The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) sent a letter dated March 18 to Catholic University of America president Peter Kilpatrick, and it's a case study in how antisemitism gets laundered through procedural neutrality.
On January 19, the student group Students Supporting Israel submitted two event requests through the university's official portal. The first would have brought U.S. Congressman Randy Fine to speak on the documented rise of antisemitism in higher education. The second would have featured Col. (Res.) Dr. Dany Tirza — the primary architect of Israel's security fence — to explain the engineering, the route decisions, and the security rationale behind one of the most discussed infrastructure projects in the world. On February 25, both requests were denied. The university cited its Presentations Policy and told SSI to "restructure the event and resubmit a request to have speakers representing both sides of this issue" — both sides, apparently, of antisemitism.
FIRE pulled the actual text of CUA's Presentations Policy (last reviewed April 17, 2023) and found that it says no such thing. The policy gives the university discretionary authority to refuse speakers who advocate views "counter to the clear and unambiguous official teaching" of the Roman Catholic Church, and notes that balanced programs with multiple viewpoints may be staged for educational purposes. "May," not "must." Unless CUA is prepared to argue that a sitting U.S. congressman discussing the rise of antisemitism contradicts Catholic teaching, the policy provides zero basis for the denial. No such explanation was given to SSI.
The letter documents, in footnote 16, a series of single-viewpoint student-group events that CUA approved without any "both sides" requirement. The Democratic student group hosted speaker nights featuring Amanda Riddle (February 10, 2026) and Payton Ziegler (November 18, 2025) with no demand for Republican counterpoints. The College Republicans brought in American Moment CEO Nick Solheim for a kick-off event (September 8, 2025) with no requirement to balance his conservative perspectives. The College Democrats hosted then-Congressman Maxwell Frost (October 19, 2023) and the Republicans hosted Congresswoman Kat Cammack (November 15, 2022) — clearly one-sided political events, both approved without conditions. A speaker event featuring Dr. Monica Miller as "Author, Activist, Theologian" (October 17, 2023) promoted pro-life activism from a single viewpoint, and the university found no need for an opposing voice there either.
The most striking example involves a topic far more contested on today's campuses than anything SSI proposed. In October 2024, a student group called The Olive Branch hosted a talk titled "What Is Genocide?" featuring Dr. Martin Shaw, a British sociologist whose academic record leaves no ambiguity about where he stands. Shaw has described Israel's actions in Gaza as genocide in peer-reviewed publications going back to 2023, and his most recent article in the Journal of Genocide Research — titled "The Genocide that Changed the World" — opens by treating the conclusion as settled, describing what he calls "the Israeli genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza." His 2025 book carries the title The New Age of Genocide: Intellectual and Political Challenges after Gaza. The man does not hedge. Yet the flyer for his October 2024 campus talk bears an official stamp: "Approved by Catholic University of America." There was no requirement to add a speaker arguing the other side, and no demand to restructure the event to include someone who disputes the genocide framing.
The university approved a one-sided talk asserting Israeli genocide without condition, and then denied a Jewish student group permission to discuss antisemitism without demanding opposing speakers. That is not a content-neutral policy applied consistently — it is a content-based decision dressed up in procedural language, and it is applied in only one direction.
The FIRE letter requests a substantive response by April 1, demanding that CUA approve SSI's event requests and publicly assure all students that the administration will not compel speech as a condition for hosting events. The legal argument is straightforward: CUA is a private institution not bound by the First Amendment, but it is contractually bound by the free-expression commitments it has voluntarily made to its students, commitments that include the right to organize a one-sided event and advocate a particular view without being forced to dilute it. Forcing SSI to add anti-Israel speakers to an antisemitism talk is no different, legally and morally, than forcing the College Democrats to add a MAGA speaker to their next event — something nobody would suggest, and nobody has suggested, because the only group facing this requirement is the one that supports Israel.
The FIRE letter, signed by Program Counsel Jessie Appleby, is dated March 18, 2026, and was sent to President Kilpatrick with a copy to General Counsel Matthew C. Dolan.
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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