Bullying should have no sanction. Not on our campus and not in our paper.
Nonetheless, over the past month, Graduate Students Association President Milan Chatterjee has been unjustly attacked, bullied and slandered in the pages of the Daily Bruin and on UCLA Listservs. Chatterjee’s actions in providing funding for the Diversity Caucus’ town hall have been criticized by groups that support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement as violating the First Amendment rights of students. He did no such thing. Chatterjee not only acted within the confines of university policy and the law, but did so in protection of the GSA and its mission.
The BDS movement has been a contentious campus topic for a few years now, and some in the UCLA administration have spoken out against it.
“I think the BDS movement, whatever the intent, the effect has been corrosive. And the fact that it’s focused on a single country is isolating to many of our students. It’s divisive,” said UCLA Chancellor Gene Block in an interview with the Jewish Journal.
With this in mind, the GSA Cabinet unanimously approved a resolution Oct. 24 under which “UCLA GSA – as a governing body – will abstain from taking any stances or engaging in any discussion in regards to Israel-Palestine politics.” This principled policy was adopted by a vote of 11 in favor to 0 against. Chatterjee cast just one of the votes, yet he, and only he, has been singled out for ridicule.
In October, Chatterjee received a request to co-sponsor an event with the Diversity Caucus. Chatterjee approved the funds but stipulated that they not be used to promote BDS. He explained to the Diversity Caucus representative that “Our cabinet does not want to co-program with Divest from Israel, as we believe we’ll be sponsoring a position that will alienate a substantial portion of our constituents. As I clarified to you over the phone, we also don’t want to co-program with any counter-organization to Divest from Israel, because that will alienate a significant portion of students, as well. GSA wants to remain neutral in Israel-Palestine politics, as described above.” The caucus representative acknowledged that this conversation took place, yet, when she selectively leaked documents to Students for Justice in Palestine, which turned them over to lawyers and the press, she conveniently did not leak this conversation.
GSA acted both correctly and within its rights when it refused to co-sponsor a BDS promotional event. Student groups have a right to free speech. However, GSA does not need to sponsor that speech with Cabinet funds. GSA operated both within the law, which was affirmed in a legal opinion from the American Center for Law & Justice and co-signed by a number of prominent Jewish organizations, and according to its own bylaws when it stated it would not fund an event pursuing a BDS agenda.
In the end, GSA funds were granted, the event took place and SJP was even allowed to operate a table. Nonetheless, SJP retained lawyers, issued a legal threat against Chatterjee and opinion pieces ran in the Daily Bruin calling for Chatterjee’s resignation.
Both the legal reasoning and the calls for Chatterjee’s resignation are tendentious. The GSA should not take sides on contentious Israeli-Palestinian politics. The GSA has a mission. It is to advance graduate student welfare, not narrow political agendas. Chatterjee is right to hold his ground. There’s a name for what is happening to him, and that is bullying. We can’t let the bullies win.
Saidoff is a graduate student in political science.
imgur.com/gallery/BPQfc
How Milan got people to vote yes: http://165.227.25.233/2015/11/30/submission-gsa-member-resigns-over-duplicitous-neutrality-policy/
Here are some choice quotes from the founder of the American Center for Law and Justice, Pat Robertson:
1) Many of those people involved in Adolf Hitler were Satanists, many were homosexuals – the two things seem to go together.
2)Islam is a violent, I was going to say religion, but it’s not a religion. It’s a political system. It’s a violent political system bent on the overthrow of the governments of the world and world domination. That is the ultimate aim.
3) The founding document of the United States of America acknowledges the Lordship of Jesus Christ because we are a Christian nation.
So the graduate students of UCLA cannot handle a conversation about Palestine? Or do some people, like the author, benefit from the status quo?
Wouldn’t it be great if those on the pro-Israel side could prevent conversation…conversations they are afraid of losing.
Red Alert: UCLA is not a place for “divisive” topics. I.e. topics that don’t support those in power.
First Amendment takes second chair as GSA President and his ragtag team determine what kind of conversations we can have.
“However, GSA does not need to sponsor that speech with Cabinet funds.” Excuse me, but can you show me where in the First Amendment it says that the GSA can restrict who the Diversity Caucus indirectly associates with? Because that’s exactly what Milan did: http://i.imgur.com/aZpjO8W.png
I like how the author says “With this in mind, the GSA Cabinet unanimously approved a resolution Oct. 24 ” then simply says “In October, Chatterjee received a request to co-sponsor an event with the Diversity Caucus.” If the author included the date for the second one, you’d see their application happened before that resolution. See here: http://imgur.com/gallery/BPQfc
Nazik: Its time to move on. I respect your passion on this issue, but it is moot. The funding was granted and the event took place. No one’s free speech rights were infringed upon (SJP even had a table) and therefore I believe a court would be hard pressed to hear this case. However, if you believe otherwise, then perhaps you should move forward and file a complaint instead of continuing to rant on this website. Just a suggestion.
Again, supporters of the funding requirement are missing the point. The point is that you can not restrict public funding because of speech and associations you don’t agree with, period. Its just that simple folks, no matter what your personal opinion. And no, the American Center for Law and Justice – a far right-wing legal group – is not credible on this issue. The Supreme Court has already spoken, time and time, again. Unfortunately, the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, and Pal Legal have to remind them of this fact.
http://41.media.tumblr.com/763bb7e3eca25e88808f40a3dfcd3599/tumblr_inline_nyu58n6y8L1qdcy4n_500.jpg
“Israel, a tiny democracy, whose total area is 600 times smaller than that of its enemies, is being demanded to give up precisely the very asset it does not have – territory. In exchange, its enemies, 21 Muslim tyrannies, are being asked to provide the one and only thing they do not have – peace.”
– Arieh Stav, http://www.acpr.org.il/
http://falkland-islands.tumblr.com/post/134524276100/answer-to-a-bdshole
Why is SJP’s Agatha Palma profiled on the Canary Mission for anti-Jewish activities?: http://canarymission.org/individuals/agata-palma/
If the Daily Bruin deletes my three questions, I’ll just need to start a website to get my questions answered.
Why is SJP’s Rahim Kurwa profiled on the Canary Mission for anti-Jewish activities?: http://canarymission.org/individuals/rahim-kurwa/
Why did SJP’s Yacoub Kureh target the dorm rooms of Jewish students to place “mock eviction notices?”: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/harvard-jewish-students-contemptuous-of-mock-eviction-notices/2013/03/08/0/?print
What does SJP have to say about their BDS legislation being overturned by UAW?https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2015/12/18/uaw-nullifies-california-grad-students-bds-vote