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Search resuls for: "National Lawyers Guild"


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An unfortunate symbiosis has developed between pro-Israel culture warriors like Republican Representative Elise Stefanik and the most self-indulgent fringe of pro-Palestinian campus protesters. Together they are, wittingly or unwittingly, shifting attention from the urgent emergency in Gaza, where Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is poised to defy the United States and invade the southern city of Rafah, to the much smaller problem of campus antisemitism. The United States has none.” Within the movement, I imagine such rhetoric functions as a sign of total commitment, a no-going-back rejection of hollow liberal pieties. Since 2016, pro-Israel politicians have pushed versions of a bill called the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, which would codify, for the purpose of enforcing federal civil rights law in higher education, a definition of antisemitism that includes rejection of Israel as a Jewish state. In the past, civil libertarians were able to head such legislation off, but that’s become harder in the current fevered climate.
Persons: Elise Stefanik, Benjamin Netanyahu, , , Panther, Kwame Ture, Stokely Carmichael, Israel, that’s Organizations: Palestinian, Columbia, National Lawyers Guild, United, Senate, Semitism Locations: Israel, Gaza, United States, Rafah, stoke
Student protesters at Columbia University who took over a building on campus Tuesday morning could face a variety of felony or misdemeanor charges, but probably will not be found guilty of criminal charges, said Martin R. Stolar, a Manhattan lawyer and former president of the New York City chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, with more than 50 years of experience defending protesters. Protesters broke into Hamilton Hall early Tuesday, hours after university administrators said they had begun suspending students who refused to leave a tent encampment on campus. Videos show a person breaking windows in a door to gain access to the building. Other photos taken inside and posted on social media show protesters using chairs and desks to barricade the doors. Columbia announced later Tuesday that the students occupying the building faced expulsion.
Persons: Martin R, “ We’re, , Stolar, Alvin L, Bragg, Jeffrey Maddrey, Maddrey Organizations: Columbia University, New, National Lawyers, Protesters, Hamilton Hall, Columbia, Police Locations: Manhattan, New York City, New York
For Palestinian and Muslim students, the invocation of terrorism law is especially frightening. But now advocates for Palestinian rights describe a new level of repression. “That’s the difference.”No one should underestimate how awful the campus climate is for many Jewish students, who’ve experienced a surge in violence and abuse. In some social justice circles, then, support for Israel is viewed as something akin to support for the K.K.K. There is little reason to think that the pressure brought to bear by these outside institutions is making Jewish students any safer.
Persons: Louis D, Law, Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, , Donald Trump, Radhika Sainath, Columbia University’s Rashid Khalidi, , who’ve, Jewish counterprotesters, Erwin Chemerinsky, George Floyd, they’ve, Kenneth Stern, Bard College’s, ” Stern, He’s, Stern, Trump, scenesters, Joe Rogan, Elon, that’s, Khalidi Organizations: Defamation League, Brandeis Center for Human, Justice, ADL, Brandeis, Republican, Palestinian, Homeland Security, Education, Israel, Palestine, Columbia, Cornell, Jewish, Tulane, University of California, America, Peace, Bard College’s Center, National Lawyers Guild, American Jewish Committee, International Holocaust, Alliance, The, Rights, Elon Musk, West Bank Locations: Palestine, Israel, Ron DeSantis , Florida, Florida, United States of America, Berkeley, America, Gaza City, Gaza, West
The number of people granted asylum in immigration courts hit a historic high this fiscal year under the Biden administration's adjustments to the asylum process, a recent data analysis shows. The TRAC report, released in late November, said the 2022 number was the largest number of individuals granted asylum in any year in the courts' history. However, the analysis also showed that grants of asylum have slowed, with 50% of cases granted asylum in June falling to 41% of cases in September. Also, those released from detention had better asylum grant rates, 54% this fiscal year, compared to those who were detained, 15% of whom were granted asylum. Just 23% of people from Ecuador, or 3,380, were granted asylum, placing the country near the bottom.
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