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tv   Inside Story  Al Jazeera  May 4, 2024 9:30am-10:01am AST

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to the enjoy your free speech. the us how speak of faces anti war protest is at columbia university poll suggests an increasing number of young americans, assigning with palestinians. so what's behind list? generational gas for the us response to the war on garza, this is inside story, the
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a very welcome to the program and the clock for decades. united states has been israel's biggest ally, imagery, pond of successive us, administration's right across the political divide back to it since it was created in 1948 business is academia. the public adult had lost the support of israel. the polls suggest that unequivocal backing now appears to be waning, especially among the young appeared research study 2 years ago indicated only 41 percent in the age group of 18 to 29 year old. had a favorable view of israel menu from this generation. now, protesting in university campuses against the war on drugs which is killed nearly $35000.00 palestinians. so is he anger among young americans highlighting a generational divide in washington's policy towards israel. almost all the reasons
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re shaping public opinion with explosives and other questions without guessing just a moment. but 1st this report from katia lopez audio there's been a generational divide in america's response to the war ongoing from college campuses to politicians in washington. differences are emerging and wide and they know political risk amongst voters. so in essence, i think they might, in the ministration, might just be putting their hands up and saying, we are going to have to write off these motors by care deeply about this issue. because there's no way that we can a piece them. we will continue to have israel's back precedent by doing the same criticism for his handling of israel's war on calls from both the left and the right. and that could check the strong support. israel has enjoyed in washington for decades. analysts say it's not just about generational differences,
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but also about changing world views on foreign policy and israel. even before. a 2022 pew survey suggest a bill 70 percent of americans. 65 and older had of favorable view of israel, but support dropped nearly 30 percentage points with the younger americans age 18 to 29. when i was growing up, the democratic party was the party that supported israel, 7675 percent of the american jews go to the democratic party. that is still the case, although i suspect it may not be in november of this year. my message to the students inside the encampment, go back to class and stop the nonsense. republicans are denouncing the protesters and biden's policies. but the president is also getting pushed back from his own democratic party with 57 members of congress recently asking him to withhold aid to israel. it is a sign that the by and there's been a station is run by
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a man was 81 years old because she is of the old school of the democratic party. almost nobody who works for him is just 5 criticism from both parties and young voters biden remains defiant. now, for years it's been the economy, not foreign policy, this way more heavily with american voters. now some analysts say the war and guns of may not play a defining role in november's presidential election, but it would likely have an impact that's he a little, this is a, you know, to 0 for insights store. all right, let's spring. and i guess now in new york we have cleared devon, pulled a student at columbia journalism school in london. julie norman, who's deputy director at new sales and to on us politics and also,
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and you can lead says kit milburn, who's author of generation left, which is a book which examines generational differences at good to have you with this or will welcome to all of you i'd like to start with you in new york if i may want in your view, do you think is happening here while the generations adults. ready of israel, do you think? i mean, i think this is something both new and old. you know, i mean there was no the protest dot columbia in the sixty's against the, were in the, in the eighty's against apartheid in south africa. so in some way, as i think it's not a surprise, you know, that the word, this generation is something that university students, when i can test on one and fight back against the after same time, i think younger people are more looped. and then after before, because of the social media, i think there's also more of a growing awareness, you know, of our global world. and the problem is within it and drawing lines between
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different issues. i know you've been in my own life. my younger companies, you know, will bring up issues like gentrification and column and vision that things i certainly was not aware of when i was, you know, in middle school in the early high school. um. so i do think social media has played a role in that and started greater awareness of different struggles, different in history is around the world. but, but after the same time, i do also think, you know, the urge to push back against a more and america goes, um, you know, americans ties to war. i think are something we see time and time again, play out on college campuses so. so i think it's both um, you know, a new divide and an old divide. right. and i guess as israel's actions and goals have come super charge of differences and, and the us is perceived role in that assault on gaza class. yeah, and i think there's much greater awareness, you know, of the economics of all the best. um, i think thinking about our tax dollars,
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you know, going to find is really going to find the square. and then thinking about colombia, you know that how the universities and diamond isn't invested in um, different defense defense companies like lockheed martin or companies like air b and b that operate within the occupied settlements in the west spot. that's governments in the i to pride westbank. i think there's just a greater awareness of some money at play here. and i think capitalism and pushing back against capitalism is something younger generations um, you know, have been and have been feeling and, and talking about and say more. and so i think this fits very much within that. we're all the pushing back against trust and you've got the university, you know, who have ties to these companies and this based on a black rock list of investment in stock. okay, we don't have that much of an eye into it. julie, if we heard from katya, is report just now is outlined in just how old the president is,
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the us president isn't. and it's not that the the perception, the general perception of israel's position is changed in spite. and i'm his cohort . it grew out. things do look very differently to someone bull in this century day . absolutely. you know, i think everything that clara said is, is very right. and i think you add to that an issue like israel palestine where the conflict and the issue simply has changed over the decades. and as we heard in the report that started the show, many from fighting generation, the so called boomers grew up seeing israel as the underdog of the country that emerged after the holocaust, the, the country that was needing to defend itself against aggression. i don't think you'd be going too far to say was almost the beginning. the way if you many people see you crane today is how many and by ins, generation saw israel. that's obviously changed. you know, why students in university here in london? obviously students in the us have grown up with an israel that's very different
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that has a very different political. i'm seeing that it has a very different position in the region. and they've seen this concert play out with the 2nd intifada. i'm with the wars on guys are proceeding this one and then of course the current conflicts. so it's a very different image i think then say binding his generation grew up with that with, with having of his room. right. things have moved on that. can you right how age increasing the appears to be that one of the key dividing lines in contemporary politics, but it really doesn't think that's always being the case. especially with the student. activism is always being there as close as outlined that has always been student activism. i think this way but and comments is something we haven't seen on this of scale for quite a long time. probably going back to the 1980s. i mean 5 to i'd make an odd when say with them about that. but, but the generational political differences a significant generational political differences are not always that you know,
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they, they come and merge and become significant and only only periodically, i think, i mean, you can really, you can tie what's going on at the moment in this generational division on how to choose around, perhaps israel gals as well, palace stocks. you can talk about to a why that a division in it jet along the lines of age or generation in terms of politics. i'm not, i'm is very particular point in history images in a really significant way really grows massively across several countries. actually at the same time, in the early to mid to thousands and time. i mean, it's something that happens on an international scale very suddenly, you would want to look as sudden international calls for about that. i would argue that that the financial crisis of 2008 is the roots, are based on a be submitted sions. and because i think that the, the financial crisis of 2008, it's actually very differently if you're old, how assets such as a home, over if your younger and you rely on income from work or perhaps from, from, from,
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from, from a state, welfare, etc. because what happens after 2008 huge amount of financial support goes from the states to the financial sector by proxy. if you're an asset, all that you do well, a fast, the same time, wages of being catastrophic, the performing since about pointing to u. k. 18 years of no wage growth, that's actually the portfolio. you haven't seen anything like that since the probably on it was as are the prospects of young people. so a couple of come diminished. i maintain that the a maintain to a very low level since that time the prospect for young people also costs complicated by climate change, which is going to make, make that lives poor. there's no doubt about, but i think that they're coming to a less settled state in the world of the exist, opens you up actually to be more critical to optimal critical views up out of the existing structures of the world. i think that's part of what pushed younger
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generations to the left to open them up to the, to the, to the left, the tools, both structural critiques. and i think that's a 1st thing for a phone. something like sort of jump. uh, do you think this is, this is like a, a tipping point then we're beginning to are on the verge of injury on you there. i mean, it was not just like that at the, the significance of student protests, of the pulse, but something different. that's going to give them it, which is because i think the se, in the financial crisis and everything that to means that the future is, are a little more bleak at the same day. so what does it mean for the future? i mean, lots of business as usual ladies to some of the very and pleasant young people. i think it's important about that way and that's what are significant changes and whether these and come as this wave of protests a, you know what, but this could actually be what we might call a generational forming event. but what, we're, what a disgruntled generation actually farmer,
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casey room politics is too early to tell. but i think that's what happened in the, the wave of protests about revolutions in 2011. you remember the occupied move but not k, but re inputs us cost without, without this of way of lecturing. electro projects, jeremy colbin in the u. k. bernie sanders in the us. they were both defeated in 2020 and since then that's been a little disarray. i think a but, but you know, it could well be the best sort of event. could be the sped to add to the next way. you know that this could be the generational foaming event of generations. that if, if, if you like, i mean, all right, significant, it's around foreign policy. i think i'm, that the role that the us plays in, in international structures. claire, would you like to come back on that? so there's a growing sense of despair among the the young of today is driving this. i mean, i certainly agree about it plays a role. i think, you know, we're talking about climate change talking about economic issues. mental health
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issues are also very much on the rise, and you know, we're still unsure the role social media is playing or not, but i do sense of growing nihilism. you know, among young people, especially the millennial generation and the order. jonesy, i think some of the younger people, younger than not, still come with a bit of hope to come with a bit of energy. but i do think that there is the start of streak of despair that is viewing hello is this um, at the same time i, i wonder, you know, if that is limited to the younger generation. i, something i've been thinking a lot about is how more generally across age differences were moving to the left into the right. you know, as a society were growing more polarized. and i think, you know, maybe one of the key differences is go language and some of the strategies of protests that are used by talking about israel, for instance. and i think to julie is point, you know, i think we're looking at a very different israel. um, today then we were, you know,
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203040 years ago and i think i see across generations grow and frustration with israel and what they're doing right now. and godsa. i think they are very different expressions around that. you know, i think older generations, for instance, are we less likely to embrace, protest, chance like from the river to the sea. but at the same time, i think, i see, you know, within my own life and family, even different perspectives on israel than people used to have. and i think the protest as well, you know, there's been across the country is huge support from professors and faculty for the students, you know, coming out and forming barriers against the police. so i do think these things extend beyond just to younger people and i think all of the same issues, you know, climate change, economic issues, older generation, see them as well. and i think are worried for younger people. and i do think about factors and julie, would you like to come back on that and also take it on politically what this means? a j bite and then upcoming elections?
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sure, yes, again, i disagree with what we are said. you know, here in the u. k. there is some campus activism, of course, but there has been essentially weekly, large demonstrations and protests and in london really since, since october 7th and, and it's clear and booted to those are quite intergenerational. so it's an important, obviously to, to see what's happening on the campuses and to look at that, that student movement, but also to see that this is a broader and bigger than not with this issue in conflict and getting back to the us. absolutely. i mean by then i think is really struggling with how to navigate this and that has been really from day one uh, you know, from october with i knowing i think that he would not be able to freeze all voters with whatever stance he took. i think he knows now that he will probably lose some voters especially, you know, the more a young progressive voters on this issue. but at the same time, i think there was
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a sense that uh, you know, going too far. the other way would also, you know, potentially was voters who were more sympathetic to israel. i honestly would just underscore, i think the policy is a bite and has been trying to pursue in the middle east. are more focus on what's happening there than on the political landscape back home that is having an effect . and i read this point, i would see that again, the campus, the campus, the politics is, is even some, somehow a bit different than now where we're seeing priorities among the wider population. your polls have shown that either among, even among the use demographic israel, palestine is so i think 15 out of 16 issues are in terms of ranking. so i do think it's important as, as clear and here of alluded to other issues are at play here also, you know, the economy, domestic issues and all of these are in the next right now with bite and has to consider for this election year. right and care and another issue that is it's daycare, the democratic, the demographic changes are having an effect, thought they have playing
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a role in shaping public opinion with younger generations, perhaps being made up of logic percentages of racial minorities who are perhaps more historically sympathetic to towards publishing its, i mean, not certainly triggering to us and is easily playing a significant role in the, in the makeup of, of the, of the incumbents at the campuses. and of course, you know, the, the demographic thing is that spam and that, that what we're saying is that the play out of the baby boom generation that the baby boom is a call that because there's a lot of time. there was a booming baths up to the 2nd level which ran up to around like 1965 with with the roll out to the contraceptive filled with the phrase full full fell off a bit as what we'd be accompanied, stuck in this almost like a geron jared's acrostic sort of society, you might just be very happy, younger people to a set themselves. and i said that i said the interest. so i think we'd be, we'd put it, put it that way. and of course that is likely to change. i think that, you know, and it's like the change over time. there's that really significant problems here.
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one, the emergency about the horrific emergency. so the status of something such as golf, for instance, but also the, the, you know, the pressing time scale of climate change means that way we might be in a re, factually to vote for younger people to say their interests. i'm fine. political means to do that. and so the incumbents, which only include us very small part of the population of young people across the us, that can be sort of like the trigger triggered moments. if you like, better ones, you can forward your way. unfortunately, politics which then disseminate some amongst, amongst a wider population, spokane, old but of course, your material interest to play a role and whether you ever subject to those ideas on north, i think doesn't mean you got an older people aren't going on. the protest in london, i've been on them and, and they, they certainly, uh, and it's just, you know, we, we need to take the thoughts of demographic and lexical factors into account when we're trying to work out what's going on. right click, what then can bridge,
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these divides then is as we get into an area where millennials are taking on leadership positions, i guess will be a kind of bridge between the boomer generation and then the generations to um, it's a good question. i mean, i always think, you know, engagement, i think one of the drawbacks of social media and how interconnected we are on line is, i think there's, especially for schools that have been growing installation, you know, interpersonal and traction. i think you can even see this and you know, israel itself, is there a pos trying to read research. you know, that in the past um is really from talk to names used to speaking each other and more, you know, and now there's way less actual face to face the interaction and you're seeing people much more just as a figure online. um, so i think, you know, building a sense of our culture, humanity in that way and seeing each other and showing up for each other i think. but that can certainly play a role in some healing. i also think, you know, i mean to the point, certainly about, i think there's been, you know,
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the political establishment at this moment is really almost kind of closing. it's i, as to how the public feels right now about the associates. and i think, you know, perhaps biden's own buildings, but is there a plan to this? but i think that, you know, again, you know, that things have changed and sentiment has changed and we might very well be at this turning point. and i think similar and, you know, talk to the black line. it's not our protest. there was a real response from the political establishment to a certain extent. and at least an attempt whether or not it was successful to understand some of these issues and to grapple with some of them. and you're not really seeing that in the same way with this issue scale. so many people on both sides of the aisle are staunchly and supportive israel instruction and supportive us support of israel and are really just not going to question that. so i think that you know, that this is really important for paul cheese to engage with where people are now, which is in a different place. julie, you know, i spoke to a university professor yesterday. you said that when he was teaching in the states
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for about 10 years, maybe a decade or so ago, and the students would know of bed at to raise the voice of game design isn't in such a way and such a prolific way. what's changed on that front? do you think? yeah, so i would say, you know, a number of things have changed as we've talked about in just the, the course of the conflict i think has shifted and we see and much more. um we see a lot more images of these really actions and gods in particular that has been, i would say, i splitting over the last 10 years. and obviously in the aftermath of the october 7th, a talk to it, we've seen a very different kind of war. but that has changed over time. i think as clear, mentioned, are students access to the images of those wars and even the, the reality on the ground in between the wars is just much more visible here. my students are following the word daily on, on check talk. they're seeing live streamed images from, you know, from the,
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from everyday people. and so i think that has changed. and i think just the climate again, on the campus itself has changed. there has been a lot more, i think, solidarity movements awareness to different different issues and movements around the world and uh, and students are taking those to her and i think trying to uh, trying to to have a place and not. and that's maybe a little bit different than it was 10 years ago that i would say again, you know, there's, there's always been, there was movement. so i remember 10 years ago is more like occupied was kind of the big movement. so it, i think just this focus has shifted because of just the international residents of what's happening right now. and to, to just quickly, just 30 seconds or so. would you say it's true to say that the difference is that we're saying a married by divergence between older and younger, jewish americans? oh, i think to some degree i wouldn't want to to, to say a quite that, that hard stroke i think, but on. but there's certainly been been
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a divergence in that regard. and yes, i would just underscore, the protest now are quite diverse in their makeup, and those who are, are counter protesting and, and are upset with the protests. are also quite diverse and their make up. this is something you've related to, the proximate can explore a little bit more. do you think these, these moments of protest can mock a transition in collective social thinking? just to take us towards a different view points when these new generations take the home? i mean, yeah, i think they always, i don't know, everyone does know every instance of these sorts of protests does that. but the only thing that does, that is the sort of protest if you, i mean that that could be the spot that's and that, but that, that's a so that leads the way in which people then that then follow. i think you'd probably something like that. so i think it really started off that sound at the moment. you know, you know, the end of time is coming up. we don't know what's gonna happen with those. we don't know what's going to happen with the israel is more on causes. so, you know,
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we, it's, it's too heavy to tell of costs but, and about that. but the, the general outlook for young people, but for all of us, but you know, the cost for getting people in particular, you know, it really, it is a crisis reading future that way, less than, that's the moment and you k food prices are rising because of the incredible ratings this drives the climate change of the material effects it's going to make as poor as making this product today. you know, at the same time, you know, people who study contentious politics. they say pretentious politics, social movements, they explode when the, the, the official political system is closed off to you about seems to be particularly for, for perhaps it, are you the young cohort? the let more left, we can probably younger cohort. the off the phone doesn't call them, but defeated. political system seems to be closed off in the u. k. political parties move much closer together. that doesn't seem to be much of a choice. and if you cannot express your opinions on your interest through the
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political system, you tend to do it outside the political system in the exposure social movements. club tenants, if you would, within universities like where you are at columbia at just how potent arise it is. and how much debate there is about this particular issue as well. it's funny, you know, because, and you see the media reports and it's being painted in the frame for, i'd say, and i really would say that's not the end of it on campus. i think there's pretty well there, there's been just quite widespread support, i think, for the protest either you know, from people who believe in freedom of speech or people who believe in what they're actually pushing for. you know, there certainly are some students and faculty, i think, somewhere very outspoken, who are a fan of the protests and i think can do is point, you know, these are very diverse to groups of people. but i think that it's been painted, you know, and that's very divided way. and i think there's a lot more a solid arity on campus around, you know, the rates of these protesters to express themselves and a lot of solidarity and support with their messages. we saw, you know,
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just hundreds of people come out the other day and support when being camp and when, when, when the ministration told him can and they had to leave and a lot of talk to you support as well. and i would also like to make the point in kind of going off what julie was saying, i think, you know, it's being painted as this issue of interest i'm. it has and so many of the protestors are young jewish people themselves. and so i think that for, you mean just totally takes out some of the nuance of the situation and how young jewish people themselves understand their role in these protest movements. so i think it's very important to me and you know, 15 of the students who are a rest of the other day. um, probably not the recent round for us, but the 1st round of arrest for jewish students. and we don't have those numbers yet for the current round for us, but i just think that that's been a bit over eastern some of the media framing. and i think it's important to kind of understand there is a lot of community follow. they're already on campus around, you know, the rates and the students to have a voice and to have a say. and i think that there's
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a lot of political life on this. and that's perhaps by, you know, it's being printed painted in this more porous fashion. but that really hasn't been the mood you know on columbia day today. a very interesting discussion, everybody uh much more to be said, but we've run out of time. we're afraid we'll be watching very closely here and i'll just or a direction this will take, but thank you, declared davenport to judy norman and care. no, but thank you. and thanks for watching how you can check out this program again, any time by visiting a website i'll just or dot com for the discussion. go to our facebook page. that's facebook dot com, forward slash ha inside store. and also join the conversation on x. i'll handle is at a inside story for me in the clock and the entire team here is good bye for now. the i'm counting the calls protested in the us to bond universities divest them israel . how the schools make them money? washington,
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once russia to pay for rebuilding ukraine must go friends to retaliate. plus what's the future for the tech? talk to the american market? kind of the costs for that, which is 0. 2 error writers from different countries, but with much in common moraine upstairs. so a palestinian resistance poets jailed for his left wing views, his poetry, what's the width? and he used to fight the whole world. and course something sort of a syrian professor who lots of behind the scenes. there wasn't a secret movement in lebanon, syria, how this going, the rock, that constantine was not behind rebel writers, palestine and syria on that, which is 0. it's a school day in taiwan, but it's too dangerous for peoples of this school in on, in to return to class for pin is needed here. quick cost more than $6000000.00 toilets. and this is just one of the dozens of public buildings damaged by an earthquake. some residential buildings are also beyond repair. this apartment
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building was one of the most severely damaged. it needs to be demolished before it completely collapses. despite the $7.00 magnitude strength of the earthquake, the damage is relatively contained. so let's say that's thanks to taiwan is designed to prepare this, including its strict building the, [000:00:00;00] the hello on monday inside. this is the news life from doha. coming up in the next 60 minutes round operation day would bring catastrophe on top of catastrophe. you and officials will on against then is rodney ground assaults on rafa and say that northern garza is experiencing
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a full blown fireman. is really as drugs can at least 9 people in rough uh with a 1000000 and a hoff displays have

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