We're Reaping Harvest of '60s, '70s Radicalism's Seeds

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By Wednesday, 01 October 2025 07:45 AM EDT ET Current | Bio | Archive

As the Trump administration takes on the latest wave of left-wing violence, an obituary reminds us what happens when political killers get away with their crimes.

The law never caught up with Joanne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur.

She died last Thursday, age 78, an honored guest of Cuba's Communist regime  and honored, disgracefully, by tenured radicals in America's universities, too.

 Professors have placed the convicted murderer on lists of "African-American heroes" and present her as a model for activism.

Stanford University's dean of students, Mona Hicks, quoted a "loving refrain from Assata Shakur" in a campus email at the time of the George Floyd riots:

"It is our duty to fight for our freedom. It is our duty to win. We must love and support each other. We have nothing to lose but our chains.'"

That language wasn't metaphorical  when Shakur said fight, it was a call to violence.

She wasn't just an activist. She was a terrorist, a self-styled "revolutionary" of the Black Liberation Army, a Marxist-Leninist radical group in the 1970s.

Revolution for them meant robbing banks, planting bombs and killing cops.

Shakur was already on the run from the law when she and two other BLA members were pulled over by New Jersey state troopers in 1973.

She and her associates shot at the officers  killing one and wounding another, while Shakur took a few bullets herself and one of her fellow radicals died.

Police took her into custody, but she became a cause celebre with progressives  who tried to call her a political prisoner  and in 1979 a BLA offshoot called "The Family" sprang her from prison.

Fidel Castro's dictatorship granted her as ylum, then refused decades of U.S. entreaties to extradite her so she could face justice.

All that's in the past, though, and now so is Shakur.

Unfortunately, the evil example of Shakur is still very much with us.

It's not only gray-haired professors and college bureaucrats lauding her violent politics.

A teacher's union in Chicago affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers signaled its approval with a post on the social media site X that noted her death and dubbed her "a revolutionary fighter, a fierce writer, a revered elder of Black liberation, and a leader of freedom whose spirit continues to live in our struggle."

This was a woman who, without remorse, defended armed robberies her group committed as class-war "expropriation" and called cop-killing "armed struggle" in interviews she gave from her Cuban exile.

Shakur was hardly the only radical of the 1960s and 1970s who became a hero to the academic left, trading bombs and bullets for poisoning the minds of future generations.

Angela Davis, a black extremist and longtime Communist Party stalwart who bought the shotgun used in the murder of a judge, is today "Distinguished Professor Emerita in the History of Consciousness and Feminist Studies" at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Bill Ayers, the founder of the Weather Underground domestic terrorist group, eventually retired as "Distinguished Professor of Education and Senior University Scholar" at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

In the 1990s, Professor Ayers worked with a promising young "community organizer" who'd go on to bigger things, a fellow by the name of Barack Obama.

The left-wing extremists of the 1960s and 1970s didn't pay a very high reputational price -- nor, in many cases, a legal price  for their violent politics.

Instead they were welcomed into the institutions that shape the outlook of rising generations.

America is now reaping the harvest of those seeds, with a new crop of student radicals who cheer for violence, and all too often commit it.

This time the country, including government and the universities themselves, will have to react differently: There must be no tolerance for such political violence.

Those who perpetrate it, including by beating up or harassing speakers on campus, must be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

And those who applaud thuggery or more extreme violence must face professional consequences  they shouldn't be teaching anyone's children, for one thing.

Yes, the First Amendment enshrines their right to tell the world they idolize Assata Shakur's bloody legacy.

But Americans also have the right to choose their associations, their employees, and where their tax dollars go.

They should make the choice not to promote or subsidize the likes of Shakur, Davis or Ayers  and not to entrust their children to anyone who worships them.

Daniel McCarthy, a recognized expert on conservative thought, is the editor-in-chief of Modern Age: A Conservative Review. He's also a regular contributor to The Spectator's World edition. He has a long association with The American Conservative, a magazine co-founded by Pat Buchanan. Mr. McCarthy's writings appeared in a variety of publications. He has appeared on PBS NewsHour, NPR, the BBC, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, CNN International and other radio and television outlets. Read more of Daniel McCarthy's reports — Here.

Charlie McCarthy

Charlie McCarthy, a writer/editor at Newsmax, has nearly 40 years of experience covering news, sports, and politics.

© Creators Syndicate Inc.


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Joanne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur. She died last Thursday, age 78, an honored guest of Cuba's Communist regime, and honored, disgracefully, by tenured radicals in America's universities, too.
cuba, davis, feminist
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Wednesday, 01 October 2025 07:45 AM
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