Last weekend, multiple anti-Semitic protests broke out on college campuses including Ohio State University, Columbia University, and Yale University. The demonstrators tore down American flags, chanted about the death of Israelis and praised the October 7 attacks. There were also some injuries and arrests.
Ever since the war between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas broke out, intense targeting of Jews in the U.S. sparked, too.
Initially, people questioned whether the anti-Semitism was new or simply uncovered by the Hamas terrorist attack.
But now, as more protests occur, many worry that colleges have become a breeding ground for not only leftist agendas at large, but also for much of this resurgence of Jewish hatred.
Considering the amount of anti-Semitism displayed on college campuses in recent months, the news that a survey found roughly half of Gen Z voters “are sympathetic toward Hamas” is, for many, not a shock, Breitbart reported.
Summit Ministries and RMG Research, Inc. released data on Monday showcasing “the startling difference between the sentiments of all voters and Gen Z voters specifically, those born between 1997 and 2012.”
These particular results, which involved 1,003 registered voters, highlighted Gen Z’s terrorist sympathies with the label, “Landmark poll: Gen Z sides with Hamas.”
The respondents were asked, “Do you believe that Israel’s wealth and military power make its campaign against Hamas unjust?”
According to Breitbart, “While most voters across the board, 58 percent, believe that Israel’s campaign is ‘just’ — compared to 21 percent who believe it is unjust — only 42 percent of voters aged 18-24 believe Israel’s campaign against Hamas is just. A plurality of voters aged 18-24 believe Israel’s campaign against Hamas is unjust.”
Does Hamas deserve Gen Z sympathy?
This is despite the fact that roughly 60 percent of Gen Z voters “agree with the U.S. government classifying Hamas as a terrorist group.”
The survey also revealed that “one-third of Gen Z voters believe Israel does not have the right to exist as a nation. Across the board, just ten percent hold that same sentiment, showcasing the radicalization of America’s youth.”
Comparatively, a Pew Research poll from March found “roughly six-in-ten Americans (58 percent) say Israel’s reasons for fighting Hamas are valid,” even if they did not all agree with how Israel responded to Hamas.
However, even though the majority of the U.S. voters appear to side with Israel amid the war, the poll from Monday made it unmistakably clear that almost the majority of young voters do not.
Meg Kilgannon, Family Research Council’s senior fellow for Education Studies, shared with The Washington Stand, “When colleges and even primary and secondary schools are educating their students in the ‘oppressor/oppressed’ paradigm, it’s little wonder that Gen Z will identify with Hamas as indigenous and believe that Israel is a ‘colonizing’ force.”
She continued, “We know that this is totally and biblically inaccurate, but this is a generation that has been formed by social media very profoundly where these ideas are pervasive.”
As such, it leads to “a situation where there is very little downside for being a pro-Palestine protestor on a college campus in most states,” especially considering the fact that “universities have policies where they provide the police force and the court system to meet their need for [social] justice.”
Unfortunately, Kilgannon concluded, “This horrific situation is sadly not surprising.”
This article appeared originally on The Washington Stand.