By Seth Mandel
Friday, February 07, 2025
Familiarity with anti-Zionism breeds contempt. And also a
justified cynicism.
After 16 months of “well maybe the protesters really do
just want a cease-fire” and “let’s give them the benefit of the doubt that they
aren’t just twisted pro-Hamas sickos,” we can now acknowledge what we all knew
to be true from the beginning: They’re just twisted pro-Hamas sickos.
According to documents obtained
by the Telegraph, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign contacted London
police while the Hamas rampage of Oct. 7, 2023, was in full swing. Their
request: Permission to hold a public rally.
“By the time the PSC spoke to the police, Hamas had taken
hostages and killed hundreds of people across towns and villages next to the
Gaza Strip,” the Telegraph reports. “Videos had also circulated on
social media, showing terrorists taking Israeli hostages to Gaza on
motorbikes.”
The PSC reached out to the police before 1 p.m. on the
day of the attack. It was at a time when the public already knew the attack was
under way and some of the gruesome details, but before Israel could even
contemplate a military response. The attack and the search for infiltrators
went on for two days. During that time the PSC was planning its event.
Let there now be no doubt: This was a celebration rally.
Like other such demonstrations in the West, Londoners were joyously reveling in
acts of barbarism against Jews that hadn’t been seen since the Nazis. The
police confirmed the timing to the Telegraph with a statement: “The Met
was contacted on Saturday Oct 7 at approximately 12.50pm via telephone call and
informed of the intention to protest. The Met committed this to our systems on
the same day and are satisfied being contacted by telephone was a sufficient
means in which to notify the MPS as the event was taking place seven days after
notification.”
It’s good to have confirmation, but we should remember
that we already knew this about protests in the United States as well. Chicago
saw hundreds march
downtown on Oct. 8, the day after the attacks. No one would even bother to
try and claim that such an event was spontaneous, right? That march was in the
pipeline as soon as it became clear what Hamas was doing.
Oct. 8 also saw an “all out for Palestine” rally in
Dallas and a demonstration in Athens, Georgia, which organizers said was to
mark the fact that “the Palestinian people, yesterday, fought back successfully
against Israeli occupation.”
The lesson: Some were honest, some weren’t—but the
protest movement that began that hellish weekend was a movement celebrating the
massacre and sexual torture of Jewish men, women, and children.
Let me repeat: The protest movement that began that
weekend. Not simply the protests that weekend, because the ones that
followed weren’t any better. Remember, the Telegraph story is about a
demonstration that took place a week after the attacks—but was coordinated in
the middle of the first day of the attacks.
These weren’t “cease-fire” protests. They didn’t stop
after the first cease-fire and they haven’t stopped since the signing of the
current cease-fire. Instead, they pivoted. A couple days ago there was a protest at
the University of Washington with a prominent banner that said “Free all
Palestinian prisoners,” a reference to the murderers and others in Israeli
prisons serving time for terrorism-related offenses.
No, it was never about a cease-fire. One of my favorite
photos from such protests was taken at a demonstration last year. Marchers are
holding a sign that says “Cease-fire Now” over a banner that says “By Any Means
Necessary.” In the minds of the protesters, slaughtering Jews and a cease-fire
have always been linked, because the cease-fire was just for Israel. Nobody in
that photo wants peace, that much is obvious.
Now, were there occasionally a few people here and there
who attended Gaza protests because they were genuinely concerned about the
welfare of Palestinians? Sure, such people do exist (although I don’t know why
they’d show up to a tentifada protest that is clearly just a terrorism pep
rally). But this “protest” movement was born on Oct. 7, 2023, because it liked
what it saw that day. We didn’t need more proof, but we have it anyway.
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