Keen On America

Protesting the Protesters: Bruce Robbins on the Protests over Vietnam, Gaza and Minneapolis

Feb 17, 2026
Bruce Robbins, Columbia humanities professor and author of Who's Allowed to Protest?, discusses double standards in how protests are treated. He examines accusations that protesters are privileged, comparisons to Vietnam-era dissent, immigration and protest rights, the role of expertise versus anti-elitism, and why campuses like Columbia become flashpoints. Multiple short, vivid conversations explore these contested topics.
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INSIGHT

Privileged-Trope Silences Protesters

  • Media and commentators often dismiss student protesters as "spoiled elites" to delegitimize their moral claims.
  • Bruce Robbins argues this trope recurs across movements from Vietnam to Greta Thunberg and silences dissent.
INSIGHT

Social Media Created A Moral Filter

  • The Gaza protests reached young people through uncurated social media, bypassing traditional gatekeepers.
  • Robbins says that direct visual exposure became a moral criterion motivating a generation.
INSIGHT

Dismissals Repeat Across Generations

  • Critics of 1960s protesters used psychological explanations similar to today's sociological dismissals.
  • Robbins traces continuity: delegitimizing protest by reducing it to personal pathology.
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