Bondi Comments On New Probe Amid Protests

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Something’s been festering just beneath the surface for years—no, not some random policy dispute or wonky tax bill, but an all-out ideological war, carried out quietly at first and now screaming from the rooftops of our so-called “institutions of higher learning.”

You’ve felt it, you’ve seen it, and if you’ve been paying attention, you know exactly where it’s spreading fastest: our universities. Once places for critical thinking and debate, they’ve morphed into activist boot camps where the only acceptable viewpoint is whatever flavor of Marxist theory is trending this week.

But what happens when the curtain gets pulled back—when the radical professor who’s been cheerleading violence from behind a podium finally gets called out? What happens when the students themselves, not federal watchdogs or bureaucrats, are the ones who say, “enough”?

Welcome to Rutgers University, where the radical chickens are coming home to roost—and one of them just packed his bags for Europe.

Let’s talk about Professor Mark Bray. Or as some students have come to call him, with the type of dark humor that only comes from dealing with absolute absurdity: “Dr. Antifa.” Yes, seriously. This isn’t satire. This is the guy who literally wrote “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook,” a cheerful little manual for political violence that he proudly funnels proceeds from into legal funds for arrested radicals.

Oh, and just in case you were wondering—yes, he’s being paid with your tax dollars.

Bray recently made the oh-so-dramatic announcement that he’s taking his classes online and fleeing the country—to Europe, naturally—because of a petition launched by Rutgers’ Turning Point USA chapter asking for his removal. That’s it. No torches. No mobs. Just a digital petition. And that was apparently enough for “Dr. Antifa” to cry foul, cite “safety concerns,” and hop on a plane to hide out in some European café, presumably typing up his next manifesto between sips of ethically sourced espresso.

But let’s not breeze past the facts here.

This isn’t just about one unhinged professor with a flair for anarchist cosplay. This is about what’s been tolerated, even rewarded, in American universities. Bray isn’t an outlier. He’s the result of years of universities bending over backwards to accommodate radical ideology while slamming the door shut on anything even remotely conservative.

He once said, “Only mass antifascism, legal or not, can save us.” Just think about that for a second. A university professor—paid by the public—openly pushing for illegal political action, while clutching his pearls when a few students say, “Hey, maybe this guy shouldn’t be in a classroom?”

But here’s where it gets good.

The students didn’t stoop to his level. They didn’t throw bricks or block traffic. They filed a petition. They organized. They used their words, their convictions, and yes, their courage. Megyn Doyle, the Turning Point USA chapter treasurer, summed it up perfectly:

“Freedom of speech does not protect individuals from the consequences of advocating for political violence.”

Boom.

These students put the whole system on notice. They exposed how deep the rot really goes and how completely unserious the radicals become when challenged—how the minute they get pushback, they scatter like cockroaches under a flashlight.

And look, don’t be fooled—this isn’t over. Bray’s departure isn’t a victory lap just yet. It’s a moment, a flashpoint in the broader fight to take back our institutions. Because for every “Dr. Antifa” who gets exposed, there are a dozen more quietly indoctrinating students under the banner of “social justice” and “liberation theory.”

But this—this—is a start.

So no, you’re not crazy for thinking something’s deeply wrong in academia. You’re not overreacting when you hear stories like this and think, “What the heck are we funding here?” The reality is worse than you thought. But the response? That’s the part that should give you hope.

Because the pushback is finally here.

And the radicals? They’re running.