola University Gaza encampment, which took place this past spring. These Palestine solidarity activists faced misdemeanors for trespassing and resisting arrest. The court dismissed both charges without trial for one of them, Brenna Byrne, because the Tulane University Police Department (TUPD) witness didn’t show up. !--more-- Attendants watched closely as the second protester, a Students for a Democratic Society member and Tulane student, stood trial. Tulane’s attorney, William Barr, was present for the trial and was seen speaking privately with the prosecutor. Two TUPD officers sat beside him – Lieutenant Johnny Miller, in uniform, and Sargeant Vincent Silva, in plain clothes. A hearing began at 2:15 p.m. The defense made several motions, with the court granting only its motion to exclude evidence. This was essentially a request for any evidence not previously obtained by the defense to be excluded from the trial. The motion was important because the defense had not obtained videos from city crime cameras and Tulane security cameras. TUPD is obligated to provide these videos under its Cooperative Endeavor Agreement with the New Orleans Police Department. The defense argued that this implied an “adverse presumption,” meaning Tulane either destroyed or withheld evidence that hurt their case. After the motions hearing, both sides made opening statements. The prosecution argued that the defendant trespassed onto Tulane’s campus during an “unsanctioned protest.” “She was asked to leave, but did not leave,” he claimed. He also argued that she had resisted arrest. The defense attorney’s response was twofold. First, he argued that, as a Tulane student, the defendant had no reason to think she wasn’t allowed on campus. Second, even if she had resisted, which the defense did not concede, any Louisiana resident has the right to resist an unlawful arrest. This is a precedent established by the state’s Supreme Court, in Monroe v. Ducas and New Orleans v. Lyons. The attorney also noted that a horse ridden by NOPD Mounted Patrol kicked the defendant during the arrest. The prosecution only called one witness, Lt. Miller. During direct examination, Miller testified to having ordered the student to leave. As evidence, the city attorney introduced body camera footage, in which he simply identified the defendant in the corner of a frame. During cross examination, the defense exposed that Miller did not capture any oral warning or struggle with the defendant on his body-worn camera. He appeared to have no knowledge of any “conspicuous signage” warning against trespassing, as required by Louisiana Revised Statute 14:63 in the absence of a vocal or written notice. Miller also testified to the protest having taken place around 6 p.m. on April 29, 2024, which contradicted his arrest report, dated 2:27p.m. that same day. During closing arguments, the defense attorney concluded that the Tulane student had every right to be present on her own campus. He also reiterated that an unfounded trespassing charge automatically voids the resisting charge, because a Louisiana resident has every right to resist an unlawful arrest. The judge found the defendant not guilty on both counts. Both defendants celebrated outside the courthouse after the trial. This victory came after a long political defense campaign, in which protesters regularly called the city attorney and rallied outside the courthouse to demand dropping the charges. Six more encampment protesters are scheduled for trial on trumped-up charges, including one facing felony resisting an officer with force. #NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> A police officer arresting a protester.

New Orleans, LA – About 25 people filled the benches at Municipal Court, December 12, to witness proceedings against two protesters from the Tulane-Loyola University Gaza encampment, which took place this past spring. These Palestine solidarity activists faced misdemeanors for trespassing and resisting arrest. The court dismissed both charges without trial for one of them, Brenna Byrne, because the Tulane University Police Department (TUPD) witness didn’t show up.

Attendants watched closely as the second protester, a Students for a Democratic Society member and Tulane student, stood trial.

Tulane’s attorney, William Barr, was present for the trial and was seen speaking privately with the prosecutor. Two TUPD officers sat beside him – Lieutenant Johnny Miller, in uniform, and Sargeant Vincent Silva, in plain clothes.

A hearing began at 2:15 p.m. The defense made several motions, with the court granting only its motion to exclude evidence. This was essentially a request for any evidence not previously obtained by the defense to be excluded from the trial. The motion was important because the defense had not obtained videos from city crime cameras and Tulane security cameras. TUPD is obligated to provide these videos under its Cooperative Endeavor Agreement with the New Orleans Police Department. The defense argued that this implied an “adverse presumption,” meaning Tulane either destroyed or withheld evidence that hurt their case.

After the motions hearing, both sides made opening statements. The prosecution argued that the defendant trespassed onto Tulane’s campus during an “unsanctioned protest.”

“She was asked to leave, but did not leave,” he claimed. He also argued that she had resisted arrest.

The defense attorney’s response was twofold. First, he argued that, as a Tulane student, the defendant had no reason to think she wasn’t allowed on campus. Second, even if she had resisted, which the defense did not concede, any Louisiana resident has the right to resist an unlawful arrest. This is a precedent established by the state’s Supreme Court, in Monroe v. Ducas and New Orleans v. Lyons. The attorney also noted that a horse ridden by NOPD Mounted Patrol kicked the defendant during the arrest.

The prosecution only called one witness, Lt. Miller. During direct examination, Miller testified to having ordered the student to leave. As evidence, the city attorney introduced body camera footage, in which he simply identified the defendant in the corner of a frame.

During cross examination, the defense exposed that Miller did not capture any oral warning or struggle with the defendant on his body-worn camera. He appeared to have no knowledge of any “conspicuous signage” warning against trespassing, as required by Louisiana Revised Statute 14:63 in the absence of a vocal or written notice. Miller also testified to the protest having taken place around 6 p.m. on April 29, 2024, which contradicted his arrest report, dated 2:27p.m. that same day.

During closing arguments, the defense attorney concluded that the Tulane student had every right to be present on her own campus. He also reiterated that an unfounded trespassing charge automatically voids the resisting charge, because a Louisiana resident has every right to resist an unlawful arrest. The judge found the defendant not guilty on both counts.

Both defendants celebrated outside the courthouse after the trial. This victory came after a long political defense campaign, in which protesters regularly called the city attorney and rallied outside the courthouse to demand dropping the charges. Six more encampment protesters are scheduled for trial on trumped-up charges, including one facing felony resisting an officer with force.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #StudentMovement #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-municipal-court-dismisses-charges-against-two-gaza-encampment Mon, 16 Dec 2024 17:27:27 +0000
Orlando, FL: SDS Week of Actions a success https://fightbacknews.org/orlando-fl-sds-week-of-actions-a-success?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Orlando, FL – From November 18 -26 students at the University of Central Florida (UCF) participated in a week of action that featured multiple protests for Palestine, and an observance of the Trans Day of Remembrance. !--more-- The actions included week-long study-in hosted by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in collaboration with the UCF Divestment Coalition, and UCF Young Democratic-Socialists of America (YDSA). The goal of the study-in was to build the presence of the pro-Palestinian student movement among the UCF student body while also building momentum for a November 26 rally against the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity’s trumped-up conduct charges against UCF student Chris Gibson for protesting against Israel’s genocide of Palestine. Study-in: Monday November 18 Students began the study-in at 8:30 by taping signs to the library tables and chairs, as well as laying out educational material, promotional flyers, and Palestinian flags to hand out to students passing by or wanting to join in. The signs contained several slogans, such as “While we are studying, ‘Israel’ is committing genocide” and “UCF divest from death.” At its height on most days, the study-in was made up of 12-15 students, and went as late as 6 p.m. On the second day of the study-in, a UCF police officer approached the studying demonstrators, saying the taped signs were “improperly attached” to the library tables and chairs and then threatened a student with charges of criminal mischief after the student informed the officer that they were busy because they were studying. The officer walked to a nearby hallway, where students studying nearby noticed the cops’ presence. Several students passing by then talked with the protesters and joined the study-in, asking if the officer was bothering them. The officer soon left. After this police interaction, the study-in was approached by a single member of UCF administration, Dr. Kerry Welch, the vice president of Student Engagement and Leadership Development. He informed the student protesters that he had received complaints they were taping signs to university property, after which the students proceeded to tape the signs to their laptops and re-attach the signs to their chairs without the use of tape. Students and community members collectively wrote about 30 letters demanding the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity drop their conduct charges against UCF student and member of SDS and the Divestment Coalition, Chris Gibson. Speakout - November 19 On Tuesday, November 19, UCF SDS held a speak-out and tabling session in collaboration with the UCF Divestment Coalition at the Student Union for a National Day of Action called by National Students for a Democratic Society for Trans Day of Remembrance. Jay Ialongo spoke on behalf of UCF SDS, stating, “Every day it seems we are slowly struggling back to a time before we had the rights that our elders fought so hard for.” Ialongo went to say, “Our schools make it harder for us to even use the restroom, with anti-trans bathroom policies running rampant throughout colleges across the state, including here at UCF, giving trans students Code of Conduct charges just for having to take a piss.” Mass meeting and panel - Thursday, November 21 On Thursday. November 21, UCF YDSA hosted a mass meeting and panel featuring speakers from UCF YDSA, SDS, Divestment Coalition, and Central Florida Students for Justice in Palestine. Students packed the classroom with an audience of over 30 attendees. The meeting was started off with the panel speakers each answering questions about their experiences organizing for Palestine on campus, what their organizations’ reactions to the recent presidential election were, and what organizing on UCF campus will look like in the future. Afterwards the panel was opened up to an open audience discussion with the majority of attendees participating. UCF YDSA has recently begun a divestment referendum campaign, collecting signatures to make disclosure and divestment from weapon manufacturers profiting off of Israel’s genocide in Palestine a votable action for the next campus election cycle. UCF SDS and the Divestment Coalition were able to collect over 30 signatures through the study-in, contributing to UCF YDSA’s grand total of over 400 petitions signed, out of a required amount of 750. Rally and march - November 25 The study-in on Monday, November 25, ended at 1 p.m. to join a rally and march called by the UCF Palestinian Student Association. The march had between 30 and 40 students who marched around the Student Union chanting slogans including “From the river to the sea. Palestine will be free” and “UCF, what do you say? How many kids did you kill today?” A heavy police presence of at least 10 or 15 officers on bicycles escorted and maintained a perimeter around the student protests as they marched twice around the student union. Drop the charges against Chris Gibson rally - November 26 On November 26, UCF SDS mobilized students to the Ferrell Commons, where Chris Gibson’s “formal panel hearing” was taking place, to demand the charges against Gibson be dropped. At the rally Vanessa Christaldi of UCF SDS stated, “ We know that Chris has not broken any rules, that Chris is simply one of the many people that have spoken up against our university, our city, and our country’s support of Israel’s genocide. An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.” Christaldi continued, “The university is unjustly punishing us because they want to protect their financial interests, and we must show them now more than ever that we will continue to push for disclosure and divestment.”. During the rally, passing students signed petitions for divestment. Chris Gibson is currently facing one felony and one misdemeanor charge for protesting October 7 against Israel’s genocide of Palestine. Gibson is being charged with one count of battery against a police officer and one count of resisting arrest without violence. While Gibson is still waiting for those charges to be filed, the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity (SCAI) decided to pursue code of conduct violations against Gibson. The formal panel hearing consisted of a panel of two faculty members and two students (picked by SCAI) who listen to testimony given by the student facing charges, and any witnesses called by SCAI and/or the student. While the arresting officer and officer alleging the original battery charges against Gibson were originally tasked to give witness testimony, the only witness to actually appear at the formal panel hearing was Marcus Polzer, an organizer with UCF SDS and the Divestment Coalition, who witnessed the Orlando Police Department’s brutal arrest of Gibson at Orlando City Hall. After each witness gives a testimony of their account of the events, the panel is then able to question the student and witnesses, after which the charged student may give a closing statement, and the panel deliberates. Upon reaching an agreement, the panel sends their findings to the director of SCAI, Ryan Iocco, who has the final authority to approve or deny the findings of the panel. The director of SCAI only has to explain their rationale if they rule against the findings of the panel. Chris Gibson is still waiting to hear back from SCAI, as his formal panel hearing date was set for November 26, the day before UCF campuses close for Thanksgiving break. Gibson’s original felony and misdemeanor charges are still not filed, and he is still awaiting to be granted access to the state’s evidence. #OrlandoFL #FL #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #SDS div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Orlando, FL – From November 18 -26 students at the University of Central Florida (UCF) participated in a week of action that featured multiple protests for Palestine, and an observance of the Trans Day of Remembrance.

The actions included week-long study-in hosted by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in collaboration with the UCF Divestment Coalition, and UCF Young Democratic-Socialists of America (YDSA). The goal of the study-in was to build the presence of the pro-Palestinian student movement among the UCF student body while also building momentum for a November 26 rally against the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity’s trumped-up conduct charges against UCF student Chris Gibson for protesting against Israel’s genocide of Palestine.

Study-in: Monday November 18

Students began the study-in at 8:30 by taping signs to the library tables and chairs, as well as laying out educational material, promotional flyers, and Palestinian flags to hand out to students passing by or wanting to join in. The signs contained several slogans, such as “While we are studying, ‘Israel’ is committing genocide” and “UCF divest from death.” At its height on most days, the study-in was made up of 12-15 students, and went as late as 6 p.m.

On the second day of the study-in, a UCF police officer approached the studying demonstrators, saying the taped signs were “improperly attached” to the library tables and chairs and then threatened a student with charges of criminal mischief after the student informed the officer that they were busy because they were studying.

The officer walked to a nearby hallway, where students studying nearby noticed the cops’ presence. Several students passing by then talked with the protesters and joined the study-in, asking if the officer was bothering them. The officer soon left.

After this police interaction, the study-in was approached by a single member of UCF administration, Dr. Kerry Welch, the vice president of Student Engagement and Leadership Development. He informed the student protesters that he had received complaints they were taping signs to university property, after which the students proceeded to tape the signs to their laptops and re-attach the signs to their chairs without the use of tape.

Students and community members collectively wrote about 30 letters demanding the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity drop their conduct charges against UCF student and member of SDS and the Divestment Coalition, Chris Gibson.

Speakout – November 19

On Tuesday, November 19, UCF SDS held a speak-out and tabling session in collaboration with the UCF Divestment Coalition at the Student Union for a National Day of Action called by National Students for a Democratic Society for Trans Day of Remembrance.

Jay Ialongo spoke on behalf of UCF SDS, stating, “Every day it seems we are slowly struggling back to a time before we had the rights that our elders fought so hard for.”

Ialongo went to say, “Our schools make it harder for us to even use the restroom, with anti-trans bathroom policies running rampant throughout colleges across the state, including here at UCF, giving trans students Code of Conduct charges just for having to take a piss.”

Mass meeting and panel – Thursday, November 21

On Thursday. November 21, UCF YDSA hosted a mass meeting and panel featuring speakers from UCF YDSA, SDS, Divestment Coalition, and Central Florida Students for Justice in Palestine. Students packed the classroom with an audience of over 30 attendees. The meeting was started off with the panel speakers each answering questions about their experiences organizing for Palestine on campus, what their organizations’ reactions to the recent presidential election were, and what organizing on UCF campus will look like in the future. Afterwards the panel was opened up to an open audience discussion with the majority of attendees participating.

UCF YDSA has recently begun a divestment referendum campaign, collecting signatures to make disclosure and divestment from weapon manufacturers profiting off of Israel’s genocide in Palestine a votable action for the next campus election cycle.

UCF SDS and the Divestment Coalition were able to collect over 30 signatures through the study-in, contributing to UCF YDSA’s grand total of over 400 petitions signed, out of a required amount of 750.

Rally and march – November 25

The study-in on Monday, November 25, ended at 1 p.m. to join a rally and march called by the UCF Palestinian Student Association. The march had between 30 and 40 students who marched around the Student Union chanting slogans including “From the river to the sea. Palestine will be free” and “UCF, what do you say? How many kids did you kill today?”

A heavy police presence of at least 10 or 15 officers on bicycles escorted and maintained a perimeter around the student protests as they marched twice around the student union.

Drop the charges against Chris Gibson rally – November 26

On November 26, UCF SDS mobilized students to the Ferrell Commons, where Chris Gibson’s “formal panel hearing” was taking place, to demand the charges against Gibson be dropped.

At the rally Vanessa Christaldi of UCF SDS stated, “ We know that Chris has not broken any rules, that Chris is simply one of the many people that have spoken up against our university, our city, and our country’s support of Israel’s genocide. An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.”

Christaldi continued, “The university is unjustly punishing us because they want to protect their financial interests, and we must show them now more than ever that we will continue to push for disclosure and divestment.”. During the rally, passing students signed petitions for divestment.

Chris Gibson is currently facing one felony and one misdemeanor charge for protesting October 7 against Israel’s genocide of Palestine. Gibson is being charged with one count of battery against a police officer and one count of resisting arrest without violence. While Gibson is still waiting for those charges to be filed, the UCF Office of Student Conduct and Academic Integrity (SCAI) decided to pursue code of conduct violations against Gibson.

The formal panel hearing consisted of a panel of two faculty members and two students (picked by SCAI) who listen to testimony given by the student facing charges, and any witnesses called by SCAI and/or the student.

While the arresting officer and officer alleging the original battery charges against Gibson were originally tasked to give witness testimony, the only witness to actually appear at the formal panel hearing was Marcus Polzer, an organizer with UCF SDS and the Divestment Coalition, who witnessed the Orlando Police Department’s brutal arrest of Gibson at Orlando City Hall.

After each witness gives a testimony of their account of the events, the panel is then able to question the student and witnesses, after which the charged student may give a closing statement, and the panel deliberates. Upon reaching an agreement, the panel sends their findings to the director of SCAI, Ryan Iocco, who has the final authority to approve or deny the findings of the panel. The director of SCAI only has to explain their rationale if they rule against the findings of the panel. Chris Gibson is still waiting to hear back from SCAI, as his formal panel hearing date was set for November 26, the day before UCF campuses close for Thanksgiving break. Gibson’s original felony and misdemeanor charges are still not filed, and he is still awaiting to be granted access to the state’s evidence.

#OrlandoFL #FL #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #SDS

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https://fightbacknews.org/orlando-fl-sds-week-of-actions-a-success Thu, 12 Dec 2024 12:47:33 +0000
USF students and supporters rally for free speech https://fightbacknews.org/usf-students-and-supporters-rally-for-free-speech?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Students in Tampa rally for freedom of speech. | Fight Back! News/staff Tampa, FL - On Monday, November 25, a group of students and community members held a rally to demand free speech on campus. The University of South Florida’s (USF) administration continues to deny students the right to free speech and assembly, with police saying they cannot hold events or even leaflet. !--more-- The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) are demanding that USF stop the repression and drop USF policy 6-028. This new policy, introduced by the USF administration in the summer, puts limits on campus events, requires administration approval of protests, bans bake sales, and launches other attacks on students’ free speech. In particular the students are demanding the right to protest the U.S./Israel genocide in Gaza. Students chanted, “When the student movement is under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back!” Signs read, “Protect free speech on campus” and a banner reading, “Defend student protests for Palestine.” This rally was organized after the formal university hearings for Saba Indawala and another student, who were both placed on interim suspension after an October 1 “Defend Free Speech on Campus” rally. In a victory to the student movement in Tampa Bay, both of their interim suspensions were lifted, allowing them to return to campus. Members from Tampa Bay SDS, as well as the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, spoke out against the policies, the repression and the violence that the USF administration continues to enact on student activists. #TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Students in Tampa rally for freedom of speech.  | Fight Back! News/staff

Tampa, FL – On Monday, November 25, a group of students and community members held a rally to demand free speech on campus. The University of South Florida’s (USF) administration continues to deny students the right to free speech and assembly, with police saying they cannot hold events or even leaflet.

The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) are demanding that USF stop the repression and drop USF policy 6-028. This new policy, introduced by the USF administration in the summer, puts limits on campus events, requires administration approval of protests, bans bake sales, and launches other attacks on students’ free speech.

In particular the students are demanding the right to protest the U.S./Israel genocide in Gaza.

Students chanted, “When the student movement is under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back!”

Signs read, “Protect free speech on campus” and a banner reading, “Defend student protests for Palestine.”

This rally was organized after the formal university hearings for Saba Indawala and another student, who were both placed on interim suspension after an October 1 “Defend Free Speech on Campus” rally. In a victory to the student movement in Tampa Bay, both of their interim suspensions were lifted, allowing them to return to campus.

Members from Tampa Bay SDS, as well as the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, spoke out against the policies, the repression and the violence that the USF administration continues to enact on student activists.

#TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #FreeSpeech #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS

]]>
https://fightbacknews.org/usf-students-and-supporters-rally-for-free-speech Sat, 30 Nov 2024 23:55:18 +0000
Tampa students rally, update community in fight for free speech on campus https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-rally-update-community-in-fight-for-free-speech-on-campus?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Tampa, FL – On November 8, Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society, along with community members and students, rallied in defense of free speech on campus, after facing repression by the University of South Florida (USF) and not being allowed to host events on campus. !--more-- More than a dozen people gathered to call for code of conduct charges to be dropped on student protesters like Saba Indawala, who was temporarily suspended by USF for being an SDS member, and SDS members Kinsey Dyal, Vicky Tong, and Daniel Mendez, who were hit with conduct charges three weeks after attempting to protest on campus on October 1. Protesters rallied with the slogans “Defend the right to protest the genocide in Gaza,” “Stop the suspension of Saba Indawala,” “Drop the conduct charges on student protesters” and “Down with policy 6-028,” a new policy introduced by USF’s administration in the summer that puts limits on campus events, requires administration approval of protests, bans bake sales, and launches other attacks on students’ free speech. USF SDS member Vicky Tong stated, “All three of us were interrogated, and they were trying to force us to say we were not affiliated with SDS, and they said that if we were, we would have to go through a formal hearing. They manipulated all of us into giving answers the USF administration wanted to hear.” Tong also explained how administration forced Kinsey Dyal to choose between a hearing advisor and an accessibility officer, and after choosing an accessibility officer, instead of aiding them, the officer interrogated and pressured them into giving certain answers. Thankfully, the protesters were told only to write essays as punishment, but not before having been mocked and bullied by the USF administration. Other organizations which shared statements included Freedom Road Socialist Organization and the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, which stood in solidarity with student protesters and with Tampa Bay SDS, chanting: “USF shame on you, student voices matter too!” #TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #SDS #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #Palestine div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Tampa, FL – On November 8, Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society, along with community members and students, rallied in defense of free speech on campus, after facing repression by the University of South Florida (USF) and not being allowed to host events on campus.

More than a dozen people gathered to call for code of conduct charges to be dropped on student protesters like Saba Indawala, who was temporarily suspended by USF for being an SDS member, and SDS members Kinsey Dyal, Vicky Tong, and Daniel Mendez, who were hit with conduct charges three weeks after attempting to protest on campus on October 1.

Protesters rallied with the slogans “Defend the right to protest the genocide in Gaza,” “Stop the suspension of Saba Indawala,” “Drop the conduct charges on student protesters” and “Down with policy 6-028,” a new policy introduced by USF’s administration in the summer that puts limits on campus events, requires administration approval of protests, bans bake sales, and launches other attacks on students’ free speech.

USF SDS member Vicky Tong stated, “All three of us were interrogated, and they were trying to force us to say we were not affiliated with SDS, and they said that if we were, we would have to go through a formal hearing. They manipulated all of us into giving answers the USF administration wanted to hear.”

Tong also explained how administration forced Kinsey Dyal to choose between a hearing advisor and an accessibility officer, and after choosing an accessibility officer, instead of aiding them, the officer interrogated and pressured them into giving certain answers. Thankfully, the protesters were told only to write essays as punishment, but not before having been mocked and bullied by the USF administration.

Other organizations which shared statements included Freedom Road Socialist Organization and the Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression, which stood in solidarity with student protesters and with Tampa Bay SDS, chanting: “USF shame on you, student voices matter too!”

#TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #SDS #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #Palestine

]]>
https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-rally-update-community-in-fight-for-free-speech-on-campus Tue, 12 Nov 2024 01:02:14 +0000
Palestine activists protest student repression; city council introduces solidarity resolution https://fightbacknews.org/palestine-activists-to-protest-student-repression-city-council-introduces?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Minneapolis protest against repression aimed at campus pro Palestine activists. | Meredith Aby/Fight Back! News Minneapolis, MN - On November 8, the Twin Cities-based Free Palestine Coalition rallied outside Hennepin County Government Center in support of student arrestees who face both university disciplinary action and potential criminal charges for protest action. !--more-- The arrests took place on October 21, when campus community members occupied Morrill Hall at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Demands included UMN divestment from companies complicit in the Gaza genocide and severing ties with Israeli universities. Occupiers renamed the building “Halimy Hall,” after Medo Halimy, a Gazan Palestinian student who was murdered by Israeli forces in August. Eleven individuals were arrested and jailed for allegedly participating in the occupation. Among those, UMN alumni Robyn Harbinson, faces fourth degree assault charges. Other students detained face potential suspensions, evictions from on-campus housing, and other repressive measures pending disciplinary hearings - as well as the looming possibility of criminal charges from prosecutors. Protesters demanded that Hennepin County and the city of Minneapolis decline to pursue charges against any of the arrestees, and that the University of Minnesota revoke all punishments for students. Minneapolis City Council Member Robin Wonsley, representing Ward 2, where many UMN students live, spoke at the rally and told the crowd she recently introduced a resolution titled, “Expressing solidarity with nonviolent campus activism opposing war and supporting Palestinian human rights, and urging no charges be filed against protestors arrested at the University of Minnesota on October 21, 2024.” The draft resolution points out that in January 2024, Minneapolis city council passed a ceasefire resolution aligning with many of the same goals as the student protesters’ demands. It also notes a historic 1970 occupation of Morrill Hall by Black students, and a similar movement in the 1970s and ‘80s that ultimately won university divestment from apartheid South Africa. Wonsley announced that the resolution will be discussed at the December 3 city council meeting and she invited the Palestine solidarity movement to come to the meeting to show support for the resolution. “These attacks on campus protests show that the political repression many commentators have accused the incoming Trump administration of planning, is in fact already here,” said Wyatt Miller, a member of the MN Anti-War Committee. “Now that the election is over, it’s crucial to keep focus on the movement against the U.S./ Israeli genocide in Palestine, including these brave student protesters, who history will no doubt absolve.” #MinneapolisMN #MN #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #Palestine #AntiWarMovement #SDS div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Minneapolis protest against repression aimed at campus pro Palestine activists.  | Meredith Aby/Fight Back! News

Minneapolis, MN – On November 8, the Twin Cities-based Free Palestine Coalition rallied outside Hennepin County Government Center in support of student arrestees who face both university disciplinary action and potential criminal charges for protest action.

The arrests took place on October 21, when campus community members occupied Morrill Hall at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Demands included UMN divestment from companies complicit in the Gaza genocide and severing ties with Israeli universities. Occupiers renamed the building “Halimy Hall,” after Medo Halimy, a Gazan Palestinian student who was murdered by Israeli forces in August.

Eleven individuals were arrested and jailed for allegedly participating in the occupation. Among those, UMN alumni Robyn Harbinson, faces fourth degree assault charges. Other students detained face potential suspensions, evictions from on-campus housing, and other repressive measures pending disciplinary hearings – as well as the looming possibility of criminal charges from prosecutors.

Protesters demanded that Hennepin County and the city of Minneapolis decline to pursue charges against any of the arrestees, and that the University of Minnesota revoke all punishments for students.

Minneapolis City Council Member Robin Wonsley, representing Ward 2, where many UMN students live, spoke at the rally and told the crowd she recently introduced a resolution titled, “Expressing solidarity with nonviolent campus activism opposing war and supporting Palestinian human rights, and urging no charges be filed against protestors arrested at the University of Minnesota on October 21, 2024.”

The draft resolution points out that in January 2024, Minneapolis city council passed a ceasefire resolution aligning with many of the same goals as the student protesters’ demands. It also notes a historic 1970 occupation of Morrill Hall by Black students, and a similar movement in the 1970s and ‘80s that ultimately won university divestment from apartheid South Africa.

Wonsley announced that the resolution will be discussed at the December 3 city council meeting and she invited the Palestine solidarity movement to come to the meeting to show support for the resolution.

“These attacks on campus protests show that the political repression many commentators have accused the incoming Trump administration of planning, is in fact already here,” said Wyatt Miller, a member of the MN Anti-War Committee. “Now that the election is over, it’s crucial to keep focus on the movement against the U.S./ Israeli genocide in Palestine, including these brave student protesters, who history will no doubt absolve.”

#MinneapolisMN #MN #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #Palestine #AntiWarMovement #SDS

]]>
https://fightbacknews.org/palestine-activists-to-protest-student-repression-city-council-introduces Mon, 11 Nov 2024 00:12:48 +0000
Milwaukee: Down with political repression and with UWM PD; Hands off the student movement! https://fightbacknews.org/milwaukee-down-with-political-repression-and-with-uwm-pd-hands-off-the?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Milwaukee SDS resists repression. | Staff/Fight Back! News Fight Back News Service is circulating the following statement by Students for a Democratic Society University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Chapter. The Students for a Democratic Society UWM chapter condemns the ongoing political repression against Robby Knapp, Patricia Fish, Kayla Paterson, and Audari Tamayo. Knapp is currently facing suspension after refusing to stop protesting for Palestine and has been hit with multiple disciplinary sanctions. Fish is now being hit with disciplinary sanctions from the Chapman Hall occupation in February. Patterson and Tamayo were unable to enroll in time for the Fall 2024 semester after bogus holds were placed on their school accounts. This was just part of the string of repression unleashed by the university in its attempt to intimidate members of SDS and the student movement at large for standing with Palestine. !--more-- At 2:00 a.m., June 20, UWM PD officers went to Robby Knapp’s home. They arrested Knapp at 2:25 a.m., took the long way to campus, and didn’t read his Miranda rights until after arriving at the campus booking station at 3:00 a.m. They later released Knapp at 3:26 a.m., with no way to get home. This despicable act of intimidation was to force the SDSer to give the police information about an alleged "graffiti" incident on campus. Later that week, the police visited the homes of Tamayo and Patterson, visiting Tamayo’s home twice. Both SDSers live over 20 minutes away from campus, making the repeated visits by campus police even more ridiculous. Neither SDSer spoke to the cops. The UWM police later called them both repeatedly, attempting to intimidate Patterson and Tamayo into going in for a “chat” and giving them information on their dubious investigations into other SDS members. In defiance, all three SDSers - Knapp, Patterson, and Tamayo - refused to say a word to the cops. SDS has been relentless in standing up for what is right. The struggle has risen to levels unseen in decades, and with it, the ruling class and the administrators at their service have attempted to stomp out the growth of the student movement. We know police weren’t acting on their own — they act on behalf of the administration. It was admin who wanted to crack down on the encampment. It was admin who called over 10 police precincts during the Chapman Hall occupation in February, and it was the admin that had riot police and pre-printed citations ready for student activists during the Board of Regents meeting in June. The administration is not our friend, they are tools of the war machine. We denounce these political attacks from the administration and the UWM PD. SDS will never talk to the cops in their bogus investigations against fellow organizers, much less members of SDS. UW-Milwaukee is spending student and taxpayer money on sham investigations, sending cops far off campus to intimidate pro-Palestine student activists over some alleged graffiti. It's a shame. This is one of many reasons we demand that admin defund the cops and instead fund student needs! Along with attacks against SDSers, SDS UWM has been suspended from being a registered student organization for over a year. All this is clear-cut political repression directed at pro-Palestine activists and organizations. Nonetheless, targeting SDS has backfired on admin. SDS has continued to deal blows against the enemy. In addition to advancing our campaign to cut ties with "Israel", we have gotten cases dismissed at court, overturned an unfounded suspension alongside our coalition members in the Popular University for Palestine, and we’ve had student conduct charges brought down to simple “reflection essays”. SDS has grown and helped build the movement on this campus and in Milwaukee through struggle, not compromise. Admin will keep failing because with every act of repression, our resolve to win only grows. SDS demands UW-Milwaukee drop the student conduct charges and investigations against Robby Knapp and Patricia Fish! SDS demands UWM PD stay the hell away from SDSers' homes! SDS says solidarity with Palestine is not a crime! SDS says don’t talk to the cops, chop from the top! Dare to struggle, dare to win! #MilwaukeeWI #WI #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Milwaukee SDS resists repression.  | Staff/Fight Back! News

Fight Back News Service is circulating the following statement by Students for a Democratic Society University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Chapter.

The Students for a Democratic Society UWM chapter condemns the ongoing political repression against Robby Knapp, Patricia Fish, Kayla Paterson, and Audari Tamayo. Knapp is currently facing suspension after refusing to stop protesting for Palestine and has been hit with multiple disciplinary sanctions. Fish is now being hit with disciplinary sanctions from the Chapman Hall occupation in February. Patterson and Tamayo were unable to enroll in time for the Fall 2024 semester after bogus holds were placed on their school accounts. This was just part of the string of repression unleashed by the university in its attempt to intimidate members of SDS and the student movement at large for standing with Palestine.

At 2:00 a.m., June 20, UWM PD officers went to Robby Knapp’s home. They arrested Knapp at 2:25 a.m., took the long way to campus, and didn’t read his Miranda rights until after arriving at the campus booking station at 3:00 a.m. They later released Knapp at 3:26 a.m., with no way to get home. This despicable act of intimidation was to force the SDSer to give the police information about an alleged “graffiti” incident on campus.

Later that week, the police visited the homes of Tamayo and Patterson, visiting Tamayo’s home twice. Both SDSers live over 20 minutes away from campus, making the repeated visits by campus police even more ridiculous. Neither SDSer spoke to the cops. The UWM police later called them both repeatedly, attempting to intimidate Patterson and Tamayo into going in for a “chat” and giving them information on their dubious investigations into other SDS members. In defiance, all three SDSers – Knapp, Patterson, and Tamayo – refused to say a word to the cops.

SDS has been relentless in standing up for what is right. The struggle has risen to levels unseen in decades, and with it, the ruling class and the administrators at their service have attempted to stomp out the growth of the student movement. We know police weren’t acting on their own — they act on behalf of the administration. It was admin who wanted to crack down on the encampment. It was admin who called over 10 police precincts during the Chapman Hall occupation in February, and it was the admin that had riot police and pre-printed citations ready for student activists during the Board of Regents meeting in June. The administration is not our friend, they are tools of the war machine.

We denounce these political attacks from the administration and the UWM PD. SDS will never talk to the cops in their bogus investigations against fellow organizers, much less members of SDS. UW-Milwaukee is spending student and taxpayer money on sham investigations, sending cops far off campus to intimidate pro-Palestine student activists over some alleged graffiti. It's a shame. This is one of many reasons we demand that admin defund the cops and instead fund student needs!

Along with attacks against SDSers, SDS UWM has been suspended from being a registered student organization for over a year. All this is clear-cut political repression directed at pro-Palestine activists and organizations. Nonetheless, targeting SDS has backfired on admin. SDS has continued to deal blows against the enemy. In addition to advancing our campaign to cut ties with “Israel”, we have gotten cases dismissed at court, overturned an unfounded suspension alongside our coalition members in the Popular University for Palestine, and we’ve had student conduct charges brought down to simple “reflection essays”. SDS has grown and helped build the movement on this campus and in Milwaukee through struggle, not compromise. Admin will keep failing because with every act of repression, our resolve to win only grows.

SDS demands UW-Milwaukee drop the student conduct charges and investigations against Robby Knapp and Patricia Fish! SDS demands UWM PD stay the hell away from SDSers' homes! SDS says solidarity with Palestine is not a crime! SDS says don’t talk to the cops, chop from the top! Dare to struggle, dare to win!

#MilwaukeeWI #WI #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS

]]>
https://fightbacknews.org/milwaukee-down-with-political-repression-and-with-uwm-pd-hands-off-the Mon, 04 Nov 2024 23:11:41 +0000
Tampa students and community members rally for free speech on campus https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-and-community-members-rally-for-free-speech-on-campus?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Tampa students resist political repression on campus. | Staff/Fight Back! News Tampa, FL - On October 26, at 5 p.m., 25 students and community members held a rally near campus to defend free speech on campus. The rally was held in response to the University of South Florida (USF)'s escalated political repression of the student movement, where administration has expelled Victoria Hinckley, suspended Saba Indawala, and deported Joseph Charry, all organizers with Students for a Democratic Society, for their solidarity with Palestine. !--more-- Students and community members gathered to demand that USF drop the conduct charges on Saba Indawala, defend the right to protest the genocide in Gaza, and stop policy 6-028, a recently amended policy that heavily represses students’ rights to free speech on USF’s campuses. USF administration, continuing with its repression of the student movement, recently placed conduct charges on SDS members and student protesters Vicky Tong, Kinsey Dyal and Daniel Mendez for organizing a SDS protest for free speech on October 1. More than three weeks after the protest, the USF administration has placed bogus charges such as “failure to comply” and violation of “university policy.” Student organizations spoke in solidarity with the local student movement, with a speaker from the Pan-African Party stating, “As a student organization ourselves, it’s important we use our voice, our power, our organization for the benefit of the people.” Other student organizations voiced their support for the student movement, stating that it was shameful that USF continues to stifle and prevent student voices from being heard. A member of Tampa Democratic Socialists of America said that the USF administration, “should be ashamed of themselves. Rhea Law, Dean McDonald and Melissa Graham, you're all complicit! Shame!” Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society was joined by Bulls Dabke, Pan-African Party, and Triota Women's and Gender Studies Honor Society. Community organizations present included Tampa Democratic Society of America, Sunrise Tampa, New Era Young Lords, Food Not Bombs, and Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression. #TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Tampa students resist political repression on campus.  | Staff/Fight Back! News

Tampa, FL – On October 26, at 5 p.m., 25 students and community members held a rally near campus to defend free speech on campus. The rally was held in response to the University of South Florida (USF)'s escalated political repression of the student movement, where administration has expelled Victoria Hinckley, suspended Saba Indawala, and deported Joseph Charry, all organizers with Students for a Democratic Society, for their solidarity with Palestine.

Students and community members gathered to demand that USF drop the conduct charges on Saba Indawala, defend the right to protest the genocide in Gaza, and stop policy 6-028, a recently amended policy that heavily represses students’ rights to free speech on USF’s campuses.

USF administration, continuing with its repression of the student movement, recently placed conduct charges on SDS members and student protesters Vicky Tong, Kinsey Dyal and Daniel Mendez for organizing a SDS protest for free speech on October 1. More than three weeks after the protest, the USF administration has placed bogus charges such as “failure to comply” and violation of “university policy.”

Student organizations spoke in solidarity with the local student movement, with a speaker from the Pan-African Party stating, “As a student organization ourselves, it’s important we use our voice, our power, our organization for the benefit of the people.” Other student organizations voiced their support for the student movement, stating that it was shameful that USF continues to stifle and prevent student voices from being heard.

A member of Tampa Democratic Socialists of America said that the USF administration, “should be ashamed of themselves. Rhea Law, Dean McDonald and Melissa Graham, you're all complicit! Shame!”

Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society was joined by Bulls Dabke, Pan-African Party, and Triota Women's and Gender Studies Honor Society. Community organizations present included Tampa Democratic Society of America, Sunrise Tampa, New Era Young Lords, Food Not Bombs, and Tampa Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression.

#TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #SDS #FreeSpeech

]]>
https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-and-community-members-rally-for-free-speech-on-campus Thu, 31 Oct 2024 23:27:55 +0000
American Bar Association mandates crackdown on law student speech https://fightbacknews.org/american-bar-association-mandates-crackdown-on-law-student-speech?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Temple University Beasley School of Law in Philadelphia. | Staff/Fight Back! News Philadelphia PA - On October 16, over the objections of students, Temple University Beasley School of Law adopted anti-protest policies mandated by the American Bar Association. In the spring of 2024, the American Bar Association (ABA) adopted a mandate forcing all law schools to adopt policies designed to prevent the student protests that have taken place since October 7, 2023. !--more-- While the student movement has recently surged as a part of the broader pro-Palestine movement, law student protests that have raised concern from the ABA also include the pro-choice and LGBTQ rights activism following judicial attacks on women and LGBTQ people in the courts. This encroachment on the right to protest is couched in language about protecting free speech and diversity of thought, with the ABA calling this new mandate a protection for the free speech rights of reactionaries who have been the target of student protests. The Bar Association mandate demands that law schools pass policies banning “disruption” and setting strict and indefinite acceptability standards. For instance, Temple Law has changed its policy in order to keep accreditation away from a standard that only banned unreasonable disruption to one that bans “substantial” disruption and puts a blanket ban on students from acting contrary to orders given by administrators. Further rules have been adopted by Temple Law to comply with the new ABA rules about acceptable places for protest, including restricting protests at “common areas and public events.” Where before there were objective tests of the reasonableness of a disruptive protest and the appropriateness of the location and time, now the rule is against protest itself. Supporters of Temple Law Students for Justice in Palestine wrote comments against the new policy. The Temple University Student Bar Association rejected the policy, returning it to the rule makers for review. Rule makers have refused to revise the new conduct code and like law schools around the country, Temple Law has adopted the ABA’s anti-free speech rules. #PhiladelphiaPA #PA #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #Palestine #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Temple University Beasley School of Law in Philadelphia.  | Staff/Fight Back! News

Philadelphia PA – On October 16, over the objections of students, Temple University Beasley School of Law adopted anti-protest policies mandated by the American Bar Association. In the spring of 2024, the American Bar Association (ABA) adopted a mandate forcing all law schools to adopt policies designed to prevent the student protests that have taken place since October 7, 2023.

While the student movement has recently surged as a part of the broader pro-Palestine movement, law student protests that have raised concern from the ABA also include the pro-choice and LGBTQ rights activism following judicial attacks on women and LGBTQ people in the courts.

This encroachment on the right to protest is couched in language about protecting free speech and diversity of thought, with the ABA calling this new mandate a protection for the free speech rights of reactionaries who have been the target of student protests. The Bar Association mandate demands that law schools pass policies banning “disruption” and setting strict and indefinite acceptability standards.

For instance, Temple Law has changed its policy in order to keep accreditation away from a standard that only banned unreasonable disruption to one that bans “substantial” disruption and puts a blanket ban on students from acting contrary to orders given by administrators. Further rules have been adopted by Temple Law to comply with the new ABA rules about acceptable places for protest, including restricting protests at “common areas and public events.” Where before there were objective tests of the reasonableness of a disruptive protest and the appropriateness of the location and time, now the rule is against protest itself.

Supporters of Temple Law Students for Justice in Palestine wrote comments against the new policy. The Temple University Student Bar Association rejected the policy, returning it to the rule makers for review. Rule makers have refused to revise the new conduct code and like law schools around the country, Temple Law has adopted the ABA’s anti-free speech rules.

#PhiladelphiaPA #PA #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #Palestine #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/american-bar-association-mandates-crackdown-on-law-student-speech Thu, 24 Oct 2024 20:37:26 +0000
Tampa Students fight for freedom of speech on campus, face further repression https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-fight-for-freedom-of-speech-on-campus-face-further-repression?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Tampa administration, cops stop rally from taking place on campus. | Staff/Fight Back! News Tampa, FL - On Tuesday, October 1, around six students who are members of Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society at the University of South Florida, took a stand. They attempted to have a rally demanding free speech on campus for pro-Palestine protests. Students gathered to begin the rally when Dean of Students Danielle McDonald stopped the students and prevented the rally from happening. Though no event was happening, the dean, along with campus security and police threatened students with trespasses and arrests for simply being on campus. She refused to allow students to leave without handing over their student ID cards. Two students at the attempted rally, Isabella Deschene and Saba Indawala, have now been suspended, trespassed, and have bogus code of conduct charges alleged against them. !--more-- This comes after intensified political repression faced by Tampa Bay SDS after leading the solidarity encampment for Gaza at USF. After being tear-gassed and shot at with rubber bullets by the university and police, Tampa Bay SDS was expelled by USF for leading this struggle for Palestine on their campus. Additionally, two members of SDS faced severe punishment from USF for organizing the encampment for Palestine. Victoria Hinckley, who was a senior at the school, was expelled and the school continues to withhold their degree. Joseph Charry, an international student from Colombia, was suspended for a year and was stripped of his student visa and forced to leave the country. Now, five months after the encampment, Tampa Bay SDS continues to fight for these sanctions against students to be reversed, for USF’s immediate divestment from Israel and now for freedom of speech on campus. The university has passed harsh, restrictive policies on free speech. The student movement remains strong and students on campus have and will continue to fight against this political repression from the USF administration. Isabella Deschene, one of the newly-suspended SDS members, says “this was yet another blatant act of repression and will not stop students from continuing to fight for what we believe in. We will continue advocating for free speech and protesting the genocide in Gaza. We will continue to call out USF’s complicity and their disregard for the student body’s demands to disclose and divest.” #TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS #Feature div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Tampa administration, cops stop rally from taking place on campus.  | Staff/Fight Back! News

Tampa, FL – On Tuesday, October 1, around six students who are members of Tampa Bay Students for a Democratic Society at the University of South Florida, took a stand. They attempted to have a rally demanding free speech on campus for pro-Palestine protests.

Students gathered to begin the rally when Dean of Students Danielle McDonald stopped the students and prevented the rally from happening. Though no event was happening, the dean, along with campus security and police threatened students with trespasses and arrests for simply being on campus. She refused to allow students to leave without handing over their student ID cards. Two students at the attempted rally, Isabella Deschene and Saba Indawala, have now been suspended, trespassed, and have bogus code of conduct charges alleged against them.

This comes after intensified political repression faced by Tampa Bay SDS after leading the solidarity encampment for Gaza at USF. After being tear-gassed and shot at with rubber bullets by the university and police, Tampa Bay SDS was expelled by USF for leading this struggle for Palestine on their campus. Additionally, two members of SDS faced severe punishment from USF for organizing the encampment for Palestine. Victoria Hinckley, who was a senior at the school, was expelled and the school continues to withhold their degree. Joseph Charry, an international student from Colombia, was suspended for a year and was stripped of his student visa and forced to leave the country.

Now, five months after the encampment, Tampa Bay SDS continues to fight for these sanctions against students to be reversed, for USF’s immediate divestment from Israel and now for freedom of speech on campus. The university has passed harsh, restrictive policies on free speech. The student movement remains strong and students on campus have and will continue to fight against this political repression from the USF administration.

Isabella Deschene, one of the newly-suspended SDS members, says “this was yet another blatant act of repression and will not stop students from continuing to fight for what we believe in. We will continue advocating for free speech and protesting the genocide in Gaza. We will continue to call out USF’s complicity and their disregard for the student body’s demands to disclose and divest.”

#TampaFL #FL #StudentMovement #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech #SDS #Feature

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https://fightbacknews.org/tampa-students-fight-for-freedom-of-speech-on-campus-face-further-repression Thu, 03 Oct 2024 01:34:00 +0000
First Gaza encampment trial in U.S. finds protesters not guilty in New Orleans https://fightbacknews.org/first-gaza-encampment-trial-in-u-s-finds-protesters-not-guilty-in-new-orleans?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[Rory Macdonald. | Zach Kemp/Fight Back! News New Orleans, LA - On Friday, September 20, Tulane University encampment arrestees held a rally at 8 a.m., outside of the Orleans Criminal District Court, just before a monumental win for the city’s movement. There were over 40 people in attendance for both the rally and their full-day trial. They packed the courts in support of the arrestees for the Popular University for Gaza encampment that took place on Tulane’s front lawn from April 29 to May 1. !--more-- The crowd chanted, “Not guilty, not sorry!” and “When student rights are under attack what do we do? Stand up, fight back!” A Loyola faculty member, Pablo Zavala, shared his thoughts on the students’ bravery stating, “SDS members, the young people, and community members have shown me and have shown us what it means to be courageous. When the system was against them and the powers that be weaponized the rules and criminalized free speech, they kept going.” Loyola and Tulane administrations have been attacking the student movement, making new policies for code of conduct and change how the appeal process works. “Every time they create a new policy to undermine and deter the movement, we just become more creative and more organized,” stated Juleea Berthelot, SDS member and encampment arrestee. “We have ripped off the masks of the ‘progressive’ ghouls who are truly nothing but imperialist. Who are truly nothing but people who want to genocide anybody who stands up for liberation,” said NOSHIP member and encampment arrestee Sheryas Vasudevan. He accused District Attorney Jason Williams, who accepted the charges as Tulane pressured him to do so, of being of those “progressive ghouls.” Williams is a Tulane alumnus. The court tried to diminish the attendance of supporters by pushing back the trial to 11 a.m. Nevertheless, protesters were in the keffiyeh-packed courtroom, ready to support the brave arrestees during the trial. Prosecutors had 14 police witnesses trying to identify those who have been arrested and testify that the arrestees were trespassing. Ultimately, the prosecutors and their witnesses showed the judge how weak their case was. From submitting discovery material late after having an extension to 5 p.m. the previous Friday, to the officers telling on themselves as they were answering questions from the defendants’ defense attorneys, the prosecutor brought a weak case. “It’s disappointing that the district attorney would take a case to trial when he and his office knew the evidence in the case exonerated the accused. But fortunately, the court quickly recognized that the prosecution had no case,” said defense attorney Graham Bosworth. The mainly pro bono defense attorneys played offense. They exposed the contradictions between police witnesses and blatant conflicts of interest. They also caught Tulane destroying evidence. The university had allowed self-incriminating security camera footage to delete, despite having a requirement to turn it in. Defense lawyers additionally objected to the DA submitting evidence that they failed to hand over during pre-trial discovery. In other words, the DA had withheld evidence. Judge Benedict Willard acquitted the arrestees. After leaving the courthouse, cheers and chants of “When we fight, we win!” and “Dare to struggle, dare to win!” started to celebrate the victory that was won through the power of the people. Rory Macdonald, a member of Tulane SDS and encampment arrestee, made a speech as a call-and-response, “My name is Rory Macdonald and I am proud to have stood trial as a defender of the Tulane and Loyola Popular University for Palestine. Because today we showed Tulane and their dog, Jason Williams, that if you want to put the people on trial, the people are gonna put you on trial.” This was the first trial nationally for Popular University for Gaza arrestees. It will inspire people to keep fighting as we still have more political attacks to win. #NewOrleansLA #LA #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #SDS #PoliticalRepression #freespeech #Palestine div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> Rory Macdonald. | Zach Kemp/Fight Back! News

New Orleans, LA – On Friday, September 20, Tulane University encampment arrestees held a rally at 8 a.m., outside of the Orleans Criminal District Court, just before a monumental win for the city’s movement. There were over 40 people in attendance for both the rally and their full-day trial. They packed the courts in support of the arrestees for the Popular University for Gaza encampment that took place on Tulane’s front lawn from April 29 to May 1.

The crowd chanted, “Not guilty, not sorry!” and “When student rights are under attack what do we do? Stand up, fight back!” A Loyola faculty member, Pablo Zavala, shared his thoughts on the students’ bravery stating, “SDS members, the young people, and community members have shown me and have shown us what it means to be courageous. When the system was against them and the powers that be weaponized the rules and criminalized free speech, they kept going.”

Loyola and Tulane administrations have been attacking the student movement, making new policies for code of conduct and change how the appeal process works.

“Every time they create a new policy to undermine and deter the movement, we just become more creative and more organized,” stated Juleea Berthelot, SDS member and encampment arrestee.

“We have ripped off the masks of the ‘progressive’ ghouls who are truly nothing but imperialist. Who are truly nothing but people who want to genocide anybody who stands up for liberation,” said NOSHIP member and encampment arrestee Sheryas Vasudevan. He accused District Attorney Jason Williams, who accepted the charges as Tulane pressured him to do so, of being of those “progressive ghouls.” Williams is a Tulane alumnus.

The court tried to diminish the attendance of supporters by pushing back the trial to 11 a.m. Nevertheless, protesters were in the keffiyeh-packed courtroom, ready to support the brave arrestees during the trial.

Prosecutors had 14 police witnesses trying to identify those who have been arrested and testify that the arrestees were trespassing. Ultimately, the prosecutors and their witnesses showed the judge how weak their case was. From submitting discovery material late after having an extension to 5 p.m. the previous Friday, to the officers telling on themselves as they were answering questions from the defendants’ defense attorneys, the prosecutor brought a weak case.

“It’s disappointing that the district attorney would take a case to trial when he and his office knew the evidence in the case exonerated the accused. But fortunately, the court quickly recognized that the prosecution had no case,” said defense attorney Graham Bosworth.

The mainly pro bono defense attorneys played offense. They exposed the contradictions between police witnesses and blatant conflicts of interest. They also caught Tulane destroying evidence. The university had allowed self-incriminating security camera footage to delete, despite having a requirement to turn it in. Defense lawyers additionally objected to the DA submitting evidence that they failed to hand over during pre-trial discovery. In other words, the DA had withheld evidence. Judge Benedict Willard acquitted the arrestees.

After leaving the courthouse, cheers and chants of “When we fight, we win!” and “Dare to struggle, dare to win!” started to celebrate the victory that was won through the power of the people.

Rory Macdonald, a member of Tulane SDS and encampment arrestee, made a speech as a call-and-response, “My name is Rory Macdonald and I am proud to have stood trial as a defender of the Tulane and Loyola Popular University for Palestine. Because today we showed Tulane and their dog, Jason Williams, that if you want to put the people on trial, the people are gonna put you on trial.”

This was the first trial nationally for Popular University for Gaza arrestees. It will inspire people to keep fighting as we still have more political attacks to win.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #AntiWarMovement #StudentMovement #SDS #PoliticalRepression #freespeech #Palestine

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https://fightbacknews.org/first-gaza-encampment-trial-in-u-s-finds-protesters-not-guilty-in-new-orleans Sun, 22 Sep 2024 12:21:44 +0000
New Orleans students occupy the street outside Loyola president's house https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-students-occupy-the-street-outside-loyola-presidents-house?pk_campaign=rss-feed <![CDATA[New Orleans students march in solidarity with Palestine. | Fight Back! News/staff New Orleans, LA - On September 18, students from the Loyola Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) organized a rally to demand that Loyola University of New Orleans divest from Israel. Despite escalating calls from the student body in the past months, the administration has only responded with force. !--more-- The group met in front of Loyola’s campus on St. Charles Street, where two speakers from the Tulane and Loyola SDS chapters spoke about both universities’ ties to Israel and the lack of transparency on where tuition is spent. A Tulane SDS speaker connected the genocide to New Orleans, stating. "Tulane is the lead university in the U.S.-Israel Energy exchange, a program that explores fossil fuel drilling in occupied Palestine. The research for that program happens right over there." This program is responsible for researching potential oil wells off the coast of Gaza for Israel to exploit should they win the war and ethnically cleanse Gaza. Less is known about where Loyola's endowment is invested - the page literally "doesn't exist" on their website. However, students raised some research that sheds light on the question. "They are partnered with the Lily Endowment, which is a Zionist institution. Very recently, they gave Loyola's institute of Ministries $1.25 million," said a Loyola SDS speaker. She pointed out that both universities have refused to disclose their entire billions of dollars’ worth of endowments, despite loud student calls. Afterwards, students and community members walked down Saint Charles Avenue and turned on Arabella Street to greet Dr. Xavier Cole, president of Loyola University of New Orleans, at his house. "Xavier Cole you can't hide, we charge you with genocide!" rang out as Cole fled to his car. While Cole was leaving, he stayed behind for several minutes to report to the police what was happening and listened to several minutes of the speeches. He stayed long enough to get lambasted by a freshman speaker. "It is our right, if not our duty as students to advocate for change, we will not stop until we know where our tuition is going, we will not stop until our money stops funding a genocide, and we will not stop until our friends no longer get unfairly prosecuted for exercising their rights," she said. Cole also caught flak from Freedom Road Socialist Organization speaker Juleea Berthelot. "Just as we march in defense of Black lives and against police brutality in our own country, we continue to march for Palestinian lives," they said. After Cole left, the students quickly wrapped up and returned to campus to disperse. Before leaving, the students made several calls to action, most pressingly the criminal charges some members of SDS are facing. They called for community members to show up on Friday, September 20, for the country’s first encampment trial. #NewOrleansLA #LA #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech div id="sharingbuttons.io"/div]]> New Orleans students march in solidarity with Palestine.  | Fight Back! News/staff

New Orleans, LA – On September 18, students from the Loyola Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) organized a rally to demand that Loyola University of New Orleans divest from Israel. Despite escalating calls from the student body in the past months, the administration has only responded with force.

The group met in front of Loyola’s campus on St. Charles Street, where two speakers from the Tulane and Loyola SDS chapters spoke about both universities’ ties to Israel and the lack of transparency on where tuition is spent.

A Tulane SDS speaker connected the genocide to New Orleans, stating. “Tulane is the lead university in the U.S.-Israel Energy exchange, a program that explores fossil fuel drilling in occupied Palestine. The research for that program happens right over there.”

This program is responsible for researching potential oil wells off the coast of Gaza for Israel to exploit should they win the war and ethnically cleanse Gaza. Less is known about where Loyola's endowment is invested – the page literally “doesn't exist” on their website. However, students raised some research that sheds light on the question.

“They are partnered with the Lily Endowment, which is a Zionist institution. Very recently, they gave Loyola's institute of Ministries $1.25 million,” said a Loyola SDS speaker. She pointed out that both universities have refused to disclose their entire billions of dollars’ worth of endowments, despite loud student calls.

Afterwards, students and community members walked down Saint Charles Avenue and turned on Arabella Street to greet Dr. Xavier Cole, president of Loyola University of New Orleans, at his house.

“Xavier Cole you can't hide, we charge you with genocide!” rang out as Cole fled to his car. While Cole was leaving, he stayed behind for several minutes to report to the police what was happening and listened to several minutes of the speeches.

He stayed long enough to get lambasted by a freshman speaker. “It is our right, if not our duty as students to advocate for change, we will not stop until we know where our tuition is going, we will not stop until our money stops funding a genocide, and we will not stop until our friends no longer get unfairly prosecuted for exercising their rights,” she said.

Cole also caught flak from Freedom Road Socialist Organization speaker Juleea Berthelot. “Just as we march in defense of Black lives and against police brutality in our own country, we continue to march for Palestinian lives,” they said. After Cole left, the students quickly wrapped up and returned to campus to disperse.

Before leaving, the students made several calls to action, most pressingly the criminal charges some members of SDS are facing. They called for community members to show up on Friday, September 20, for the country’s first encampment trial.

#NewOrleansLA #LA #AntiWarMovement #Palestine #SDS #PoliticalRepression #FreeSpeech

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https://fightbacknews.org/new-orleans-students-occupy-the-street-outside-loyola-presidents-house Sun, 22 Sep 2024 11:42:28 +0000