Columbia’s Chaos: Pro-Palestinian Protests Cross the Line into Lawlessness

Hotspotorlando News. On May 7, 2025, Columbia University became the latest battleground for radical activism as dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters, many masked and cloaked in keffiyehs, stormed Butler Library, occupying a reading room and renaming it after a Palestinian figure tied to militant rhetoric. Led by the student group Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD), these agitators unfurled banners, chanted slogans, and demanded the university divest from companies supporting Israel’s defense against terrorism. What began as a demonstration quickly escalated into a brazen act of defiance, with protesters locking arms and refusing to leave, forcing a showdown with campus security and the New York Police Department.

This isn’t free speech—it’s anarchy. The protesters’ actions disrupted the academic environment, intimidated students trying to study, and crossed legal boundaries. Columbia’s acting president, Claire Shipman, had no choice but to call in the NYPD after the occupiers ignored warnings of trespassing charges and disciplinary action. The result? Up to 76 arrests, with students zip-tied and carted off in police vans. Two injuries were reported during clashes with public safety officers, a predictable outcome when mob tactics replace civil discourse. New York Mayor Eric Adams rightly condemned the protest as “unacceptable,” backing the university’s request for law enforcement to restore order.

Let’s be clear: universities are places for debate, not destruction. These students weren’t engaging in reasoned dialogue; they were staging a theatrical takeover to bully Columbia into bending to their demands. Their call for divestment from Israel-linked companies isn’t just misguided—it’s a direct attack on a key U.S. ally fighting for its survival against groups like Hamas, whose October 2023 attacks killed over 1,200 Israelis and sparked the current conflict. By glorifying figures like Basel al-Araj, whose writings have inspired violence, these protesters reveal their true colors: not advocates for peace, but apologists for terror.

Columbia’s troubles didn’t start this week. Last year’s protests saw similar chaos, with encampments and occupations turning the campus into a war zone. The university’s response then was too soft, emboldening groups like CUAD to push further. Now, under pressure from the Trump administration, which canceled $400 million in federal grants over Columbia’s handling of protests and alleged antisemitism, the university is finally taking a stand. And good for them. The administration’s new security measures—checkpoints, ID checks—are a necessary response to a campus spiraling out of control.

Critics will cry “free speech” or claim the crackdown unfairly targets Palestinian voices. Nonsense. Free speech doesn’t include the right to occupy private property, disrupt classes, or intimidate peers. And when protests veer into antisemitic tropes—as they often do, with chants and signs vilifying Israel and its supporters—it’s no surprise Jewish students feel unsafe. The conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism isn’t a myth; it’s a reality on campuses like Columbia, where rhetoric too often morphs into harassment.

The broader issue is a generation of students radicalized by activist professors and social media echo chambers. They’ve been taught to see complex conflicts like Israel-Palestine in black-and-white terms, with Israel cast as the eternal villain. Never mind the decades of Palestinian terrorism, rocket attacks, or Hamas’s use of Gaza as a launching pad for violence. These students demand “justice” while ignoring inconvenient truths, like Israel’s right to defend itself or the billions in aid Gaza has received, much of it diverted to weapons and tunnels.

Columbia must hold the line. Suspend the arrested students. Expel repeat offenders. And stand firm against divestment demands that would undermine academic integrity and align the university with a one-sided, anti-Israel agenda. Other schools should take note: coddling radicals only invites more chaos. It’s time to restore order, protect students’ right to learn, and remind everyone that universities are for education, not insurrection.

*Word count: 350*
*Sources: Web searches and X posts on the May 7, 2025, Columbia University protest.*

photos: Reuters, Ryan Murphy

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