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Good evening. It's Thursday, December 7.
Tonight: Nikki Haley has had some bad debates in her life before, but none that compare to the utter devastation and exposure she suffered at last night's GOP presidential debate, in Alabama, led by her rival Vivek Ramaswamy, and subject to quite aggressive questions from moderator Megyn Kelly, Haley got exposed as an utter fraud: not only someone who cheers every American war and every American proxy war as long as it's other people dying in them, and not only someone who is the ultimate tool of Wall Street oligarchs and corporate billionaires, and not only someone who served the Wall Street or the military-industrial complex that made her so personally wealthy as she cheers on every one of the wars that make them wealthy but also she's just someone who really has no idea what she's talking about when it comes to the policies she's paid to spout and the wars she cheers. We'll show you some of the key moments from last night.
Then: three university presidents were hauled before Congress on Tuesday to be interrogated about whether they would censor or otherwise punish various forms of political speech about Israel and Jews. When one of Congress's most vocal and steadfast supporters of Israel, Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, asked them whether they would punish those who defended the genocide of Jews, all three said that they would punish only actions against other students, but not mere political speech. For all sorts of reasons, this led to an explosion of rage, including from many who have long claimed they oppose campus speech restrictions. Very wealthy donors immediately announced they would stop or withdraw or never donate again. All sorts of students and professors expressed disgust and outrage at the testimony of these school presidents, saying “We would never punish political speech only actions.” And yet, as a result, each of those school presidents had to issue a groveling apology today for not immediately vowing to censor and punish that speech. A new report just emerged moments ago that the president of the University of Pennsylvania, Liz Magill, has been summoned to a meeting with the board chair where she's likely to be fired as university president. It's not easy to get a university president fired, but you see here the issue that will cause that. We'll examine all of this and the call for many more campus speech restrictions, including those who have long claimed to hate campus censorship, now supporting that all to limit what can be said in the United States in the way of criticizing Israel and its war.
Finally, we are pleased to present a debate tonight on the Israel-Gaza war between a long-time defender of Palestinian rights, who is also a political analyst and a journalist, Omar Baddar, and the Newsweek opinion editor, Batya Unger Sargon, who has been on the show before, where she and I had somewhat of a debate or an interview. She is, of course, a supporter of Israel, which is what makes this a debate. We're very happy to host two very smart people with two very different views on this critical conflict.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.