by Caroline Glick
For decades New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman balanced his substantively anti-Israel positions with repeated protestations of love for Israel.
His  balancing act ended last week when he employed traditional anti-Semitic  slurs to dismiss the authenticity of substantive American support for  Israel.
Channeling the longstanding  anti-Semitic charge that Jewish money buys support for power-hungry Jews  best expressed in the forged 19th century Protocols of the Elders of Zion and in John Mearshimer's and Stephen Walt's 2007 book The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy, Friedman denied the significance of the US Congress's overwhelming support for Israel.
As  he put it, "I sure hope that Israel's prime minister, Benjamin  Netanyahu, understands that the standing ovation he got in Congress this  year was not for his politics. That ovation was bought and paid for by  the Israel lobby."
It would be nice if Friedman  is forced to pay some sort of price for finally coming out of the  closet as a dyed-in-the-wool Israel hater. But he probably won't. As he  made clear in his column, he isn't writing for the general public, but  for a very small, select group of elitist leftists. These are the only  people who matter to Friedman. And they matter to him because they share  his opinions and his goal of indoctrinating young people to adopt his  pathologically hostile views about Israel and his contempt for the  American public that supports it.
It doesn't  matter to Friedman that overwhelming survey evidence, amassed over  decades, show that the vast majority of the American public and the  American Jewish community support Israel. It doesn't matter to him that  the support shown to Netanyahu in Congress last May was a reflection of  that support.
As he put it, "The real test is  what would happen if Bibi tried to speak at, let's say, the University  of Wisconsin. My guess is that many students would boycott him and many  Jewish students would stay away."
Embedded in  this statement are two key points. First, Friedman assesses that the  prevailing view on US college campuses are his own radical views. And he  is convinced that college students share his views.
As  he sees it, if college students share his views, then it doesn't matter  that Congress supports Israel today. Through the youth, he and his  anti-Israel colleagues will own the future.
THE  KEY question then is is Friedman right? Do he and his friends on the  Israel bashing Left own the future? Are their efforts to convince young  Americans in places like University of Wisconsin to embrace leftist  dogmas, including rejection of Israel's rights working? Is support for  Israel diminishing? 
A plethora of data  indicates that while the picture is mixed, the dominant trends do not  favor Friedman's views. This is true not only in the US but in Israel as  well.
For instance, last week the Washington Examiner's  senior political commentator Michael Barone noted a massive  deterioration of US President Barack Obama' support levels among voters  under 30 years old. Whereas Obama won this demographic in the 2008  elections by a 2-1 margin, two recent surveys show that if elections  were held today, he would receive the support of just over a third of  young voters.
Barone hypothesized that young  Americans' disenchantment has to do with their generational  individualism bred of their limitless ability to express themselves  through technology. This individualism has nothing in common with  Obama's economic and foreign policy collectivism.
As  for young American Jews, according to a study published in August 2010  by Brandeis University's Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies, the  ratio of young American Jews who feel attached to Israel - while lower  than that of older Jews -- has remained constant over the past twenty  years. Moreover, Brandeis's researchers told the Forward that "Every generation goes through a normal 'lifecycle,'...in which attachment to Israel grows as people get older."
Even  more notable than the consistency of support levels over time is the  fact that researchers discerned no difference in levels of support for  Israel across the political spectrum. As the study reported, "We found  that conservatives were no more likely than liberals to feel connected  to Israel or regard Israel as central to their Jewish identities. These  findings are remarkable given that liberalism is associated with reduced  support for Israel in the broader American population."
So  not only have Friedman and his colleagues on the far Left failed to  convince the general public to give up support for Israel, they have  failed to get young American Jews to give up support for Israel.
THE  FAILURE of Friedman's fellow radicals to convince university students  to abandon support for Israel or to water it down to the point of  meaninglessness was demonstrated last month by Berkeley's Jewish Student  Union.
In recent years, Berkeley's Hillel  has come under withering criticism from pro-Israel activists on campus  and countrywide for its leadership's willingness to accept anti-Israel  groups as members of its community of sponsored organizations.
Hillel-sponsored  groups like Kesher Enoshi have welcomed the virulently anti-Israel  Jewish Voices for Peace group into the Hillel tent. Hillel groups have  participated in Israel Apartheid Week activities and supported  university divestment from Israeli-owned firms. So too, Hillel's  leadership has held dances on Memorial Day for Fallen Israeli Soldiers,  published fliers demeaning observant Jews and discouraged students from  flying Israel's flag at demonstrations.
Last  month, Berkeley's Jewish students took a step to regain control over  their community from the anti-Israel radicals running Hillel. On  November 16, Berkeley's JSU voted to deny membership to J Street U, the college wing of the anti-Israel lobby J Street.
Speaking to the local Jewish paper j.weekly,  Jacob Lewis, co-president of the pro-Israel student group Tikvah  explained, "J Street is not pro-Israel but an anti-Israel organization  that, as part of the mainstream Jewish community, I could not support."
Hillel's  leadership is up in arms. Rather than respect the decision of the JSU,  Hillel's professional "grown-ups" are urging them to reconsider.
In a letter to Haaretz and to the j. weekly,  Berkeley Hillel's board president Barbara Davis and its executive  director Rabbi Adam Naftalin-Kelman wrote, "We respect the right of the  Jewish Student Union...to make its own decisions, but we encourage JSU  to reconsider its vote and include J Street U as a member." 
The  two then pledged that despite the verdict of Berkeley's Jewish  students, Hillel will continue to find J Street U's programming.
THE  SITUATION on Israeli college campuses is similar. Here too, Israeli  students are in revolt against post-Zionist and anti- Zionist academics.  Here too, the best efforts of radical professors to convince their  students to abandon Zionism seem to be faltering. A poll of young  Israelis taken last year by Dahaf for the German Friedrich Ebert Foundation  indicated that young Israelis are far more politically conservative  than their baby boomer parents and professors. And this disparity is  apparent on university campuses.
Last year the  Im Tirtzu student group published a report on the state of Political  Science studies in Israeli universities. In a follow-on report, it  placed a spotlight on the situation at Ben Gurion University's Politics  and Government Department.
Both reports were  attacked by the media and by the professoriate as cheap, academically  shoddy attempts to harm academic freedom.
Im  Tirtzu's reports were based on an analysis of course syllabi at all  university departments and they concluded that there was a clear far  left ideological bias inherent in course materials. Pro-Israel and  non-hostile books and research were almost entirely absent from the  curricula, they alleged.
As for Ben Gurion  University's Politics and Government Department, the Im Tirtzu report  claimed that aside from political bias reflected in the course  curricula, the department's faculty is dominated by anti-Zionists. It  charged that nine out of 11 permanent faculty members were involved in  "radical left-wing" political activities and that six signed a letter  supporting refusal to serve in the IDF.
While  the media and the professorate pilloried their reports, the group's  charges caused the Council for Higher Education to form a blue ribbon  committee last November comprised of seven political scientists - three  from Israel and four from abroad -- to conduct a study of all of the  political science departments in Israeli universities. Last month the  committee presented its conclusions to the CHE. And they were  devastating.
The committee's general  recommendations involved requiring professors at all universities to  make a distinction in their classrooms between facts and their political  opinions. It also called for a more theoretical approach to political  science with emphasis on research methods rather than activism and  ideology. University departments were urged to use more politically  balanced curricula.
As to Ben Gurion  University, the commission said the Politics and Government Department  needs to clean up its act or be shut down. Not only is it giving short  shrift to the academic foundations of the discipline in favor of  activism, its instructors use the classrooms to indoctrinate students.
So  too, due to the department's academic inadequacy, the committee claimed  its master's program's "value...is doubtful," and said that the faculty  could not adequately educate doctoral students.
On  November 29, the CHE unanimously adopted the committee's findings and  recommendations. It gave Ben Gurion University until April to enact the  required changes in its Politics and Government Department or shut its  doors.
It will be interesting to see how events progress at Ben Gurion  in the coming months, but one thing is clear enough, like Friedman and  the Berkeley Hillel, its professors will no longer be able to pretend  that they are fair and balanced professionals.
Their bluff was called.
On December 7 Politico's Ben Smith published a detailed report  about how two of the Democratic Party's core institutions, the Center  for American Progress and Media Matters are waging a concerted,  continuous campaign to diminish left wing Democratic support for Israel.  Media Matters official M.J. Rosenberg acknowledged that given the depth  of popular support for Israel in the US, chances are remote that their  efforts will pay off in Congress today. He explained that his goal is to  shift the Democratic Party's position on Israel through its younger  generation.
As he put it, "We're playing the long game here."
Happily,  to date, they are losing the long game as well as the short game both  in Israel and the US. While it is important to remain on guard against  radicals like Friedman and Rosenberg and their fellow travelers on  campuses, it is also important to recognize that despite their powerful  positions, they remain marginal voices in both Israel and the US.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/12/tom-friedmans-losing-battle.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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