The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Safe Space That Became a Viral Nightmare’
Episode Date: October 2, 2022In September 2021, a group of female minority students at Arizona State University confronted two white male students who were studying in the library’s multicultural center.The women were upset wit...h what they saw as blatant antagonism: One of the men sported a “Didn’t Vote for Biden” shirt, the other had a “Police Lives Matter” laptop sticker. The women felt they had chosen the multicultural center in order to rile them. A heated row between both parties erupted, a video of which quickly went viral, threatening to upend the lives of all involved.For The New York Times, Sarah Viren, a journalist and essayist, explored the incident in the context of “the widening gyre of the culture wars.” The row at Arizona State was, she explained, “a symbolic fight,” one that raised questions of “wokeism” and “free speech,” the perils of viral videos, and the purpose of “safe spaces.”“It was a brief drama that was also a metaphor,” Ms. Viren wrote. “But watching and rewatching that drama unfold from my computer, I kept asking myself: a metaphor for what?”This story was written by Sarah Viren and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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So this story you're going to hear is about something that happened in 2021 at Arizona State University
that theoretically might not have caught much attention at all.
Only video of the incident was recorded on a phone.
And then it went up online.
And it went viral.
My name is Sarah Vereen.
I'm a contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine,
and I also happen to teach at ASU.
This all began last year, not long after the fall semester started.
Here's what you see in the video.
Two white male students are seated across from each other at a table in a large room.
It's the kind of place on campus you might go to for a meeting
or to squeeze in some work between classes.
One of the students is wearing an anti-Biden t-shirt,
and the other has a laptop with a sticker that says,
Police Lives Matter.
The video doesn't capture the beginning of the incident,
but what you hear early on is one of the men asking what he did wrong.
Yeah, I don't know.
What did I do wrong?
You're offensive.
Police Lives Matter?
What happens next is essentially a debate
between the two men and the three students
behind the camera about whether
or not the Police Lives Matter sticker
is racist and whether or not
the student should leave.
You are racist. Your sticker is racist, and whether or not the student should leave. You are racist.
Your sticker is racist
because police, that's a job.
You can choose to be a police.
I don't choose to be Black.
The students behind the camera
are students of color.
They are arguing about the purpose
of the room itself,
which is a newly designated
multicultural space.
We had to work for five years
to make this space.
Yes, we did. We worked for five years for ASU to build a multicultural space. We have to work for five years to make this space.
We worked for five years for ASU to build a multicultural space.
The video ends with the two white students leaving.
We're not white surprised.
About like police, police size, police size matter is saying.
They're not white surprised.
Yeah, it is.
Yes, it is.
Yeah, it's affiliated with white nationalists.
I first heard about this video from a colleague who knew one of the students.
It was posted the day before, but people outside the university were already talking about it.
On Monday, we showed you footage of this hate-filled whack job at Arizona State University
attacking students for sitting in the wrong place because they had the wrong skin color.
Every single part of the campus centers you.
This is the only space that you're not centered and you're still trying to center yourself,
which is peak white cis male bulls**t.
So that's not even English. That's some sort of weird sub-dialectic academic leftism.
It's fascinating that liberals put the bumper sticker on their Prius that says coexist, right?
And yet they're the new liberal segregationists. I mean, please explain to me how this isn'tist. You can almost see the outrage machine being stoked by this video.
And what so many people reacted to specifically was the perceived anger of the students of color.
But what was missing from this story is the history that leads up to that moment.
There'd been a five or six year push at ASU to have a multicultural space, a space where students of color or other
underrepresented groups could organize or meet people. The administration resisted creating one
for years, and it wasn't until the summer of 2020, after the murder of George Floyd and the ensuing
racial reckoning, that it finally acquiesced. I found that the nearly six million people who
watched the video were so focused
on who was right. Was it the students of color or the two white men at the table?
But this question of who was right, who was the victim, and who was the victimizer only illustrates
how the retelling of an incident like this could contort the incident to serve specific agendas,
regardless of the actual context.
And that context is what I wanted.
So I spoke with all the students who were in the video,
except one who declined to participate.
I wanted to let them speak from their own perspective
and get at everything that happened around the play and stop points of that video.
So here's my article,
The Safe Space That Became a Viral Nightmare,
read by Julia Whelan.
This was recorded by Autumn.
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I first heard about the video from a colleague and friend at my university as we waited in line
to pick up our kids after school in late September 2021. One of her students was in the
video, and it had gone viral, she said. She'd posted something in support of that student,
but then she also started getting attacked. Another professor at our university, Arizona State,
would later call the attackers vultures, the kind of people who feed off moments of everyday life that morph into spectacle after an article or tweet or video goes viral.
But at the time, I didn't have that analogy.
My friend told me she was scared, and I said I was sorry.
By that point, she had already taken down her post.
Later that night, I watched the video for the first time. It was 7 minutes and 40 seconds,
though the excerpt that was then going viral, that would eventually be watched by nearly 6
million people, was just over 2 minutes in length and had been posted alongside the descriptor,
This insanity is happening on college campuses. What follows is intense, but I wouldn't call it
insane. It's a nonviolent confrontation among several students in ASU's new multicultural room.
What felt insane, if also predictable, was that Fox News reported on the incident,
that a U.S. congressman called it an act of segregation and threatened my
university's funding, that hundreds of strangers emailed ASU to opine on the video, and tens of
thousands more weighed in online after watching the brief drama on their own screens. I'd been
at ASU for four years by that point, and in academia for more than a decade after leaving
my job as a newspaper reporter in 2008, at a time when that industry felt similarly under duress.
Our main campus is studded by palm trees and buildings the color of the desert,
as well as the frequent reminder, from banners to brochures, that we are an innovative university,
which is perhaps a way of saying that
although dozens of colleges are now closing or consolidating every year, this one plans on
surviving. It's an identity that manifests in a number of ways, most notable of which is size.
With almost 80,000 on-campus students and another 60,000 online, ASU has the population of a small city.
It is in many ways the antithesis of where I went to college, a tiny public liberal arts school
called New College of Florida. We had 600 or so students and could invent our own majors.
If an incident like this one had happened there, everyone would have been talking about it, processing it, reacting to it. But at ASU, in the days and
weeks after that clip went viral, its reach was limited. It was brought up at a faculty
meeting and after a visiting scholars lecture on how we're losing a common reality in
this country. Some faculty members and students organized a teach-in to
process what had happened, and the university issued a news release chalking it up to a
difference of opinions. It was, in other words, one incident among many on the campus.
Online, though, that viral video briefly came to represent not just our university in its entirety,
but in some interpretations, the state of higher education in this country as a whole.
It was a brief drama that was also a metaphor.
But watching and re-watching that drama unfold from my computer,
I kept asking myself, a metaphor for what?
When the video began, there were four students,
two white men seated at a study table and facing them, standing, two students of color.
One of those students was Mastani Qureshi, a 20-year-old history and justice studies major at ASU with long, sleek hair, a Pakistani-American who would later be mistaken
for black by strangers on the internet using words that I won't quote here. The other one standing,
and also the one recording the incident, was Zahra Takola, my friend's student. Takola,
who uses the pronouns they, them, and is black, appears only briefly in the video,
uses the pronouns they, them, and is black, appears only briefly in the video. Their face mask blue and belly shirt banana yellow, but their voice, loud and resonant, is as close as we get to a
narration during those nearly eight minutes. Toccolla can be heard telling one of the seated
men why the Police Lives Matter sticker on his laptop is racist, telling the other that white is not a culture,
and explaining to both the significance of the space they were in that day.
A sprawling third floor room with floor-to-ceiling windows, neatly organized study tables,
and a smattering of pleather-bound, square-backed couches and chairs.
Do you understand what a multicultural space is? T'Kola asks at a point
in which all the voices in the video begin to rise. It means you're not being centered.
A graduate student at the time studying colonialism and climate change, T'Kola is also
an activist, one successful enough that Outside magazine included them in its 2016 list of 30 under 30 who
are tackling the biggest challenges on the planet, but also one who, in that same write-up,
was nicknamed the troublemaker, a moniker that Toccolla both laughs about and takes some pride in.
Because, while activists have become something of a boogeyman in the widening gyre of
the culture wars, Toccolla sees that work, which has ranged from confronting Bill Clinton about
his 1994 crime bill during a publicity stop to pressuring their undergraduate university to
divest in fossil fuels, as essential. I've always been loud and outspoken and willing to make a difference,
Toccolla told me. On the morning of the video, Thursday, September 23rd, Toccolla had carpooled
to ASU's Tempe campus with their good friend Miriam Araya, known as Mimi, who is also black
and an activist, as well as a graduate student. Araya never appears in the video, but she's in the room that day,
and in some ways, all the events that unfold began with her.
After she and Takola got to campus that morning,
Araya went to the multicultural room,
officially called a Multicultural Communities of Excellence space,
while Takola met Qureshi and other student activists
for their weekly meeting
with university staff members about the room, which had just opened weeks before.
Araya sat at a table in the new space, she later told me, and pulled out her laptop with its Black
Lives Matter Phoenix Metro sticker on it. She was hosting a Black Graduate Student Association
study session, so other students drifted in and out, and Ariah at times stopped to chat with them.
Then, at some point, she said she looked up and noticed two white dudes,
one of them with a t-shirt that said, did not vote for Biden,
and the other with a Police Lives Matter sticker on his laptop.
The room was partly filled, mostly with
students studying. Many of them were white, so it wasn't the men's skin color that Ariah said she
noticed. It was the iconography, the sticker and the t-shirt, but also, she said, the fact that the
two of them seemed to have noticed her as well. I am chatting with another person, Araya told me, and that's
when the other dude directs his laptop toward me and kind of smirks. I am thinking he is starting
shit with me because of my laptop sticker. They are laughing, and I am trying to type,
but they are looking over at me. The graduate student Araya was with said he had to leave,
and after that she was alone. The two men leave, and after that, she was alone.
The two men kept gesturing toward her, she said, doing a head nod thing and laughing.
And then, without warning, she started to feel vulnerable.
Her mind slipped from the present to the past, to the stories her grandmother used to tell her about living in Louisiana,
stories her grandmother used to tell her about living in Louisiana,
and the enduring fear of women in that community that white men would show up and pull them from their homes.
Araya wanted to leave,
but instead she snapped a photo of the man with the Police Lives Matter sticker
and sent it to Takola and Koreshi in their meeting with staff members
about the multicultural center.
White supremacists in the space, she wrote.
Unacceptable.
Toccolla got the message just as that meeting was coming to an end
and read it out loud to those in the room.
It was just past noon.
There are some Nazis located within the multicultural space,
one of the staff members present later told a university investigator T'Kola said, though T'Kola doesn't remember using those words.
What they remember saying was this.
What are y'all going to do about it?
Chase Beckerman was the one with the Police Lives Matter sticker.
was the one with the Police Lives Matter sticker. He was 24 that day, though he looks younger in the video, an undergraduate studying biological medical science, recently married, with dreams
of becoming a doctor. Beckerman's parents are both nurses, as were two grandparents,
and he hoped to be the first in his family to get his medical degree. Going to college was always
part of that larger plan, and ASU had long been
where Beckerman hoped to go. He grew up attending university football games and said ASU felt like
a home years before it became one. Beckerman works as a medical scribe doing clerical work
at a local emergency room, and the evening before he had another night shift. That morning, he came straight to campus
from work. He had a biology lab at 7.30 a.m., and afterward, he stuck around to study for an
upcoming test on the human skeletal system. He met up with a student named Garrett Niles,
who was wearing his Did Not Vote for Biden t-shirt, and the two went in search of a quiet
place to study. They eventually found
a table in a room on the third floor of a building called the Student Pavilion that Niles previously
knew as a tutoring center. Beckerman said he didn't notice the new sign out front, the one
now designating it as a space for multicultural communities of excellence. We study in that
building daily, and it's mostly just where
you find a spot, he told me when we talked over Zoom a few weeks after the video went viral.
It was an explanation that would be questioned later by those convinced that Beckerman and Niles
had intentionally trolled the multicultural space that day. But it squared with what I had noticed
about the room when I met T'Kola there for an
interview. How nondescript it was, how little signage the university had put up to mark it,
and how many other students also seemed to be using it more as a study hall than as a cultural space.
Beckerman is a quiet talker, with the small, compact frame of a soccer player, which he was for two years while at ASU before he
blew out his knee. Niles I know less about because he declined, via his lawyer, my requests for an
interview. But in a taped Q&A following a lecture at ASU months later, he identifies himself as a
junior at ASU and a Republican and talks about how the fallout of that video had left him
feeling confused about his future at the university. Beckerman told me that he and Niles met at the
start of that semester, only a few weeks earlier. Both were into lifting weights, and both were
majoring in the sciences. They had studied for two or three hours that morning, Beckerman estimates,
when a group of people arrived and started making noise in a corner of the multicultural room near
his table. He had his laptop out because it was running a program with three-dimensional images
of the skeletal system. The Police Lives Matter sticker on it was scratched and worn. He'd had
it there for years. Having a background as a first-line
worker, I respect the good cops, the good police, he said. It changes at Blue Lives Matter.
I don't know, but I believe that could be in response to the Black Lives Matter.
Beckerman denied ever making intimidating gestures or head nods at Araya or laughing with Niles while looking
in her direction. He says he only really noticed Araya once those other students arrived. He looked
up from his computer screen and a woman from the group was walking toward him. Soon after that,
someone else from the group followed, cell phone out, starting to record.
I was speechless, Beckerman said.
I think my mouth dropped.
I can't even recall how I was feeling at first, because I was just so shocked.
I didn't know what was going on, what the motive was.
Why me?
What did I do?
Koreshi approached Beckerman first.
After Takola read Araya's message out loud in that morning meeting, two staff members present promised to send a situational response team to talk to the men. These are ASU staff members
tasked with managing what the university refers to as free speech visitors, a job that can involve
anything from taking down anti-Semitic flyers to attending campus protests
for or against Kyle Rittenhouse, who at one point was an online student at ASU.
When T'Kola and Qureshi made their way back to the multicultural room after their meeting ended,
however, the situational response team hadn't yet arrived. The friends debated what to do,
response team hadn't yet arrived. The friends debated what to do, and eventually, Koreshi volunteered to talk to the guy with the Police Lives Matter sticker. I was like, it's not going
to be a big deal, she said. In my mind, I felt like if we approached him, it was going to be okay.
Koreshi said she approached Beckerman's table and, in the softest voice ever, asked,
Can you please put your laptop in your backpack because you are making people in this space
uncomfortable? Beckerman took out his earbud and said, What? She said he looked surprised.
He was starting to figure out his words when the other student with the anti-Biden shirt
jumps in, Qureshi said about Niles. He says,
you can't be serious, you can't be serious, and pushes his chair back. Now everyone who is
studying is looking at us. He calls me snowflake, and he is being really loud. Watching this,
Takola decided to act. Koreshi is the youngest of their small group, and Takola and Araya are protective
of her. I was like, there they are disrespecting Mastani, Takola told me. So at that point,
I came over and I went live. The video starts and you briefly see Kureishi standing beside a study
table backlit by floor-to-ceiling windows. She is wearing glasses
and a leopard-patterned shirt and has just said something you can't quite hear. Then the camera
shifts to Beckerman sitting at the table beside her, an earbud still in one ear, a Bass Pro Shops
hat cupping his head, and the Police Lives Matter sticker across the front of his laptop.
What did I do wrong? Beckerman asks, staring at the camera.
You're offensive, T'Kola says from behind the lens.
Police lives matter?
You have the same sticker, Beckerman says.
What? T'Kola asks louder.
You guys have the same sticker,
but of the other...
Beckerman trails off.
But this is our space, Koreshi says.
That space is also an important character in this drama.
Many of those posting about the video online mistook it for a library or neutral study
space, and even those who recognized the room for what it was, a multicultural room, still
couldn't have known about the long,
and by some accounts contentious, fight to bring it into existence.
Multicultural, or identity-based cultural centers, have been around since the late 1960s and 70s,
when black students in particular pushed their universities to do more to protect them from the
racism and isolation that many said
they experienced in predominantly white universities. They are often referred to as
so-called safe spaces, which is to say places where, if you are minority on campus, you can
find brief respite from always being marked as different. The verb center is used a lot when talking about these rooms,
as in, this is a space that centers the Black experience, say, or the LGBTQ experience,
because, out in the rest of the world, that perspective is only rarely, if at all,
considered the norm. But Lori Patton Davis, an expert on black cultural centers
and a professor at Ohio State University, told me that many of these spaces also offer important
academic and support services. They might provide tutoring or mentoring for disenfranchised students,
or host poetry readings and art shows. There is one at a majority white school, she said,
that offers a black barber shop. Most of the time, Patton Davis said, universities like having
multicultural centers, if only for the optics. If they do resist, it's usually for financial reasons.
They just don't prioritize the work that those centers do, she said, often mistaking it for merely social instead of academic.
But cultural centers have also become something of a manufactured controversy as of late.
According to some critics, these rooms and adjacent projects, like so-called affinity housing,
in which students can elect to live in Black or Latino-themed dorms, for instance,
are new forms of segregation, because they focus on the lives of minority students instead of the majority, which in most cases is white. None of these spaces exclude white students,
but articles about them often imply that they do. I always talk about this as white people feeling
they are being discriminated
against because they haven't been discriminated against, Patton Davis told me. It comes from a
misunderstanding about how cultural centers came into existence in the first place. It was about
exclusion on campuses. A desire for inclusion was one reason Toccolla became such an advocate for multicultural centers.
The University of Washington, where they were an undergraduate, had an ethnic cultural center,
a center for multicultural education, and a tutoring center for underrepresented minorities,
all part of a multicultural office that Toccolla told me made it possible for them to go to graduate school.
I wouldn't be here without that office, they said. When Toccolla showed up at ASU in 2016,
they were surprised to learn we had no multicultural center. Both of Arizona's
other public universities have either a multicultural room or multiple identity-based centers, and ASU had something
similar, an inter-group relations center, that was shuttered during the 2008 recession.
DeCola asked around about opening one and eventually formed an unofficial student coalition
to advocate for a multicultural center, but the answer was always no. I'm still not exactly sure why.
The university's president, Michael Crow, declined an interview request via our press office,
and officials there refused to make any administrator available to talk with me.
A spokesman eventually clarified in an email that ASU deans began meeting with Toccolla and others about their proposal for a
center in 2018, the same year that Ronald Jackson, an associate dean, explained why ASU wouldn't be
having a multicultural center anytime soon to the student-run State Press magazine.
We value all of our spaces being inclusive spaces, Jackson told the publication.
The model of multicultural centers sometimes has a negative impact but good intentions.
What happens in some of those spaces is they become the place where all multicultural activity, sensitivity, and understanding happens, and then no one else has to create that type of space
in their academic department or building. Whatever the reason for ASU's resistance,
Toccolla's coalition refused to give up. In addition to protests and press interviews,
the group started petitions, screened films, and eventually drafted a 20-page plan to address racial inequality at ASU,
a blueprint that included a multicultural center. Members also pointed out moments of racism and
harassment at the university, a religious right activist protesting while wearing a t-shirt that
read, Muslims will rape you, anti-immigrant and neo-Nazi flyers plastered around campus.
A student group called College Republicans United, whose members were caught sharing racist,
homophobic, and anti-Semitic messages online. That group, still an official student organization,
last year tweeted a Thanksgiving meme referring to Native Americans as undocumented
immigrants who refuse to learn local language and still get food assistance. The group's organizing
likely would have been for naught, though, if not for the summer of 2020. Days after the murder of
George Floyd, Crowe issued a statement acknowledging that at ASU,
we need to do more. Three months later, he released a second statement outlining a 25-point
plan that included more faculty positions and fellowship programs for Black scholars,
a study of race and discrimination at the university, an African-American council to advise university
leadership, and number five on the list, a multicultural space on campus. It was a victory
that started to feel less like one once Toccolla and others realized how many meetings lay between
them and an actual room of their own. For a year, students say they met weekly with faculty and staff members at ASU
to discuss, and at times debate, plans for that space.
But when the room finally opened last year, just weeks before the video went viral,
a sign out front still identified it as a tutoring center.
And students say the university wouldn't let them
decorate the space or post rules for how to use it or provide them with dedicated staff members
to help organize events, gather resources, and ensure that the room itself was, in their words,
safe. All of which is to say that it seems clear to me now, watching and rewatching that video over the past year,
that when Qureshi snaps, but this is our space, or when T'Kola yells, do you understand what a multicultural space is?
The source of their anger was most likely not just Beckerman or Niles, but also our university.
Beckerman or Niles, but also our university. It was ASU that was on T'Kola's mind too, when they pulled out their cell phone that day and hit record.
Change only happens when we go live, when we do a news conference, T'Kola told me.
And that also informed our decision to say, okay, let's put this online.
When Takola stopped recording that day, seven minutes and 40 seconds had elapsed.
Beckerman had packed up his laptop and left the room. Niles was moving toward the door, saying something about how the women were
treating him just as black people had been treated during the times of racism in the United States.
Both men had threatened to contact their deans, and at one point in the video, right after Kureishi can be heard
cursing at the men, Niles says how pissed she and the others will be once their confrontation
shows up on conservative social media. Leaving the room, Beckerman told me he felt shaken and
confused, but he still assumed that someone at the university he loved would rectify what felt
like a wrong. Instead, he and Niles spent the next couple hours wandering around campus looking for
help. They talked to student services, then the campus police, and finally an assistant dean,
Sherry Gustafson. They wanted someone to assure them that they had a right to use the multicultural room, and that T'Kola and Qureshi had been wrong to confront them in the way they had.
But also, once they learned about the video, they wanted it taken down. Beckerman said they even
showed Gustafsson the recording, which had been posted to the Instagram page for T'Kola's
coalition. Hardly anyone had seen it at that point. The group had only a few
hundred followers at the time. For how powerful ASU is, I thought 100% that evening that she or
whoever it took would have dealt with that video, Beckerman said. But in a later statement to
university investigators, Gustafson said she told the men the university had no power to remove content
from a non-university website. She or someone else from ASU could have reached out to Takola's group
and asked them to take the video down, though as far as I can tell from interviews and documents
I've reviewed, that never happened. She or someone else also could have talked to beckerman and niles about the history and
purpose of the room they were in perhaps in a bid to build better understanding but in that written
statement to investigators gustafson says only that she assured the men that they were allowed
in the room she agreed to excuse them from their classes that day, and she told them an investigation would be opened into what
had happened. Beckerman got home later that afternoon, frustrated and exhausted, and started
prepping for another night shift at the ER. He hadn't slept in almost 60 hours. Then, an hour
before I had to be at work, he said, this went viral. Friends called from Georgia, then Virginia,
saying they had recognized him in a video online. Beckerman drove to the ER, scared someone there
would recognize him too, scared that his address would show up online, that while he worked,
his parents, but also his little sisters and his wife might be in danger.
I was mentally destroyed, he said.
I was in the middle of a panic attack.
T'Kola remembers tracking some hateful posts on their group's Instagram page
and not thinking much of it until a friend reached out,
most likely around the same time that Beckerman also heard from his friends.
They're dragging you pretty hard on Twitter, that person
said. T'Kola had been identified online, and soon Koreshi was as well. Their Instagram page flooded
with angry messages, and emails started stacking up in their inboxes. Strangers were calling,
texting, and posting about them online. I was attacked at every intersection, homophobic
and racist and sexist threats and rape threats and fat shaming, T'Kola told me.
They were sending pictures to us of black people killed by the police, of dead black bodies.
One email in particular haunted T'Kola. You'd be invited to the barbecue, not as a guest though.
Let's have ourselves a picnic, it read.
Take some time to learn about southern white culture.
Below that was a photo of the 1916 lynching of a 17-year-old named Jesse Washington.
By Friday morning, more than a million people had watched
that two-minute excerpt from the video posted on Twitter, a clip that ends just as Beckerman gets
frustrated and yells, I'm working 60 hours a week and going to school because my parents don't just
give me money. By the end of that day, 3.6 million people had seen the short clip beckerman got off the night shift
and slept for an hour and a half when he woke up his mother had found him a lawyer a man named
craig morgan who told me that people were already trying to politicize what had happened the tucker
carlson's of the world wanted to talk to Chase, he said. There were these political websites offering him laptops and money.
I was like, Chase, I don't think so.
And Chase was like, I just want this to go away.
The two talked and decided to put out a statement.
Beckerman wanted to calm things down, but Morgan also wanted him to wrest control of his narrative.
but Morgan also wanted him to wrest control of his narrative.
Although the bulk of the noise online at that point seemed to cast Beckerman and Niles as victims and to Cola and Koreshi as self-entitled hypocritical girls, as one Reddit post put it,
there was a sector of viewers who read the whole interaction as either a stunt propagated by the two men, whose responses at times do sound
stilted, or a public scolding they deserved, given the t-shirt, the bumper sticker, and the context,
a multicultural room. Each of us has the right to our own beliefs and to express them through
constructive and non-threatening discourse, Beckerman said in
his eventual response. I do not know the experiences of those who confronted me,
and I am devastated that this misunderstanding is being highlighted by others in a way that
perpetuates the continued racial divide in this country. He added that he hoped the video might lead to meaningful change and said he supported
those who want to end racial and social injustice. Then he made the statement public on his Instagram
page. It has since been made private. That night, Beckerman asked someone to cover his shift at the
ER, and finally he got some sleep. By the next morning, his post was
flanked with messages of support. But elsewhere on the internet, the vultures were circling.
The university's College Republicans United Club, for instance, reposted Beckerman's statement on
Twitter with the comment, this is what selling out looks like. The question implicit to a lot of
the outrage online was how my university would respond. There is a need in situations like this
for someone to play the arbiter, but the arbiter of what? Theoretically, ASU needed to figure out
what happened and decide if anyone that day violated its student code of conduct.
But within 24 hours, this had already become a symbolic fight, at least for those who saw Niles and Beckerman as victims.
You could watch them constructing a binary, white versus black, free speech versus wokeism, that for people like me on the ground made little sense.
Or perhaps it made perfect sense, because by building that binary, they were also asking ASU,
and by extension, all universities, to choose a side. The day after Toccolla's video went up online,
ASU put out a statement saying that the Dean's office would be discussing the incident with those involved. ASU is a community of more than
100,000 people from all 50 states and more than 150 countries, a university
spokesman said. Differences of opinion are part of the university experience.
The university expects respectful dialogue
between students in all engagements.
It was a statement aiming at neutrality
in a situation in which there seemed to be none.
That's not a statement, tweeted Eleanor Swanson,
a former Libertarian congressional candidate from Montana.
That's word salad.
Two students were bullied while studying
because they had silent, politely differing political views and the wrong skin color.
This isn't what college, or America, is about. According to Will Knight, the lawyer who
represented Tukola, Qureshi, and Araya in eventual disciplinary hearings, an ASU investigator told him the
university had received more than 1,500 email messages about the incident within the first week.
I requested copies of those emails, and of those I received, almost all either criticized Kola and
Qureshi, one alumna called them terrorists in her email,
or ASU for not yet punishing them. A group of 20 Arizona state legislators signed an open letter
threatening funding cuts against ASU for using taxpayer dollars to institutionalize racism
and further divide our society by enabling neo-segregation.
Paul Gosar, a U.S. representative from Arizona, tagged Crow in a post that called the incident a
racist attack. Then, someone on the internet found out that Toccolla had a fellowship from
the Ford Foundation, and Tucker Carlson invited the U.S. senatorial candidate J.D. Vance onto his show
to discuss why that foundation and other organizations, like the Harvard Endowment,
should lose their tax-exempt status. The Ford Foundation spends billions funding people like
this, making them into radicals and placing them inside colleges, Carlson said on September 28th,
after playing a clip of the viral video and identifying T'Kola by name.
The threats and harassment against T'Kola and Koreshi, meanwhile, continued. Koreshi's mother
worried about letting her out of the house, and when she did leave one day, Koreshi said she was
heckled by a crowd of students in a parking lot
on campus. Tukola started sleeping at a friend's place for safety and carrying a knife just in
case. The university offered the students a police escort, but Tukola declined, pointing out that
Law Enforcement Today, a website run by former police officers, had also posted derogatory statements about them online.
While many of the attacks focused on both students, Toccolla received the bulk of the
criticism, because of their Ford Fellowship, because they were a graduate student, but also
because internet sleuths had uncovered another useful fact, an arrest the year before during a Black Lives Matter protest.
In October 2020, Toccolla was arrested by the Phoenix police along with six others after a
march for Dion Johnson, a local man killed by an Arizona trooper earlier that year.
The arrest was one of dozens later thrown out after a local ABC News affiliate revealed that the police had
been targeting protesters, including Toccolla in Phoenix, and inventing lies about them,
including, in some cases, trumped-up gang charges. The Department of Justice opened an investigation,
and more than 20 protesters, including Toccolla, sued the police and prosecutors for colluding to arrest them
and trampling on their constitutional rights. The suit is proceeding. The district attorney
for Maricopa County, Alistair Adele, later resigned, and the police chief stepped down as well.
But much of the internet ignored that context, as did many of the letters sent to ASU.
that context, as did many of the letters sent to ASU. None of this was particularly surprising.
What unsettled me was learning that ASU also apparently failed to check the facts.
Two weeks after the video went viral, the university finally made a decision.
Tukola, Koreshi, and Araya would be investigated for two student code of conduct violations, interfering with or
disrupting university or university-sponsored activities, and stalking or engaging in repeated
or significant behavior toward another individual. Possible sanctions against them ranged from
writing an essay to suspension or expulsion. But Toccolla was also being investigated for
something else, that October 2020 arrest. Although ASU declined to discuss its investigations with
me, Toccolla shared a low-quality recording of a Zoom hearing they had with university investigators
during which they first learned about the investigation into the arrest.
I can only hear parts of what was said, but at one point, T'Kola's lawyer, Knight, can be heard
explaining the larger context of that arrest, including the fact that the charges had been
dismissed. He also notes that bringing up an arrest a year after the fact smacked of retaliation.
bringing up an arrest a year after the fact, smacked of retaliation.
But the investigator present sounds unconvinced,
at least in the parts of the meeting I can hear.
She did not respond to an interview request, and the university would only say that ASU opens code of conduct investigations
for any potential violation.
Any time that a student is arrested, the investigator says at one point,
that can be a potential student code of conduct violation. She goes on to say, misgendering T'Kola,
she was still arrested. She was arrested and charged. When the meeting ended, T'Kola waited
for a call from Knight to debrief, and that interaction was also recorded.
Knight sounds rattled, as does T'Kola.
They discuss how ASU investigators learned about the arrest.
ASU's paperwork names the Phoenix Police Department as the reporting agency.
Then Knight asks T'Kola how much longer until they graduated.
longer until they graduated. His concern was that someone from the Phoenix police was trying to get Tukola kicked out of school months before they were about to graduate with their
PhD, and that ASU at least tacitly seemed to be aiding in that effort.
We need to get you out of there, he says of ASU. It's not safe. While Beckerman was relatively safe, he wasn't investigated by
the university, and most of those making noise online seemed to support him, he said he still
felt shaken by the fallout from the video. In the days and weeks after it went viral,
he had a hard time leaving his house, and he started attending classes online.
A reporter reached out to Morgan, asking about unfounded rumors that the former Arizona Senator Jeff Flake,
a possible distant relative, was working on Beckerman's behalf behind the scenes.
Beckerman was recognized at a restaurant when he finally did go out for dinner with his wife,
but the lowest point for him was what happened a week after the video went viral. T'Kola had set up a public Instagram
account, mostly as a way of containing all hate, they told me, but also educating, and softly
mocking, the angry hordes seeking them out online. So I guess you guys are looking for me, T'Kola says in the first video
posted at what they later called their troll page. And since you guys are so interested in my work
and have raised my profile, I'll be sure to share more of my research so you guys can learn about
critical race theory, white supremacy, climate change, and colonization. Managing the responses on that page soon became
emotionally taxing, so Toccolla recruited friends to draft posts and moderate comments.
One of those moderators, Amanda Salvione, told university investigators that on September 30th,
she posted an analysis of racism in the medical field and tagged Beckerman in it.
If he's willing to insert himself intentionally in the only ASU campus space not created with
him central to its design, that post read, what harms will he be willing to commit behind closed
doors one-on-one with a black patient.
Toccolla says the post was taken down within hours of the university's issuing a no-contact order among the students in the video, and the university ended up investigating Toccolla for
that post as well. But by the time Beckerman saw his name tagged on Toccolla's Instagram page,
Time Beckerman saw his name tagged on T'Kola's Instagram page. Doctors he knew had already warned him that his dream of going to medical school might be in jeopardy, given that he'd been called
a racist online. He didn't interpret the post then as a critique of systemic racism or as an
attempt to educate white supremacists. He saw it as T'Kola's going after him. The motive was to defame
me, he said. This was an intentional attempt to ruin my entire life, my entire career.
Morgan said it was the first time that he saw his client cry, and soon thereafter,
he shot off an email to ASU. These statements about Chase are hurtful, libelous, and simply put,
hate speech, he wrote. They are meant to be divisive, malicious, and clearly directed
toward Chase, a continued victim of this person's pattern of hurtful, baseless, and vitriolic
misbehavior. When Beckerman and I met via Zoom a few weeks later, he told me one reason he decided to talk with me, and not anyone else from the media, was that he thought I would understand what he was going through.
Two years ago, I wrote in this magazine about someone who tried to steal an academic job from me, in part by using anonymous emails to accuse me and my wife of something we didn't do.
I was confused by the connection when Beckman first mentioned it,
but to him, the similarity seemed simple.
He felt as if he had just been going about his life
when someone swooped in and upset everything.
It's a version of events that I understand wanting to believe,
but that never felt right in my own story, and doesn't feel appropriate in this one either.
Instead, what I kept thinking about as I watched the video and talked to more and more people affected by it was not who is a victim and who is an aggressor, who was innocent or guilty, but what allowed any of this to happen in the first place,
and what might have been done to stop it.
In early November, faculty members, including my friend from the elementary school pickup line,
began circulating a letter asking our university not to punish Takola, Koreshi, and Araya.
asking our university not to punish Tukola, Qureshi, and Araya.
It opens by calling on Crow to live up to the promises he made in 2020 to better support Black faculty, staff members, and students at ASU,
and critiques the university for a series of failings.
Not staffing the multicultural space as promised,
not sending help quickly enough when Araya complained,
and, in choosing to investigate Takola, Koreshi, and Araya for disrupting Beckerman and Niles as
they studied, ignoring that the publicly stated purpose of that room was to provide a sense of
place and support for students of color. We consider it shameful and cruel that instead
of protecting students who are clearly vulnerable and being targeted, the university is siding with
white nationalist media and downplaying the incident as an isolated disagreement between
students, the letter read. The email circulating the letter asked that it be kept internal, but someone from the School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies leaked it to a conservative website called Campus Reform, telling that publication that he or she was very concerned about the potential for intimidation and or retaliation against members who do not sign this letter of defense.
Campus Reform then published the letter in full alongside an article arguing that leftist students
and faculty across the country have used multicultural centers to discriminate against
white students. The individual who leaked the letter wasn't named,
but the person who had forwarded it to the religion department was Leah Surratt,
an associate professor of religion. Soon, she started receiving angry emails. Not that many,
but one in particular upset her. It focused on Surratt's gender and her body and ended with this line,
your life has no value, kill yourself. Surratt reported the email to ASU campus police,
who examined it, she said, and determined the author was not a threat. But she kept pushing.
She told the faculty senate about the harassment and members of the equity and
justice committees she sits on. She stressed that attacks like these against individual faculty,
students, or staff members are not aberrant annoyances from internet trolls, nor are they
mere examples of a culture of toxic outrage slowly engulfing us all. They are part of a larger system.
engulfing us all. They are part of a larger system. It's a system that another colleague of ours, the English professor Lee Bebo, the one who introduced me to the vulture metaphor,
knows well. Though not because of a viral video or a leaked letter of support,
but because of a class he taught at ASU in 2015 called US Race Theory and the Problem of Whiteness. A student who wasn't enrolled in
that class criticized it in a post for campus reform in late January of that year. And by the
next day, the student was on Fox & Friends critiquing the course and its reading list,
books that, based on their titles alone, the student claimed were casting all white people as the root cause of social injustices for this country.
Threats and hate mail followed.
Flyers were distributed around Bebo's neighborhood, calling him anti-white.
Supporters of the white supremacist group the National Youth Front demonstrated on campus. A state senator
complained that Bebo's class was racist, and according to an essay Bebo later wrote about
the experience, numerous people claiming to be donors, alumni, parents of prospective students,
and concerned citizens contacted ASU demanding that I be fired.
contacted ASU, demanding that I be fired.
The worst day I experienced was when a picture of my son was on a neo-Nazi site,
Bebo told me when we talked in the spring.
Part of what led him to write about those attacks after the fact was that Bebo felt that situations like his were becoming more common,
yet universities seemed at a loss as to how to
handle them. In fact, the same semester that Bebo was targeted, at least two other incidents at
universities followed a similar trajectory. Campus Reform and similar conservative online sites,
and there are a number of them, reported on a supposed transgression, Fox News amplified the story, and the National Youth Front
began targeting individual professors or college administrators, claiming that white people were
facing discrimination. More recently, a survey by the American Association of University Professors
found a similar trend, namely that campus reform articles often result in harassment and attacks.
Of the faculty members surveyed, 40% of them had received threats of harm, including physical
violence or death, after being named in an article in Campus Reform, which is listed as a public
charity in tax documents by the Leadership Institute, a conservative organization
that owns the site. The study found that black faculty members were disproportionately named in
the articles themselves, LGBTQ faculty were more likely to be harassed after publication,
and prominent research institutions tended to be the primary focus of the website's ire. Campus Reform's
overwhelming focus on the most prestigious universities suggests that an apparent goal
of the website's coverage is to delegitimize not just higher education generally, but specifically
those institutions that make the largest share of contributions to research production in the
United States, its authors wrote. Surratt told me that those are the kinds of systemic issues
she thinks ASU ignores when it treats each emailed threat or nasty post online or menacing phone call
as that of an individual actor, as disparate moments of free speech,
which, while uncomfortable, are in no way linked to a larger, more menacing problem.
There is no mechanism at ASU for connecting the dots and looking at these threats systemically,
she said. This was meant to intimidate me and attack my status as a woman.
There are no structures for addressing that. In Bebo's case, he said that ASU similarly seemed to struggle with how to respond
to the criticism aimed at the university and at him. The university's instinct was to remain
publicly neutral, he writes in his essay, while also supporting his academic freedom
as a then-tenure-track professor, a freedom that is not always extended to non-tenure-eligible
faculty members. But that approach had the unintended consequence of neutralizing some
of the white supremacist rhetoric aimed at him and others, treating it, in a sense, like just another viewpoint.
While I am sympathetic to administrative desires to let this die out because of the way the
attention disrupted the university, Bebo writes, I am also keenly aware that they were caught
flat-footed, without an ability to communicate about race beyond feel-good multiculturalism.
The Anti-Defamation League eventually stepped in and began pressuring ASU to take a more forceful stand against hate speech,
according to reporting by the Arizona Republic at the time.
The university was hesitant, but in April 2015, three months after Bebo made national news, ASU finally signed on to a co-written editorial in that newspaper affirming that we will not sit idly by when hate raises its ugly head in our community.
then, Bebo told me that he has become something of an unofficial coach to academics who have been attacked by what he calls the right-wing discourse community, and then doxxed or threatened after the
fact. People reach out to him a few times a year, he said, but there are also moments when he reaches
out himself. When Bebo saw that Takola was named online last year, for instance, he knew what would
most likely follow, so he decided to send a quick email of support. I heard that you had been outed
as the person from the viral video, he wrote. I went through something similar a few years ago
for a class I teach on white supremacy. It all goes away after the vultures move on to the next person.
Recently, as I was trying to finish this article, I received an email invitation to a lecture at ASU
on a question that I'd been stuck on myself as of late. What is the purpose of universities?
For over a thousand years, the traditional purpose of a university
has been the pursuit of truth,
and universities have focused on the discovery
and dissemination of knowledge, read the announcement.
But in recent decades,
as academic institutions became more inclusive,
many universities seem to have adopted a different mission,
the achievement of social justice.
If I were still teaching rhetoric, I might use that argument as a lesson for my students,
replete as it is in logical fallacies. If I were teaching political philosophy,
I might point out how the critique replicates one of the more cynical interpretations of Plato's Republic,
that justice and truth are incompatible, and thus colleges and universities, like democracies, or republics, must choose either one or the other, but not both. But I teach creative nonfiction now,
so instead, that email made me think about storytelling, and how many of the
stories being told right now about higher education in this country just aren't true.
It is true that early iterations of what would eventually become the first Western universities
began to appear nearly 1,000 years ago, first in Bologna and later in Paris.
But historians are still not completely sure why.
One reason was likely job security.
Scholars outside of monastic schools were often itinerant teachers,
dependent on students who could accumulate enough learning to poach clients from their mentors and set up their own shops.
Another cause may have been housing costs. In places like Bologna, students organized in order to negotiate lower
rent in the cities to which they were moving so they could learn. Universitas, in its original
definition, after all, meant a corporation of workers, like a guild, or later, a union.
a corporation of workers, like a guild or, later, a union. These were organizations formed to give students and their professors more power via collective action. The origin of the university,
more directly linked to learning itself, however, goes like this. Around the 12th century,
new works from ancient Greece and Rome began making their way into Europe via Arab
scholars who had read and studied them for centuries. All that new knowledge needed a
repository, and the university became one. Which means that this nearly millennial-old institution
most likely got its start in the kind of organizing we'd later see reflected in students like Ticola, but also in
the thinking of philosophers like Aristotle, whose writing on anatomy would one day filter down to
Beckerman as he studied the skull and the spine, the ribcage and the sternum that day in the
multicultural room. Aristotle believed we might best understand a species, as well as a tragedy, by examining its parts, and as such, his lessons have wormed their way into my thinking as well, as I write about the anatomy of one tiny tragedy and so many of us here watching it, trying to figure out what it means.
what it means. There are more times than not when ASU, like much of higher education,
feels like a corporation among many. And within that analogy, this incident is just one more problem that has to be managed or contained. But I wonder if a better metaphor would be the body.
Each of us, one part of that larger anatomy, all of us cognizant that caring for the other parts, tending to whatever wound afflicts us, ultimately means caring for the whole.
Late last year, ASU cleared Araya of any wrongdoing.
and Qureshi were left with just one code of conduct violation, interrupting a university-sanctioned activity, and were asked to write an essay explaining how they would be more civil in the
future. They responded with a video in which they called the investigation itself a form of
discrimination and criticized the university for failing to protect them from white supremacists online. They posted that video to their Instagram page in December,
and another round of attacks from conservative media ensued,
followed by more online harassment,
as well as an invitation to be on the Dr. Phil show,
which T'Kola ignored.
But ASU appears to have accepted the video as fair punishment,
and in the months since then, all three students have tried to move on.
Kureishi graduated in May with plans to take a gap year before she applies to law school.
Araya recently took her comprehensive exams and is waiting to hear if she passed.
And Takola successfully defended their dissertation.
and Toccolla successfully defended their dissertation.
But since last January, they said they stopped going to the multicultural room and had given up on trying to make ASU more inclusive.
I just felt really betrayed, Toccolla told me the last time we talked.
I knew the university didn't always like me, but I knew that they needed me.
And so for them to do what they did, I just felt really betrayed.
Beckerman didn't want to have a follow-up conversation with me, but when we talked,
he told me that he, like me, kept watching and re-watching that video as if it might offer up
some clue. I don't know why I keep watching it, he said. At this point now, it's out of frustration.
know why I keep watching it, he said. At this point now, it's out of frustration. I am heartbroken.
His lawyer, Morgan, told me that Beckerman is worried about this article, and that maybe he made a mistake in talking to me. I said I hoped that wasn't the case. To me, this article has
never been about any of these individual students and what they supposedly did wrong or right.
about any of these individual students and what they supposedly did wrong or right. It's about our rapt attention on them and how that attention keeps many of us from seeing the machinations
taking place just off screen. As for the multicultural room, it's still there,
but the meetings with Takola's coalition about the space have stopped. There was a final one last March with
Cassandra Aska, the dean of students, in which Qureshi asked who was making decisions about the
space now and was told that leadership was, though Aska wouldn't specify who exactly that is,
Qureshi said. Aska didn't respond to my request for comment, but Surat, the religious studies professor,
told me that she attended that meeting to provide faculty support to the students
and found it to be both discouraging and surreal.
I see it as a joke, she said, of the multicultural space.
I see the website makes ASU look good, but it's window dressing.
website makes ASU look good, but it's window dressing. Just beyond that window dressing,
the university itself continues to operate as if it and we weren't under attack. Elsewhere, seven censorship bills passed in states restricting what can be taught in colleges
and universities, and 70 similar bills have been proposed since the beginning of last year.
Elsewhere, millionaires who went to college themselves keep telling young people that
it's no longer worth their time. Elsewhere, more states like mine are funding conservative schools
within universities while refusing to fund the universities themselves at pre-recession levels.
to fund the universities themselves at pre-recession levels. Elsewhere, polls show that more than 40% of Americans now believe higher education is bad for this country. One interpretation of all of
this is that it is just noise. Words, freedom of speech, perhaps even a valid critique of powerful institutions. Another version might
go something like this. There is a concerted campaign afoot to delegitimize academia in the
United States, one that too many people seem unwilling to acknowledge and very likely will
not respond to in time. Those most hurt by these attacks are not Marxist professors or wealthy
elites, but students like Beckerman, who for weeks was afraid to leave his house, and Tukola,
who still feels abandoned by their university. And colleagues who, like me, keep looking up at the
sky, watching for the circling of distant birds.