For more on this topic check out tomorrow’s False Flag Weekly News with E. Michael Jones
On-scene reporting specialist Brett Redmayne-Titley discusses his new article “UC’s War For Your Mind?: Students Defeat Cops in Opening Battle.” It provides an in-depth look at one of the more than 100 protests/encampments that have sprung up on American campuses protesting the genocide of Gaza: “On the weekend of April 27, 2024, UC/ San Diego campus administrators got wind that Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) was going to set up an ‘encampment’ at a point yet unknown. They had been waiting for this opening salvo of the constant of conscience and its visual appeal—tents—to finally come to their campus. For months, they had previously been summoned to meetings at UC Davis, UC Los Angeles, and UC Berkeley to, in part and priority, address the growing student awakening…And how to stop it.”
Brett Redmayne-Titley is the author of THERE! On-Scene Reporting from a World Gone Mad.: From Ukraine to Moldova, Erdogan’s Turkey to Hizbullah’s Lebanon, the US Police Killing of Evan Quik and Further Down the Rabbit Hole of Media Lies. His work is archived at WatchingRomeBurn.uk.
The interview begins:
B R-T: We're dealing with a very moral issue here, one that I coined as the constant of conscience. I think that anyone who has the constant of conscience understands that this is indeed genocide and it has to stop. Certainly the ICJ this morning said the same thing. We're going to see the same thing from the ICC very shortly.
But the students are ahead of the curve. In my articles, I use the analogy to Occupy, which as you probably remember, Kevin, I was very well invested in, actually living in the camps with the protesters, writing many articles. I believe I wrote more about Occupy than any other journalist in America because I was so invested in the organization and was very enthusiastic about it. It was a grassroots organization that was indeed really all-inclusive.
And the all-inclusive nature of it sold itself to the general public. It was why Obama ruined and destroyed the camps. The camps, just like they are today at the universities, are a means of coalescence against genocide. And because it's very effective as a visual means of protest and a visual means of coalescing further in additional protests, the administration is furious, as they are about the ICJ decision. today.
We're not allowed to protest genocide. We're merely allowed to accept this new definition that's being pro-offered to the students and forced down their throats, regardless of the realities in Gaza.
I've been privy to a lot of what's taken place at an administrative level, and I'm afraid I cannot disclose how I'm able to do that. I can just assure your listeners that my information does come from the sources at the administrative level. Collectively, I can say that the administration doesn't give a damn about the students and their protests. They want it to stop now because they're getting their orders from the UC Regents Office, and the UC Regents Office is fervently, vociferously Zionist. And they want this to stop because it will coalesce into the streets soon with the American people now rising up against the genocide.
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