Jim, I really doubt that the writeup you referenced is applicable in this case. It is dealing with the situation where a ham radio transmitter, which typically may be outputting several hundred or even 1000 watts of rf energy, is interfering with a neighbor's tv set perhaps 100 feet away.
In that situation, yes, it seems conceivable that speaker cables in or connected to the tv set could pick up some of that energy, from where it would blast its way into the audio or video circuits of the tv and be rectified, and perhaps amplified as well.
With Marty's integrated amp, on the other hand, the speaker cables are likely to be picking up rf measured in microvolts, or millivolts at most, corresponding to nanowatts. That pickup will be loaded down to much less than even that low level, by the amplifier's output impedance (likely a tiny fraction of an ohm), and also by the speaker, which is not capable of reproducing low level rf signals unless they are both rectified and amplified.
The power cord and wiring would seem to me to be an unlikely entry point as well, due to the capacitive filtering, etc., that is in the amplifier between the ac input and the signal path.
Best regards,
-- Al