2024-05-13 08:40:06
The journalist Carla Colomé Santiago, who studies in the City University of New York (CUNY) wrote in the Spanish newspaper The country an article in which he condemned the police of that city clearing the camps that occupied academic and common spaces in several universities against the
financial and cultural cooperation with the State of Israel.
Interrupting the normal functioning of the higher education houses, the students who camped around or took over the buildings would prevent the return to the classrooms after the spring holidays, and, according to the rector of the University of Colomé Santiago, they were deactivated by “specific and repeated acts of violence and vandalism.”
Days before, the author had visited the camp where students from her class “They sent all kinds of proposals to local media, interviews to international channels, and documented with the awareness of being part of something historic.”
In the camp, which Colomé Santiago described as full of tents, tattoo artists printing the peace symbol and people and choirs shouting over the loudspeaker Free, free Palestine! (Free Palestine), he met socialist agitator Danny Shaw, expelled from CUNY, where he taught, for posting content that incited harassment against Israelis.
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The Cuban considered that Shaw “His University, his school and his colleagues failed him”. She described it as “a former teacher, who spoke Spanish, let’s say with good grace (with a Cuban accent)” and greeted her “as if he had known me for years”and confessed that “A few years before, between his travels through Latin America, he was working in the Arroyo Naranjo neighborhood, in Havana.”
At the meeting, the magazine’s collaborator The sneeze and the man shared contacts and said goodbye with a handshake. “Shaw’s conscience ignited mine,” he confessed.
The writer and Executive Editor of People in spanishJoaquín Badajoz, exposed Shaw’s links with the Cuban socialist regime in a comment on Colomé’s publication.
“Danny Shaw is a university professor what I am a cosmonaut. He is a professional political activist who has been in charge of indoctrinating young people in classrooms for decades. “Dreaming about the destruction of the United States and its institutions gives him orgasms,” Badajoz expressed.
Just a year ago Shaw offered a conference in which he described the Havana regime as one of “dignity and self-determination.”
Cuban exile Jose Luis Bermello criticized Colomé Santiago for tearing his clothes for the expulsion of Danny Shaw, who according to his profile on the Historica fandom website, is a “communist activist” and “organizer of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, a minor party with small affiliated groups in the New York City metropolitan area.”
Shaw reportedly spent several years living in Cuba, fluent in Spanish, and visited other communist countries such as China and Vietnam.
Other activists in anti-Semitic protests on American college campuses, like Manolo de los Santos, have close ties to the Cuban socialist dictatorship.
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Bermello highlighted the hypocrisy of Colomé Santiago, by not mentioning the Jewish professor Shai Davidai, who was prevented from entering Columbia University to protect him, according to his authorities, from violence and harassment by leftist and anti-Semitic groups stationed there.
“This is the ‘left opposition’ that they want to sell us, which is nothing more than another small group of enlightened people determined to build ‘true socialism’ this time and keep us enslaved in the name of equality, diversity and environmentalism; “We are fixed!” Bermello said about the Cuban journalist and other young people who present themselves as exiles, but who return to socialism like a dog to vomit.
Mónica Baró, a scholar at the famously anti-Semitic New York University, denied in one of the comments to her colleague’s article that Jewish students were attacked in any way.
The young feminist did so less than two weeks after Rabbi Elie Buechler, associated with the Jewish Learning Initiative of the Orthodox Union on the campus of Columbia University, asked in a WhatsApp message to about 300 students, in his majority Orthodox Jews, to return to their homes and stay there.
CNN reported, for Buechler, the events “have made clear that Columbia University Public Safety and the NYPD cannot guarantee the safety of Jewish students.”
Baró’s denialism even obviated the need for the authorities of Columbia University to send this message in a letter to their students: “We know that many of you feel threatened by the atmosphere and language of the protest and have had to leave campus. That can’t happen. “The chants, signs, taunts, and social media posts by our own students that mock and threaten to ‘kill’ Jews are totally unacceptable, and Columbia students involved in such incidents will be held accountable.”
The Aliance Defending Liberty has recognized that universities are failing to protect Jewish students from attacks based on their ethnicity, religion and the country from which they come.
The activist and mountaineer Yandy Núñez Martínez, the first Cuban to climb Everest, expressed a perspective ignored by Colomé Santiago: “that Hamas return the kidnapped people and stop singing: ‘From the river to the Sea’. Palestine never existed as a country. They were always the twelve Tribes of Israel. Free Palestine from Hamas.”
The exiled Marcos Barrios reflected on how Baró and Colomé Santiago, among others, had not managed to escape the socialist matrix in which they were indoctrinated in Cuba. “All these leftist youth that come out of our universities,” lamented, now focuses on every conflict that comes their way in international media, but with a socialist nature and with great resources, such as El País, The New York Times o The Washington Post.
Meanwhile, in Cuba, the Castro leadership has repudiated the State of Israel for decades, and like international jihadism and the left that took over university campuses, it has organized public protests against the imminent attack against the remaining battalions of the Hamas terrorist group. , in the Rafah area.
Editorial Cubans around the World