Word: protest
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...There was almost no protest by comparison and much lower level of feeling,” Government professor and vocal conservative Harvey C. Mansfield ’53 said about Harvard at the beginning of the Iraq invasion. “Even though most American people are against the Iraq War, no one’s out in the streets saying it should be condemned...
...caucuses instantly formed the morning after the police action,” Hoffmann said. “It had never happened before. There had been individuals taking positions, but we didn’t have a two party system, which was entirely provoked by the protest...
...many professors on the Right, their commitment to authority came from their own experiences with student protest and activity before coming to the United States...
...Many students believed there was a direct relationship between Harvard as an institution, and the Pentagon and White House,” said Timothy P. McCarthy ’93, a lecturer in History and Literature who teaches a class on protest literature...
...students wanted to run the University into a source of political protest, diverting it from its path of learning and teaching,” Mansfield said. “The anti-war sentiments should not have been felt or expressed. It was not an ignoble war and we would have won it if not for the protest...