College Administrators Care About Your Speech Rights–If You’re a Nazi

They disapprove of speech favorable to Palestinians, however.

Discussing free speech in the United States is a losing proposition.  Every political demographic screams about hypocrisy, but doing so misses the larger point:  it’s impossible to lionize speech as understood in this country without also being hypocritical.  That’s because civil liberties are indivisible from the needs of power.  In many cases, speech isn’t performed as a freedom; it’s an asset exploited by the shrewdest consumers.  

Continue reading “College Administrators Care About Your Speech Rights–If You’re a Nazi”

James Baldwin and the Jewish State

Baldwin didn’t speak often of Israel, but he still managed to say plenty

For James Baldwin, nothing started or stopped at the borders of the United States.  His comments about Black-Jewish tension in the country of his birth took on worldly dimensions, offering unusual insight into domestic race relations, international affairs, and conflict in the Middle East. 

Baldwin wasn’t a policy wonk, but, befitting a person of his stature, he commented regularly on contemporary issues of global import.  Public figures don’t normally escape questions about Palestine and Israel; Baldwin was no exception.  The few times he spoke about the region reveal a thinker of significant prescience and a skilled rhetorician who doesn’t allow audiences the luxury of comfort. 

Continue reading “James Baldwin and the Jewish State”

Palestine in the Revolutionary Imagination

Finding Palestine among the disinherited.

Beirut’s corniche is a terrific place to contemplate the immovable and the ephemeral.  The seaside walkway is one of the city’s few remaining public spaces and the only place where servitude doesn’t divide rich and poor.  Tourists mingle among locals, many of them Syrian and Palestinian, and on lucky days entertainment will include oddball breakdancers, daredevil divers, and somebody playing an oud plugged into an amplifier.  On a nice Sunday, which in the Eastern Mediterranean is usually a weekly occurrence, crowds are so thick (with pedestrians strolling in bike lanes and bikes weaving through pedestrians) that walking briskly is impossible. 

Continue reading “Palestine in the Revolutionary Imagination”