Oberlin College has recently come under fire for the online remarks of professor Joy Karega, who took to Facebook to publicize her claims that “Israeli and Zionist Jews” were behind the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, the Charlie Hebdo attacks, and the rise of ISIS. She has also shared remarks by Louis Farrakhan, the leader of the Nation of Islam, who said that “white people are potential humans – they haven’t evolved yet.” Roger Cohen of The New York Times recently contributed a piece entitled, “An Anti-Semitism of the Left”, which details the issues that arise when criticisms of Israel evolve into demonizations. Cohen also details a comment made by an Oberlin alumna, who claims that she heard students dismiss the Holocaust as only “white on white crime.” The Oberlin faculty and administration, which have a reputation for integrating progressivism and social justice into their respective missions, has been largely silent in response to the Karega’s remarks and radicalism. Karega, who is an assistant professor of rhetoric and composition, received her PhD from the University of Louisville in 2014. Oberlin’s website lists her areas of research and expertise as “black political and protest literacies, translingual composition, rhetoric and composition historiography,