The Opinions - ‘They're Coming After All of Us. So You Might As Well Tell the Truth.’
Episode Date: April 10, 2025In this episode, the New York Times Opinion columnist Lydia Polgreen speaks to the author and activist Sarah Schulman on resistance and solidarity during politically charged times.Thoughts? Email us a...t theopinions@nytimes.com.This episode of “The Opinions” was produced by Vishakha Darbha. It was edited by Alison Bruzek and Kaari Pitkin. The rest of the show's production team includes Derek Arthur and Jillian Weinberger. Mixing by Efim Shapiro. Original music by Pat MuCusker and Isaac Jones. Fact-checking by Mary Marge Locker. Audience strategy by Shannon Busta and Kristina Samulewski. The director of Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is The Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times opinion.
You've heard the news. Here's what to make of it.
I'm Lydia Pullgreen, and I'm a columnist for the New York Times.
In my many years as a journalist, I've never seen anything quite like the swift and relentless attacks
on our most fundamental rights and freedoms we are witnessing under the Second Trump administration.
Immigrations and customs enforcement admitted to an administrative error that resulted in the deportation of an undisputation
of an undocumented man to El Salvador.
This letter from the Trump administration
and the Department of Education,
it orders all colleges in K-12 schools
to end diversity, equity,
and inclusion programs and initiatives,
or they run the risk of losing federal funding.
The government is actively clamping down on any dissent,
particularly among students, teachers, and activists.
The government is trying to deport Khalil
over his role in pro-Palestinian protests
at the school last year.
A lot of fear and uncertainty
rippling through college campuses
across the country tonight after the Trump administration revokes hundreds of international student visas.
To better understand the moment we're in and what we might do about it, I wanted to speak to my friend Sarah Schulman.
She has played a defining role in leftist thought from her work on the AIDS crisis to conversations about Israel and Palestine.
She's just written a book called The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity, which draws upon her previous works and speaks to this moment in history.
Sarah, thank you for doing.
joining me. Thank you so much. This book had its genesis in the ongoing crisis that has been
unfolding in Israel and Palestine, but it also is coming out in a world where we have a new Trump
administration and things are unfolding much closer to home. I'd love to just hear you talk about,
you know, both the original attention of the book and what you mean by solidarity. Why do you think
it was important to write this book at this particular moment? Well, the point of the book is to
make solidarity more doable. And in order to do that, I'm trying to strip away the idea of heroism,
perfectionism, and pure motive, because I feel that those things are unachievable, and they
keep people from trying to participate in solidarity. So the book is like an array of very interesting,
weird people and interesting movements that haven't been covered, and their moments of complexity.
to help us see that solidarity really just builds infrastructure for the future.
It doesn't solve the problems.
And if we can look at it that way, I think it's easier to try.
There are a couple of different strands there I want to pick up on.
But just beginning with the title of the book, you know, I understand the necessity part.
But I want to talk about the fantasy.
You know, people have this very romantic idea of what it means to come together.
And there were a couple of lines in the book that really struck with me along this theme.
And one is that you say that solidarity is a relationship rooted in inequality.
And the other is that justice by definition is not a popularity contest.
And solidarity does not require love.
I think that these are very challenging ideas for people because particularly in this time,
we fantasize about a kind of kumbaya moment where everyone has perfect alignment.
I think there's an expectation that there is going to be this kind of perfect agreement
and that one has to make, as you write,
a kind of perfectionist analysis to say,
like, do we agree on absolutely everything
in order to move forward together?
Well, that doesn't work.
I mean, historically, no movement
that has tried to force everyone in it
to agree on one analysis and one strategy.
None of those have succeeded.
They have all failed.
And the reason is, very simple, people are different.
And I know that's really hard to accept,
and I had to be in therapy for 20 years to accept that people are different.
But they just are, and people can only be where they're at.
So trying to force people to think and believe things that they don't think and believe will sabotage your movement.
So real leadership is about helping people be effective from where they're at.
So, you know, for the left, there hasn't never perhaps been a more vital time to wrestle with his ideas of solidarity, of stepping outside.
of one's safety and family and tribe. And I think one of the things that's been toughest for me
is seeing how Trump's popularity is slipping. You see that people are not trusting him on the economy.
I think we can see why. People are angry about a variety of other issues. They think that
tariffs are a bad idea. But the one place where his approval remains in positive territory is on
immigration. And to me, I look at that and I just think, my God, this is the realm in which he is
exercising the greatest cruelty, stepping the furthest outside of the bounds of, of certainly the
law, but also of just human decency. And I guess that challenge is my ability to be in solidarity
with the people who are angry at Trump for other reasons, but are indifferent to the cause that I
care about most. So I'd love you to give me a little bit of therapy about how to be in solidarity
with people who don't care about Palestine, who don't care about trans rights, who don't care
about immigrants, but are angry at the Trump administration and are potential allies in making
change happen. The challenge of Big Ten politics is working with people that you don't agree with.
I would say radical democracy is about accepting difference with the bottom line. You have to have a
bottom line, but then it's a kind of emotional maturity that you can partner with people when you
agree and when you disagree, you walk away from them. You know, one example is like the Catholic
Church. I disagree with the Catholic Church on almost everything, but in certain neighborhoods when
people are facing eviction, the Catholic Church is there to defend them. And that's a time that you
move in and work with them. Once they bring up abortion, then you walk away. And this gets back to
where we started, which is this fantasy of perfection that does us in every time.
I think the other thing that really struck me, particularly in the early part of the book,
and that I've been thinking about a lot, is the role of those who are early to understand danger.
And you write in the book about how the American supporters of the Spanish Republican movement
against the fascists suffered for being what you call prematurely anti-thes.
fascist. That was a government term. Oh, really? Oh, wow. Yeah. Okay. So say more about this group, because I think, as we think about the way that events are unfolding now, it really does seem as though, particularly those who are involved in the student movement and the other movements for Palestine are suffering a similar fate.
Well, it's always difficult to be in the first group of people that understand something. It's always better to be in the fifth, you know, because it's already people are used to it. But these were people.
like the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, Americans who wanted to fight fascism in Spain, the U.S. government would not support.
And, of course, later, the U.S. entered the war against fascism.
So by the 40s, the average American would describe themselves as fighting against fascism.
But these people did it before it became the status quo.
So when McCarthyism came in, they were called prematurely anti-fascist,
which is this absurd term, but it's something we can all recognize, which is people who understand an injustice and start acting towards it before it's acceptable or even discussed in a public way.
And what that shows, I think, is that early insight starts to build the infrastructure of movement.
Sometimes it's just the politics of repetition.
But by the time movements are ready, they already have preexisting organizations.
They already have books.
They already have ideas that are already formulated that they can build on. And that's what we're seeing now with the Palestine Solidarity Movement. I mean, they have organizations like Students for Justice in Palestine is 30 years old. And this has been able to propel people forward. At the same time, it does feel like this is a profound moment of despair and of disillusionment, of fear. I'd love to just hear you reflect a little bit on how you manage the kind of emotional,
landscape of this moment because you've been there watching friends die when you were you're part of
a act up during the height of the AIDS crisis. But how do you manage that feeling of hopelessness?
Well, it is true that there are a lot of cowards. You know, a moment like this really shines the
light on everybody and sometimes it's surprising. But there are so many decent people out there
and there's so much resistance going on, but it's not at the top. You know, students,
it's interesting because the student movement has not been stopped,
even with all this punishment.
I mean, these students at Barnard, who not only were expelled,
but their colleagues had their diplomas revoked, which is insane.
You know, after they graduated, all this is doing is alienating people from these institutions.
It's discrediting the institutions.
And I'm seeing it in my school, because I'm the faculty advisor to Jewish Voice for Peace
at Northwestern University.
My students are so sincere in their objection to the Israeli war in Gaza that they are willing to risk discipline by the administration because they have to live with themselves.
And that's very inspiring.
And, you know, I start the book with a quote from Gadir Shafi, who is a Palestinian lesbian leader.
And she says, think about what you can do, not what you can lose.
And that is my mantra.
because as I've been going through the world,
I'm constantly engaging people who are terrified
that they're going to lose some status,
they're going to lose some access,
and often they do,
but you get something else,
which is this internal coherence of integrity.
So in a way, I feel like the greatest hope that we have
is to expand our integrity so that we can maintain it,
because it's the only thing we can control.
Yeah, yeah.
One of the real pillars of your work and your activism is the idea of direct action.
So I'd love to hear you talk a little bit, particularly in this moment, about the history and importance of direct action in making change happen.
Well, it's interesting because very effective movements, starting with Dr. King's movement, which was a direct action movement, and going through ACT UP, the AIDS activist movement, which used very similar tactics. The way they move forward was by building campaigns. And this is something people have lost. It's not just getting huge numbers of people in the street to yell and scream and then they go home. Like, that doesn't help. You need to first become the expert on
your issue. Then you need to design solutions that are reasonable, winnable, and doable.
You go to the powers that be and you bring your proposal and when they say no, then you use
non-violent theatrical civil disobedience to communicate through the media to the public what your
solution is. So that every action you take is to build on this demand and this campaign. So that
That's sometimes what's missing is this idea of a winnable goal and that you use actions to build
towards that goal. Without that, you're often just wasting energy. So in this moment right now,
let's take, for example, the detention of students who holds legal status to be in the United
States. What would you imagine would be an agenda for direct action, achievable goals? Because I think
people are really hungry for ideas. And again, I'm not saying this is your
space or the, but I think it'd be helpful just to hear your thoughts on how one might approach
this. Well, I think right now there's a three-part approach. So one is the legal, that we have our
lawyers who are in the courts. There are some judges who are reasonable. There is a problem of
enforcement because the government has dismantled enforcement. But that is one approach. The second
are protests. We've seen demonstrations inside Trump town.
We've seen students chaining themselves to fences.
You know, we're seeing constant objection on the part of the people against these kidnappings.
And the third is providing information to students about how they can protect themselves, what their rights are in relationship to ICE, what kinds of questions they can ask.
And then there are some schools that are providing legal protection, as they should.
It's the simultaneity of action that always makes movements effective.
And that's what we're seeing.
There is no quick fix to this moment.
This moment is a cataclysm.
But speaking out, being informed, working with others, allowing for multiple approaches,
that's what we can do.
It seems though that the other thing that's happening is a kind of intimidation, a threat of violence.
You had President Trump, you know, speaking on Air Force One about how he'd love to send
American citizens to El Salvador if it was possible. I think there is a very strong and palpable fear
that seems designed to deter direct action. There is, but, you know, in the end, it's funny because
I was talking to my sister recently about our ancestors who were exterminated in the Holocaust, actually.
And she asked me, what camps did our aunts and uncles die in? And I said, well, they never made it to the
camp. They were shot in the town square of their town. And I started thinking about that. And I really,
you know, in the end, you don't protect yourself by what you say or don't say because you become an anonymous mass from the point of view of fascists. You know, so it's this kind of narcissistic fear that if you tell the truth, they're going to spot you and they're going to come after you. They're coming after all of us. So you might as well tell the truth. Sarah, you are also a prolific novelist and playwright. And I know you primarily think of yourself as an artist.
In this time, I've been finding myself really leaning on art as a place to find a sense of connection and community and meaning.
And I'm curious, what are the works and experiences that you're leaning on in this time to provide inspiration, to give you a sense of groundedness or whatever it is?
Well, there's two pieces that I think of.
One is Zone of Interest, the film by Jonathan Glazer, and the second is a novel, minor detail by the Palis.
Palestinian writer Adania Shibley. And they both work very similarly, formally, to show us that the past and the
present exist simultaneously. And this is something that we need to take in, that we've been here before.
These things are rooted in the past. I just read Red Scare by Clay Risen. And what it really reveals
is that the Red Scare was a white Christian male rebellion against the New Deal.
and women and black people getting money to write and make paintings and rural theater companies and all of this kind of thing.
And it's very similar to Jim Crow being a resistance to reconstruction.
So we've understood that these are not all discrete events.
These are patterns of people, multitudes of different kinds of people rising in this country and then being opposed by this very small minority that has a lot of
power. And this gets back to the immigration issue. Many people in the United States have projected
their anxieties and problems onto immigrants without realizing that it's actually being caused by the 1%
that are stealing all the wealth of the country. That's the thing, when people are not getting
their social security checks, when they're watching the tech pros rising and rising, maybe some
connections will happen because of their actual lived experience. Well, I think that's a really good
place to end it. Sarah, thanks so much for talking with me. Thank you, Lydia. The Opinions is produced by
Derek Arthur, Sophia Alvarez-Boid, Veshaka, Christina Samuelski, and Jillian Weinberger. It's edited by
Kari Pitkin, Alison Brusek, and Annie Rose Strasser. Engineering, Mixing, and Original Music by
Isaac Jones, Sonia Herrero, Pat McCusker, Carol Sabro, and Afim Shapiro.
Additional music by Amon Sahota.
The fact check team is Kate Sinclair, Mary Marge Locker, and Michelle Harris.
Audience Strategy by Shannon Busta and Christina Samuelski.
The executive producer of Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
