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| - As of this writing, it is highly unlikely the bill will become a law. Even if the bill made it through the House — which currently holds a slim Republican majority — it is almost certain to die in the Democrat-controlled Senate. If passed, the bill would broadly require offenders to spend a minimum of six months doing community service in Gaza, according to U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., who introduced the bill. As of this writing, no text for the bill is available.
On May 8, 2024, U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., introduced a bill, dubbed the "Antisemitism Community Service Act," that would require those "convicted of unlawful activity on the campus of an institution of higher education beginning on and after October 7, 2023, to provide community service in Gaza."
While the bill does not specifically mention unlawful activity relating to pro-Palestine activism, its mention of Oct. 7, 2023, references the date of an attack on Israel by the militant Islamic group Hamas that killed approximately 1,200 Israelis. Since that date, as of this writing, Israel's declared war on Hamas has killed more than 30,000 people and injured 72,889 in Gaza, according to the United Nations.
Following marches, sit-ins, and other global protests calling for a ceasefire in Gaza among other demands since Oct. 7, 2023, a wave of global university campus encampments began on April 17, 2024, at Columbia University. The Columbia encampment was organized by students — in a move reminiscent of the anti-war movement staged by students protesting the Vietnam War in the 1960s — and primarily called for transparency and divestment of any of Columbia's financial ties to Israel, among other aims.
University campus encampments spread across the U.S. as well as to Canada, the U.K., Austria, the Netherlands, France, Australia, Lebanon, and Japan, as of this writing, resulting in widespread unrest and arrests.
If H.R. 8321 (archived here) — which Reps. Jeff Duncan, R-S.C., and Randy K. Weber, R-Texas., co-sponsored — passed and was signed into law, it would mean that the U.S. government would send those convicted of these unspecified unlawful activities to Gaza to complete a minimum of six months of "community service." The full text of the bill was unavailable, as of this writing.
However, it is highly unlikely the bill will become a law. According to bill tracking site govtrack.us, the bill has only a 2% chance of becoming a law. Even if the bill made it through the House — which currently holds a slim Republican majority — it is almost certain to die in the Democrat-controlled Senate.
"Students have abandoned their classes to harass other students and disrupt campus-wide activities, including university commencement ceremonies nationwide. Enough is enough," Ogles told Fox News Digital on May 8, referring to the bill. "This is the 'I'll give you something to really cry about' bill?" one X user commented.
Multiple X users responded to the bill's introduction with outrage, with one user claiming that the bill would send "American students to be slaughtered in Gaza by Israel for misbehaving."
H.R. 8321 was introduced alongside another bill, H.R. 8322 [archived here], which would "revoke visas of certain aliens for rioting or unlawful protests, and for other purposes." The full text for this bill also was not available, as of this writing. "It's time to send a clear message to foreign, Hamas-sympathizing students rioting: if you bring chaos to our universities, you can study abroad somewhere else," Ogles said to conservative media outlet The Daily Caller. "Might I recommend Iran, Qatar, or Gaza? They seem more your speed."
Ogles has previously been in hot water for comments he made in February 2024 regarding deaths of Palestinian children. In response to an activist telling Ogles: "I've seen the footage of shredded children's bodies, that's my taxpayer dollars going to bomb those kids," he responded with: "You know what, I think we should kill them all, if that makes you feel better. Everybody in Hamas."
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