By Nick Catoggio
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
An annoying occupational hazard of punditry is stumbling
across a news story that perfectly supports the thesis of your column … after
you’ve already published it.
Maybe “annoying” is too much. It’s gratifying to see
one’s opinion vindicated by events! When the New York Times drops this
six days after I wrote this,
I feel like Dispatch subscribers are getting their money’s worth.
But it sure would have been nice to have had the Times
item in hand a week ago when I was putting that piece together.
That’s not the only time it happened to me this week. Two
days ago I wrote about Donald Trump’s habit of “kidding
on the square,” framing outré policy ideas in comic terms to normalize them
while granting himself and his supporters plausible deniability about his
sincerity. He’s only joking about running for a third term in 2028!
Although, now that you mention it, it *would* be nice….
Late on Tuesday night, not 48 hours after I posted that
newsletter, he dropped the mother of all “kidding on the square” examples on
Truth Social.
You can’t watch that clip without laughing. There’s Elon
Musk stuffing his face with hummus. And a pale, husky Trump sunbathing by the
pool with Netanyahu. And bearded men, er, belly-dancing in barely-there women’s
clothing. (“Trump Gaza” will be vastly more “woke” than the current iteration,
it seems.) Even the music is catchy.
If you can get past the fact that juvenile trolling of
this sort coming from the president is a complete embarrassment to the United
States, you’d have to call it one of the more enjoyable pieces of AI slop to
reach mass circulation.
Buried beneath the absurdity, though, are two
semi-serious ideas. One is that Trump earnestly wants the United States to take
over Gaza, or so he
says. The other is that he foresees the forcible displacement of the
Palestinian population as a necessary step in the process.
Where are the cries from America’s pro-Palestinian left
over the president proposing the ethnic
cleansing of Gaza?
I can’t tell you how many times that question has come up
this month in conversation. Dispatch colleagues have raised it. Family
members have raised it. Strangers on social
media have raised it. A year ago, campus Hamasniks were occupying buildings
and setting up tent cities to protest Israel’s effort to punish the
perpetrators of the October 7 pogrom. Today the leader of their own country is
suggesting a gratuitous American incursion into Gaza to evict the impoverished
locals and convert the land into a playground for the rich—the most grotesque
conceivable expression of “settler-colonialism”—and
seemingly no one cares.
Where are the protests?
Overtaken by events.
They haven’t disappeared entirely, contrary to popular
belief.
Last month, on the day the spring semester began at
America’s most
notorious “anti-Zionist” campus, the usual suspects bearing “intifada”
signs staged a
walkout. According to the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian
Rights, which maintains an updated list of daily agitation across the
country, protests are scheduled today in Burbank, California, and Oneonta, New
York, and another is set for tomorrow in Dallas, Texas.
There’ll be some sort of demonstration in Los
Angeles on Sunday to coincide with the Oscars and an “International Day
of Action” next Wednesday aimed at convincing businesses to stop supporting
Israel’s military. Protests are still happening!
Just at one-one-thousandth or so of the intensity that we
saw last year.
In fairness, is that really so strange under the
circumstances?
The point of the 2023-24 protests was to force the Biden
administration to pressure Israel for a ceasefire. Whether you believe those
ceasefire demands were primarily motivated by a desire to protect Palestinian
civilians or by a desire to protect Hamas’ ability to menace Israelis depends
on how charitable you feel toward leftists. Either way, we do have a
ceasefire at last. Barely.
So it makes sense that protests would have fallen off,
notwithstanding the obnoxiousness of Trump’s interest in redeveloping Gaza.
It’s hard enough to sustain the intensity of demonstrations when the mission
hasn’t yet been accomplished. It’s really hard when it has.
And insofar as it hasn’t been completely accomplished,
it’s been rendered moot. The sort of pro-Hamas degenerate who hoped last year’s
demonstrations would scare a Democratic president into forcing the Israelis to
back off before they weakened the group’s capabilities in Gaza has been
overtaken by events. Many of Hamas’ leaders are dead, its
power to wage war is
degraded, and its brothers-in-arms across the border in Lebanon have
been routed.
If the goal was to stop the war before real damage was
done to the glorious jihadist cause, there’s no point in continuing to protest.
That ship has sailed.
If, on the other hand, the actual goal of pro-Palestinian
activism is something more subversive and closer to home, there’s … also no
point in continuing to protest. Domestic politics has moved on and has taken
the salience of the demonstrations with it.
Mission accomplished?
I agree with economist Noah Smith, who
alleged earlier this month that “the purpose of the Palestine movement was (A)
to seize power from the establishment wing of the Democratic party, and (B) to
reduce the influence of Jews in the American left.”
Whether Jewish voters were scared into voting
meaningfully more Republican on Election Day is a
matter of dispute, but it’s always felt like more than coincidence that
Kamala Harris bypassed the popular Jewish governor of Pennsylvania as her
running mate despite the importance of that swing state. The protests put her
on notice that her pro-Palestinian base would tolerate only so much “Zionism”
at the top after Joe Biden and the Democratic establishment backed Israel’s war
in Gaza. The message was received, apparently.
Snubbing Josh Shapiro didn’t save Harris, though. It was
Trump who won
the majority-Arab city of Dearborn, Michigan, a surprise outcome that
seemed to confirm a backlash to Democrats among pro-Palestinian voters. That
outcome makes no sense as a matter of geopolitics given that Trump’s support
for Israel is far less conditional than Harris’, to the point that he’s not
above using the word “Palestinian” as
an insult. (Buyer’s remorse has already begun in
Dearborn.) But it makes sense as a matter of domestic politics, through
Smith’s frame. If the point of last year’s Gaza protests was to warn Democratic
leaders that the party can’t win by governing from the center, especially but
not exclusively with respect to Israel, those protests served their purpose.
Harris lost. Dearborn went red. Democratic leaders will
think twice next time about telling the left “no,” supposedly. So why bother
continuing with the protests now? The progressive mission was accomplished.
That’s the optimistic view for Palestinian activists,
anyway. The pessimistic view is that not only did the protests not succeed in
terms of foreign policy—“Trump Gaza” is certainly not what the “uncommitted”
movement had in mind—but they’ve backfired domestically as well.
A Gallup
poll published a few weeks ago asked Democratic voters and “leaners”
whether they want to see the party become more liberal, more moderate, or stay
the same on policy. “More moderate” earned 45 percent, up 11 points from four
years ago; “more liberal” declined to 29 percent, down 5 points over the same
period. That jibes with the sense that it wasn’t just inflation and immigration
that did Harris in, it was working-class voters across the partisan spectrum
concluding that Democrats have grown far too fringe-y on cultural matters to be
trusted with power.
“Defund the police,” gender
weirdness, and an antisemitic streak ugly enough that even progressive
stars like
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have gotten nervous about it: The Democratic Party
looks so radical to so many swing voters that a proto-fascist convicted felon
seemed like a more responsible option in November.
The sort of left-wing activist who protests the war in
Gaza in hopes of “seizing power” from Democratic leaders, as Smith imagines,
won’t care about losing elections. But the sort of activist who prefers
government by milquetoast centrist Democrats to government by a proto-fascist
convicted felon will. Pro-Palestinian protests that too often played like
pro-Hamas protests are, or were, yet another progressive cultural excess that
ended up scaring the horses on Election Day.
Can you blame those more sensible liberal activists for
not wanting to participate anymore? No wonder the number of demonstrations is
down.
The Trump factor.
In many ways, the fact that Donald Trump rather than Joe
Biden is now president has also undercut the rationale for protests.
For starters, it’s harder now for activists to get the
media’s attention. Every day since January 20 the press has been forced to
prioritize between covering the
end of the American-led world order, the probably illegal subversion
of federal agencies by the richest man in the world and his band of
twentysomething geeks, the appointment of comically unfit nutjobs to positions
of high influence over public health and
law
enforcement, and more mundane stuff like a new tax-cut bill that’s going to
blow another sucking
wound in America’s fiscal stability.
The press is a little busy. Who wants to go to the
trouble of building a tent city if reporters don’t have time to come out and
gawk at it?
Fear is another consideration for demonstrators in the
age of Trump, as it is for
all of us.
A week after he was sworn in, the president signed an
executive order pledging immediate action by the Justice Department to punish
unlawful acts of antisemitism on college campuses. The fact sheet that
accompanied the order contained a bonus threat for foreign students. “To all
the resident aliens who joined in the pro-jihadist protests, we put you on
notice: come 2025, we will find you, and we will deport you,” it declared,
pledging to “also quickly cancel the student visas of all Hamas sympathizers on
college campuses, which have been infested with radicalism like never before.”
Is it legal for the government to punish someone who’s
here lawfully for expressing an opinion with which it disagrees? Probably not.
Would you want to be the foreign student who tests that theory in court? Also
probably not. The legal cost of protesting has gone up since Trump signed his
executive order, and as with any good whose price has risen, demand for it has
begun to fall.
It’s not just Trump whom activists need to worry about,
though. Universities have grown bolder about punishing unruly campus
demonstrators since Election Day 2024.
On Monday Barnard College, affiliated with Columbia
University, expelled
two students who disrupted a class on the history of Israel last month. Not
once since the war in Gaza began in October 2023 had that happened at
Columbia—until this week. Another example: In December a student at the
University of Chicago was arrested
in a dorm by local cops and detained for 30 hours for having grabbed the hand
of an officer while he was swinging a baton at a protest in October. The
student was designated a “threat” by the school administration and barred from
campus.
It’s hard to say whether universities are acting out of
heartfelt fear of Trump, perhaps fretting that he might meddle in their federal
funding if they don’t “monitor”
disfavored activism by students, or whether they’re using that as a pretext to
follow through with a crackdown they’ve secretly longed to implement. I
strongly suspect that the American corporations rushing
to jettison their diversity programs were eager to unburden themselves of
being ideologically policed by wokesters—and the attendant compliance costs—and
viewed Trump’s election as a convenient excuse. (“We don’t want to to do it but
we can’t risk angering our vindictive president!”) The schools, or at least
some of them, might be behaving similarly.
Either way, protesting is obviously riskier when you know
that people with influence over your career prospects are looking to make an
example of those who cross a line. There’s a reason some pro-Palestinian
activists went
anonymous last year when law firms started rescinding job offers from the
most obnoxious agitators.
Even if the spirit among demonstrators is willing, the
financial flesh might be weak. The tents in those tent cities aren’t
free, you know; left-wing fatcats are already at high enough risk of being
persecuted by Trump’s administration that they might understandably decline to
antagonize the White House by funding a new round of campus chaos.
Futility.
The biggest effect that “the Trump factor” has had on
progressive protesters, though, is also the simplest. What would be the point
of demonstrating against his Gaza plan, exactly? Now that he’s president, whose
opinion would theoretically be moved by a new round of protests?
Protests, in theory, are designed to pressure the
government into changing its policies. Trump won’t do that. Not only won’t he
do it, he won’t even pretend to take the demonstrators seriously, as Biden and
Harris were required to do. He’d love to have them as a foil, I’m sure: Nothing
would make his insane “Sandals: Gaza” resort plan seem more appealing than
watching pimply teens in Hamas headbands cosplaying as revolutionaries
screeching about it at Columbia.
“Forget Trump. Protests might move public opinion,” one
might answer. I guess? But how much will public opinion move, realistically,
now that the war in Gaza is (sort of) over, Americans are distracted by rising
inflation and dozens of daily new Trump insanities, and his “kidding on the
square” shtick has made his plans to ethnically cleanse the Palestinians
momentarily seem like just another bit of outrageous comic excess that he
doesn’t really mean.
Can’t these protesters take a “joke”?
If and when he alarms Americans by turning serious about
bulldozing the Gaza Strip and creating a seaside paradise for hirsute
belly-dancers, that might finally trigger another burst of large
pro-Palestinian demonstrations. But until then, “Trump Gaza” will cause
precisely as much public anxiety as turning a crazed, possibly high
mega-billionaire loose on the federal government and inviting him to shut down
whatever he likes. It’s the sort of thing that would have shocked the activist
class and galvanized a response had a “normal” president done it. But when
Trump does it?
Americans knew what they were signing up for and handed him a near-majority in the popular vote anyway. Protests only work when the government’s conduct defies popular expectations. How do you build a protest movement in a country that now expects, and accepts, lunacy?

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