Anonymous online threats against Kean University’s black students led to calls for the school’s president to quit. And when it turned out a black student was behind the threats, the demands . . . continued.

The coalition of black ministers behind calls for Dawood Farahi’s ouster says the threats still “arose from a climate of racial intolerance” — no matter they were bogus.

It all began Nov. 17 during a rally on racial issues on the New Jersey campus.

Kayla-Simone McKelvey, a 2014 Kean graduate who’d been at the rally, began posting screenshots from a Twitter account claiming to be for anyone at Kean “who hates black people” and threatening to bomb the campus and shoot blacks.

That led the ministers to demand Farahi quit, charging such threats “did not happen in a vacuum” and saying he wasn’t doing enough to calm racial tensions.

But on Monday, police arrested McKelvey and said she’d made the threats herself — during the rally, in fact — from a computer station at a university library. She faces up to five years in prison.

Apologies? Of course not. Just other complaints. For example, outrage that Kean is hiring adjuncts in place of tenured professors and cutting support services.

Such cost-savers are increasingly common on US campuses — but to the protesters, they’re evidence of “structural racism.” (The gripe wins them the support of the faculty union, to boot.)

As for the criminal charges against McKelvey, that just “puts us one or two steps back looking for genuine justice.”

But “genuine justice” is the last thing on these activists’ minds. They’re all about seizing control of a campus and imposing their own extremist agenda.