Monday, April 22, 2024
BY JULIA CLAIRE & CROOKED MEDIA
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- Vital presidential poll happening over at Fox News (we actually agree with Fox that Trump would win that contest by a landslide)
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Student protests at Columbia University in New York City continued over the weekend, even after the administration called in the NYPD last week. Now, the demonstrations have spread to other schools.
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The White House released an official statement on Sunday seemingly referencing the ongoing protests and “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” at Columbia University, characterizing them as “physical intimidation and targeting Jewish students and the Jewish community.” President Biden made remarks a few hours later ahead of Monday’s Passover holiday in which he condemned “blatant Antisemitism…[which] has absolutely no place on college campuses, or anywhere in our country.” (“I also condemn those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians,” he said.) Early on Monday, Columbia’s President Nemat Shafik announced that classes would be held virtually and that school leaders would begin discussing a way to end what she called a “crisis.”
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These protests have sparked national outrage on both sides of the issue, as well as larger conversations about institutional responsibility.
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At the center of each of these protests is not just the war itself, but demands from students that their universities divest from companies profiting from the Israeli military campaign in Gaza. Columbia, for example, has an endowment of almost $14 billion. The school’s Student Elections Board announced on Monday that a divestment referendum had overwhelmingly passed in a vote of over 2,000 undergraduate students. The referendum has no direct bearing on University policy, but functions as a barometer of campus sentiment. The referendum’s results, with 76.5 percent of students voting in favor, marked a 15 percent increase in undergraduate support for divestment since Columbia College held its last referendum on the topic four years ago. The University’s Advisory Committee on Socially Responsible Investing rejected a divestment proposal in February, citing lack of consensus on the issue, according to the University’s newspaper.
Pro-Palestinian protests coming off the heels of a conservative backlash to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives on college campuses has led to politicians exerting significant pressure on institutions of higher learning. This political climate may be leading to a rightward lurch among university administrations.
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Book bans are on the rise, and it’s on us to fight back. Luckily, the Crooked Store is doing a flash sale on all Free The Books merch! Free The Books tees, sweatshirts, and magnets are 30% off, but the sale won’t last long, so make like a conservative who found out about a book with a gay character and jump on it. Head to crooked.com/store to shop before the sale ends.
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It’s almost summer so you know what that means: The Supreme Court’s conservative majority is gearing up to make some bad decisions. On Monday, SCOTUS began hearing arguments in a landmark case that could determine states’ abilities to criminalize homelessness. The case involves an appeal from the city of Grants Pass, OR, which a lower court had found in violation of the Constitution's Eighth Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment in enforcing anti-camping ordinances against unhoused people, when there was no other shelter space available. The three city ordinances in the crosshairs of the case target sleeping and camping in public streets, alleyways, and parks, violation of which gets you a $295 fine. If someone is found to have repeatedly violated these laws, they can be criminally prosecuted for trespassing and face up to 30 days in jail. The liberal justices like Elena Kagan expressed that the city’s ordinance “goes way beyond” seeking to address public safety and instead creates conditions under which an unhoused person “can’t take a blanket and sleep some place without it being a crime.” "Where do we put them if every city, every village, every town lacks compassion and passes a law identical to this? Where are they supposed to sleep? Are they supposed to kill themselves, not sleeping?" asked Justice Sonia Sotomayor. It will not surprise you to learn that the Court’s conservative justices appeared to be receptive to the arguments made by lawyers representing Grants Pass.
In recent decades, housing costs have skyrocketed, and so too has the population of unhoused Americans. On any given night in the United States, more than 600,000 people are experiencing homelessness, according to federal estimates. As these populations have grown larger, many cities have resorted to draconian measures involving local police to crack down on encampments rather than addressing the crisis at its root, which is obviously a much more difficult endeavor. The Court’s ruling is due by the end of June.
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Opening statements were heard on Monday in the Manhattan hush money trial of disgraced former president Donald Trump. The former president was seen listening quietly (truly shocking behavior) as prosecutors listed allegations against him, and then Trump’s defense team laid out their claims that he is just a normal guy who by the way is innocent! Trump is charged with falsifying 34 business records related to an effort to cover up a payment he made through his lawyers to adult film actress Stormy Daniels in order to buy her silence in 2016 for an alleged sexual encounter they had ten years prior, while Trump’s wife Melania was pregnant with their son. Trump denies the charges yada, yada, yada. If convicted, he could face probation or up to four years in prison. Trump’s lead lawyer Todd Blanche used his opening statement to cast his client as a typical businessman who simply acted as any of us would have, and also made the outrageous claim that, “There's nothing wrong with trying to influence an election. It's called democracy.” For their part, prosecutors began the proceedings by laying out the way that Trump had worked with his former fixer Michael Cohen and the publisher of the National Inquirer (whose name is, I kid you not, David Pecker) to catch and kill damaging stories during the 2016 election. Will this election season take years off of all of our lives? Yes. But at least this trial will be fun to read about.
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