"I got my ID card. I tapped it on the barrier and it wouldn't work. The barrier wouldn't open," Mehreen, one of the KCL students barred from entering the campus during the Queen's visit, told RT.
"I tapped [the ID card] about three times... by the third time I knew that this was intentional."
She, along with several campus groups, now accuses the police and KCL of "profiling" and going after them for staging peaceful pro-Palestinian protests. They had earlier launched a campaign denouncing the college's ties to Israeli institutions that work with arms companies.
"I'm a fee-paying student... and I'm not allowed to go to my lecture because I'm apparently a security threat to the queen? Outrageous."Mehreen posted a video showing a campus security guard explaining that her access was blocked at the request of the Metropolitan Police. Others also shared videos of their ID cards not working.















Comment: Read Jonathan Haidt's book The Righteous Mind to see why humans (not just Swedes!) do this. Human morality is often more giving the appearance of following social norms, than actually behaving in accordance with those norms.