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Around 200 Stanford students walk out as Google CEO takes stage

sfgate.com

139 points by pera 8 days ago · 40 comments

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JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

This is an effective form of protest. It causes someone who is clearly courting public affection to see they won't get it. It doesn't interrupt the speech for others who want to hear. But it's also not going to be missed by anyone at the assembly. Moreover, it communicates to the administration–who are also courting donations and prestige–that this gets more difficult when there is a massive gap on an issue students care about between them and leadership.

My only gripe is the lack of a clear ask. But perfect is the enemy of good.

  • M95D 7 days ago

    > This is an effective form of protest.

    No, it wasn't. I don't think 200 students is a significant proportion of audience. (BTW, bad reporting for not giving a % estimate.) This is a gross lack of solidarity. If this was to happen in Europe 50 years ago, 90% of students would walk out.

    > It causes someone who is clearly courting public affection to see they won't get it.

    It didn't even make him feel bad. (BTW, bad reporting again for not saying how many people applauded him at the end.)

    > It doesn't interrupt the speech for others who want to hear.

    Oh, yes they did. They blew whistles. Read the article.

    > Moreover, it communicates to the administration–who are also courting donations and prestige–that this gets more difficult when there is a massive gap on an issue students care about between them and leadership.

    Apparently they cared about Palestine. I get it that Google supported Israel, but what does the administration has to do with any of it?

  • t0bia_s 7 days ago

    It's more like happening. Effective would be to abandon using services of company that I don't agree with. Which most of protesters probably don't. It's like going by diesel car to protest against oil production.

  • SpicyLemonZest 8 days ago

    As the article mentions, this is the third consecutive year that students have led a walkout for the same cause. I don’t think anyone’s obligated to sit in on a speech they’d prefer to skip, but it’s not clear that there’s anything being accomplished here other than a new tradition that pro-Palestine students leave commencement early. They’re not making any new demands because the administration flatly refused the 2024 ones.

    • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

      > it’s not clear that there’s anything being accomplished here other than a new tradition that pro-Palestine students leave commencement early

      It keeps it in the news cycle. Though it was genuinely unclear to me if this was mostly a pro-Palestine thing or folks pissy about AI and the Epstein class’s public corruption.

  • asdfasgasdgasdg 8 days ago

    Is it? I have to assume that Pichai was informed beforehand that there would be a walkout. Around 10% if the class walking out is not that big of a deal, especially considering that ten percent was probably not likely to seek gainful employment with Pichai’s companies anyway.

    Economically, the BDS movement is making demands of so many companies that there’s hardly a large firm or other organization in the country they don’t have a problem with. But if you are saying you’re going to boycott everyone, it means you’re not really boycotting anyone.

    • EA-3167 8 days ago

      That assumes that the real purpose of these movements is to achieve their stated goals, rather than as a social activity for people of a certain mindset. If you look at it more like a church outing it makes a lot more sense, albeit the church is really messed up.

      • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

        They’re expressing a broad slice of gripes to a powerful person. The point isn’t to get a win. It’s to embarrass them. Make them uncomfortable. So that they then ask how to prevent that in the future.

        • asdfasgasdgasdg 8 days ago

          I don’t think there is any action Pichai can take on this that wouldn’t hurt vastly more than a few students walking out of his commencement speech. He is a man well used to people complaining about his policies. Googlers do so all the time internally, including on this same topic, and have been for years. If gestures like this were going to move him, he’d have been moved already.

          That being said, I don’t have a problem with people standing up for what they believe, even when it has no practical impact. It’s good character building. I would expect that Sundar is similarly unbothered.

        • EA-3167 8 days ago

          If you're still trying to shame the shameless in 2026 then you missed the past decade IMO. The likes of Pichai can afford to ignore the 10% that walked out, frankly they can afford to ignore far more than that and have to great success. The idea that symbolic actions by a small number of students represents something other than entertainment for those students and hope-porn for their elders doesn't stand up to scrutiny.

          • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

            > likes of Pichai can afford to ignore the 10% that walked out

            Of course he can. But he’s still choosing to speak at a commencement. Why?

            • EA-3167 8 days ago

              If you stand in front of a room full of people, about to give a speech, you already know that you aren't going to reach 100% of the people present. Moving the floor to 90% hardly matters at all, and the fact that the minority wasn't able to mobilize the majority would be my takeaway.

              Beyond that why do any of these guys give speeches? They do it to raise their profile, to polish their ego, to promote recruitment or their ideals, and of course because they genuinely believe they have something to offer.

            • asdfasgasdgasdg 8 days ago

              For the other 90%? For his own personal reasons? It’s almost impossible to guess.

              • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

                > For the other 90%?

                If it’s this, the protest had no effect on him.

                > For his own personal reasons?

                I’m guessing this plays a bigger part than comments here give credit for. Pichai isn’t pitching anyone on anything of consequence to him at this commencement. He is, broadly speaking, flattering his ego.

nubinetwork 8 days ago

Dupe of https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48533756

w29UiIm2Xz 8 days ago

The upper middle class' opinions and reflections on business seem to be shifting in this environment. It seems less mutually beneficial than it used to be.

  • cowanon77 8 days ago

    A lot of upper middle class people recognize that AI is a direct assault on their livelihood. The very jobs that AI threatens to disrupt are the bread and butter of the upper middle class.

  • rvnx 8 days ago

    Considering the price of Stanford, this is more bourgeoisie than middle class

    • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

      > this is more bourgeoisie than middle class

      The bourgeoisie are literally the middle class [1].

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourgeoisie

      • rvnx 8 days ago

        > The bourgeoisie are a social class of business owners, merchants and wealthy people

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx%27s_theory_of_class#Bourg...

        There is even a funny article here: https://danielmiessler.com/blog/a-bourgeoisie-primer

        There is more here: https://www.reddit.com/r/communism101/comments/hilk3e/trying...

        So, if you want to play it safe, you can say, "it's the upper middle class that own the businesses and factories"

        I'll give it to you

        • JumpCrisscross 8 days ago

          > No, it's the rich middle class

          The "no" is incorrect. Some people use it to refer to the upper middle class. But this betrays the term's original Revolutionary as well as Marxists roots, and I'd argue, is inherently incorrect.

          The main reason we blur these lines is because we want to call our poor middle class. And our rich don't want to admit that we're rich.

          > it's the upper middle class that own the businesses and factories

          I.e. everyone with a 401(k). (Two fifths of Americans have no material shareownership.)

          If you don’t own equities or real estate in America, you’re poor. If you do, you’re middle class or rich. And if you’re middle class or rich and confused which you are, if you have ever chartered a private plane you’re rich, if you haven’t you’re the bourgeoisie.

          • rvnx 8 days ago

            > The main reason we blur these lines is because we want to call our poor middle class.

            At least something I agree with you, it quite makes sense

    • orochimaaru 8 days ago

      What I was about to say. I’m pretty sure most of the students walking out have a trust fund way more than what I have as savings.

quaddoggy 8 days ago

Safespacemaxxing. Never lose your snowflakery Gen Z.

  • temp8830 7 days ago

    So, gone from ignoring to making fun of them? That would mean they are on their way to winning.

M95D 7 days ago

IMHO, they (the students) should have walked out in protest of Android lockdown, AI, google ads, enshittfication, spying, profiling, and 100 other reasons the Google CEO is directly more responsible than having Israel as a client. I'm not saying protesting what Israel did and does in Palestine isn't a valid reason, but... they're so ignorant of all the rest of bad things Google does, things that affects them directly.

josefritzishere 8 days ago

Google has been doing a lot of evil lately.

  • temp8830 7 days ago

    Not sure why this is downvoted. Eric Schmidt has his own AI killer drone factory. That's pretty evil.

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