EFE
The president of the United States, Joe Biden, condemned this Thursday the violence in university protests against the war in Gaza and stated: “Violent protest is not protected, peaceful protest is.”
Biden made these statements during an urgently called speech at the White House that did not appear on the official agenda that the press office sent to the media on Wednesday night.
In statements lasting just three minutes, the president defended the right of students to demonstrate, but insisted that “order must prevail” in the face of the riots that have occurred in recent days on university campuses across the country with hundreds of arrests. .
“Violent protest is not protected, peaceful protest is. It is illegal when violence occurs. Destroying property is not a peaceful protest, it is illegal. Vandalism, break-ins, breaking windows, paralyzing campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations. None of this is a peaceful protest,” he emphasized.
“Threatening people, intimidating them, instilling fear in them is not a peaceful protest. “It is illegal,” he stressed.
Biden stated that “dissent is essential to democracy,” but dissent “should never lead to disorder and should never result in the denial of the rights that other students have to finish the semester and their college education.”
The president, who had remained silent in recent days about the spread of protests across the country, stated that on university campuses “there is no place for hate speech or violence of any kind,” whether “ anti-Semitism, Islamophobia” or discrimination against students of Arab or Palestinian origin.
At the end of his speech, Biden responded with a dry “no” when a reporter asked him if the university protests had made him reconsider his policies toward Israel.
He also answered negatively when asked if National Guard reservists should intervene in these protests, something that the governor of Texas, Republican Greg Abbott, resorted to to repress protesters at the University of Texas at Austin.
The last time Biden spoke about the protests was on April 22, when, in response to questions from journalists, he said that he condemned the “anti-Semitic protests” and “those who do not understand what is happening to the Palestinians.” .
Hundreds of students were arrested in protests, encampments and building occupations in pro-Palestinian protests throughout the country, after harsh interventions by riot police in actions that were generally peaceful, but that their critics criticized as anti-Semitic and organized by external agents.