Two weeks into the surge of pro-Palestine protests that swept college campuses across the United States, a new, heroic archetype captured the imagination of right-wing media influencers: throngs of casually attired “frat bros” who jeered and laughed at activists, and in one case, a solitary Black woman. Fraternities — whose reputations have taken repeated hits for sexual assault , hazing deaths , drug dealing and alcohol abuse — are being lionized by prominent conservatives who celebrate them as a cultural counter-force to liberals whose anti-Israel protests and encampments have roiled dozens of American college campuses this spring. ALSO READ: 8 ways Trump doesn’t become president Together, these conservative influencers, led by the likes of Donald Trump advocate Charlie Kirk, have quickly moved to promote, exploit and otherwise co-opt frat boy belligerence against pro-Palestinian protesters.

Doing so provides them fodder for advancing broader goals, such as attacking higher education’s diversity initiatives and boosting Trump’s prospects in the November presidential election among like-minded conservatives. Richard Hanania, a former white nationalist who has successfully reinvented himself as a conservative academic, has also recognized the value of counter-protesters to advancing conservative aims, while expressing appreciation for fraternity brothers. “One thing to realize about protest movements is that they rely on the other side laying down,” he wrote.