Recently, a major kerfuffle broke out over a commencement address at the University of Michigan. (See photo above. Courtesy of Derek Peterson.) It was an odd but predictable affair. The speech actually went down well with its audience of graduates and onlooking proud parents. It received loud applause. But, for daring to praise pro-Palestinian student activists, the University of Michigan, in response to complaints, disowned the speaker and issued an apology for the offense taken.
Scan the headlines relating to higher education in America, and one is treated to an endless stream of academic cowardice: canceled speakers, rebuked and sometimes fired professors, and students suffering all sorts of penalties. The common variable is Palestine. The administrative staff at universities is working overtime to suppress any dissent on Israel in response to donor pressure, Zionist student agitators, and, most ominously, state and federal pressure. The Trump Administration, in particular, is basically running shakedown operations against private and even public universities for alleged antisemitism, which is merely code for pro-Palestinian speech that condemns Israeli genocide and apartheid. Some universities have even adopted the highly contentious IHRA definition of antisemitism, a project started by Zionists to rebrand opposition to Israel and Zionism as a bigotry against Jews as a people.
Since October 2023, billionaire donors have used their vast wealth—and the threat of withdrawing it—to demand a severe crackdown on student protesters expressing solidarity with Palestine. New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman followed through on threats to suspend donations to Columbia University in response to their alma mater’s handling of pro-Palestinian student protests. Cooperman went on to describe students organizing for Palestinian liberation as “fucking crazy”. Ronald Lauder, an heir to the Estée Lauder Cosmetics company fortune, pulled his donations from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business, while Marc Rowan, CEO of Apollo Global Management, called for Wharton alumni and donors to “close their chequebooks until President Liz Magill and Chairman Scott Bok resign.”
Even Jewish professors in Jewish Studies have been impacted:
“Jewish studies is at the precipice of a cliff in America,” said Shaul Magid, a professor of Jewish studies at Harvard. “It’s being hijacked by a particular political agenda and somebody has to get ahold of the wheel.”

(^^^ This NYT headline makes no sense; push Hamas on what? It’s about donors pushing universities on domestic pro-Israel politics.)









