By Liam Clancy
Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, which descended into chaos when minorities students demanded that whites leave campus for a "Day of Absence," has plunged even further, with gangs of bat- and baton-wielding students now roaming the campus.
The battle developed when race-baiting students and a progressive administration combined to attack biology professor Bret Weinstein, who spoke out against a campus event that coerced white students and faculty to leave campus.
He refused to participate in the so-called "Day of Absence," leading to protesters taking faculty members hostage, and even barricading themselves in buildings.
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Weinstein told the Washington Times that protesters were seen stopping cars on campus, demanding information about occupants.
Now he's reported some groups are attacking others.
"Credible reports [of] protesters [with] bats roaming campus for 2 days. People hit, won't report," Weinstein tweeted on Monday.
On Sunday, an official at Evergreen sent a letter to students, insisting that they immediately cease carrying bats on campus.
Alarmingly, the memo is phrased as if the students are participating in completely reasonable behavior.
"We acknowledge and understand the fear and concerns that are motivating these actions. We also understand that these students are seeking to provide an alternative source of safety from external entities as well as those community members who they distrust," the memo states.
The students ignored the memo, as they were seen with bats the next day.
Instead of disciplining or expelling offending students, the college president actually thanked the protesters and gave in to a multitude of their demands.
Scott Greer, author of "No Campus for White Men: The Transformation of Higher Education into Hateful Indoctrination" and an editor at the Daily Caller, went on the "Alex Jones Show" on Monday to share his views on the Red Guards that have taken over higher education.
"Do these activists hear of my book title, and then take it up as a challenge to make it a reality?" Greer joked.
Speaking about Evergreen State College specifically, Greer relayed the strategy of the student protesters: "This is an extreme example of what we've seen at various other campuses: building up demands that are only for certain students, and it's very racially exclusionary."
"The essence of authoritarianism is to say, 'White people did some oppressing things in the past so you, because you look like those people, you're now guilty,'" Jones responded.
Greer went on to note the negative effects wrought by these senseless protests, such as earlier at the University of Missouri.
In 2015, the University of Missouri was the site of now infamous student protests against alleged racism, with one professor charged with misdemeanor assault for harassment of a journalist trying to cover the event.
"Mizzou is getting hurt very bad right now," Greer explained. "They've had to close at least 3-4 dorms because of how bad enrollment is. And it's not even just enrollment; alumni donations are also plummeting. So a lot of the money they could count on to offset the bad enrollment numbers isn't coming in, either. That's all due to them catering to these campus leftists."
Greer then relayed the completely immoral strategy of these protesters, including propagating a hoax that the Ku Klux Klan was seen on campus.
"So they will resort to lies and deceit to support their cause," Greer argued.
Greer expects the climate on campuses across the nation will only get worse in coming years, unless politicians make a stand.
"I think unless lawmakers start cutting funding for these schools, things are going to get much worse," he said.
Jones added, "Bottom line, the colleges are being held hostage by their own ideology that they were trying to create ... their own vile, globalist propaganda of racial manipulation is backfiring."
Greer thinks these protests have rebounded because they've began to target normal Americans, even those on the left. It's simply "fantasy racism" that's not actually there.
How to stop the insanity?
Greer thinks it's simple: "The first thing that can be turned around at least on a college level is administrators could tell these kids 'No.'"
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