Ivy League Lesson Plan: Aspiring Intern Attempts to School Me on Her Third
Worldist "Feelings"

Posted By Phyllis Chesler On May 11, 2011 

Life is funny, life is great, but life is also strange, the way it all boils
down to one's views on only two or three subjects, namely Israel, Islam, and
America.

Yesterday, I met with a potential intern sent my way by a local area college
with whom I've happily worked before. She seemed alert, bright, interested,
talented and ready to start her (unpaid) full-time summer internship almost
immediately. I had already told her to visit my website
<http://www.phyllis-chesler.com/>  and to read some of my articles and
assumed that she knew my current subjects and views. She did. In fact, on
the phone, she went out of her way to agree with me on my critique of the
academic feminist view that the Islamic face veil and polygamy are
"liberating" for women.

Just after we finished discussing hours and possible projects, she stopped,
smiled smoothly, and said this:

"But I have to tell you that I take issue with your position on Israel."

"Oh" said I. "Have you lived in Israel, do you know any Palestinians, have
you read many books, written many articles, taken many courses about Israel
and about the Middle East?"

"Well no," she said, "but I feel strongly about it."

And then I said: "So, based on your feelings and perhaps on some peer
pressure, you are willing to give up an internship that you might otherwise
want?"

I stressed that I had no problem with her holding a view different than my
own. I asked her whether she could work with someone with whom she did not
agree exactly on this one issue.

She paused. And then she said: "But I have another problem. I think it is
wrong to condemn all of Islam."

Now I looked at her for a moment without saying anything.

Then I spoke.  "But I don't. In fact, I champion the work of some religious
Muslims as well as those of secular Muslims and ex-Muslims and I work with
Muslim and ex-Muslim dissidents and feminists. To expose honor killings, to
challenge Islamic gender apartheid practices is not the same as condemning
all Muslims or all Islam."

Again, I told her that I could work with someone with whose views I did not
completely agree; could she? Although by now I was fearing that if she said
yes that instead of working for me  she would force me to teach her in an
unpaid tutorial.

She was not yet done.

"I also take issue with an article
<http://www.nationalpost.com/todays-paper/Palestinization+lesbian+activism/4
480785/story.html>  you wrote in which I believe you are stereotyping
lesbians and Jewish lesbians."

Friends: I actually managed not to laugh out loud.

I assured her that I was not at all biased against lesbians or against
Jewish lesbians but indeed, that I had seen many lesbians, including Jews,
who were "Queers for Palestine," and who defended a toxically homophobic
"Palestine" over the Jewish state when that Jewish state actually grants
political asylum to Palestinian homosexuals who have been tortured and
near-murdered by their Palestinian families, neighbors, and political
leaders.

And then I said: "Look, if you decide that you can work for someone with
whom you do not agree, call me."

She left. Calm, cool, unruffled, almost satisfied.

This was the second time in which a young woman-no more than 20 or 21 years
old-felt entitled to preach at me, rather righteously, when they were
applying for a job with me. The first young woman was applying for a paid
position but she did not let me speak until she first spent 15 minutes
"filling me in" on her Third Worldist views. Yesterday's cream-of-the-crop
came all the way for an interview, ultimately in order to challenge me up
close and personal.

For all I know, a tape recorder might have been running in her bag because
when she left my apartment she seemed strangely happy.

Why is this all important? Because these two young women (granted, they do
not represent all young Ivy League women), do not seem to respect authority
or at least authority with whom they do not agree. This means that,
potentially, they might be willing to destroy their own civilization since
they disagree with its authorities on certain key issues.  Standing on no
serious knowledge base, they and others of their generation nevertheless
feel absolutely entitled to stake out a position based on "feelings."

Is this a continuation of the student uprisings in Europe and America in the
1960s?  Is this the result of the politicization of knowledge, i.e. its
Stalinization and Palestinianization?

Where will this end if we do not stop it? And, how can we do that?

  _____  

Article printed from NewsReal Blog: http://www.newsrealblog.com

URL to article:
http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/05/11/ivy-league-lesson-plan-aspiring-inter
n-attempts-to-school-me-on-her-third-worldist-feelings/

 



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