New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo was so taken in by the documentary "The Hunting Ground" that he is using it to promote his campus sexual assault agenda.

Cuomo screened the film for a private audience at the Lincoln Center last week, and promoted his " Enough is Enough" strategy for combating campus sexual assault. His proposal would make "yes means yes" consent standards the law of the land for all New York colleges and universities — including private universities.

Late last year, Cuomo directed the State University of New York and its 64 campuses to adopt the consent policy, which requires "affirmative, conscious and voluntary agreement" that is "ongoing throughout a sexual activity and can be revoked at any time." The policy also states that a "lack of protest or resistance does not mean consent, nor does silence mean consent."

This new definition of consent makes nearly every sexual encounter illegal unless a constant back and forth of "May I…?" is practiced. Also, consuming drugs or alcohol negates consent, as all an accuser has to say is that she was too drunk to consent. The law provides no due process protections, so accusations are the main — if not the only — evidence available. Combine that with a "preponderance of evidence" standard, which says that a campus hearing panel must be just 50.01 percent sure the accuser is telling the truth, and a culture that says no one lies about rape, and you have a recipe for injustice against accused students.

Cuomo's basing his agenda, in part, on "The Hunting Ground," an alleged "documentary" film with nearly as many holes as Rolling Stone's gang-rape story (the film at least includes accusations against real people). The film relies on dubious, misleading and one-sided accounts of sexual assault allegations — and the filmmakers didn't give accused students or universities a chance to respond until after the film was finished and submitted to the Sundance Film Festival. It also relies on debunked statistics to claim that American college women are living in a "rape culture" with danger at every turn.

But Cuomo fell for — or sees an opportunity in — "The Hunting Ground" hook, line and sinker. And now he's using it to curry favor with activists with no regard to the damage these policies do to the wrongly accused.