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Over the last 15 months, this blatant censorship – the punishment of dissent in almost every sector of American life – has rapidly and aggressively intensified. This time, though, its targets are not primarily conservative voices, instead, they have been overwhelmingly those people who have either criticized aggressively Israel and its destruction of Gaza and/or those who support the Palestinian cause, both of which, as I understand it, falls squarely within the protection of the First Amendment's guarantee and right of free speech.
There is no Israel exception in the First Amendment – nor is there in any other amendment. We’ll tell you about the latest abridgment of Americans’ free speech rights in one of its most influential academic institutions – Harvard.
At Columbia University, in New York, Professor Catherine Franke, a long-time prominent faculty member, was inundated with multiple formal complaints and investigations, several filed by fellow faculty members: the kind of free speech witch hunts on campus that conservatives in the United States have been for years vocally condemning and pretending to oppose, though not notably in this case, where many of them are silent and some are outright supportive.
There is a very bizarre dynamic when it comes to Israel and the United States that no matter how many times I see it, it never seeks to amaze me. Joe Biden has prided himself on the 60 years that he has been in public life as a senator, a vice president, and as a president over the last four years, in being one of the most stalwart, vocal and unyielding supporters of Israel, of the Israeli government, and not only a supporter of everything it does but also an unrelenting defender of the need and justification of the United States subsidizing the Israeli state, of paying for their military, paying for their wars.
There are dozens, if not hundreds of speeches that he gave in the Senate saying things like, “Israel is the most important ally to us,” “If there were no Israel, we would have to invent an Israel,” “The billions of dollars we give to them each year are the greatest investment we've ever made” – you cannot find a more pro-Israel stalwart in Washington than Joe Biden over the course of his career.
The minute October 7 happened, Biden immediately got on a plane – the first foreign leader to go to Israel and stand by Netanyahu's side – and he made a commitment to Netanyahu that the United States would pay for the entire war that they now had to undertake in Gaza and not only pay for it but give them all the arms they asked for, needed and wanted – that our government and our taxpayers and workers would pay for it as well on top of the $4 billion we give to them every year by virtue of an agreement negotiated by Barack Obama with Benjamin Netanyahu when Obama was way out the door in 2016. Also, he would have the United States diplomatically impede any attempt at the U.N. to bring a halt to or impose limits on the Israeli destruction of Gaza.
Biden made good on every single one of those promises and every time the world – and I mean the entire world – was in consensus about some effort to try to limit or stop Israel in this unprecedented level of violence and destruction against a helpless population, Joe Biden dispatched his diplomats to the U.N. to stand against the entire world and isolate the United States, to veto the resolution or otherwise vote no and defend the state of Israel, no matter how much power and standing in the world the United States had to sacrifice to do it.
It's hard to imagine, short of literally transferring the control of the United States Treasury formally to Benjamin Netanyahu or just making him Commander in Chief of the armed forces of the United States, what possibly Biden could have done more for the state of Israel, other than everything he has spent the last 15 months doing. Obviously, it's not a coincidence that a cease-fire deal was reached only when Donald Trump won the election, and he got very heavily and aggressively involved in forging one because Joe Biden had no interest in trying to end the war. He was fueling it, paying for it and defending it up until his very last day in office.
The Republican critique of Joe Biden, however, is not that he forced American workers to subsidize the state of Israel, even though Israeli citizens have a higher standard of living than millions of Americans, or that he involved the United States in a war that isn't ours to fight.
Instead, it was that, somehow, he was anti-Israel and pro-Hamas, that he didn't do enough for Israel.