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Corona-19 and Anti-Israel Ideology | Cherryl Smith – The Times of Israel

Posted By on March 27, 2020

Israeli doctors and nurses, like medical professionals worldwide, are working round the clock in extremely difficult conditions. The country is almost completely locked down.

Yet those who subscribe to a relentless anti-Israel ideology find ways to use the current crisis to distort and denigrate real life in Israel and to obscure Israels humanitarian contributions. At its most extreme, it is an ideology in which Israel is always at fault.

The state-run news services of both Iran and Turkey simply blame Zionists for the outbreak of Corona-19.

Dozens of posts blaming Jews and Israel for the Corona virus are showing up on social media. The Anti-Defamation League has been tracking this commentary. Some twitter comments have been especially grotesque.

At California State University, Stanislaus, a political science professor claimed Israel would have different medical treatments for Jews and non-Jews and would put non-Jews in prisons. This slander outraged many people who responded that the professor clearly knows nothing about Israel, its national heath system, and the huge number of Arab-Israeli doctors and nurses. He fired back calling the responders Zionist hoodlums and writing, looks like I activated the Israel lobby.

The University of Maryland branch of Students Supporting Israel (SSI) found itself facing a campus-hosted event called Corona and Countering the Occupation. As the SSI noted, the event doesnt have any logic to it and is hijacking an international epidemic.

Meanwhile, back in the real world, Israeli scientists are testing possible vaccines and working to develop cures. Israel sent protective equipment and hundreds of thousands of masks to China. Quarantined patients around the world have been able to ask questions of Israeli doctors who are volunteering to give their support using technology based in Tel Aviv. An Israeli company is donating millions of doses of a drug that scientists say may halt the virus and that US health officials are fast-tracking for public use.

And in exact reversal of anti-Israel dogma, the Jewish state is working closely with the Palestinian Authority. Israel has been delivering medical gear and testing equipment to the PA and providing special joint trainings for Israeli and Palestinian medical personnel.

In spite of very recent rocket attacks on civilians in Israel, the Israelis have given hundreds of test kits to Hamas-run Gaza. In fact, a big part of Israels emergency measures are focused on the Palestinians. According to Col. Sharon Biton who heads the government activities in the West Bank:

Our efforts against this virus stem not merely from a legal duty, but from a humanitarian and moral one, with an understanding that this pathogen does not care about national borders.

Such efforts are not forthcoming from any other Middle Eastern country.

With his decades of experience as a journalist in both Israel and the Palestinian areas, Khaled Abu Toameh assesses the situation clearly:

Egypt, for its part, long ago abandoned the Palestinians by essentially sealing its border with the Gaza Strip. The Lebanese, Egyptians and most Arabs perceive the Palestinians as Israels problem. When the current virus crisis has passed, it is to be hoped that the Palestinians will remember that one country alone came to their rescue: Israel.

Cherryl Smith's new book is FRAMING ISRAEL, A Personal Tour of Media and Campus Rhetoric. She is professor emerita of rhetoric and composition at California State University, Sacramento. She has lived in Tel Aviv since 2016.

Originally posted here:
Corona-19 and Anti-Israel Ideology | Cherryl Smith - The Times of Israel

What Jewish groups want to see in Congress’ $2 trillion pandemic spending bill – JTA News

Posted By on March 27, 2020

WASHINGTON (JTA) The White House has come to an agreement with Democrats and Republicans on a $2 trillion stimulus package, the biggest in U.S. history, in response to the major economic downturn triggered by the coronavirus.

The Senate approved the package, 96-0, at midnight Wednesday. It could undergo changes before the U.S. House of Representatives vote expected Thursday.

But the broad outlines are known: Money will flow to workers suddenly unemployed, businesses large and small, and a medical infrastructure poised to be overwhelmed by the spread of COVID-19.

Jewish organizations are lobbying for a piece of the pie and to influence the bills final language.

The devil is in the details, and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency spoke to a range of Jewish community professionals who were scrambling to get their hands on copies of the measure and were speaking with its drafters.

Heres a look at what they expect:

Funds for nonprofits

Jewish nonprofits already are feeling the crunch of the coronavirus-induced spending slowdown. The threat of an extended quarantine would inhibit philanthropic giving and also dry up sources of income like tuition for religious schools and camps, said Eric Fingerhut, the Jewish Federations of North America president, and Stephan Kline, the umbrella bodys associate vice president for public policy.

Jewish Federations has asked its members to press their local lawmakers for provisions that would assist nonprofits. Fingerhut and Kline said they welcomed news that funding for nonprofits would likely be included among the loans to businesses amounting to hundreds of billions of dollars, but they also expressed concern about two possible exemptions.

Under one, loans would not be available to agencies already eligible for assistance through Medicaid, the health care program for the impoverished that has been a critical revenue source for Jewish agencies that administer to the poor and the elderly.

Also, nonprofits employing more than 500 people will not be eligible for the loans under the bill language they had seen. That could exclude some of the larger Jewish community centers and camps, among others. Plus, they said, what constitutes an employee is not clearly defined, which could allow government officials to count seasonal workers or temporary workers.

That would exclude JCCs that have lots of preschools and adjunct staff, Fingerhut said.

Jewish Federations has joined with over 100 other nonprofits, including about half a dozen Jewish groups, in pressing for a dedicated $60 billion cash infusion into the nonprofit sector to preserve jobs, as the bill is said to direct to other sectors.

Just as they have for airlines and other industries its certainly as urgent as any of those major other industries, Fingerhut said. (One estimate says airlines would get a $46 billion infusion, by comparison.)

Fingerhut said it was critical to have trained nonprofit professionals in place once the pandemic has passed in order to transition back to normalcy.

If you lose your leadership teams and operating teams, and lose people maintaining facilities and they dissipate or cant regroup, you lose your operating ability, he said.

The nonprofits also are asking that taxpayers be allowed to deduct more charitable donations from their federal income tax burden, as they could until the 2017 reforms. The bill is set to restore the line item, but only up to $300.

This would restore charitable incentive, Kline said.

The coalition is asking for the change to happen in time for 2019 tax filing, which has been extended to July 15.

Tweaking it to include 2019 would encourage immediate contributions, said Eric Fusfield, the director of legislative affairs at Bnai Brith International. The group maintains a network of homes for the elderly.

Lobbying for the provisions will likely continue beyond the passage of the current stimulus. On Wednesday, Jewish Federations announced that it was working with seven other major Jewish organizations to coordinate pandemic policy. Among the four policy items was a unified advocacy and lobbying effort.

Nathan Diament, the Orthodox Unions Washington director, said the bill extended emergency education funding to non-public schools, which he welcomed.

We appreciate that the Jewish day schools in our community will be able to receive financial support in these very challenging times, Diament said.

No funding for food security

MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger and the National Council of Jewish Women have joined in pressing Congress through petitions and lobbying to expand the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, formerly known as food stamps.

Abby Leibman, MAZONs president, said she understood from congressional contacts that the SNAP expansion did not make the final cut. She called it devastating.

So many people are going to be in need because theyre losing their jobs, Leibman said. What is paramount during this crisis is getting healthy, and what is critical to getting healthy is getting food.

Abortion and the Violence Against Women Act

The National Council of Jewish Women and other feminist organizations have been pushing for the 1994 Violence Against Women Act to be reinstated since it lapsed last year. The act dedicated funding to prosecuting and preventing domestic violence.

NCJW says violence is likely to intensify while families are confined to close quarters and unemployment increases.

The current COVID-19 crisis is making it even more difficult for survivors of domestic violence to seek help, an NCJW talking points sheet says.

Meanwhile, some right-wing lawmakers want to make sure stimulus spending does not go to pay for abortions. Those provisions likely wont be included.

Jewish groups also are watching emergency funding measures in state governments.

Ohio and Texas have classified abortions as nonessential medical procedures during the pandemic, which could delay abortions for women who need them immediately, said NCJW CEO Sheila Katz.

The organizations state chapters are reporting that other Republican-dominated state governments are poising to do the same.

It means fewer people will have safe abortions, Katz said. Even a few days delay will jeopardize the life of the pregnant people, and in Judaism the life of the pregnant person is always considered paramount.

Support for voting by mail

Some state primaries have already been delayed because of the pandemic, and there are concerns about limitations on mail-in voting ahead of the Nov. 3 general elections. The Anti-Defamation League has joined with an alliance of civil rights groups asking for $2 billion to facilitate voting by mail and expand early voting and online registration.

Michael Lieberman, ADLs Washington counsel, said it looks like the funding will be $400 million.

Thats inadequate, he said, but an important recognition of the need and a start towards what is actually needed.

Going broad

Jewish organizations cannot confine their advocacy to issues directly affecting Jews, said Rabbi Jonah Pesner, the director of the Reform movements Religious Action Center, or RAC.

Were not separate. There will be Jewish people who get fired, Jewish small businesses who will go under, Jewish elderly, Jewish people with disabilities, Pesner said. This is about the Jewish community and about the other. Theres no dichotomy.

That accounts for RACs lengthy action alert to synagogues urging advocacy for relief for laid-off workers, protections for first responders and expanded screening for the virus, as well as funding for nonprofits.

Pesner recalled a Hasidic reading that said God dictated that the Israelites wander the desert for 40 years because the robust among them neglected the stragglers.

We must empower governments and society to put the most vulnerable at the center, he said.

Continued here:
What Jewish groups want to see in Congress' $2 trillion pandemic spending bill - JTA News

NYU Condemns Former SJP Head for Tweeting Should I Paint My Nails in Response to Israels First Coronavirus Death – Jewish Journal

Posted By on March 27, 2020

New York University (NYU) issued a statement on March 24 condemning the former leader of the campus Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) chapter for tweeting should I paint my nails in response to Israels first coronavirus death.

Leen Dweik, who ran NYUs SJP chapter from 2018-19, wrote in a since-deleted tweet on March 20 regarding Israels first coronavirus death: Anyway should I paint my nails red or green today? Israels first coronavirus death was 88-year-old Holocaust survivor Arie Even. The colors mentioned are perhaps a reference to two colors of the Palestinian flag.

NYU spokesperson John Beckman said in a statement, With almost 500,000 alumni, NYU does not routinely respond to its graduates social media posts, but the reported Twitter post by a former NYU student about the first Israeli death from COVID-19 was shameful and callous. The death and disruption caused by this pandemic should be reason to draw us together in sympathy, not be fodder for divisiveness and indifference.

He added: NYU denounces such insensitivity; it is at odds with our campus values.

Anti-Defamation League New York/New Jersey praised Beckmans statement in a tweet.

Thank you @nyuniversity for speaking out against a former student & head of #SJP at #NYU, they wrote. Mocking the #Covid19-related death of an 88-year old Holocaust survivor in #Israel is beyond shameful. We need unity, not divisiveness, to fight this #pandemic.

NYU pro-Israel student group Realize Israel wrote in a Facebook post, Thank you to NYU administration for this thoughtful and appropriate response to an extremely disturbing tweet by the former president of NYU Students for Justice in Palestine.

Former NYU student and current Maccabee Task Force Northeast Coordinator Adela Cojab, who filed a complaint against NYU in April stating that the administration improperly handled anti-Semitic incidents on campus, said in a text message to the Journal, This is the very rhetoric of my Title VI complaint. It is not surprising that those who use their hatred for Zionism to justify harassment of Jewish students will justify Israeli deaths during this pandemic. People are people, and it is disgusting to see someone celebrate loss of life due to personal politics.

She added: NYU is taking a public stand against blatant anti-Semitism, and for that I am grateful.

In March 2019, Dweik confronted Chelsea Clinton during a vigil at NYU for the victims of the shootings at mosques in New Zealand.

Forty-nine people died because of the rhetoric you put out there, Dweik said, referencing Clintons criticism of Rep. Ilhan Omars (D-Minn.) its all about the Benjamins tweet in February 2019.

See more here:
NYU Condemns Former SJP Head for Tweeting Should I Paint My Nails in Response to Israels First Coronavirus Death - Jewish Journal

Ku Klux Klan handing out hateful propaganda inside free bags of candy. The police say theres nothing they can do – PinkNews

Posted By on March 27, 2020

Members of KKK group the Loyal White Knights in 2008. (Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty)

The Ku Klux Klan (KKK) has been distributing leaflets inside bags of candy in Virginia, according to local police.

Police in Chesterfield County, Virginia, told the Chesterfield Observer received five phone calls about flyers from the horrific hate group being left outside homes between March 17 and 19.

The flyers contained hateful propaganda about African Americans, Native Americans and Jewish people, under the title Liberals The Most Intolerant Hate Group in the World.

They were signed by the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, and placed inside plastic sandwich bags filled with candy. One resident told the local newspaper they were upset by the awful leaflets because candy would lure in children.

However, police said their hands were tied as no crime had technically been committed.

A Chesterfield County police spokesperson said: At this point, distributing the flyers in this manner does not appear to be a crime, as the distributor did not trespass on anyones property and distributing the materials in this way does not violate the littering law.

As always, we encourage residents to report suspicious activities or materials left in their neighbourhoods.

According to the anti-hate organisation Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the Loyal White Knights follow a version of traditional Klan ideology infused with neo-Nazi beliefs, andare known for their distribution of racist, anti-Semitic, anti-immigrant, homophobic and Islamophobic propaganda.

There are 35 to 40 groups that make up the organised Klan movement in the United States, but the Loyal White Knights arethe largest and the most active Klan group in the country with approximately 100 members.

They have organised and participated in public white supremacist rallies [and] they also hold private gatherings and cross burning ceremonies.

79 per cent of KKK propaganda distribution tracked by ADL in 2018 was attributed to the Loyal White Knights.

In 2015, the group distributed leaflets in Florida urging people to support gay bashing against disgusting and inhuman gay men.

In 2016, leaflets were sent out in Alabama declaring that trans abominations should be forced to urinate outside.

Read more from the original source:
Ku Klux Klan handing out hateful propaganda inside free bags of candy. The police say theres nothing they can do - PinkNews

‘You’re Spreading the Virus’: Hasidic Man Alleges Antisemitic Discrimination at New York Car Dealership – Algemeiner

Posted By on March 27, 2020

An employee at Johnstons Toyota in New Hampton, New York, is seen telling a Hasidic customer to leave because youre spreading the virus. Photo: Screenshot.

A Hasidic Jewish man has accused a New York car dealership of antisemitic discrimination after he was denied a pre-scheduled servicing appointment on the alleged grounds that he was spreading the coronavirus.

The shocking incident occurred at Johnstons Toyota in New Hampton, New York. Video shot by the Hasidic man showed him asking an employee why his appointment was being denied.

I thought youre not open, I had an appointment, the Hasidic man can be heard saying.

You gotta go, the employee replied.

When the man asked, Why wont you accept me? he was again told by the employee, Can you just go outside please?

The man nonetheless persisted, asking, as he indicated towards other customers who were being served, I just wanna understand why all the other guys can have service, and you wont accept me please?

Without hesitating, the employee replied, Because youre spreading the virus you gotta go.

The Hasidic man protested, replying, I spread the virus? Why do I spread the virus more than other people?

Responded the employee: You gotta go buddy, Im sorry.

As the Hasidic man insisted on receiving an explanation, the video showed the employee turning his back and walking off.

Attempts by The Algemeiner to obtain an explanation from Johnstons Toyota on Tuesday afternoon were unsuccessful. An employee who answered the phone in the servicing department abruptly hung up when asked whether they were aware of the Hasidic mans complaint and if there was anyone present at the dealership who could provide a comment or an explanation.

A tweet from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on Tuesday called the video of the Hasidic mans experience deeply troubling, adding that the Jewish civil rights groyo was trying to learn more about the incident.

See original here:
'You're Spreading the Virus': Hasidic Man Alleges Antisemitic Discrimination at New York Car Dealership - Algemeiner

A psychological explanation for why some people believe coronavirus hoaxes and conspiracy theories – PsyPost

Posted By on March 27, 2020

As the world continues to deal with the life-altering effects of the novel coronavirus, a small but not-insignificant number of individuals have been expressing their fears about COVID-19 through the language of government conspiracies and wild alternative health cures.

Last week, one online conspiracy network suggested that COVID-19 is an act of biological terrorism to attack Chinese trade. Last month, a popular online site said the virus was a hoax manufactured to induce global fear and would therefore be a boon to Big Pharma. A website based in Toronto claims COVID-19 is the result of 5G cellular networks plus the common cold.

Press TV, part of the state sponsored media in Iran, suggested Zionists were behind the spread. As recently as last week, some public officials in the United States government continued to underplay the seriousness of the virus.

As reported by the New York Times, popular conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh called the virus a plot by the Chinese, and conservative commentator and FOX TV host Sean Hannity read and gave credibility to a tweet calling COVID-19 a fraud to spread panic in the populace, manipulate the economy and suppress dissent.

Why have conspiracy theories so readily circulated during the COVID-19 pandemic? What type of person believes medical conspiracy theories?

I research new religious movements. I decided to explore this question because of the ubiquity of conspiratorial thinking within some of these communities. What can belief in alternative theories tell us about ourselves?

What challenges might conspiratorial thinking, circulated online and in popular media, present to public health advocates in the coming year?

Conspiracy theories connecting the COVID-19 pandemic to the state of Israel are flourishing. One source, part of a large global conspiracy community, claims the novel coronavirus is an act of Israeli bioterrorism.

Jews have historically been blamed for global viral events, including the Black Death in the 1300s, which led to massive pogroms against European Jewry. The common narrative goes that people in the Middle Ages needed a scapegoat because they did not know about the germ theory of disease. However, 130 years after Russian microbiologist Dmitri Ivanovsky and Dutch scientist Martinus Willem Beijerinck (working independently) discovered the existence of viruses, Jews continue to take the brunt of conspiratorial blame.The Anti-Defamation League in the United States, a leading anti-hate organization, has tracked a growing number of anti-Semitic conspiracies, which claim that Jews are either behind the COVID-19 pandemic, or stand to profit from it.

Infowars Alex Jones claimed a product called DNA Force Plus could help fight off COVID-19: it is currently on sale for US$89.95 for one month supply. Another popular supplement advocate suggests a cocktail of over 11 different supplements to combat coronavirus, costing over US$170 a month. Other purported cures include vitamin C dosing, faith healing and homeopathic vaccines. There is no evidence that any of these work.People seek alternative medicine for many reasons, including distrust of authority, consumer-centered individuality and the belief that the treatment will work. While no vaccine for coronavirus currently exists, that hasnt stopped televangelist Jim Bakker from selling his colloidal silver tincture for US$125 a bottle. The state of Missouri has filed a law suit against Bakker alleging fraudulent treatment claims.

As demand for alternative medicine grows, Canadian researchers recently looking at internet health scams found, most of the alternative products marketed online either severely misrepresented the efficacy for the given health concern and/or had no strong scientific evidencebase to support their use as advertised.

Since being declared a global pandemic, there is evidence that demand for alternative medicine has increased. Some alternative medicine has been shown to be effective, but many of the options being marketed today have not. As Timothy Caulfield professor of health law at the University of Alberta writes: trust in science is crucial right now.

Conspiratorial thinking can be founded on legitimate concerns and transcends socio-economic, racial, educational and gender boundaries. This complicates our tendency to view conspiracies as perpetuated by tinfoil-hat wearing people.

A number of theories have been proposed to account for conspiratorial thinking.

University of Chicago political scientists Eric Oliver and Thomas Wood explored medical conspiracy theories. They found approximately 50 per cent of Americans believe in at least one general conspiracy theory, and more than 18 per cent believe in three or more medical conspiracies.

Writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine, Oliver and Wood wrote:

Although it is common to disparage adherents of conspiracy theories as a delusional fringe of paranoid cranks, our data suggest that medical conspiracy theories are widely known, broadly endorsed and highly predictive of many common health behaviours.

Perhaps the explanation for the broad appeal of such theories points to something more fundamental to the experience of being human? When people talk about quarantines, hoarding and conspiracies, they can ignore the elephant in the room: death.

Research suggests that we use different management techniques to deal with the terror of death. Where sickness can act as a reminder of our finitude, simple health-management solutions can offer a sense of autonomy over our bodies.

This may explain why some conspiracy websites are downplaying the danger of COVID-19 to adults by focusing on the older age of the victims. In other words, pandemics are scary, and they remind us that we are mortal.

Even if medical conspiracies are mostly confined to the fringe, the effects of conspiratorial beliefs on public health may end up exacerbating the spread of the virus. People may continue to ignore quarantine orders. A future vaccine for COVID-19 may come up against a growing anti-vaccine movement. Will people continue to be receptive to anti-vaccine conspiracy rhetoric in the age of COVID-19?

Conspiracy theorists, like all of us, are trying to make sense of a complicated world. Having a sense of control against an ineffable source of power which describes the novel coronavirus in many ways may speak to some of our collective fears and motivations in the face of mortality. After all, nothing offers direct evidence of human finitude and frailty like a viral pandemic.

By Jeremy Cohen, Doctoral Candidate, Religious Studies, McMaster University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

See more here:
A psychological explanation for why some people believe coronavirus hoaxes and conspiracy theories - PsyPost

What Jewish Groups Want In Congress’ $2 Trillion Pandemic Spending Bill – Jewish Week

Posted By on March 27, 2020

WASHINGTON (JTA) The White House has come to an agreement with Democrats and Republicans on a $2 trillion stimulus package, the biggest in U.S. history, in response to the major economic downturn triggered by the coronavirus.

The exact details wont be set until after the Senate passes the package, which may happen as soon as late Wednesday. It also could undergo changes before the U.S. House of Representatives vote expected Thursday.

But the broad outlines are known: Money will flow to workers suddenly unemployed, businesses large and small, and a medical infrastructure poised to be overwhelmed by the spread of COVID-19.

Jewish organizations are lobbying for a piece of the pie and to influence the bills final language.

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The devil is in the details, and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency spoke to a range of Jewish community professionals who were scrambling to get their hands on copies of the measure and were speaking with its drafters.

Heres a look at what they expect:

Funds for nonprofits

Jewish nonprofits already are feeling the crunch of the coronavirus-induced spending slowdown. The threat of an extended quarantine would inhibit philanthropic giving and also dry up sources of income like tuition for religious schools and camps, said Eric Fingerhut, the Jewish Federations of North America president, and Stephan Kline, the umbrella bodys associate vice president for public policy.

Jewish Federations has asked its members to press their local lawmakers for provisions that would assist nonprofits. Fingerhut and Kline said they welcomed news that funding for nonprofits would likely be included among the loans to businesses amounting to hundreds of billions of dollars, but they also expressed concern about two possible exemptions.

Under one, loans would not be available to agencies already eligible for assistance through Medicaid, the health care program for the impoverished that has been a critical revenue source for Jewish agencies that administer to the poor and the elderly.

Also, nonprofits employing more than 500 people will not be eligible for the loans under the bill language they had seen. That could exclude some of the larger Jewish community centers and camps, among others. Plus, they said, what constitutes an employee is not clearly defined, which could allow government officials to count seasonal workers or temporary workers.

That would exclude JCCs that have lots of preschools and adjunct staff, Fingerhut said.

Jewish Federations has joined with over 100 other nonprofits, including about half a dozen Jewish groups, in pressing for a dedicated $60 billion cash infusion into the nonprofit sector to preserve jobs, as the bill is said to direct to other sectors.

Just as they have for airlines and other industries its certainly as urgent as any of those major other industries, Fingerhut said. (Oneestimatesays airlines would get a $46 billion infusion, by comparison.)

Fingerhut said it was critical to have trained nonprofit professionals in place once the pandemic has passed in order to transition back to normalcy.

If you lose your leadership teams and operating teams, and lose people maintaining facilities and they dissipate or cant regroup, you lose your operating ability, he said.

The nonprofits also are asking that taxpayers be allowed to deduct more charitable donations from their federal income tax burden, as they could until the 2017 reforms. The bill is set to restore the line item, but only up to $300.

This would restore charitable incentive, Kline said.

The coalition is asking for the change to happen in time for 2019 tax filing, which has been extended to July 15.

Tweaking it to include 2019 would encourage immediate contributions, said Eric Fusfield, the director of legislative affairs at Bnai Brith International. The group maintains a network of homes for the elderly.

Lobbying for the provisions will likely continue beyond the passage of the current stimulus. On Wednesday, Jewish Federations announced that it was working with seven other major Jewish organizations to coordinate pandemic policy. Among the four policy items was a unified advocacy and lobbying effort.

Nathan Diament, the Orthodox Unions Washington director, said the bill extended emergency education funding to non-public schools, which he welcomed.

We appreciate that the Jewish day schools in our community will be able to receive financial support in these very challenging times, Diament said.

No funding for food security

Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger and the National Council of Jewish Women have joined in pressing Congress through petitions and lobbying to expand the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, formerly known as food stamps.

Abby Leibman, Mazons president, said she understood from congressional contacts that the SNAP expansion did not make the final cut. She called it devastating.

So many people are going to be in need because theyre losing their jobs, Leibman said. What is paramount during this crisis is getting healthy, and what is critical to getting healthy is getting food.

Abortion and the Violence Against Women Act

The National Council of Jewish Women and other feminist organizations have been pushing for the 1994 Violence Against Women Act to be reinstated since it lapsed last year. The act dedicated funding to prosecuting and preventing domestic violence.

NCJW says violence is likely to intensify while families are confined to close quarters and unemployment increases.

The current COVID-19 crisis is making it even more difficult for survivors of domestic violence to seek help, an NCJW talking points sheet says.

Meanwhile, some right-wing lawmakers want to make sure stimulus spending does not go to pay for abortions. Those provisions likely wont be included.

Jewish groups also are watching emergency funding measures in state governments.

Ohio and Texas have classified abortions as nonessential medical procedures during the pandemic, which could delay abortions for women who need them immediately, said NCJW CEO Sheila Katz.

The organizations state chapters are reporting that other Republican-dominated state governments are poising to do the same.

It means fewer people will have safe abortions, Katz said. Even a few days delay will jeopardize the life of the pregnant people, and in Judaism the life of the pregnant person is always considered paramount.

Support for voting by mail

Some state primaries have already been delayed because of the pandemic, and there are concerns about limitations on mail-in voting ahead of the Nov. 3 general elections. The Anti-Defamation League has joined with an alliance of civil rights groups asking for $2 billion to facilitate voting by mail and expand early voting and online registration.

Michael Lieberman, ADLs Washington counsel, said it looks like the funding will be $400 million.

Thats inadequate, he said, but an important recognition of the need and a start towards what is actually needed.

Going broad

Jewish organizations cannot confine their advocacy to issues directly affecting Jews, said Rabbi Jonah Pesner, the director of the Reform movements Religious Action Center, or RAC.

Were not separate. There will be Jewish people who get fired, Jewish small businesses who will go under, Jewish elderly, Jewish people with disabilities, Pesner said. This is about the Jewish community and about the other. Theres no dichotomy.

That accounts for RACs lengthyaction alertto synagogues urging advocacy for relief for laid-off workers, protections for first responders and expanded screening for the virus, as well as funding for nonprofits.

Pesner recalled a Hasidic reading that said God dictated that the Israelites wander the desert for 40 years because the robust among them neglected the stragglers.

We must empower governments and society to put the most vulnerable at the center, he said.

View post:
What Jewish Groups Want In Congress' $2 Trillion Pandemic Spending Bill - Jewish Week

Coronavirus ‘cures’ for $170 and other hoaxes: Why some people believe them – The Conversation CA

Posted By on March 27, 2020

As the world continues to deal with the life-altering effects of the novel coronavirus, a small but not-insignificant number of individuals have been expressing their fears about COVID-19 through the language of government conspiracies and wild alternative health cures.

Last week, one online conspiracy network suggested that COVID-19 is an act of biological terrorism to attack Chinese trade. Last month, a popular online site said the virus was a hoax manufactured to induce global fear and would therefore be a boon to Big Pharma. A website based in Toronto claims COVID-19 is the result of 5G cellular networks plus the common cold.

Press TV, part of the state sponsored media in Iran, suggested Zionists were behind the spread. As recently as last week, some public officials in the United States government continued to underplay the seriousness of the virus.

As reported by the New York Times, popular conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh called the virus a plot by the Chinese, and conservative commentator and FOX TV host Sean Hannity read and gave credibility to a tweet calling COVID-19 a fraud to spread panic in the populace, manipulate the economy and suppress dissent.

Why have conspiracy theories so readily circulated during the COVID-19 pandemic? What type of person believes medical conspiracy theories?

I research new religious movements. I decided to explore this question because of the ubiquity of conspiratorial thinking within some of these communities. What can belief in alternative theories tell us about ourselves?

What challenges might conspiratorial thinking, circulated online and in popular media, present to public health advocates in the coming year?

Conspiracy theories connecting the COVID-19 pandemic to the state of Israel are flourishing. One source, part of a large global conspiracy community, claims the novel coronavirus is an act of Israeli bioterrorism.

The Anti-Defamation League in the United States, a leading anti-hate organization, has tracked a growing number of anti-Semitic conspiracies, which claim that Jews are either behind the COVID-19 pandemic, or stand to profit from it.

Jews have historically been blamed for global viral events, including the Black Death in the 1300s, which led to massive pogroms against European Jewry. The common narrative goes that people in the Middle Ages needed a scapegoat because they did not know about the germ theory of disease. However, 130 years after Russian microbiologist Dmitri Ivanovsky and Dutch scientist Martinus Willem Beijerinck (working independently) discovered the existence of viruses, Jews continue to take the brunt of conspiratorial blame.

People seek alternative medicine for many reasons, including distrust of authority, consumer-centered individuality and the belief that the treatment will work. While no vaccine for coronavirus currently exists, that hasnt stopped televangelist Jim Bakker from selling his colloidal silver tincture for US$125 a bottle. The state of Missouri has filed a law suit against Bakker alleging fraudulent treatment claims.

Infowars Alex Jones claimed a product called DNA Force Plus could help fight off COVID-19: it is currently on sale for US$89.95 for one month supply. Another popular supplement advocate suggests a cocktail of over 11 different supplements to combat coronavirus, costing over US$170 a month. Other purported cures include vitamin C dosing, faith healing and homeopathic vaccines. There is no evidence that any of these work.

As demand for alternative medicine grows, Canadian researchers recently looking at internet health scams found, most of the alternative products marketed online either severely misrepresented the efficacy for the given health concern and/or had no strong scientific evidencebase to support their use as advertised.

Since being declared a global pandemic, there is evidence that demand for alternative medicine has increased. Some alternative medicine has been shown to be effective, but many of the options being marketed today have not. As Timothy Caulfield professor of health law at the University of Alberta writes: trust in science is crucial right now.

Conspiratorial thinking can be founded on legitimate concerns and transcends socio-economic, racial, educational and gender boundaries. This complicates our tendency to view conspiracies as perpetuated by tinfoil-hat wearing people.

A number of theories have been proposed to account for conspiratorial thinking.

University of Chicago political scientists Eric Oliver and Thomas Wood explored medical conspiracy theories. They found approximately 50 per cent of Americans believe in at least one general conspiracy theory, and more than 18 per cent believe in three or more medical conspiracies.

Writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine, Oliver and Wood wrote:

Although it is common to disparage adherents of conspiracy theories as a delusional fringe of paranoid cranks, our data suggest that medical conspiracy theories are widely known, broadly endorsed and highly predictive of many common health behaviours.

Perhaps the explanation for the broad appeal of such theories points to something more fundamental to the experience of being human? When people talk about quarantines, hoarding and conspiracies, they can ignore the elephant in the room: death.

Research suggests that we use different management techniques to deal with the terror of death. Where sickness can act as a reminder of our finitude, simple health-management solutions can offer a sense of autonomy over our bodies.

This may explain why some conspiracy websites are downplaying the danger of COVID-19 to adults by focusing on the older age of the victims. In other words, pandemics are scary, and they remind us that we are mortal.

Even if medical conspiracies are mostly confined to the fringe, the effects of conspiratorial beliefs on public health may end up exacerbating the spread of the virus. People may continue to ignore quarantine orders. A future vaccine for COVID-19 may come up against a growing anti-vaccine movement. Will people continue to be receptive to anti-vaccine conspiracy rhetoric in the age of COVID-19?

Conspiracy theorists, like all of us, are trying to make sense of a complicated world. Having a sense of control against an ineffable source of power which describes the novel coronavirus in many ways may speak to some of our collective fears and motivations in the face of mortality. After all, nothing offers direct evidence of human finitude and frailty like a viral pandemic.

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Coronavirus 'cures' for $170 and other hoaxes: Why some people believe them - The Conversation CA

Bernie the Yid: The invisible message behind Sanders’ stigmatisation – Plus61 J Media

Posted By on March 27, 2020

DAN COLEMAN: Sanders politics has been attacked as beyond the acceptable limits of politics; the critics have not recognised his otherness is also his Jewishness

LIKE BERNIE SANDERS, I am a New York-raised, secular Jew, a former elected official, and a veteran of many campaigns, some very intense and very close. I hold to a left political persuasion not far afield from his. We have a lot in common. As Sanders prospect of victory fades, I have pondered the role of anti-Semitism in the relentless attacks on the presidential contender and the fear he seems to generate in the minds of so much of Americas political centre.

Sanders, of course, rarely speaks of his ethnic background. A notable exception was in a Town Hall meeting hosted by CNN in February where he was asked directly about the impact of his Jewish heritage and replied, It impacts me profoundly. When asked about the Israel-Palestine conflict at the Las Vegas debate, he prefaced his reply with, I am very proud of being Jewish, before forcefully advocating a just and secure solution for both nations.

For centuries, Western peoples have viewed Jews as the essential carrier of otherness and the scapegoat for all evils. This led to a day-to-day experience of oppression which flared up into national atrocities including the thirteenth century expulsion of Jews from England, the Spanish Inquisition, the Russian pogroms, and, ultimately, the Nazi holocaust.

Those scapegoated as the other become the object of fear as well as hatred, fears stoked by demagogues of all stripes. In Donald Trumps America, the overt scapegoating is targeted at Hispanics and Muslims. Still, Trump found good people among the neo-Nazis who marched in Charlottesville in 2017.

Over his 30 years in Congress, Bernie has been an Independent, not a Democrat. He caucuses with the Democrats, perhaps the way Saint Paul, also a Jew, caucused with the Romans before they beheaded him.

Although Jewish characters, weddings and barmitzvahs have become a staple of Hollywood fare, a sense of the Jew as other persists in the United States. According to a study by the Anti-Defamation League, tens of millions of Americans harbour virulent views towards Jews.

Some 44% of those surveyed believe Jews stick together more than other Americans, and thereby hold themselves apart from mainstream society. Although fully secular, Bernie Sanders has, throughout his political career, cultivated his own brand of otherness.

Over his 30 years in Congress, Bernie has been an Independent, not a Democrat. He caucuses with the Democrats, perhaps the way Saint Paul, also a Jew, caucused with the Romans before they beheaded him. How many times have we heard criticism of Sanders include the phrase hes not even a Democrat? No, he is something other, despite that his politics stand squarely in the progressive Democratic tradition going back to FDR.

Sanders identifies as a democratic socialist, rather than as a capitalist. When progressive former candidate Elizabeth Warren was asked in Las Vegas about her assertion that she is a capitalist to my bones, she was quick to reply, Yes, I am, as if reassuring voters that I may sound like him but, dont worry, I am really one of you.

Sanders erstwhile rivals joined in a free-for-all in attacking him for his socialism. I believe in capitalism, echoed Amy Klobuchar, who dropped out of the race and endorsed Joe Biden just before Super Tuesday. Americans will never vote for a socialist, they tell us, emphasising Sanders otherness rather than his policies.

They warn voters to fear Sanders, fear that he would lose to Trump, fear that his policies mainstream in much of the world will alienate voters, fear that his legislative agenda would never be passed by a conservative Congress. These attacks seem to have found purchase, as the key factor behind Joe Bidens resurgent and now front-running campaign is voters perception of electability.

The association of redbaiting with anti-Semitism is long established, having had its heyday through the 20th century, going back at least to the roundup, imprisonment, and deportation of many Jewish leftists after passage of the 1917 Espionage Act, and cresting with the blacklists of the McCarthy era, a time when the words red, Jew, and commie rolled off the tongue as if interchangeable. I have personally experienced redbaiting and anti-Semitism, both as a candidate for public office and as a supporter of Sanders.

Sanders has spoken of how his politics derives from his experience of growing up in a family that didnt have a whole lot of money, and as the child of immigrant Jews, tearfully aware of the horrors of the Holocaust and the toll bigotry and division take from so many.

It seems likely that during Sanders tenure at Brooklyns James Madison High School which also gave us Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Chuck Schumer and in his neighbourhood of ordinary secular Jews, he would have breathed in the justice tradition embedded in progressive Judaism.

The New Yorker has reported that Sanders friend, Rabbi Richard Sugarman, has said his Jewish identity is strong. Its certainly more ethnic and cultural than religious, except for his devotion to the ethical part of public life in Judaism, the moral part.

Sanders has certainly lived his life as if in embodiment of the progressive Jewish interpretation of Tikkun Olam to heal the world and build a better society.

The New Yorker has reported that Sanders close friend, Orthodox Rabbi Richard Sugarman, has said, If you talk about his Jewish identity, its strong. Its certainly more ethnic and cultural than religiousexcept for his devotion to the ethical part of public life in Judaism, the moral part. He does have a prophetic sensibility.

Indeed, in a packed arena, before Covid-19 shut down his immensely popular rallies, Sanders can sound like the prophet Amos calling for justice, or like Jeremiah assailing the unrighteous. Are you willing to fight for that person you dont even know as much as youre willing to fight for yourself? Sanders asks. If I am only for myself, what am I? asked Hillel.

What might Amos have accomplished had he lived in a democracy? Perhaps Bernie Sanders means to find out. In this years debates, with fingers jabbing, voice raised, and eyes flaming, he has railed against the fossil fuel companies, pharma, the health insurance industry, and the National Rifle Association.

Asked if Sanders message is right for America, then candidate Pete Buttigieg dismissively characterised it as all the way to the edge. Sanders has a different idea. Echoing Martin Luther King Jr in quoting Amos two prophets murdered for their work Sanders calls on America to let justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream.

And poll after poll validates that Sanders policies and the vision of justice that underlies them are supported by most Americans.

The anti-Sanders forces attack him as one who has strayed beyond the acceptable limits of politics, as irredeemably too far left. To the extent that there is anti-Semitism in some of the attacks coming from mainstream Democrats, it is an anti-Semitism that does not recognise itself. Sanders is assailed for his otherness, without recognition that his otherness is also his Jewishness.

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Bernie the Yid: The invisible message behind Sanders' stigmatisation - Plus61 J Media

100 years ago: After a pandemic, Jacksonville and America went on a wild ride – The Florida Times-Union

Posted By on March 27, 2020

For the city of Jacksonville, the 1920s were a monumental and memorable decade, one with echoes as we begin the 2020s dealing with a pandemic, fighting amongst ourselves, and craving a bit of normalcy.

Normalcy.

Its not a word you typically see a presidential campaign built around.

But when 1920 arrived in America, it was not a normal time. The country was emerging from the gloom of war and, even deadlier than any global battle, a pandemic that killed tens of millions of people worldwide, including 675,000 in the United States.

As the war ended in 1918 and the troops came home, the Spanish flu that began in 1917 spread rapidly in its second deadly wave. In late September, the Times-Union noted that 1,000 cases of mild influenza had been found at a naval station in Michigan but that only 13 cases had been reported at Jacksonvilles Camp Johnston.

Influenza is under perfect control here, one story said. There is no cause for alarm as to the spreading of the disease.

RELATED | Killer epidemic of October 1918 hit Jacksonville hard

In the next month alone, nearly 200,000 died in America including more than 400 in Jacksonville.

While that was the peak, the effects of the pandemic physical, psychological, economical lingered in 1920.

So when Warren Harding ran for president that year, he pledged a return to normalcy.

He was mocked for picking this word, rarely used beyond mathematics, instead of the more conventional normality. But normalcy stuck. The word, not the condition of anything normal.

To a degree, the Roaring 20s were a reaction to the Dire Teens.

America began one of its wildest rides, a decade with the highest of highs and lowest of lows, of parties and prayer, of equality and inequality, of boom and bust.

And perhaps nowhere was this ride wilder than in Florida a place with Jacksonville, its largest city, as its gateway.

When local historians look at Jacksonvilles past the city will celebrate its bicentennial in 2022 they point to 1920s as a monumental and memorable decade, one with echoes as we begin the 2020s dealing with a pandemic, fighting amongst ourselves, and desperately craving a bit of normalcy.

PARTYING & PRAYING

Another word that emerged from the Roaring 20s: partied.

In 1922, E.E. Cummings first turned the noun party into a verb.

Mention the Roaring 20s today and thats what we picture. Jay Gatsby partying in fictional West Egg and East Egg, people doing the Charleston from coast to coast, mobsters and flappers, a decade of decadence.

Thats the trope of the Roaring 20s said Alan Bliss, executive director of the Jacksonville Historical Society. I think its true to a point. But I think its a little overstated. It certainly is not faithful to most Americans experience in the 1920s.

Bliss taught courses about the Roaring 20s at the University of North Florida, partly because its a period that fascinates him. But part of what interests him about the decade is how it isnt necessarily what people picture. Its a complex decade, one with echoes as we begin another 20s.

It was a time when the national politics trended toward conservatism and another big word of the decade Americanism.

In the first week of the decade, a headline stripped across the top of the Times-Union said: GREATEST ROUNDUP OF RADICALS EVER KNOWN.

RELATED | Read more from Mark Woods

The story detailed Department of Justice agents doing raids in cities from coast to coast, including Jacksonville, in a carefully planned movement against communists.

Another story from the first week of the new decade told of the Educational and Temperance Campaign that would open that Sunday at the Morocco Temple. Col. Dan Morgan Smith was scheduled to speak, it said, about pure-blooded Americanism.

This is the greatest need of America today, Smith said, and America must be made to realize it.

Later in 1920, the city built an 8,000-seat wooden tabernacle on Market Street for Billy Sunday a former baseball player who became one of the most famous evangelists of his time. For six weeks, Sunday preached every day, delivering 72 sermons to packed houses.

This is how the 1920s began in Jacksonville.

Evangelism was very much on the rise and current in the 1920s, Bliss said. Religiosity was stimulated by growing tensions over science and traditional values. These tensions gave fuel to evangelicals who said, Our life, our cultural heritage, our neighborhoods, our world, are all under threat.

Something else was happening. In 1920, for the first time in the countrys history, the census showed that more Americans lived in cities than elsewhere.

Jacksonvilles population had surged during World War I, partly because of a migration of workers for shipyards. And during the 1920s, Jacksonville became the first Florida city to top 100,000 in population.

People were living increasingly close to people who were not like them immigrants, other races and ethnicities and religions, Bliss said. You name it. There were all kinds of increasing layers of complexity.

Amidst the rapidly changing America, there was backlash, with powerful anti-immigration sentiment and action. In 1923, Congress passed the Emergency Quota Act, aimed primarily at reducing Jewish immigration. A year later, its revision effectively banned all immigration from Asia. When President Coolidge signed the legislation, he said: America must remain American.

BOOZE & BLOOD

Before the whole nation went dry, Florida already was there.

Florida voters overwhelmingly approved an amendment to the Florida Constitution in 1918, prohibiting the manufacture, sale, barter or exchange of alcohol. The governor at the time was Sidney Catts, a preacher and Prohibition Party candidate who was elected after a campaign that was full of anti-German, anti-Catholic and anti-black rhetoric.

At his inauguration, Catts said: The everyday cracker people have triumphed.

In January 1919, with Catts as governor, the state of Florida began Prohibition. One year later, on Jan. 16, 2020, people packed taverns in other parts of America to take one last drink.

Wink, wink.

The reality was that banning alcohol in America meant that more people drank, and people often drank more. It also meant that Florida, with its coastline and swamps, became a paradise for smugglers. Speakeasies flourished. And when readers opened up the Times-Union in 1920, they saw ads for a new elixir called Aspironal.

Better Than Whiskey for Colds and Flu, the ad said.

(Fun side note: This medicine was 10 percent alcohol.)

Jacksonville, referred to as the Gateway to Florida by some northern press, not only became a hotbed for bootleggers. It became one of the bloodiest cities in America.

In 1926, a year of legendary violence in America, 12 cars of gangsters opened fire in Chicago at the headquarters of Al Capone. But that same year Jacksonville had a murder rate five times that of Chicago and eight times higher than New York.

A story in the Times-Union said Jacksonvilles murder rate 107 in a city with a population barely more than one-tenth of what it is today was the highest of any city in the civilized world.

That was the year a woman, Lyndall McMurray, made headlines after shooting a mail carrier in the streets of Springfield.

In a courtroom packed with women, a jury deliberated only 40 minutes before finding McMurray not guilty. The Associated Press, noting that she was the first white woman tried for murder in court here in a number of years, said McMurray testified she shot Adolphus Ward to protect her 14-year-old son and herself.

The story behind the story was that McMurray had a tent on Main Street. She sold soda in the front and booze in the back and Ward supposedly stole 10 cases of whiskey from her.

Sometimes local law enforcement cracked down on bootlegging. Other times it was involved in it. The Jacksonville sheriff for much of the 1920s, Ham Dowling, would later be arrested for having two stills, 14,000 gallons of beer, 79 bottles of home brew and 250 gallons of whiskey.

And then theres the tale behind the phrase the real McCoy.

When Bliss shares this story, he prefaces it by saying the sourcing isnt real reliable. And the internet is full of other possible explanations for the phrase. But there was a boat captain named William McCoy who settled in Northeast Florida.

In the early 1900s, he and his brother Ben lived north of Daytona Beach, spent time in Jacksonville, and earned a reputation as skilled boat makers. Customers included the Carnegies and Vanderbilts. But when they hit hard times, Bill McCoy turned to smuggling whiskey and other liquor through the Bahamas.

He began anchoring a boat off the coast, in international waters, and sold liquor to smaller ships that took it to shore.

The lore is that, unlike other rum runners, he didnt dilute his products.

So if you bought smuggled spirits from Capt. Bill McCoy, you supposedly were getting the real McCoy, Bliss said.

McCoy pleaded guilty to smuggling and spent nine months in a New Jersey jail. When he got out of jail, he returned to Florida, invested in real estate and wrote an autobiography (The Real McCoy).

An interesting detail in it: Capt. McCoy never drank a drop of the Real McCoy.

I went for the cash, he wrote, and I stayed in it for the fun it gave me.

HARLEM OF THE SOUTH

Its often referred to as the Jazz Age. And while that brings to mind places like New York and New Orleans, the Cotton Club and the Harlem Renaissance, many of the biggest musicians of the era came to Jacksonville.

In the 1920s, LaVilla was part of a thriving African-American neighborhood. Black churches, hospitals and schools originated in LaVilla. Abraham Lincoln Lewis, founder of the Afro-American Life Insurance Company, lived there. And in the area near the intersection of Ashley and Jefferson Streets, some of Americas jazz greats and swing bands played there. Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington.

In 1929, the Ritz Theatre opened on the site of a former movie house.

At the same time, movies with all African-American casts were being produced in Arlington.

In the early 1900s, Jacksonville had earned a reputation as the Winter Film Capital of the World. It was home to more than 30 studios. But in 1917, John W. Martin ran for mayor, pledging to rid the city of two evils: brothels and film studios.

Martin won, and by 1920, all the studios but one had relocated to a new home, Hollywood.

Richard Norman bought Eagle Studios. And a century before Marvel Studios produced Black Panther, Norman Studios made race films starring African-American actors in aspirational roles.

In some ways, it was a progressive time. In other ways, it was regressive.

EQUALITY & INEQUALITY

In 1920, after a half-century battle, women got the right to vote.

One of the leaders of the effort, Grace Trout, moved from Illinois to Jacksonville in 1921. She and her husband lived in Marabanong, the colorful Victorian mansion in Empire Point. She continued her activism, becoming the president of the Jacksonville Planning and Advisory Board and the Jacksonville Garden Club.

Yet throughout the 1920s, progress often was greeted by pushback.

This is where Tim Gilmore begins when asked about what happened in the Roaring 20s. Gilmore teaches at Florida State College at Jacksonville and has extensively researched and written about local history and people including a book titled, In Search of Eartha White, Storehouse for the People.

Eartha Mary Magdalene White, born in Jacksonville in 1876, became one of the citys most notable citizens. She founded a nursing home, a tuberculosis hospital, an orphanage and a home for unwed mothers. She worked on anti-lynching campaigns and voter registration drives.

Gilmore describes how in 1920, after the passage of the 19th Amendment, she went door to door, registering black women to vote, hoping this would lead more black men to vote.

While she had success, her efforts produced an example of a common thread of the 1920s. Progressive ideals warred with reactionary re-entrenchment, said a recent New York Times story about the decade.

This was a decade that saw the Ku Klux Klan grow, claiming to include 15 percent of the countrys white men. The Klan marched in cities across the country, and targeted those it identified as enemies of 100 percent Americanism Catholics, foreigners and African-Americans.

In Jacksonville, that was on display on Election Day 1920. The black voters whom Eartha White registered and brought to the polls faced a KKK parade.

The intent was to suppress the black vote, Gilmore said. When that didnt work, the county failed to count scores of black votes.

Elsewhere in Florida, he says, it was even worse. There were racial massacres in Ocoee in 1920, Perry in 1922 and Rosewood in 1923.

BEFORE JEA

As the decade began, the way people lived their lives was changing. More homes were using electricity instead of gas. And in 1922, the city started a Cook With Electricity campaign.

A story that was reprinted in the 1923 Duval High School yearbook (and recently sent to the Times-Union during the modern-day JEA saga) describes the city purchasing several hundred Electric Ranges at a price less than wholesale and offering to sell and install the ranges for that cost.

The main focus of the story, though, was on how it had been a decade since the opening of a new electric plant -- which it said saved taxpayers money and helped make Jacksonville prosperous.

The headline: The Largest and Finest Equipped Municipal Electric Plant in the United States is Located in Jacksonville, Fla.

1920s MAYOR & GOVERNOR

Martin, the young mayor who sent the movie industry to Hollywood, decided not to seek a fourth term in 1923. He instead ran for and became governor, serving from 1925 to 1929.

In 1923, he was succeeded as mayor by John T. Alsop who ended up serving 18 years, the longest stint in the citys history.

That was weirdly typical for American cities in the inter-war years, Bliss said.

As Jacksonvilles mayor for the Roaring 20s and beyond, Alsop did things that Bliss describes as remarkably progressive. To start with, he created the citys planning advisory board.

That tells you something about Jacksonvilles growth, he said. Alsop looked around and said, Weve got to impose some rational order to this place.

To a large degree, this was like trying to stop a runaway train. But a few years later, several of the citys most influential women including Alsops wife, Ella pushed for city planning and beautification. The city hired George Simons to craft a municipal plan, which became the first to be adopted in Florida.

Many of the 1920s plans remain topical today: roads, mass transportation, the port and an emerald necklace of parks.

TRAINS, PLANES & AUTOMOBILES

In 1920, a headline in the Times-Union said: Autoists Must Signal Traffic Officers at Street Corners.

The story said new policemen would be wearing white gloves and working at intersections. And the police chief had a mandate: Drivers must indicate which direction they intend to turn.

One hundred years later, as anyone who drives Jacksonvilles roadways will attest, the turn-signal issue remains. But the white-gloved policemen are long gone, they ushered in a decade of dramatic changes in transportation.

This was the decade that Charles Lindberg flew across the Atlantic and came to Jacksonville as part of his celebration tour in 1927.

The new Union Station, completed in 1919, was the busiest train station in the South. And, as noted in a 1920 advertisement in the Times-Union, some of those trains were carrying new cars.

In one of many newspaper ads touting the latest automobiles, the Cole Motor Company told potential customers a trainload shipment of 30 Columbia Six Roadsters was on the way.

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