Before expressing admiration for the protests of American university students advocating for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, it is prudent to critically examine the impressions left by rapid responses to events, people, and historical phases.
A prevalent analogy today likens the current student movements at major US academic institutions to the anti-Vietnam War protests of the late 1960s.
While this comparison is alluring, it unfortunately lacks both accuracy and context, rendering it inadequate for forecasting the outcomes of today’s student activism.
Originally, the 1960s demonstrators, emerging from the heart of American society, were deeply intertwined with their ethnic and social backgrounds. In contrast, today’s university protests are significantly represented by new immigrants.
Moreover, whereas only a minority of youths in the 1960s expressed support for the Viet Cong, focusing instead on ending civilian casualties and advocating for US withdrawal from Vietnam, today's protesters appear to openly support Hamas.
Their vision for the future of Palestine and its people remains nebulous, articulated only through vague chants for "freedom," "independence," and "stopping the genocide."
The critical distinction, however, lies in what the Vietnam War symbolised domestically in the US—the loss of tens of thousands of young Americans in a conflict far removed by continents and oceans, which profoundly impacted the nation’s political, economic, and cultural fabric.
This contrasts starkly with a conflict involving foreign powers that might hold limited significance to the average American citizen, particularly in an election year marked by severe polarisation between the major political parties, the Democrats and the Republicans.