 A quick update from one of the universities, Rutgers University, a major U.S. university in New Jersey, when after October 9th, Rutgers like October 7th, sorry, Rutgers like many U.S. universities experienced massive protests for Hamas in favor of the Palestinians. And the campus is facing ongoing growing tensions. And the university did not respond like many of the other universities. It did not respond strongly and powerfully with more certainty when these demonstrations were happening in the aftermath of October 7th. It didn't respond to the events of October 7th themselves very harshly. This came out a huge amount of criticism from certain faculty members and several influential members of the business community, donors, I assume, particularly to the Rutgers Business School and the Rutgers Center for Real Estate. And these demonstrations have continued. The Jewish students at Rutgers have again expressed the fact that they have felt threatened and unsafe and the administration has done little. But they have come under a lot of pressure, like in many other universities. And faculty members have said that many business school faculty and staff are scared. Many are in shock. And they feel threatened by the atmosphere on the university. As I think as a consequence of this, Rutgers, when was it yesterday, I think, finally came to the decision of suspending students for justice in Palestine for violating university policies. The chapter has two days to appeal this. They are suspended for an indefinite amount of time. It's not clear for how long. And, you know, they noted that the chapter was responsible for disruptive and disorderly conduct, failure to comply with university directives, improper behavior by campus guests, and inappropriate use of space. I don't even know what that means. It referred to several students' complaints that members of the Student for Justice in Palestine have disrupted classes, have disrupted a program, meals, and students studying, and also noted allegations of vandalism at the business school that were associated with SJP's activity. The SPJ, as well as other student groups, have called Hamas, Massaka of Jews in Israel justified and their actions against Jewish students on campus have moved beyond, this is what the administration is saying, beyond microaggressions, whatever the hell that means. Several other universities have done the same thing. Brandesk University, George Washington University, Columbia University have also suspended certain anti-Zionist and anti-Jewish groups out there. And it's going to be interesting to see when they allow them back in, under what terms, how this plays out. Is there going to be a backlash against this? But some universities seem to be acting. Whether there's consistency, whether there's a vision, whether there's any kind of insight into what exactly should the university be doing and how to tell. It still seems like haphazard and it motivated primarily by the level of pressure that is brought on particular administrations by primarily alumni. They're doing this not out of a set of beliefs, not out of a set of commitments, but more out of fear of losing money. I really, really urge alumni again to consider whether they want to return to funding these universities, whether they want to return to providing these universities with money without a fundamental shift in their attitude, not just to these particular events and these particular student organizations, but their whole approach to who are oppressed groups, their whole DI approach, their whole modern leftist approach to power and power relationships, their whole approach to what constitutes harassment and harassment of whom is justified, of whom is not. This is deep philosophical rot. I talked about this when was it? Yesterday. Yesterday when I talked about what's going on at the universities. This is deep philosophical rot. This is not going to be cleaned up by suspending a student organization here or there. This is not going to be cleaned up by a meek statement here or there. This is going to require some really bold action and a reversal of many of these universities attitudes towards speech, towards harassment, towards minority groups, towards hiring, towards admittance of students. In other words, it's going to require some kind of philosophical revolution, which I don't think any university is ready for, but which alumni, if they really care, that's what they need to advocate for. That's what they need to talk about. That's what they need to care about.