Current:Home > InvestOnline threats against pro-Palestinian protesters rise in wake of Sen. Tom Cotton's comments about protests -Secure Growth Academy
Online threats against pro-Palestinian protesters rise in wake of Sen. Tom Cotton's comments about protests
View
Date:2025-04-19 08:43:36
Online threats and hateful rhetoric against pro-Palestinian protesters have accelerated since Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas encouraged people affected by the mass protests to "take matters into your own hands," according to a report obtained by CBS News.
Advance Democracy, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that conducts public interest research, says it found that there has been a surge in calls for violence against pro-Palestinian protesters across social media platforms this week after Cotton's comments, with users threatening to kill or injure protesters.
The report found many of the threats were in direct response to Cotton's post, as well as to right-wing accounts and personalities who shared the post online, including Fox News commentator Sean Hannity.
"RUN THEM OVER!" one user wrote on Truth Social, the social media platform owned by Trump Media, which is majority-owned by former President Donald Trump. "They are terrorists and should be shot," wrote another. Others suggested mugging, hanging, executing, zip tying, or throwing the protesters off of bridges they are occupying.
To counter protesters who sometimes glue their hands to roads, one user on far-right social media site Gettr suggested that their arms be ripped off or that they should have their hands cut off.
"I encourage people who get stuck behind the pro-Hamas mobs blocking traffic: take matters into your own hands. It's time to put an end to this nonsense." Cotton posted on X April 15, before editing the post six minutes later to add "to get them out of the way." Cotton accused the protesters of being pro-Hamas, though he offered no proof of this.
Earlier in the day before Cotton's comments, protesters demanding a ceasefire in Gaza had shut down major roads and bridges in multiple cities, including San Francisco, Oakland, New York, Philadelphia and Chicago. Dozens of protesters were arrested, but there were no reports of violence.
Cotton continued to encourage a vigilante approach in interviews with Fox News and NBC News, telling Fox News that "if something like this happened in Arkansas on a bridge there, let's just say I think there'd be a lot of very wet criminals that have been tossed overboard — not by law enforcement, but by the people whose road they're blocking." He told NBC News that if people are blocked by the protesters, "they should get out and move those people off the streets."
It is not the first time Cotton has used charged language to describe how nationwide protests should be handled.
In a 2020 op-ed published in the New York Times, Cotton advocated sending in National Guard troops to stop nationwide protests after the murder of George Floyd by police officers in Minneapolis. After monuments around the country were vandalized by protesters, Cotton called those who defaced or destroyed statues during the Floyd protests "mob vigilantes" who "may come for you and your home and your family."
"The Senator's comments encouraging violence against protesters are irresponsible and dangerous. They not only complicate the work of local law enforcement, but they have also directly led to a surge in calls for violence against the protestors online," Daniel Jones told CBS News. "The failure of other elected officials and political leaders to immediately condemn these comments — regardless of political party — only serves to further normalize divisive and violent rhetoric, which is directly linked to real-world violence."
CBS News reached out to Cotton's office via phone and email Friday night for comment.
Advance Democracy, founded by Daniel J. Jones, a former U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee investigator, including on the Intelligence Committee, conducts weekly monitoring of far-right media, foreign state media, and select social media platforms.
- In:
- Palestine
- Tom Cotton
- Israel
- Protests
- Palestinians
- Antisemitism
veryGood! (5534)
Related
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Fruit Stripe Gum farewell: Chewing gum to be discontinued after half a century
- Main political party in St. Maarten secures most seats in Dutch Caribbean territory’s elections
- Coco Gauff enters the Australian Open as a teenage Grand Slam champion. The pressure is off
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Bill Belichick coaching tree: Many ex-assistants of NFL legend landed head coaching jobs
- Maine man pleads guilty in New Year’s Eve machete attack near Times Square
- Franz Welser-Möst to retire as Cleveland Orchestra music director in June 2027
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Suchana Seth, CEO of The Mindful AI Lab startup in India, arrested over killing of 4-year-old son
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Jelly Roll, former drug dealer and current Grammy nominee, speaks against fentanyl to Senate
- Investigators found stacked bodies and maggots at a neglected Colorado funeral home, FBI agent says
- Microscopic fibers link couple to 5-year-old son’s strangulation 34 years ago, sheriff says
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Tesla puts German factory production on hold as Red Sea attacks disrupt supply chains
- Franz Welser-Möst to retire as Cleveland Orchestra music director in June 2027
- Update expected in case of Buffalo supermarket gunman as families await decision on death penalty
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Kali Uchis announces pregnancy with Don Toliver in new music video
Average long-term mortgage rates rise again, reaching their highest level in 4 weeks
Inside the secular churches that fill a need for some nonreligious Americans
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Former Suriname dictator vanishes after being sentenced in killings of 15 political opponents
Indonesia and Vietnam discuss South China sea and energy issues as Indonesian president visits
Fruit Stripe Gum to bite the dust after a half century of highly abbreviated rainbow flavors