Local right-wingers agitated for a big confrontation. They got an uneventful, 10-minute standoff.

by Hannah Krieg

Right-wing commentators vastly overhyped the threat to the pro-Palestine encampment on UW’s quad posed by Pursuit Church’s “March for Israel.” The Sunday action that journalist-turned-agitator Jonathan Choe said would “buzzsaw” through the United Front for Palestinian Liberation’s (UF) Liberated Zone ended up diverting after an uneventful 10-minute standoff at the south entrance of the quad. 

For the second time since students pitched tents on the quad lawn, protesters have chosen to defend their encampment instead of giving right-wing vloggers the fight they are so desperate for. As it turns out, the student protesters would rather hold down the fort to keep pressure on UW to meet their demands, which include divesting financially and academically from Israel, cutting ties with Boeing, and ending the repression of pro-Palestinian voices. 

“We continue to lay our bodies on the line because we understand that the ongoing genocide in Palestine must be treated with urgency,” said UF media liaison Zho Ragen in a message to The Stranger. “If the University truly cared about treating this genocide with the urgency it deserves, addressing its complicity in the genocide, or protecting its students from violence, UW administration would immediately meet our demands in full.”

All That for 10 Minutes?

At 4:30 pm on Sunday, a few hundred pro-Israel counterprotesters gathered in Red Square. According to posts online, up until that afternoon, the group seemed bent on marching straight through the Liberated Zone. But both UW admin and UF clearly wanted to keep the groups separate. 

On Sunday morning, UW propped up barricades at every entrance to the quad and stationed a handful of officers at the south entrance, through which the Pursuit Church planned to lead its march. 

The encampment protesters then reinforced those barricades with chicken wire, siding, palettes, garbage cans, bike racks, and, of course, hundreds of community supporters who responded to their public calls for back-up. 

Encampment is calm despite the pressure. Black bloc is reinforcing the barricade and protesters are giving others a “know your rights” seminar, but at the same time people are painting, someone’s handing out popsicles, a mother blows bubbles for her baby in the lawn pic.twitter.com/L93j6QeTTl

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 12, 2024

Speakers at the rally said they didn’t want a fight, either. One speaker told the crowd he expected Christian people to act like Christians and Jewish people to act like Jews, which to him meant keeping the peace.

At about 5:30 pm, the pro-Israel counterprotesters rushed over to join a smattering of their comrades who were already heckling the pro-Palestine protesters holding the line at the south enterance behind a line of police.

The Pro- Israel protesters rush to the encampment. They originally intended to march through, but cops are gaurding pic.twitter.com/O6PYIw4bGu

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

During the 10 minute interaction, the pro-Palestine protesters chanted about their demands, ending the Israeli occupation of Palestine, and the ongoing genocide in Gaza, in which Israel has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians since Hamas killed 1,200 Israels in their attack on Oct. 7. 

The pro-Israel side also chanted “bring them home,” in reference to the 132 hostages still held by Hamas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected several deals with Hamas to release hostages contingent on a ceasefire. 

The counterprotesters also took the confrontation as an opportunity to tease their political rivals, yelling at them to take off their masks, which they argued signaled cowardice. Online, conservative talking heads got a good laugh at cops seemingly defending students and lefties who probably protested to defund the police in 2020. 

For their part, UF has been clear about not wanting police near the Liberated Zone. Last week, UF blasted UW for briefly sending a handful of cops to the encampment when they expected outside agitators to spill over from the Charlie Kirk speaking event at the HUB. UF did not respond to my request for comment about the police presence Sunday. 

After about ten minutes and no scuffles to speak of, the pro-Israel protesters walked around the quad and to the church. 

“Our priority was to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus during what we anticipated could be a tense afternoon,” said UW spokesperson Victor Balta. “We took proactive steps to maintain distance between opposing groups. Given the circumstances, through good planning and the fact that the vast majority of people participating in various activities sought to exercise their free speech rights without violence or aggression, we reached a largely peaceful conclusion to the day.”

After a brief, uneventful 10 minute stand off, the march diverts around, not through, the encampment pic.twitter.com/mTDF4pKW7W

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024
Side Squabbles 

The only notable interactions between the two sides happened apart from the main confrontation. 

A protester holding a Palestinian flag left the barricade to speak to a few counterprotesters at around 5:15 pm, before the larger group approached the quad. Other pro-Palestine protesters intervened and brought the protest back into the encampment in less than three minutes. 

Pro Israel protesters asked pro-Palestine protesters why he’s wearing a mask. Four other pro-Palestine protesters ask him to leave the counter protesters alone. They want to limit interaction pic.twitter.com/xaC6RlynEw

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

After the pro-Israel group left the south entrance, a pro-Palestine protester dressed in black made a cloud of smoke with their bike. Choe shoved a camera in their face and some pro-Israel protesters started to engage, but someone from their side quickly redirected them. 

Puff of smoke that seems to be from a bike burnout pic.twitter.com/ggLKl7Sh1l

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

Basically, all the counterprotesters had marched away from the quad by 6 pm, but Daily UW reporter Sofia Schwarzwalder tweeted that an “altercation broke out” at the west barricade. That confrontation resulted in pro-Palestine protesters burning an Israeli flag.

The Movement Continues 

The whole day amounted to little more than a clip farm for conservative Twitter personalities, but protesters on the inside believe that the outpouring of support from community members shows the popularity of their mission to protect the encampment until UW meets their demands.

If that’s the case, they may end up camping for quite some time. Last Friday, UW issued a statement claiming that their “response to students’ call for change will not be based on an encampment” but rather “constructive engagement on issues that are important or meaningful to our students and broader campus community.” In the statement, UW called on students to “dismantle the encampment voluntarily for everyone’s safety and continue constructive engagement for collective action.”

As I’ve written before, the UW has three options with the encampment: Respond to the students’ demands, dismantle it with police force, or just try to wait them out. So far, it seems as if UW plans to take the third, most hands-off approach. 

“The University continues to work toward a peaceful, voluntary departure of the encampment,” Balta told The Stranger in an email. “To be clear, the steps the University has taken in recent days have been in an attempt to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus. While that includes people in the encampment, it would be a mischaracterization to describe these actions as ‘protecting, supporting or maintaining’ the encampment itself.”

But after the encampment survived the Sunday march and the attention from the Charlie Kirk events last week, UW may have to take a side if they want to get tents out of the quad. 

So, what will it be—supporting Israel and weapons manufacturers, or supporting the demands of their students?

The Stranger

The coolest 40-year-olds you know were there, their mullets loose, their tattoos on display.

by Nathalie Graham

Fog coiled above the stage of Benaroya Hall as the Seattle Symphony played the beginning notes of “Misty Morning,” the more than eight-minute-long witchy epic from Thunderpussy’s new album West. The band, clad in velvet, strutted on stage. Lead guitarist Whitney Petty, wearing a red disco suit with black feathers on her bell bottoms, played the opening notes on her guitar with a violin bow. 

The house lights flicked on. Dancers, choreographed by Alice Gosti and Amy Lambert,  sailed down the aisles, twisting and contorting themselves on the downbeats. Lead singer Molly Sides, robed in a sumptuous dress of red tulle ruffles with a black layer underneath, glided behind them carrying an electric candle. When she reached the stage, Thunderpussy, now made whole, launched into the full song, accompanied by the entire symphony.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

For nearly two hours, Seattle’s all-woman rock group put on a show of abundance. Benaroya Hall on Friday night was pure stimulation. Thunderpussy broke the decorum of the symphony in a way that felt not only refreshing but necessary. When I interviewed Sides ahead of the concert, she promised an evening both classy and trashy. The band delivered on that promise. 

The very notion of seeing Thunderpussy at Benaroya Hall challenged the status quo of the symphony. Because Thunderpussy rocks. Hard. Their music features bold guitars, thumping drums, and passionate vocals. 

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

You could see the blending of the worlds—the symphonic and the rock ‘n’ roll—in attendees’ attire. People wore band T-shirts and jeans. Others wore symphony-appropriate floral dresses. Some married the looks, wearing denim over cocktail garb. The coolest 40-year-olds you know were there, their mullets loose, their tattoos on display.

During the first portion of the concert, which was music exclusively from their new album West, there were moments where I couldn’t hear the symphony at all. Then, in between the electric guitars and the beating of the drum kit, a flurry of flutes shone through and it was magic. During the softer numbers, such as the album’s eponymous track, the symphony’s effect was more prominent, buoying Sides’s soaring voice and Petty’s strummed chords. These moments were stunning. They sparkled.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Through it all, people stayed seated, cheering and politely clapping.

When a concert at Benaroya starts, the audience receives instructions: Don’t film, don’t record, keep your devices off. The message is clear: Inside the grand hall, you sit in your seat and you listen to the music. This is tasteful stuff and you will be a tasteful, perfect audience member. When the lights went down, even the most passionate fans in the front of the hall found their seats. This wasn’t a rock show, after all. 

The Thunderpussy audience obeyed the hall’s rules, and those who didn’t, like the woman covertly trying to record a moment during “Firebreather” when the dancers hoisted Sides up into the air while she sang on her back, were chastised by the ushers.

Post-intermission, a switch flipped. I don’t know whether it was because Thunderpussy played all their hits during the second half, or whether people had downed enough Thunderpussy IPAs and Thunderpussy Younder Ciders to let loose, but things really started rocking during the second half.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

All of Benaroya Hall stood up. People danced in the aisles. “Velvet Noose” roared into the hall. The audience screamed and cheered as Sides, now in a glittering gold dress trimmed with black feathers, sang, dancing in perfect time with the choreography. At the times when the symphony didn’t play, the violinists, older men in tuxes, grinned while they watched the band absolutely tear it up. 

During their song “Thunderpussy,” Sides hopped off the stage and into the aisles. She writhed on the floor. The audience closed in around her, their phones out, filming. The ushers had no power here. Not anymore. No one intervened. The crowd’s passion was euphoric, unrestricted. 

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Soon, the band left the stage. The symphony took up the same haunting melody from the beginning of the show. Then, the band returned from their third (or was it fourth?) costume change, clothed in white. Sides’s ruffles were piled in layers and layers, as if she were a sexy cloud. 

And, maybe that was the point. Thunderpussy closed with their song “The Cloud” off their first album, a love song between Petty and Sides. The two recently ended their 10-year relationship. Slow and yearning, the symphony’s music filled in the gaps between each gentle pluck of the guitar. The whole hall, the symphony, and the rest of the band seemed to fall away as Sides faced Petty, singing to her. 

But, she wasn’t just singing to Petty. She sang to the symphony, to the rest of her band, to the audience, to Seattle. As Sides made clear during the concert, this performance wouldn’t have happened without Seattle and this show was a celebration, but also a thank you. 

“Take me home, take me home,” Sides sang. “Take me home where I belong.”

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISSThe Stranger

Local right-wingers agitated for a big confrontation. They got an uneventful, 10-minute standoff.

by Hannah Krieg

Right-wing commentators vastly overhyped the threat to the pro-Palestine encampment on UW’s quad posed by Pursuit Church’s “March for Israel.” The Sunday action that journalist-turned-agitator Jonathan Choe said would “buzzsaw” through the United Front for Palestinian Liberation’s (UF) Liberated Zone ended up diverting after an uneventful 10-minute standoff at the south entrance of the quad. 

For the second time since students pitched tents on the quad lawn, protesters have chosen to defend their encampment instead of giving right-wing vloggers the fight they are so desperate for. As it turns out, the student protesters would rather hold down the fort to keep pressure on UW to meet their demands, which include divesting financially and academically from Israel, cutting ties with Boeing, and ending the repression of pro-Palestinian voices. 

“We continue to lay our bodies on the line because we understand that the ongoing genocide in Palestine must be treated with urgency,” said UF media liaison Zho Ragen in a message to The Stranger. “If the University truly cared about treating this genocide with the urgency it deserves, addressing its complicity in the genocide, or protecting its students from violence, UW administration would immediately meet our demands in full.”

All That for 10 Minutes?

At 4:30 pm on Sunday, a few hundred pro-Israel counterprotesters gathered in Red Square. According to posts online, up until that afternoon, the group seemed bent on marching straight through the Liberated Zone. But both UW admin and UF clearly wanted to keep the groups separate. 

On Sunday morning, UW propped up barricades at every entrance to the quad and stationed a handful of officers at the south entrance, through which the Pursuit Church planned to lead its march. 

The encampment protesters then reinforced those barricades with chicken wire, siding, palettes, garbage cans, bike racks, and, of course, hundreds of community supporters who responded to their public calls for back-up. 

Encampment is calm despite the pressure. Black bloc is reinforcing the barricade and protesters are giving others a “know your rights” seminar, but at the same time people are painting, someone’s handing out popsicles, a mother blows bubbles for her baby in the lawn pic.twitter.com/L93j6QeTTl

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 12, 2024

Speakers at the rally said they didn’t want a fight, either. One speaker told the crowd he expected Christian people to act like Christians and Jewish people to act like Jews, which to him meant keeping the peace.

At about 5:30 pm, the pro-Israel counterprotesters rushed over to join a smattering of their comrades who were already heckling the pro-Palestine protesters holding the line at the south enterance behind a line of police.

The Pro- Israel protesters rush to the encampment. They originally intended to march through, but cops are gaurding pic.twitter.com/O6PYIw4bGu

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

During the 10 minute interaction, the pro-Palestine protesters chanted about their demands, ending the Israeli occupation of Palestine, and the ongoing genocide in Gaza, in which Israel has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians since Hamas killed 1,200 Israels in their attack on Oct. 7. 

The pro-Israel side also chanted “bring them home,” in reference to the 132 hostages still held by Hamas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected several deals with Hamas to release hostages contingent on a ceasefire. 

The counterprotesters also took the confrontation as an opportunity to tease their political rivals, yelling at them to take off their masks, which they argued signaled cowardice. Online, conservative talking heads got a good laugh at cops seemingly defending students and lefties who probably protested to defund the police in 2020. 

For their part, UF has been clear about not wanting police near the Liberated Zone. Last week, UF blasted UW for briefly sending a handful of cops to the encampment when they expected outside agitators to spill over from the Charlie Kirk speaking event at the HUB. UF did not respond to my request for comment about the police presence Sunday. 

After about ten minutes and no scuffles to speak of, the pro-Israel protesters walked around the quad and to the church. 

“Our priority was to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus during what we anticipated could be a tense afternoon,” said UW spokesperson Victor Balta. “We took proactive steps to maintain distance between opposing groups. Given the circumstances, through good planning and the fact that the vast majority of people participating in various activities sought to exercise their free speech rights without violence or aggression, we reached a largely peaceful conclusion to the day.”

After a brief, uneventful 10 minute stand off, the march diverts around, not through, the encampment pic.twitter.com/mTDF4pKW7W

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024
Side Squabbles 

The only notable interactions between the two sides happened apart from the main confrontation. 

A protester holding a Palestinian flag left the barricade to speak to a few counterprotesters at around 5:15 pm, before the larger group approached the quad. Other pro-Palestine protesters intervened and brought the protest back into the encampment in less than three minutes. 

Pro Israel protesters asked pro-Palestine protesters why he’s wearing a mask. Four other pro-Palestine protesters ask him to leave the counter protesters alone. They want to limit interaction pic.twitter.com/xaC6RlynEw

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

After the pro-Israel group left the south entrance, a pro-Palestine protester dressed in black made a cloud of smoke with their bike. Choe shoved a camera in their face and some pro-Israel protesters started to engage, but someone from their side quickly redirected them. 

Puff of smoke that seems to be from a bike burnout pic.twitter.com/ggLKl7Sh1l

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

Basically, all the counterprotesters had marched away from the quad by 6 pm, but Daily UW reporter Sofia Schwarzwalder tweeted that an “altercation broke out” at the west barricade. That confrontation resulted in pro-Palestine protesters burning an Israeli flag.

The Movement Continues 

The whole day amounted to little more than a clip farm for conservative Twitter personalities, but protesters on the inside believe that the outpouring of support from community members shows the popularity of their mission to protect the encampment until UW meets their demands.

If that’s the case, they may end up camping for quite some time. Last Friday, UW issued a statement claiming that their “response to students’ call for change will not be based on an encampment” but rather “constructive engagement on issues that are important or meaningful to our students and broader campus community.” In the statement, UW called on students to “dismantle the encampment voluntarily for everyone’s safety and continue constructive engagement for collective action.”

As I’ve written before, the UW has three options with the encampment: Respond to the students’ demands, dismantle it with police force, or just try to wait them out. So far, it seems as if UW plans to take the third, most hands-off approach. 

“The University continues to work toward a peaceful, voluntary departure of the encampment,” Balta told The Stranger in an email. “To be clear, the steps the University has taken in recent days have been in an attempt to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus. While that includes people in the encampment, it would be a mischaracterization to describe these actions as ‘protecting, supporting or maintaining’ the encampment itself.”

But after the encampment survived the Sunday march and the attention from the Charlie Kirk events last week, UW may have to take a side if they want to get tents out of the quad. 

So, what will it be—supporting Israel and weapons manufacturers, or supporting the demands of their students?

The Stranger

The coolest 40-year-olds you know were there, their mullets loose, their tattoos on display.

by Nathalie Graham

Fog coiled above the stage of Benaroya Hall as the Seattle Symphony played the beginning notes of “Misty Morning,” the more than eight-minute-long witchy epic from Thunderpussy’s new album West. The band, clad in velvet, strutted on stage. Lead guitarist Whitney Petty, wearing a red disco suit with black feathers on her bell bottoms, played the opening notes on her guitar with a violin bow. 

The house lights flicked on. Dancers, choreographed by Alice Gosti and Amy Lambert,  sailed down the aisles, twisting and contorting themselves on the downbeats. Lead singer Molly Sides, robed in a sumptuous dress of red tulle ruffles with a black layer underneath, glided behind them carrying an electric candle. When she reached the stage, Thunderpussy, now made whole, launched into the full song, accompanied by the entire symphony.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

For nearly two hours, Seattle’s all-woman rock group put on a show of abundance. Benaroya Hall on Friday night was pure stimulation. Thunderpussy broke the decorum of the symphony in a way that felt not only refreshing but necessary. When I interviewed Sides ahead of the concert, she promised an evening both classy and trashy. The band delivered on that promise. 

The very notion of seeing Thunderpussy at Benaroya Hall challenged the status quo of the symphony. Because Thunderpussy rocks. Hard. Their music features bold guitars, thumping drums, and passionate vocals. 

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

You could see the blending of the worlds—the symphonic and the rock ‘n’ roll—in attendees’ attire. People wore band T-shirts and jeans. Others wore symphony-appropriate floral dresses. Some married the looks, wearing denim over cocktail garb. The coolest 40-year-olds you know were there, their mullets loose, their tattoos on display.

During the first portion of the concert, which was music exclusively from their new album West, there were moments where I couldn’t hear the symphony at all. Then, in between the electric guitars and the beating of the drum kit, a flurry of flutes shone through and it was magic. During the softer numbers, such as the album’s eponymous track, the symphony’s effect was more prominent, buoying Sides’s soaring voice and Petty’s strummed chords. These moments were stunning. They sparkled.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Through it all, people stayed seated, cheering and politely clapping.

When a concert at Benaroya starts, the audience receives instructions: Don’t film, don’t record, keep your devices off. The message is clear: Inside the grand hall, you sit in your seat and you listen to the music. This is tasteful stuff and you will be a tasteful, perfect audience member. When the lights went down, even the most passionate fans in the front of the hall found their seats. This wasn’t a rock show, after all. 

The Thunderpussy audience obeyed the hall’s rules, and those who didn’t, like the woman covertly trying to record a moment during “Firebreather” when the dancers hoisted Sides up into the air while she sang on her back, were chastised by the ushers.

Post-intermission, a switch flipped. I don’t know whether it was because Thunderpussy played all their hits during the second half, or whether people had downed enough Thunderpussy IPAs and Thunderpussy Younder Ciders to let loose, but things really started rocking during the second half.

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

All of Benaroya Hall stood up. People danced in the aisles. “Velvet Noose” roared into the hall. The audience screamed and cheered as Sides, now in a glittering gold dress trimmed with black feathers, sang, dancing in perfect time with the choreography. At the times when the symphony didn’t play, the violinists, older men in tuxes, grinned while they watched the band absolutely tear it up. 

During their song “Thunderpussy,” Sides hopped off the stage and into the aisles. She writhed on the floor. The audience closed in around her, their phones out, filming. The ushers had no power here. Not anymore. No one intervened. The crowd’s passion was euphoric, unrestricted. 

Thunderpussy performing at Benaroya Hall Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Soon, the band left the stage. The symphony took up the same haunting melody from the beginning of the show. Then, the band returned from their third (or was it fourth?) costume change, clothed in white. Sides’s ruffles were piled in layers and layers, as if she were a sexy cloud. 

And, maybe that was the point. Thunderpussy closed with their song “The Cloud” off their first album, a love song between Petty and Sides. The two recently ended their 10-year relationship. Slow and yearning, the symphony’s music filled in the gaps between each gentle pluck of the guitar. The whole hall, the symphony, and the rest of the band seemed to fall away as Sides faced Petty, singing to her. 

But, she wasn’t just singing to Petty. She sang to the symphony, to the rest of her band, to the audience, to Seattle. As Sides made clear during the concert, this performance wouldn’t have happened without Seattle and this show was a celebration, but also a thank you. 

“Take me home, take me home,” Sides sang. “Take me home where I belong.”

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Dancers performing at Benaroya Hall during Thunderpussy’s show with the Seattle Symphony on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISS

Showgoers at Thunderpussy’s concert with the Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall on Friday, May 10. BRITTNE LUNNISSThe Stranger

Local right-wingers agitated for a big confrontation. They got an uneventful, 10-minute standoff.

by Hannah Krieg

Right-wing commentators vastly overhyped the threat to the pro-Palestine encampment on UW’s quad posed by Pursuit Church’s “March for Israel.” The Sunday action that journalist-turned-agitator Jonathan Choe said would “buzzsaw” through the United Front for Palestinian Liberation’s (UF) Liberated Zone ended up diverting after an uneventful 10-minute standoff at the south entrance of the quad. 

For the second time since students pitched tents on the quad lawn, protesters have chosen to defend their encampment instead of giving right-wing vloggers the fight they are so desperate for. As it turns out, the student protesters would rather hold down the fort to keep pressure on UW to meet their demands, which include divesting financially and academically from Israel, cutting ties with Boeing, and ending the repression of pro-Palestinian voices. 

“We continue to lay our bodies on the line because we understand that the ongoing genocide in Palestine must be treated with urgency,” said UF media liaison Zho Ragen in a message to The Stranger. “If the University truly cared about treating this genocide with the urgency it deserves, addressing its complicity in the genocide, or protecting its students from violence, UW administration would immediately meet our demands in full.”

All That for 10 Minutes?

At 4:30 pm on Sunday, a few hundred pro-Israel counterprotesters gathered in Red Square. According to posts online, up until that afternoon, the group seemed bent on marching straight through the Liberated Zone. But both UW admin and UF clearly wanted to keep the groups separate. 

On Sunday morning, UW propped up barricades at every entrance to the quad and stationed a handful of officers at the south entrance, through which the Pursuit Church planned to lead its march. 

The encampment protesters then reinforced those barricades with chicken wire, siding, palettes, garbage cans, bike racks, and, of course, hundreds of community supporters who responded to their public calls for back-up. 

Encampment is calm despite the pressure. Black bloc is reinforcing the barricade and protesters are giving others a “know your rights” seminar, but at the same time people are painting, someone’s handing out popsicles, a mother blows bubbles for her baby in the lawn pic.twitter.com/L93j6QeTTl

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 12, 2024

Speakers at the rally said they didn’t want a fight, either. One speaker told the crowd he expected Christian people to act like Christians and Jewish people to act like Jews, which to him meant keeping the peace.

At about 5:30 pm, the pro-Israel counterprotesters rushed over to join a smattering of their comrades who were already heckling the pro-Palestine protesters holding the line at the south enterance behind a line of police.

The Pro- Israel protesters rush to the encampment. They originally intended to march through, but cops are gaurding pic.twitter.com/O6PYIw4bGu

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

During the 10 minute interaction, the pro-Palestine protesters chanted about their demands, ending the Israeli occupation of Palestine, and the ongoing genocide in Gaza, in which Israel has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians since Hamas killed 1,200 Israels in their attack on Oct. 7. 

The pro-Israel side also chanted “bring them home,” in reference to the 132 hostages still held by Hamas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected several deals with Hamas to release hostages contingent on a ceasefire. 

The counterprotesters also took the confrontation as an opportunity to tease their political rivals, yelling at them to take off their masks, which they argued signaled cowardice. Online, conservative talking heads got a good laugh at cops seemingly defending students and lefties who probably protested to defund the police in 2020. 

For their part, UF has been clear about not wanting police near the Liberated Zone. Last week, UF blasted UW for briefly sending a handful of cops to the encampment when they expected outside agitators to spill over from the Charlie Kirk speaking event at the HUB. UF did not respond to my request for comment about the police presence Sunday. 

After about ten minutes and no scuffles to speak of, the pro-Israel protesters walked around the quad and to the church. 

“Our priority was to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus during what we anticipated could be a tense afternoon,” said UW spokesperson Victor Balta. “We took proactive steps to maintain distance between opposing groups. Given the circumstances, through good planning and the fact that the vast majority of people participating in various activities sought to exercise their free speech rights without violence or aggression, we reached a largely peaceful conclusion to the day.”

After a brief, uneventful 10 minute stand off, the march diverts around, not through, the encampment pic.twitter.com/mTDF4pKW7W

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024
Side Squabbles 

The only notable interactions between the two sides happened apart from the main confrontation. 

A protester holding a Palestinian flag left the barricade to speak to a few counterprotesters at around 5:15 pm, before the larger group approached the quad. Other pro-Palestine protesters intervened and brought the protest back into the encampment in less than three minutes. 

Pro Israel protesters asked pro-Palestine protesters why he’s wearing a mask. Four other pro-Palestine protesters ask him to leave the counter protesters alone. They want to limit interaction pic.twitter.com/xaC6RlynEw

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

After the pro-Israel group left the south entrance, a pro-Palestine protester dressed in black made a cloud of smoke with their bike. Choe shoved a camera in their face and some pro-Israel protesters started to engage, but someone from their side quickly redirected them. 

Puff of smoke that seems to be from a bike burnout pic.twitter.com/ggLKl7Sh1l

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

Basically, all the counterprotesters had marched away from the quad by 6 pm, but Daily UW reporter Sofia Schwarzwalder tweeted that an “altercation broke out” at the west barricade. That confrontation resulted in pro-Palestine protesters burning an Israeli flag.

The Movement Continues 

The whole day amounted to little more than a clip farm for conservative Twitter personalities, but protesters on the inside believe that the outpouring of support from community members shows the popularity of their mission to protect the encampment until UW meets their demands.

If that’s the case, they may end up camping for quite some time. Last Friday, UW issued a statement claiming that their “response to students’ call for change will not be based on an encampment” but rather “constructive engagement on issues that are important or meaningful to our students and broader campus community.” In the statement, UW called on students to “dismantle the encampment voluntarily for everyone’s safety and continue constructive engagement for collective action.”

As I’ve written before, the UW has three options with the encampment: Respond to the students’ demands, dismantle it with police force, or just try to wait them out. So far, it seems as if UW plans to take the third, most hands-off approach. 

“The University continues to work toward a peaceful, voluntary departure of the encampment,” Balta told The Stranger in an email. “To be clear, the steps the University has taken in recent days have been in an attempt to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus. While that includes people in the encampment, it would be a mischaracterization to describe these actions as ‘protecting, supporting or maintaining’ the encampment itself.”

But after the encampment survived the Sunday march and the attention from the Charlie Kirk events last week, UW may have to take a side if they want to get tents out of the quad. 

So, what will it be—supporting Israel and weapons manufacturers, or supporting the demands of their students?

The Stranger

Local right-wingers agitated for a big confrontation. They got an uneventful, 10-minute standoff.

by Hannah Krieg

Right-wing commentators vastly overhyped the threat to the pro-Palestine encampment on UW’s quad posed by Pursuit Church’s “March for Israel.” The Sunday action that journalist-turned-agitator Jonathan Choe said would “buzzsaw” through the United Front for Palestinian Liberation’s (UF) Liberated Zone ended up diverting after an uneventful 10-minute standoff at the south entrance of the quad. 

For the second time since students pitched tents on the quad lawn, protesters have chosen to defend their encampment instead of giving right-wing vloggers the fight they are so desperate for. As it turns out, the student protesters would rather hold down the fort to keep pressure on UW to meet their demands, which include divesting financially and academically from Israel, cutting ties with Boeing, and ending the repression of pro-Palestinian voices. 

“We continue to lay our bodies on the line because we understand that the ongoing genocide in Palestine must be treated with urgency,” said UF media liaison Zho Ragen in a message to The Stranger. “If the University truly cared about treating this genocide with the urgency it deserves, addressing its complicity in the genocide, or protecting its students from violence, UW administration would immediately meet our demands in full.”

All That for 10 Minutes?

At 4:30 pm on Sunday, a few hundred pro-Israel counterprotesters gathered in Red Square. According to posts online, up until that afternoon, the group seemed bent on marching straight through the Liberated Zone. But both UW admin and UF clearly wanted to keep the groups separate. 

On Sunday morning, UW propped up barricades at every entrance to the quad and stationed a handful of officers at the south entrance, through which the Pursuit Church planned to lead its march. 

The encampment protesters then reinforced those barricades with chicken wire, siding, palettes, garbage cans, bike racks, and, of course, hundreds of community supporters who responded to their public calls for back-up. 

Encampment is calm despite the pressure. Black bloc is reinforcing the barricade and protesters are giving others a “know your rights” seminar, but at the same time people are painting, someone’s handing out popsicles, a mother blows bubbles for her baby in the lawn pic.twitter.com/L93j6QeTTl

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 12, 2024

Speakers at the rally said they didn’t want a fight, either. One speaker told the crowd he expected Christian people to act like Christians and Jewish people to act like Jews, which to him meant keeping the peace.

At about 5:30 pm, the pro-Israel counterprotesters rushed over to join a smattering of their comrades who were already heckling the pro-Palestine protesters holding the line at the south enterance behind a line of police.

The Pro- Israel protesters rush to the encampment. They originally intended to march through, but cops are gaurding pic.twitter.com/O6PYIw4bGu

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

During the 10 minute interaction, the pro-Palestine protesters chanted about their demands, ending the Israeli occupation of Palestine, and the ongoing genocide in Gaza, in which Israel has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians since Hamas killed 1,200 Israels in their attack on Oct. 7. 

The pro-Israel side also chanted “bring them home,” in reference to the 132 hostages still held by Hamas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected several deals with Hamas to release hostages contingent on a ceasefire. 

The counterprotesters also took the confrontation as an opportunity to tease their political rivals, yelling at them to take off their masks, which they argued signaled cowardice. Online, conservative talking heads got a good laugh at cops seemingly defending students and lefties who probably protested to defund the police in 2020. 

For their part, UF has been clear about not wanting police near the Liberated Zone. Last week, UF blasted UW for briefly sending a handful of cops to the encampment when they expected outside agitators to spill over from the Charlie Kirk speaking event at the HUB. UF did not respond to my request for comment about the police presence Sunday. 

After about ten minutes and no scuffles to speak of, the pro-Israel protesters walked around the quad and to the church. 

“Our priority was to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus during what we anticipated could be a tense afternoon,” said UW spokesperson Victor Balta. “We took proactive steps to maintain distance between opposing groups. Given the circumstances, through good planning and the fact that the vast majority of people participating in various activities sought to exercise their free speech rights without violence or aggression, we reached a largely peaceful conclusion to the day.”

After a brief, uneventful 10 minute stand off, the march diverts around, not through, the encampment pic.twitter.com/mTDF4pKW7W

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024
Side Squabbles 

The only notable interactions between the two sides happened apart from the main confrontation. 

A protester holding a Palestinian flag left the barricade to speak to a few counterprotesters at around 5:15 pm, before the larger group approached the quad. Other pro-Palestine protesters intervened and brought the protest back into the encampment in less than three minutes. 

Pro Israel protesters asked pro-Palestine protesters why he’s wearing a mask. Four other pro-Palestine protesters ask him to leave the counter protesters alone. They want to limit interaction pic.twitter.com/xaC6RlynEw

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

After the pro-Israel group left the south entrance, a pro-Palestine protester dressed in black made a cloud of smoke with their bike. Choe shoved a camera in their face and some pro-Israel protesters started to engage, but someone from their side quickly redirected them. 

Puff of smoke that seems to be from a bike burnout pic.twitter.com/ggLKl7Sh1l

— Hannah Krieg (@hannahkrieg) May 13, 2024

Basically, all the counterprotesters had marched away from the quad by 6 pm, but Daily UW reporter Sofia Schwarzwalder tweeted that an “altercation broke out” at the west barricade. That confrontation resulted in pro-Palestine protesters burning an Israeli flag.

The Movement Continues 

The whole day amounted to little more than a clip farm for conservative Twitter personalities, but protesters on the inside believe that the outpouring of support from community members shows the popularity of their mission to protect the encampment until UW meets their demands.

If that’s the case, they may end up camping for quite some time. Last Friday, UW issued a statement claiming that their “response to students’ call for change will not be based on an encampment” but rather “constructive engagement on issues that are important or meaningful to our students and broader campus community.” In the statement, UW called on students to “dismantle the encampment voluntarily for everyone’s safety and continue constructive engagement for collective action.”

As I’ve written before, the UW has three options with the encampment: Respond to the students’ demands, dismantle it with police force, or just try to wait them out. So far, it seems as if UW plans to take the third, most hands-off approach. 

“The University continues to work toward a peaceful, voluntary departure of the encampment,” Balta told The Stranger in an email. “To be clear, the steps the University has taken in recent days have been in an attempt to ensure the safety of all students, faculty, staff and visitors to our campus. While that includes people in the encampment, it would be a mischaracterization to describe these actions as ‘protecting, supporting or maintaining’ the encampment itself.”

But after the encampment survived the Sunday march and the attention from the Charlie Kirk events last week, UW may have to take a side if they want to get tents out of the quad. 

So, what will it be—supporting Israel and weapons manufacturers, or supporting the demands of their students?

The Stranger

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