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Jewish Org Gives 14 Colleges an F on Antisemitism Report Card

Jewish Org Gives 14 Colleges an F on Antisemitism Report Card

I think you guys can guess which schools received that F grade.

The Jewish group StopAntisemitism issued its 2025 report card guide that grades colleges on how well they address antisemitism on campus.

“In the year since StopAntisemitismʼs last Campus Antisemitism Report, the situation has intensified and metastasized into a coordinated and well funded nationwide campaign targeting Jewish students,” the group wrote. More than 140 campuses saw orchestrated protest actions, many supported by outside organizations with clear political agendas, synchronized messaging, and unified demands.”

StopAntisemitism gave 14 colleges an F (I linked to Legal Insurrection tags so you can access stories we’ve written about antisemitism on the school’s campus):

Are we shocked? No. I believe we’ve written about all of the schools regarding rampant antisemitism on campus.

For those we have not covered regularly, here is the report on them:

  • The New School (New York City): Jewish New School students have reported pervasive antisemitism including physical assault, slurs, harassment, and a campus environment that fails to reliably safeguard them. The institution was assigned a failing grade for its handling of antisemitic conduct.
  • Pomona College (California): At Pomona College, Jewish students face antisemitic incidents, including vandalism and disrupted events. Despite updated policies, the campus climate remains hostile and tense.
  • University of Oregon: Jewish students have reported antisemitic incidents such as swastika graffiti and the removal of pro Jewish materials in residence halls. While the university has publicly condemned these acts and opened investigations, the campus climate remains fraught with safety concerns.
  • University of Washington: At UW, violent protests and blocked access in 2025 highlighted severe antisemitism, with federal reviews citing gaps in the universityʼs response. Despite new policies, the campus remains unsafe and hostile for Jewish students.

Hardly any Jewish student feels safe on campus:

58% of Jewish students reported personally experiencing antisemitism on campus.
• Only 12% of reported incidents were properly addressed.
39% hid their Jewish identity, and 65% felt unwelcome in specific campus spaces.
62% were directly blamed for Israelʼs actions.
58% said their schools failed to protect Jewish students after October 7.
• Only 39% felt Jews were included in DEI initiatives.

“These findings confirm the harsh reality that Jewish students are being marginalized in institutions that claim to champion diversity and inclusion but instead amplify division and exclusion,” StopAntisemitism noted. “Their safety and dignity are treated as negotiable and often dismissed entirely.”

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Comments


 
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The Gentle Grizzly | December 9, 2025 at 9:11 am

“ Only 39% felt Jews were included in DEI initiatives.”

Speaking as a (sort of) Jew, it would not occurred to me to fall back on such a crutch as DEI.


     
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    Jonathan Cohen in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | December 9, 2025 at 11:43 am

    I agree. Falling back on victim politics as a strategy for combating antisemitism is a loser. The energy among the woke and the progressives is with the pathologically anti-Israel element including Muslim immigrants and activist blacks. For too many Jewish Democrats and their friends in too many Jewish organizations, the problem is gaining acceptance from the anti-Israel progressives by trying to blame antisemitism on the Republicans.

    Israel has a good case both in historical terms and in terms of American interests. It is essential to make the case for support for Israel rather than relying on labeling critics of Israel as antisemitic.

    For years Jewish academics have allowed a tsunami of lies about the Jewish state go unchallenged by progressives who dominate the social sciences and the humanities. Student Affairs bureaucracies, dominated by DEI advocates, have used their influence to encourage anti-Israel activism and hinder efforts to defend support for Israel.

    The culture of victim politics/DEI/affirmative action has not been good for American life. It has over time become a driver of civic discord and even violence. It has been especially bad for Jews as we now have growing resentment of Jews on both the left and the right. For vulnerable minorities like we Jews, our interest is best served by a society that treats people as individuals rather than members of separate groups. That is the law as embodied by the fourteenth amendment as well as the founding documents of the United States.

      For too many Jewish Democrats and their friends in too many Jewish organizations, the problem is gaining acceptance from the anti-Israel progressives by trying to blame antisemitism on the Republicans.

      This goes back to a problem among a depressing number of Jews: the complete inability to connect what they support and vote for with the results they get. They pass the blame for their screwups onto someone else.

      This problem is hardly unique to the Jews. No group in American history has suffered more from the corrosive effects of the welfare state, yet solid majorities of black voters demand more of the same (while blaming the inevitable disaster on “racism”). I know a number of white California refugees now living in Texas who (1) complain bitterly about conditions in that state, and (2) are enthusiastically supportive of Newsom and other lefty politicians who have run the state into the ground. Socialism is an economic policy unblemished by success (to put it mildly) yet millions of people are eagerly determined to dive headlong into that death trap.


         
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        The Gentle Grizzly in reply to Recovering Lutheran. | December 9, 2025 at 2:30 pm

        This goes back to a problem among a depressing number of Jews: the complete inability to connect what they support and vote for with the results they get.

        ^^^ This! ^^^

        Along with the depressing number who wring their hands, “oy”!, snivel, and depend on ADL to defend them rather than actually fighting back.


 
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ztakddot | December 9, 2025 at 11:59 am

All in democratic bastions, left-red alliance again.

I don’t see any of those red necked SEC schools on this list,


     
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    buck61 in reply to buck61. | December 9, 2025 at 3:25 pm

    B1G gets three schools on the list, not quite as many as the Ivy’s


       
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      shrinkDave in reply to buck61. | December 10, 2025 at 9:33 am

      Congrats to Qatar for their successful takeover of social media at those institutions, especially Ivy League. They have successfully paved the way for politicians to gain power in places like Minnesota, Michigan and of course, NYC. And there can be no doubt, that Qatar’s “donation” of an Air Force One type of jet to the Trump Library, has zero influence on Trumps tolerance of Qatari influence in the USA.


     
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    CommoChief in reply to buck61. | December 9, 2025 at 5:19 pm

    When I was at Bama …holy crap I’m getting old…35 years ago there wasn’t any sort of tension. Jewish Frats were a part of ‘Greek life’ full participants in ‘swaps’ with Sororities, co-hosting parties/events with other Frats, intramural competition. I suspect that’s still the same at Bama and across the SEC footprint.

    In many ways the ‘New South’ has become far more inclusive and tolerant than the rest of the Nation b/c we were forced to directly confront historical inequality, exclusion during the civil rights era that some other areas of the Nation haven’t yet confronted.


     
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    UVABuck in reply to buck61. | December 10, 2025 at 10:29 am

    What is remarkable is that Michigan and UCLA didn’t make the list.

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