The date for this protest was probably completely random and not at all meant to be insulting.
The College Fix reports:
Day after 9/11, pro-Palestinian protesters host ‘Keffiyeh Day’ walkout at College of William & MaryThe College of William & Mary’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter — which was placed on probation through the end of the spring semester for aggressive protest tactics — recently made its first public appearance for the fall 2024 semester.The group held a walk-out protest Sept. 12 as part of a Virginia SJP statewide “Keffiyeh Day,” held one day after the United States commemorated the 23rd anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.Members of the group, some of whom in the past have called for peace, could be heard Thursday calling for “intifada revolution” and chanted “we don’t want two states, take us back to ‘48,” which many view as a call for the destruction of Israel.The group is also promoting the national Students for Justice in Palestine’s plans for a “week of rage” that is scheduled to take place Oct. 7 through Oct. 11, the same time as the anniversary of the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel’s civilians.During the Keffiyeh Day walkout, two members of SJP approached a College Fix reporter and demanded their faces be blurred in pictures. Informed they are on a public campus, the two continued to insist and added: “We don’t want to talk to journalists.”Officers of William & Mary’s police department at the protest affirmed the reporter’s right to take photographs on a public campus.In an advertisement for the event on Instagram, the William & Mary chapter encouraged participants to wear masks to prevent the spread of COVID despite no college mandate to do so. The group also asked attendees to blur the faces of students in any photos they took.The protest drew about 50 students at its height, noticeably smaller than demonstrations at previous pro-Gaza events on William & Mary’s campus during the spring semester.Last school year, the William & Mary SPJ chapter was put on probation through end of the spring 2024 semester for “engaging in conduct that infringes on the rights of others, failure to comply with written instructions, (and) endangering health & safety,” according to a report on organizational conduct history at the college.“Members of the group prevented vehicular traffic from moving freely and placed themselves in danger,” the report states. “This was the organization’s second violation this academic year. The first violation occurred on October 25, 2023 and resulted in a warning.”
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