logo
Ben and Jerry's co-founder held over Gaza protest

Ben and Jerry's co-founder held over Gaza protest

RTHK15-05-2025

Ben and Jerry's co-founder held over Gaza protest
Ben Cohen, left, and Ben and Jerry's co-founder Jerry Greenfield at a climate rally outside the White House in November 2019. File photo: AFP
Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry's ice cream and a longtime progressive activist, said he was speaking for millions of Americans outraged by the "slaughter" in Gaza after his removal from a US Senate hearing.
Cohen, 74, was among a group of protesters who startled Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. by interrupting his testimony about his department's budget proposal.
Shouting that "Congress pays for bombs to kill children in Gaza" while lawmakers move to slash Medicaid – the health insurance program for low-income families – the businessman and philanthropist was placed in handcuffs by Capitol Police.
He urged senators to press Israel to let food reach "starving kids" as he was led away.
"It got to a point where we had to do something," Cohen said in an interview after his release, calling it "scandalizing" that the US approved "US$20 billion worth of bombs" for Israel even as social programs are squeezed back home.
"The majority of Americans hate what's going on, what our country is doing with our money and in our name," he said.
US public opinion towards Israel has become increasingly unfavorable, especially among Democrats, according to a Pew Research Center Poll last month.
Beyond the spending, Cohen framed the issue as a moral and "spiritual" breach.
"Condoning and being complicit in the slaughter of tens of thousands of people strikes at the core of us as far as human beings and what our country stands for," he said, pointing to the fact that the United States pours roughly half its discretionary budget into war-related spending.
"If you spent half of that money making lives better around the world, I think there'd be a whole lot less friction."
Invoking a parenting analogy, he added: "You go to a three-year-old who goes around hitting people and you say 'Use your words.' There's issues between countries but you can work them out without killing."
A longtime critic of Israeli policy, Cohen last year joined prominent Jewish figures in an open letter opposing the pro-Israel lobby Aipac.
"I understand that I have a higher profile than most people and so I raise my voice, it gets heard," he said.
"But I need you and others to understand that I speak for millions of people who feel the same way."
Gaza is at "critical risk of famine," with the entire population facing a food crisis after more than two months of an Israeli aid blockade, and 22 percent facing a humanitarian "catastrophe," a UN-backed food security monitor warned this week. (AFP)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China vows to ‘resolutely safeguard' its students' rights after Trump ramps up attack on Harvard, Columbia
China vows to ‘resolutely safeguard' its students' rights after Trump ramps up attack on Harvard, Columbia

HKFP

time29 minutes ago

  • HKFP

China vows to ‘resolutely safeguard' its students' rights after Trump ramps up attack on Harvard, Columbia

President Donald Trump ramped up his campaign against top US universities Wednesday, banning visas for all foreign students coming to attend Harvard and threatening to strip Columbia of its academic accreditation. Trump is seeking to bring the universities to heel with claims their international students pose a national security threat, and that they ignored anti-Semitism on campus and perpetuate liberal bias. A proclamation issued by the White House late Wednesday declared that the entrance of international students to begin a course at Harvard would be 'suspended and limited' for six months and that existing overseas enrollees could have their visas terminated. 'Harvard's conduct has rendered it an unsuitable destination for foreign students and researchers,' the order said. Karl Molden, a Harvard government and classics student from Austria, said: 'I'm trembling. This is outrageous.' 'He is abusing his executive power to harm Harvard as much as he can,' Molden told AFP. 'My god!' said another international student at Harvard, who declined to be identified for fear of retribution. 'This is such a disgrace.' China's foreign ministry vowed on Thursday to 'resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of its overseas students.' 'China has always opposed the politicization of educational cooperation,' ministry spokesman Lin Jian said, adding that the measure would 'harm America's image and international credibility.' US Secretary of State Marco Rubio promised last week to 'aggressively revoke visas' for Chinese students, a move condemned by Beijing. 'Retaliatory' Wednesday's announcement followed the Trump administration's earlier efforts to terminate Harvard's right to enroll and host foreign students were stalled by a judge. The government already cut around $3.2 billion of federal grants and contracts benefiting Harvard and pledged to exclude the Cambridge, Massachusetts, institution from any future federal funding. Harvard has been at the forefront of Trump's campaign against top universities after it defied his calls to submit to oversight of its curriculum, staffing, student recruitment and 'viewpoint diversity.' Trump has also singled out international students at Harvard, who accounted for 27 percent of total enrollment in the 2024-2025 academic year and are a major source of income. 'This is yet another illegal retaliatory step taken by the Administration in violation of Harvard's First Amendment rights,' a university spokesman said. 'Harvard will continue to protect its international students.' Trump's education secretary had also threatened on Wednesday to strip Columbia University of its accreditation. The Republican has targeted the New York Ivy League institution for allegedly ignoring harassment of Jewish students, throwing all of its federal funding into doubt. Unlike Harvard, several top institutions — including Columbia — have already bowed to far-reaching demands from the Trump administration, which claims that the educational elite is too left-wing. 'Combating anti-Semitism' Wednesday's official action suggested it was not enough for Trump. 'Columbia University looked the other way as Jewish students faced harassment,' US Education Secretary Linda McMahon said on social media platform X. She accused the school of breaking rules prohibiting recipients of federal funding from discriminating on the basis of race, color, or national origin. 'After Hamas' October 7, 2023, terror attack on Israel, Columbia University's leadership acted with deliberate indifference towards the harassment of Jewish students on its campus,' McMahon said in a statement. 'This is not only immoral, but also unlawful.' The US Education Department said in the statement its civil rights office had contacted Columbia's accreditation body about the alleged violation. Withdrawing Columbia's accreditation would see it lose access to all federal funding, a very significant proportion of the university's income. Students would also not be able to receive federal grants and tuition loans. Critics accuse the Trump administration of using allegations of anti-Semitism to target educational elites and bring universities to their knees. The administration has already put $400 million of Columbia's funding under review, prompting the university to announce in March a package of concessions to the government around defining anti-Semitism, policing protests and conducting oversight for specific academic departments. A Columbia spokesperson said after Wednesday's announcement the university was 'aware of the concerns' raised by the government. 'We take this issue seriously and are continuing to work with the federal government to address it,' the spokesperson said.

Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks
Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks

RTHK

time4 hours ago

  • RTHK

Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks

Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks A satellite image shows destroyed TU 95 aircraft in the aftermath of a Ukrainian drone strike at Belaya air base, Irkutsk region. Photo: Reuters Moscow will decide how and when to respond to Ukraine's attacks on its airbases, the Kremlin said on Thursday, confirming that President Vladimir Putin told his US counterpart Donald Trump that Russia would retaliate. Kyiv's weekend strikes on Russian airfields deep inside Russia destroyed nuclear-capable aircraft and infuriated Moscow. "As and when our military deems it appropriate," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said when asked what Moscow's response would be. The planes were parked at air fields deep inside Russian territory, including in Siberia. After a phone call with Putin on Wednesday, Trump said on social media: "President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields." Putin has repeatedly rejected a 30-day ceasefire in Ukraine and on Wednesday said that Kyiv would use it to rearm and mobilise. Trump's efforts to end the more than three-year conflict in Ukraine have so far yielded few results. The Kremlin said that Putin and Trump did not agree on a time to meet during their phone conversation but that "there is an understanding that a meeting is necessary." Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly called for talks with Putin, but the Russian leader said on Wednesday: "What can we talk about with terrorists?" (AFP)

Trump orders probe into 'Biden mental decline coverup'
Trump orders probe into 'Biden mental decline coverup'

RTHK

time12 hours ago

  • RTHK

Trump orders probe into 'Biden mental decline coverup'

Trump orders probe into 'Biden mental decline coverup' Joe Biden has slammed the probe as 'nothing more than a distraction by Donald Trump and Republicans who are working to push disastrous legislation'. File photo: AFP US President Donald Trump has ordered an investigation into what Republicans claim was a "conspiracy" to cover up Joe Biden's cognitive decline during his time in the White House. Wednesday's move, which was slammed by Biden, is the latest in a long-running campaign by Trump – with the backing of Republican Party politicians and their cheerleaders in the conservative media – to discredit his predecessor. But it also comes as a growing chorus of Democrats begins to acknowledge the former president appeared to have been slipping in recent years. Those concerns were thrown into stark relief by a disastrous debate performance against Trump during last year's presidential campaign, in which the then-81-year-old stumbled over words and repeatedly lost his train of thought. "In recent months, it has become increasingly apparent that former president Biden's aides abused the power of presidential signatures through the use of an autopen to conceal Biden's cognitive decline," a presidential memorandum reads. "This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history. "The American public was purposefully shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power, all while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to effect radical policy shifts." Biden vehemently denied the allegations. "Let me be clear: I made the decisions during my presidency," he said in a statement. "I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations. "Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false." Biden slammed the probe as "nothing more than a distraction by Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans who are working to push disastrous legislation". The Democratic Party is increasingly riven by squabbles about whether Biden could have been forced to step down earlier to give the party chance to find a more popular presidential candidate. Biden's former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Wednesday criticized the in-fighting by the Democrats, calling it a "betrayal" of Biden and announcing her departure from the party as a result. The fight has been given oxygen with the publication of a book by journalists Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson that claims the former president's inner circle connived to keep him from public view because of his decline, which included forgetting familiar faces like Hollywood star and party stalwart George Clooney. Trump's claims of a cover-up were also boosted by news that Biden is suffering from an "aggressive" prostate cancer, with some voices on the right insisting – without evidence – the diagnosis must have been known some time ago to those close to the former president. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store