Guno צְבִי
We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
It is now obvious that antisemitism was never the real reason for the Trump administration’s attacks on universities. What lessons can we learn from this great exploitation?
It is clear that many universities, in their attempt to balance free speech and safety, erred too much on the side of free expression. Detailed reports at Harvard, Columbia, and other universities have substantiated these claims. Jewish students were afraid.It was at that moment that Republicans seized upon our legitimate fears and exploited them for political gain. So forgive us for not seeing their motives more clearly.
But those motives are abundantly clear a year and a half later.
First, Trump and his Republican allies have attacked universities for all manner of alleged sins: tolerating antisemitism, yes, but also promoting “DEI” (a term that, like “woke,” now means whatever Republicans want it to mean), failing to instill patriotic values in students, allowing trans people to compete in sports, skimming too much money off the top of grants, lacking “ideological diversity,” and not paying their fair share of taxes.
What do these allegations have in common? Not antisemitism, obviously, but the targets of Republican ire: universities, especially elite ones, which MAGA nationalists, post-liberal ideologues, and Christian theocrats all hate, albeit for different reasons.

American Jews were played — now what?
Antisemitism was never the reason for the Trump administration’s attacks on universities. What can we learn from this great exploitation?
