Anti-Zionists often say they are not opposed to Jews, just the Israeli state. Some are telling the truth, but others are lying. Similarly, hyper-critics of Catholicism often say they are anti-clerical, but not anti-Catholic.

Yes, that is true for some, but not universally so. In both cases, even among those who are not lying, it is an easy slide into the bigoted camp: One animus often bleeds into the other.

Few anti-Catholics will admit to their bigotry. When pressed on it, they typically exercise the default option and maintain that they are just anti-clerical.

Two recent examples of this phenomenon are illustrative of how deceitful this position is.

I recently wrote to the president of Colorado State University about an anti-Catholic incident on campus. The student senate had voted to implement a “diversity bill” to grant senate seats to select demographic groups on campus: adult learning, veterans, the disabled, LGBT students, women’s groups, as well as various racial and ethnic groups.

A Jewish male student offered an amendment to include Jewish, Muslim, and Catholic students; he was supported by a Catholic woman. The amendment failed. The Catholic student protested, and was quickly attacked.

“I haven’t ever experienced hate like this, ever,” is how she put it.

Those who justified the exclusion of Catholics said, “the Catholic Church does not need to be represented because you are the ‘oppressors’ of the LGBTQ communities and others.”

This makes my point exactly: Catholics on campus were excluded from the “diversity bill” because the institution to which they are affiliated is allegedly guilty of oppression. Those who were truly anti-clerical, but not anti-Catholic, would not punish Catholic students for the alleged sins of their religion’s clerics.

On Easter Sunday, six animal rights protesters from a group called Collectively Free invaded St. Patrick’s Cathedral during the noon Mass. They interrupted the service, using the Mass as an exercise in “direct action.”

One had a camera strapped to his chest — parishioners thought it was a bomb — and others held signs. They shouted at the faithful, using a bullhorn to amplify their message.

As it turns out, they were protesting ham. That’s right — they said too many Catholics eat ham at Easter.

After I issued a news release on this incident, I e-blasted it to our members, listing the email address of the co-founder; she was at the event.

One of our members, Eddie Guanajuato, Director of Music at Cardinal Ritter High School in Indianapolis, asked her, “Why didn’t you visit a Mosque and disrupt their service?”

She replied, “Why not Muslims? That is such a racist comment.”

Leaving aside the obvious — Muslims are not a race — it is striking how offended she was at Eddie’s question. In her mind, it is bigoted just to hypothetically ask about invading a Muslim house of worship, but it is not bigoted to actually invade a Catholic church.

In other words, we Catholics deserve it, and that’s because of the teachings of the Catholic Church. Once again, anti-clericalism is masking anti-Catholicism.

The late Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua was fond of reminding us that lay Catholics make up close to 100 percent of the Catholic Church. It is too bad that so many of them have deluded themselves into thinking that most of today’s professed anti-clerics are not anti-Catholic.

In fact, their venom is aimed directly at the laity as well as at the hierarchy.

Bill Donohue is President of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights.