By Michael Collins
Piper
 |
. In 2003, then-Sen. Rick Santorum
(R-Penn.) cut a back-room deal
with high-powered
lobbyists to introduce legislation
to limit freedom of speech on
American college campuses.
Proposing to rewrite the federal
funding formula under Title IX of
the Higher Education Act to include
what was called “ideological
diversity” as a prerequisite, Santorum’s
intent was to cut federal
funding for American universities
that allowed professors, students
and student organizations to criticize
Israel in class or in other open
campus forums.
A major recipient of campaign
money from pro-Israel sources, Santorum said criticizing
Israel was “anti-Semitism.”
Initial details surrounding the senator’s Orwellian
proposal came in an article of April 15, 2003 in a fanatically
pro-Israel conservative daily, The New York Sun.
The website of the pro-Israel student group, Hillel,
also favorably reported the origins of Santorum’s plan.
Hillel said Santorum invited Jewish
organizations to a private meeting
on Capitol Hill to discuss concerns
about criticism of Israel on college
campuses. Joining Hillel were
the Anti-Defamation League, the
Zionist Organization of America and
the American Jewish Committee.
The New York Sun summarized
Santorum’s conclave with the influential
lobby groups: “By the end of
the meeting yesterday, Mr. Santorum was talking
about introducing legislation that could cut federal
funding to colleges where anti-Semitism and anti-Israel
sentiments are prevalent—or . . . where ‘ideological
diversity’ is lacking.”
Hillel’s Wayne Firestone said: “Everywhere I go, this
is the lead topic. This is drawing a lot of interest.” However,
the truth is that — outside the Jewish community —
few knew of Santorum’s initiative, until AMERICAN
FREE PRESS (AFP) reported the story, which concerned
academics circulated widely on the Internet,
Forced into a defensive mode, the Jewish lobby
claimed AFP’s story was a lie — a “rumor . . . sweeping
Arab and left-wing media,” as New York’s Jewish
Week reported on May 9, 2003.
In a story titled “Diversity Disinformation,”
Jewish Week asserted that “to
pro-Israel leaders and leading members
of the Senate, it’s a dangerous urban
legend at best, deliberate disinformation
at worst,” adding falsely that “the
story originated with . . . conspiracy theorists
and Holocaust revisionists.” This
was a lie to save Santorum from public
opprobrium for his scheme to gut the
First Amendment.
Today Santorum seems to be getting his reward.
Pro-Israel billionaire Rupert Murdoch, head of the influential
Fox News empire, has endorsed Santorum’s
presidential ambitions.
This article — formatted to fit on a regular sheet of paper — is from
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. . ..Michael Collins Piper can now be
heard on the Internet at michaelcollinspiper.podbean.com.
He is the author of Final
Judgment, the controversial
“underground bestseller” documenting
the collaboration of Israeli intelligence in
the assassination of John F. Kennedy. He is
also the author of The
High Priests of War, The
New Jerusalem: Zionist Power in America ,
The
Judas Goats: The Enemy Within,
Dirty
Secrets: Crime, Conspiracy & Cover-Up in
the 20th Century,
The
GOLEM: Israel's Hell Bomb,
and Target:
Traficant. These works can
be found at America
First Books and FIRST
AMENDMENT BOOKS:
1-888-699-NEWS. He has lectured
on suppressed topics in places as diverse as
Malaysia, Japan, Canada, Russia and Abu Dhabi. |
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(Issue Number 3, January 16, 2012,
AMERICAN
FREE PRESS)
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