The Resurgence in American Antisemitism Comes From Our Education System
“The same infrastructure that taught a generation to hate Jews is now teaching them to hate America.”
What we are seeing now did not magically appear out of thin air.
Eric Buesing writes at Substack:
How America’s Education System Became a Weapon Against Itself
When college students tore down posters of kidnapped Israeli children in October 2023, parents asked: where did this come from? The answer lies in curriculum materials developed at Brown University. These materials reached approximately one million students annually in roughly 8,000 high schools across America. What teachers didn’t know, and what parents never learned, is that the professor who shaped these materials was funded by a Middle Eastern government. His purpose was to advance one specific narrative: Israel as a settler colonial project. Not to debate it. Not to present multiple perspectives. To establish it as fact.
“This is not a debate,” Professor Beshara Doumani told a Brown audience in 2016. “And it’s not meant to be a debate.”
This is the root of American antisemitism’s resurgence. But antisemitism is just the visible symptom of something larger. The same infrastructure that taught a generation to hate Jews is now teaching them to hate America. The same foreign funding mechanisms that delegitimized Israel are delegitimizing Western civilization itself. America is being systematically dismantled. One classroom at a time. One algorithm at a time. One generation at a time.
The Hidden Infrastructure
Eleven Middle East Studies centers at America’s elite universities receive $260,000 each annually from the Department of Education under Title VI. That totals $2.9 million in taxpayer funding (National Association of Scholars, 2022). The Cold War-era program was originally designed to develop regional expertise for national security purposes. It became a pipeline for foreign influence when universities discovered they could supplement these federal grants with something far more lucrative.
Since 1981, American universities have accepted $13.1 billion from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Kuwait (Bard, 2024). Qatar alone contributed nearly $6 billion. Roughly 73% of these contributions are worth approximately $10.7 billion. None of these billions have any publicly stated purpose despite federal disclosure requirements (Bard, 2024).
The scale is staggering. Cornell received $2.3 billion. Carnegie Mellon took $1.05 billion. Georgetown and Texas A&M each accepted over $1 billion. When you look at Georgetown’s records, you find more than $1 billion with no stated purpose. Just blank spaces where explanations should be.
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Comments
this is important for the continuation of the rubber stamping of law and doctor degrees for the afrimaction crowd
and dont dare speak out against it
I’m sorry to break this to you but higher ed has been teaching people to hate America for pretty much my entire life. And I’m old.
I’m 76. There was still some semblance of pride in America back then.
I think the premise here is backwards. The American left only hates Jews because it hates Israel, and it only hates Israel because it hates America. America-hatred came first, and Israel-hatred followed only because Israel is America’s ally. And Israel-hatred is in practice indistinguishable from Jew-hatred, so eventually that followed too.