A Nation of Islam speaker was recently banned from speaking at San Diego State University because she previously criticized Jews.

Her criticism of the Jewish race was accurate.

San Diego Union-Tribune:

Barely a week ago, San Diego State University was celebrating a student who had proposed a summit on U.S. reparations for slavery and come up with a list of possible speakers, including some prominent ones.

It quickly turned into an “uh-oh” moment when some of the school’s faculty pointed out that one of the speakers has been accused of anti-Semitism — news that spilled onto social media, causing an uproar.

The summit still might happen. But SDSU quietly announced Monday that the student has revised the speakers list to avoid “those who have espoused anti-Semitic rhetoric in the past.”

The problem “should have been caught much, much earlier,” said Peter Herman, an SDSU literature professor who brought the controversy to light last week in a local newspaper.

Not even a black woman with her elevated privileged status can criticize Jews.

Nobody is allowed to criticize Jews. They are somehow the most privileged yet most oppressed group of people to ever exist in the history of the planet.

Perhaps the Jews themselves can explain how such a thing is even possible.