Page 1,229«..1020..1,2281,2291,2301,231..1,2401,250..»

5 myths and realities about women’s heart health – Journalist’s Resource

Posted By on February 4, 2020

In January, Journalists Resource attended a four-day fellowship on cardiovascular health, Covering the Heart Beat, organized by the National Press Foundation. Researchers, physicians and journalists gathered with the goal of improving news coverage of cardiovascular health.

At the training, Dr. Noel Bairey Merz and Dr. Martha Gulati delivered presentations on womens heart health. Bairey Merz is director of the Barbra Streisand Womens Heart Centerat Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, and chairs the National Institutes of Health-sponsored Womens Ischemic Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) initiative, a project aimed at better understanding heart disease in women. Gulati is chief of cardiology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix and co-author of the book Saving Womens Hearts.

They broke down oft-repeated myths about cardiovascular disease in women and shared the facts of the matter. This tip sheet summarizes a few of their key points.

Myth: Cardiovascular disease is a mans disease.

Reality: Women and men have similar rates of cardiovascular disease.

Nearly half of all women in the U.S. 60 million have cardiovascular disease, which includes coronary heart disease, heart failure, stroke and hypertension, according to the most recent statistics from the American Heart Association. A similar number of men 61.5 million have cardiovascular disease. For comparison, about 3.5 million U.S. women have breast cancer.

Myth: Women dont die from cardiovascular disease nearly as often as men do.

Reality: Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death for both sexes. In 2017, 418,655 women and 440,460 men died of cardiovascular disease.

Myth: Heart disease looks the same in men and women.

Reality: Bairey Merz said research has found that heart disease in women often looks different, quite literally, than it does in men. For example, plaque on the walls of womens arteries looks different from the plaque on mens. It also affects their arteries differently.

Diagnosing a heart attack in women requires more sensitive blood testing, Bairey Merz added, because their hearts are generally smaller and release smaller amounts of troponin, a protein the body releases when the heart muscle has been damaged.

These differences might explain why heart disease in women isnt always diagnosed and treated promptly. But researchers havent always considered men and women separately enough, Bairey Merz said.

She described a consequential 1991 letter to the editor in the New England Journal of Medicine written by Dr. Bernadine Healy, then director of the National Institutes of Health. Yentl, the 19th-century heroine of Isaac Bashevis Singers short story, had to disguise herself as a man to attend school and study the Talmud. Being just like a man has historically been a price women have had to pay for equality. Being different from men has meant being second-class and less than equal for most of recorded time and throughout most of the world, Healy writes.

Healy applies the story of Yentl to heart disease. She argues that only recognizing heart disease in women when it presents similarly to mens heart disease, and treating womens heart disease as the same as mens, leads to inferior diagnosis and treatment of heart disease in women.

The problem is to convince both the lay and the medical sectors that coronary heart disease is also a womans disease, not a mans disease in disguise, she writes. Decades of sex-exclusive research have reinforced the myth that coronary artery disease is a uniquely male affliction and have generated data sets in which men are the normative standard. The extrapolation of these male-generated findings to women has led in some cases to biased standards of care and has prevented the full consideration of several important aspects of coronary disease in women.

Bairey Merz added that the Yentl syndrome still afflicts the field today: The health care establishment still, I think, has these gendered ideas of not doing research in women.

Myth: Men and women both receive the standard of care for cardiovascular disease.

Reality: Men often are more likely to receive care that follows established guidelines for treating cardiovascular disease than women.

When a woman has a heart attack, do we even treat women equally? Gulati asked. The short answer, she said, is: no.

The long answer: A 2012 paper in the American Journal of Medicine found that women were less likely to receive care concordant with established guidelines for heart attack and were more likely to die from the condition than men. The study looked at a sample of 31,544 patients from 369 hospitals across the U.S. between 2002 and 2008.

A few of the differences highlighted in the study:

The only thing women do better is die, Gulati said. Even when we dont have all the answers about the [sex-related cardiovascular disease] differences if we just followed the guidelines, we would save lives.

Differences in care arent limited just to the clinical setting. Gulati said that in out-of-hospital cases of cardiac arrest, women are less likely to receive bystander-initiated cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) than men. We know the sooner we initiate CPR, the more likely we are to save lives, she said. As it stands, women are less likely to survive cardiac arrest than men.

Gulati suggested the reasons why CPR is not performed as often on women might have to do with concerns about touching women, or the fact that people are trained to perform CPR on male mannequins rather than female figures. That might lead individuals to believe they do not know how to perform CPR appropriately on a woman, Gulati said.

Myth: Women experiencing heart attacks report so-called atypical symptoms such as stomach pain, pain in the jaw and heart palpitations, rather than typical symptoms like chest pain, pressure or tightness.

Reality: Research shows that women are actually more likely than men to report typical symptoms, but are also more likely to list a greater number of symptoms.

The public health message has really somehow gone out there as if every woman will present atypically rather than most people will present with the typical symptoms, Gulati said.

A 2018 study in Circulation finds that a similar percentage of men and women reported chest pain when seeking help for a heart attack 89.5% and 87%, respectively. Women, however, were also more likely to report three or more additional symptoms than men. Additionally, both women and their healthcare providers were less likely to consider womens symptoms heart-related than men and their providers. For example, women were more likely to consider their symptoms related to stress or anxiety, and 53% of women reported that their provider did not think their symptoms were heart-related, compared with 37% of men.

Excerpt from:

5 myths and realities about women's heart health - Journalist's Resource

Why the Sea Needed to Split – Torah Insights – Parshah – Chabad.org

Posted By on February 4, 2020

Looking at the ocean, all we see is water.

The ocean is full of life. It is home to creatures of allsizes and shapes. Yet this abundant and diverse world, submerged beneath thesurface, is hidden from our view. In fact, more than 95 percent of theunderwater realm remains unexplored.

It is for this reason that the Kabbalists use the sea as aThe spiritual worlds are full of spiritual lifemetaphor for the concealed worlds. The spiritual worlds are indeed full ofspiritual lifeangels, souls, energy, Divine lightyet they are concealed fromour eyes. Dry land, by contrast, is a metaphor for reality as we perceive it.If something is tangible enough to be grasped by our five senses, then it is inthe realm of dry land. If it is a spiritual reality that cannot be perceivedwith the naked eye, it is in the concealed world of the sea.

This explains the spiritual significance of the biblicalstory of the Splitting of the Sea. When the Children of Israel left Egypt, theywere pursued by Pharaoh and the Egyptians and were trapped at the Red Sea.Miraculously, the sea split before them, and they traveled on dry land in themidst of the sea. The Egyptians followed, and the waters of the sea camecrashing down upon them, drowning them.

One look at a map of the Middle East will show that theJewish people, who were en route from Egypt to Mount Sinai, had no businessbeing at the Red Seaits completely out of the way. In fact, the Jewish peopledid not cross the sea; rather, they emerged from the sea on the same side theyhad entered, effectively making a U-turn.

So what was the purpose of the Splitting of the Sea? Was itjust a way for Gd to drown the Egyptian army? Couldn't Gd have found aneasier way to punish the Egyptians?

The answer is that in order for the people to receive theTorah, they first needed to experience the Splitting of the Sea.

The sea represents that which is concealed. The searepresents the Divine energy within every created being. The sea represents thespark of holiness that is at the core of every creation.

When the sea split, when the waters were transformed intodry land, then the hidden core withinevery creation was revealed. As the sea split, all of the concealment of theworld was torn open, exposing the truth of the oneness of Gd. As the seasplit, each and every individual experienced a Divine revelation, to the extentthat the Talmud teaches that a maidservant at the sea was able to see what theprophet Ezekiel was unable to see.

When we received the Torah at Sinai, we were charged withthe mission to connect the physical and the spiritual, the mundane and the holy,the earthly and the Divine. But how is that even possible? They seem to bepolar opposites.

The Splitting of the Sea explains it all.

Before Gd could command the people to connect the physicaland the spiritual, they first had to experienced the Splitting of the Sea, thetearing open of the concealment. They had to understand that the hidden core ofall of creation is indeed the Creator. They had to realize that, in truth, thephysical is nothing more than concealed spirituality. Every creation craves tobe used as a vessel for a mitzvah, craves to be reunited with its Divinesource.

To split the sea in the world around us, we must first splitour own sea. We must first expose the hidden reality of our soul. And thenwell discover that the world around us is disguising a deeper truth, a truthwaiting to be revealed.

When the Torah tells the story of the Splitting of the Sea,The waters became protective wallsthe Torah emphasizes that the waters of the sea became protective walls for theJewish people. This is not just a physical description, but a metaphor for oursouls. As finite beings, we tend to see things in black and white. We oftendefine ourselves in terms of what we can do and cant do. We tell ourselvesthat there are certain things we are capable of doing, were good at, and werecomfortable striving for. Then are the things we believe to be beyond ourgrasp. The things that are inconsistent with our nature, ability andinclination. We have a long list of things, we tell ourselves, that we cannotaccomplish.

The Torah teaches us that as the sea split, as the hiddenworld came to light, the core of the soul was also unveiled. At that moment ofrevelation, the Jewish people realized that the soul defies definition. Theyrealized that they could express themselves in opposite ways; they could excelin contrasting fields. They could be introverts as well as extroverts, scholarsas well as people of action. Both the right side and the left side areprotective walls. A soul is not limited to a single form of expression. A soul cannotbe boxed into one model of achievement. As soon as we reveal our essence, thereis nothing that we cannot achieve.

The stories of the Torah are not merely stories about thepast; they are the stories of our lives. To achieve the purpose of our creation,we too must experience the three most fundamental events of Jewish history: theExodus, the Splitting of the Sea, and the Giving of the Torah.

Each and every day, we have the opportunity to escape ourEgypt. To escape the enslavement to our perceived limitations. Each and everyday, we receive the Torah at Sinai, empowering us to connect creation to itsCreator, to reveal the hidden core of the physical. To do so, however, we mustfirst reveal the inner core of our soul, we must split our own sea, reveal ourhidden truth, and discover that our essence is indeed limitless.

We must reveal the hidden spark of infinity within oursouls.

Visit link:

Why the Sea Needed to Split - Torah Insights - Parshah - Chabad.org

Anti-Defamation League Nevada Hosts A Meeting on Hate in the Silver State Trends and Tools on Combating Anti-Semitism – Nevada Business Magazine

Posted By on February 4, 2020

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Annie SlimanAdvertising & Marketing Solutions, Inc.(702) 798-1819 office / (702) 429-1130 cellEmail: annies@amsinclv.com

Angela Brooks (702) 375-1683 or office@amsinclv.com

LAS VEGAS The Anti-Defamation League Nevada will host Hate in the Silver State on Monday, February 10, 2020 at 5:30pm at Temple Sinai, 3405 Gulling Rd., Reno, NV 89503.

The purpose of this community event is to educate and provide an open forum for the public to learn about the rise and normalization of hate in Nevada and across the country. It will include ADL Nevadas Words of Action program designed to help equip, empower, and motivate the public on trends and tools to address anti-Semitism.

The event is free and open to the public. For more information contact Kat Sandigo at 702-862-8600 or ksandigo@adl.org

ABOUT ADL NEVADA:

ADL is a leading anti-hate organization. Founded in 1913 in response to an escalating climate of anti-Semitism and bigotry, its timeless mission is to protect the Jewish people and to secure justice and fair treatment for all. Today, ADL continues to fight all forms of hate with the same vigor and passion. ADL is the first call when acts of anti-Semitism occur. A global leader in exposing extremism, delivering anti-bias education and fighting hate online, ADLs ultimate goal is a world in which no group or individual suffers from bias, discrimination or hate. More at https://lasvegas.adl.org/

###

See more here:
Anti-Defamation League Nevada Hosts A Meeting on Hate in the Silver State Trends and Tools on Combating Anti-Semitism - Nevada Business Magazine

I Lose Sleep Over This Building: A Rush to Make Synagogues Safe – The New York Times

Posted By on February 4, 2020

The East Midwood Jewish Center in Brooklyn needs $250,000 to replace its aging roof and another $250,000 to repair the water-damaged ceiling of its sanctuary, its director said. Then there is the aging boiler the size of a small apartment that has needed $20,000 worth of maintenance so far this winter.

Looming over those everyday concerns is something more existential: keeping everyone in the 96-year-old building alive and well at a time of rising anti-Semitism in New York and around the country.

Enhancing security for Jewish institutions, and how to pay for it, has become an urgent issue for religious leaders and local and state governments.

I lose sleep over this building every night because I care about this institution and I want to protect it and I need the money to do it, said Wayne Rosenfeld, the executive director of the synagogue, which provides Hebrew lessons for 50 students twice a week and social events for 150 older people on weekdays.

Mr. Rosenfeld said that the anti-Semitic incidents had forced synagogue leaders to face reality.

The world is not going to get better, he said. Things like this arent going to go away. And whether we have the money or not, we need to do something.

Facing reality can be expensive.

Synagogues have struggled to find the money for security improvements that can range from relatively inexpensive onetime purchases like security cameras and locks to significant recurring costs like salaries for armed guards.

Other options include electronic key cards, perimeter fencing and lighting, shatterproof glass and reinforced doors.

It presents a real substantial issue for us to be able to pay for those improvements, said Michael Schwartz, the president of the East Midwood center, a Conservative Jewish synagogue built in 1924. It is a constant tug of war between the demands of an aging infrastructure and trying to respond to the realities of what is going on today.

Synagogues have tried to find the money by raising annual dues, adding new security fees or organizing fund-raising drives. Many have also tried to obtain city, state and federal grants, but Jewish leaders complain that the application process can be daunting and that state money often comes with burdensome requirements.

Mr. Rosenfeld said he was not sure whether his synagogue met the requirements for state funding, and that the Department of Homeland Security had rejected the centers application for a grant last year. He said the application process was arduous, but he planned to apply again.

He was not alone. Edward Fox, the executive director of Yeshiva Har Torah, a Jewish school in Queens whose application for state security funding was denied last year, called the process of applying difficult, complicated and confusing.

It wasnt clear exactly what they wanted us to do, Mr. Fox said. He was one of hundreds of people at a conference on security-related state grants last week that was organized by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomos office, which pledged to make the process easier.

Eventually we figured it out, said Mr. Fox, who said he planned to apply again this year. But it took an inordinate amount of time.

At the state level, a total of $45 million in grants is available to nonprofit schools, day care centers and other entities that may be vulnerable to attack. Houses of worship are not eligible unless they are attached to such establishments.

That amount is dwarfed by available federal funding, which has risen to $90 million this year from $60 million in 2019. Last month, President Trump authorized an additional $75 million in security grants for the next five years.

Mr. Cuomo said at the conference last week that he had included $25 million in new security grants in his proposed state budget, which is supposed to be approved by April 1. He said that the new grants would not require applicants to be attached to schools or community centers.

I will tell you the truth: I am still shocked at what is going on, Mr. Cuomo said, before listing a number of high-profile hate crimes, including the October 2018 shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh that killed 11. I never believed it could happen here in New York.

Hate crimes in New York accelerated as 2019 drew to a close and a new year began, with 43 across the state from Dec. 1 to Jan. 6, according to the Anti-Defamation League. On Tuesday, Attorney General William P. Barr announced federal hate crimes charges in one case, a string of anti-Semitic assaults in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn on Dec. 27.

Over the last several years we have witnessed a change in the mind-set in the community, said Michael Masters, the national director of the Secure Community Network, which works with Jewish groups across the country. Since the Pittsburgh shooting, he said, reports of anti-Semitic incidents to the organization had increased 729 percent.

Whereas before people may have asked whether it was really necessary to have an organized, formal security program, now they are asking much more frequently, How do I do it? Mr. Masters said.

There is no one-size-fits all answer to that question. Security arrangements can vary widely based on a synagogues age and physical layout, how deep its pockets are and whether its members feel comfortable praying while an armed guard watches the door.

That means the cost of securing a building can also vary widely. An armed guard is the most expensive option and can cost hundreds of dollars for a few hours of work a week, said Joshua Gleis, the president of Gleis Security Consulting.

But any measure could be a waste of money if it is not part of a comprehensive strategy that includes training community members, he said.

In most places, $100,000 is going to go a long way, but it wont do everything, Mr. Gleis said. In some places, people spend $100,000 on cameras but they cant lock their doors.

In addition to being a community center, the East Midwood synagogue is a landmark that was added to the National and New York State Registers of Historic Places in 2006 and has been used as a location for the Amazon show The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.

Last summer, the center added a $100 security fee to its members dues for the first time. It now pays $250 a week have a security guard at Saturday services, which typically attract about 100 people, Mr. Rosenfeld said.

But higher dues will not cover everything that the 30,000-square-foot building needs. Improvements to its aging security cameras could cost as much as $20,000 and the cost of installing new locks in the five-story structure could add up, Mr. Rosenfeld said.

The list of things we could do is endless I mean, our locks are 96 years old, he said. If it was a new building, things could be built as designed but for an old building you have to retrofit everything. We are an iconic large structure and because of that we are also a target.

Read the original post:
I Lose Sleep Over This Building: A Rush to Make Synagogues Safe - The New York Times

The Long History of the Anti-Abortion Movement’s Links to White Supremacists – The Nation

Posted By on February 4, 2020

Anti-abortion protesters picket outside Florida State Prison where Paul Hill was executed in 2003 for the murder of abortion provider Dr. John Britton. (Matt Stroshane / Getty Images)

Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!

The anti-abortion movement in the United States has long been complicit with white supremacy. In recent decades, the movement mainstream has been careful to protect its public image by distancing itself from overt white nationalists in its ranks. Last year, anti-abortion leader Kristen Hatten was ousted from her position as vice president of the anti-choice group New Wave Feminists after identifying as an ethnonationalist and sharing white supremacist alt-right content. In 2018, when neo-Nazis from the Traditionalist Worker Party (TWP) sought to join the local March for Life rally organized by Tennessee Right to Life, the anti-abortion organization rejected TWPs involvement. (The organizations statement, however, engaged in the same false equivalency between left and right that Trump used in the wake of fatal white supremacist violence at Charlottesville. Our organizations march has a single agenda to support the rights of mothers and the unborn, and we dont agree with the violent agenda of white supremacists or Antifa, the group wrote on its Facebook page.)Ad Policy

But despite the movements careful curation of its public image, racism and xenophobia have been woven into it throughout its history. With large families, due to Roman Catholic Church prohibitions on contraception and abortion, Catholic immigration in the mid-1800s through 1900s sparked white Anglo-Saxon Protestant fears of being overtaken demographically that fueled opposition to abortion as a means of increasing birthrates among white Protestant women. At the time, Roman Catholic immigrants from countries like Ireland and Italy who would be considered white today were among the targets of white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan. As sociologists Nicola Beisel and Tamara Kay wrote with regards to the criminalization of abortion in the late 19th century, While laws regulating abortion would ultimately affect all women, physicians argued that middle-class, Anglo-Saxon married women were those obtaining abortions, and that their use of abortion to curtail childbearing threatened the Anglo-Saxon race.

Hostile anti-Catholic sentiment cut both ways when it came to abortion, however. Until the 1970s, pro-life activism was firmly associated with Catholics and the pope in the minds of American Protestants. This deterred many Protestants from opposing abortion as a Christian moral issuenot only in the political sphere, but even as a matter of denominational teachingbecause of its association with papists (a derogatory term for Catholics). Even the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973 decriminalizing abortion did not immediately bring conservative Protestants around. As late as 1976, the conservative evangelical Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) passed resolutions affirming abortion rights. The assumption was that it must not be right if Catholics backed it, so we havent, commented John Wilder, who founded Christians for Life as a Southern Baptist ministry in 1977 as the resistance to the pro-life movement began to dissipate.

This shift occurred in light of the lessening of anti-Catholic prejudice, strategic recruitment of evangelicals by New Right Catholic leaders, and evangelical discomfort with how many abortions took place as women accessed their new reproductive rights.

The cultural position of Catholics had shifted dramatically by the 1970s. As substantial immigration from Latin America and Asia posed a new threat to white numerical superiority, Catholics from European countries became culturally accepted as part of the white race, a readjusting of boundaries that maintains demographic control. The election of Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy as president in 1960 demonstrated how far Catholic acceptance had comeat least among liberals. Although conservative evangelical opposition to his candidacy remained rife with anti-Catholic fears, the rhetoric was less racialized and more focused on concerns about influence from the Vatican.

To counter this lingering prejudice, conservative Catholic leaders seized on the opportunity offered by the specter of atheist Communism in the mid-20th century to establish themselves as part of a Christian coalition with Protestants, unified against a common godless enemy. As Randall Balmer has written, evangelical concerns about being forced to desegregate Christian schools spurred political investment that Catholic New Right leaders capitalized on and channeled into anti-abortion and anti-LGBT opposition.

For white nationalists, meanwhile, as Carol Mason wrote in Killing for Life, Jewish people replaced Catholics as targets for groups like the KKK. Now that abortion is tantamount to race suicidenaming Catholicswhose opposition to abortion has been so keenas enemies would be counterproductive, Mason wrote. Militant anti-abortion and explicit white nationalist groups came together prominently in the 1990s when a wing of the anti-abortion movement, frustrated with a lack of legislative progress, took on a more violent character fed by relationships with white supremacists and neo-Nazis.Current Issue

Subscribe today and Save up to $129.

White supremacists were already participants in the anti-abortion cause, as Loretta Ross wrote in the 1990s. In 1985, the KKK began creating wanted posters listing personal information for abortion providers (doxing before the Internet age). Randall Terry, founder of the anti-choice group Operation Rescue, and John Burt, regional director of the anti-abortion group Rescue America in the 1990s, adopted this tactic in the 1990s. Terrys first wanted poster targeted Dr. David Gunn, who was murdered in 1993 in Pensacola, Florida. Gunns successor, Dr. John Britton, targeted by a Rescue America wanted poser, was killed in 1994.

The Florida-based KKK organized a rally in support of Dr. Brittons killer, Paul Hill, and Tom Metzger, founder of the racist group White Aryan Resistance (WAR), condoned the killing if it protected Aryan women and children. Burt himself was a Florida Klansman prior to becoming Christian and an associate of both killers. Fundamentalist Christians and those people [the Klan] are pretty close, scary close, fighting for God and country, Burt told The New York Times in 1994. Some day we may all be in the trenches together in the fight against the slaughter of unborn children. Members of the Portland-based skinhead group American Front regularly joined Operation Rescue to protest abortion clinics. Tim Bishop, a representative of the white nationalist Aryan Nations, said, Lots of our people join [the anti-abortion movement]. Its part of our Holy War for the pure Aryan race.

Groups like the Confederate Knights of the Ku Klux Klan trafficked in rhetoric that mirrored that of the anti-abortion movementwith an anti-Semitic twist: More than ten million white babies have been murdered through Jewish-engineered legalized abortion since 1973 here in America and more than a million per year are being slaughtered this way. Metzger has claimed that abortion makes money for Jews and called Planned Parenthood a corrupt Jewish organization. In 1996, a series of bombings in Spokane, targeting a newspaper office, a bank, and a Planned Parenthood office, were perpetrated by members of the Phineas Priesthood, who followed the white separatist anti-Semitic religion Christian Identity. In the late 1990s, Eric Rudolph, a clinic bomber, and James Charles Kopp, who murdered a Jewish abortion provider returning home from synagogue, were affiliated with the anti-abortion terrorist organization Army of God and staunch Holocaust deniers.

While in recent years, the mainstream anti-choice movement has been careful to distance itself from overtly racist and white nationalist groups and figures, embedded anti-Semitism appears in the trivialization of the Holocaust and in coded appeals to neo-Nazis. Abolish Human Abortion (AHA), a more recently founded group led by young white men (in a movement that typically likes to put female leaders at the forefront for better mainstream appeal) that views that pro-life movement as too moderate, created an icon linking the acronym AHA in such a way as to resemble newer incarnations of swastikas that are proliferating among white supremacist groups, according to Mason.

If you like this article, please give today to help fund The Nations work.

AHA claims that the abortion holocaust exceeds all previous atrocities practiced by the Western World, a statement that signals to anti-Semites an implicit disbelief in the Nazi Holocaust and a trivializing of real historical persecutions. The anti-abortion movement has long framed abortion as a holocausta holocaust that it depicts as numerically more significant than the killing of 6 million Jewish people. Historian Jennifer Holland told Jewish Currents that because Jewish people in the United States are more pro-choice than other religious groups, anti-abortion activists often imply and even outwardly state that Jews are participating in a current genocide and were thus ideologically complicit in the Jewish Holocaust. This frame sometimes goes hand in hand with outright anti-Semitic denial that the Nazi Holocaust even happened.

The framing of abortion-as-holocaust is starkly visible in a law passed by Alabama in May banning abortion in nearly all circumstances and threatening abortion providers with up to 99 years in prison. The law states, More than 50 million babies have been aborted in the United States since the Roe decision in 1973, more than three times the number who were killed in German death camps, Chinese purges, Stalins gulags, Cambodian killing fields, and the Rwandan genocide combined. The framing of abortion as holocaust demeans the significance of the Nazi Holocaust, in turn feeding anti-Semitism already interwoven in the movement.

Florida State Senator Dennis Baxley, discussing the possibility of implementing similar legislation in his state, revealed that nativist fears of replacement went into support for the idea. When you get a birth rate less than 2 percent, that society is disappearing, Baxley said of Western Europe. And its being replaced by folks that come behind them and immigrate, dont wish to assimilate into that society and they do believe in having children.

Anti-choice figures continue to tout demographic concernswhich at their core are a form of white nationalismin order to oppose abortion. In the political sphere, Representative Steve King is the most prominent political figure to emerge as a symbol of both white supremacism and abortion opposition. If we continue to abort our babies and import a replacement for them in the form of young violent men, we are supplanting our culture, our civilization, King stated. King has taken far-right positions on both immigration and abortion, including defending rape and incest as necessary for historical population growth.

These overt expressions of demographic nativism by politicians making decisions about reproductive rights on the state and national level is cause for alarm. With the election of Donald Trump and the rise of the alt-rightan umbrella for white supremacist, male supremacist, and anti-Semitic mobilizationsthe kinder, gentler image the Christian right and the pro-life movement have strategically invested in may be slipping, but also may be less necessary.

Coexisting in abortion opposition is an ideology that honestly seeks to end abortion for people of all races and ethnicities, alongside a white supremacist ideology that only desires to prevent white women from obtaining abortions, but uses universal opposition to abortion as a pragmatic screen for its goals. As Kathleen Belew, author of Bring the War Home: The White Power Movement in Paramilitary America, told The Nation in an interview in September, for white supremacists, opposing abortion, opposing gay rights, opposing feminism, in white power discourse, all of this is tied to reproduction and the birth of white children.

Commenting on the strategic pragmatism of white supremacist movements, Jean Hardisty and Pam Chamberlain wrote in 2000 that public advocacy of abortion for women of color might alienate potential far right supporters who oppose all abortion. White supremacist leaders, like David Duke, have instead focused on other ways to deter birthrates among people of color, such as encouraging long-term contraception or condemning social welfare programs.

The relationship between Christian right anti-abortion, white supremacist, and secular male supremacist ideology is complex. While they often put aside their differences in order to collaborate on shared goals, the agendas are different and inclusive of conflict.

White supremacist responses demonstrated complicated feelings following the passage of the Alabama law, as the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which tracks hate and bigotry, reported. Some, like the founder of Gab, a popular alternative social media forum frequented by white supremacists and neo-Nazis, heralded the Alabama law. Other white supremacists were unsatisfied that the ban would apply to white women and women of color alike. Longtime white nationalist Tom Metzger eschewed the pragmatic approach in posting on Gab that he had instructed comrades in the Alabama state legislature to introduce a bill that releases all nonwhite women within the borders of Alabama to have free abortions on demand. (Its not clear whether this claim is true or which representatives he meant.)

Get unlimited digital access to the best independent news and analysis.

Andrew Anglin, founder of the neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer, writes that while abortion is sick and evil, white supremacists should be focused on the immigrant invasion. Lest readers be disappointed, Anglin reassured them, A great reckoning is comingand it is coming swiftly! The glorious vengeance we take upon these whores will shake the cosmos! Anglin recently referred to himself as the self-appointed spiritual successor to Elliot Rodger, the incel (involuntarily celibate) mass killer who intended retribution on all women for his being sexually rejected. Richard Spencer, the neo-Nazi credited with coining the term alt-right, tweeted that the ban should punish women who seek abortion, but instead demonizes doctors.

Spencers approach, aligning with his other misogynist comments on women, flies in the face of the Christian right frame of protecting women used to advance its agenda in the mainstream. But its the same approach Donald Trump took while on the presidential campaign trail in 2016, when he stated that women should receive some form of punishment if abortion were banned in the United States. After anti-abortion groups made clear that this comment ran afoul of their strategy for banning abortionthough not necessarily their actual preferencesTrump backtracked and instead focused on punishing doctors and stating that the woman is a victim.

On the other hand, MSNBC reported that AHA activists, who refer to themselves as abolitionists, stand for banning all abortion without exceptions, equating hormonal birth control (even the daily pill kind) with abortion, and advocating that women who have abortions be tried as murderers. Under the current Supreme Court, with its Trump-instated anti-choice majority, and the presidents own anti-woman rhetoric, misogyny, and nativism may be becoming more acceptable strategies.

Trump, after all, shows a perfect willingness to cater to the Christian right, but no genuine personal interest in opposing abortion. His brand of secular misogyny, mingling objectification and vilification of women, demonstrates the same ideology as that put forth by secular male supremacist mobilizations such as Mens Rights Activists (MRAs) and The Red Pill, which have little regard for womens rights and well-being. Trumps secretary of education, Betsy DeVos, demonstrated the administrations willingness to give an ear to male supremacist groups at the expense of women when she invited mens rights groups, which spread the myth that women make widespread false accusations of rape despite all data to the contrary, to weigh in on campus sexual assault policy. The result has been the regurgitation of MRA talking points and a proposed rule gutting Obama-era protection for survivors of campus sexual violence.

The anonymous nature of many online forums, like The Red Pill, poses a challenge for determining how much influence members of these communities have. We might be inclined to dismiss Metzgers claim to have comrades in the Alabama state legislature as mere bluster. But before Bonnie Bacarisses investigative reporting in The Daily Beast in 2017 uncovered New Hampshire Republican state Representative Robert Fisher as the founder of The Red Pill, which promotes conspiracist theories about feminist control of society and advocates manipulating women into sexual intercourse, these online misogynist forums were often assumed to be divorced from real-world politics. An online pseudonym that The Daily Beast has linked to Fishers personal e-mail address advocated voting for Trump in 2016 because hed been accused of sexual violence. A spokesperson for a state anti-violence group said that Fisher was part of a very vocal minority in the NH House right now that is very antiwoman and antivictim, and that there had been surprises in recent legislative votes.

These secular misogynist mobilizations address abortion in a variety of ways, though always through the lens of establishing male power and rights, even when endorsing legal abortion. Male supremacist communities seek control over womens bodies, whether it is through denying abortion care or coercing it, or through defending or even perpetrating sexual assault.

While arguments about mens and fathers rights have been used by politicians in suggesting abortion restrictions, such as requiring that a woman receive consent from the man she conceived with in order to obtain an abortion, this is not a key concern for the movements themselves. The misogynist Red Pill forum instead suggested women should have to obtain permission to give birth and that men be able to opt out of child support. The top posts on the Reddit forum r/mensrights related to abortion complain that women hold all the rights when it comes to reproduction, arguing that it is unjust that men have no say in the matter. Not because abortion kills the mans child, as the Christian right would argue, but because men are responsible for 18 years of child support if the pregnancy comes to term. MRAs and MGTOWs (Men Going Their Own Way) refer to this financial obligation as slavery and advocate for paper abortions, where a man can sever financial responsibilities and parental claims to a child.

Paul Elams A Voice for Men, a leading organization in the mens rights movement over the past decade, established in 2010 an editorial policy that would not take an official position on abortion. Elam did criticize womens authority over abortion and painted child support as a means of controlling men, writing, We have an entire fathers rights movement necessitated by the fact that millions of men have had their lives eviscerated, their freedom forfeit, their assets garnisheed, even where paternity fraud has been proven and acknowledged by the courts.

On Return of Kings (ROK), a website listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group for pickup artists (PUAs) and founded by Daryush Valizadeh, who goes by Roosh V., the coverage of abortion has shifted from a position accepting of abortionthough not out of support for womens human rightsto an increasingly anti-choice position. In 2013, abortion was discussed as beneficial because it reduces the minority population, demonstrating the racism already inherent in this ideology, and sav[es] a lot of alpha players from having to write a check to a single mom. Other posts promoted access to contraception as a means to prevent abortion, criticizing Christian right opposition to birth control as ineffective to stopping abortion.

Two years later, Valizadeh himself wrote a post on ROK titled Women Must Have Their Behavior and Decisions Controlled by Men, recommending that women receive permission from a guardian to access abortion or birth control. He continues, While my proposals are undoubtedly extreme on the surface and hard to imagine implementing, the alternative of a rapidly progressing cultural decline that we are currently experiencing will end up entailing an even more extreme outcome. (In case youre wondering, Valizadeh has identified other offensive posts as satire, but made no such excuse for this one.) In another 2015 article, The End Goal of Western Progressivism Is Depopulation, he condemns abortion rights, birth control, and female empowerment as causes of declining population that risk Western culture. Valizadeh has admitted to perpetrating acts that meet the legal definition of sexual assault and has endorsed the decriminalization of rape. Though he later claimed that endorsement was a thought experiment, similar excuses have been used by other misogynist leaders such as Paul Elam to provide cover for their most egregious statements.

Further ROK posts on abortion described it as murder and criticized abortion and birth control for destroying traditional families. Matt Forney, a writer whose personal blog appealed to both MRAs and PUAs, referred to women who obtain abortions as monsters, and wrote, If a girl is in favor of abortion, there is evil dwelling in her soul. Forney is a noted white nationalist who also wrote for AltRight.com, and Valizadeh attempted to join him in cozying up with the white supremacist alt-right, sharing the concern for the decline of Western culture. (He turned against this movement after meeting hostility for being a non-white man bragging about sexual intercourse with white women.) The strongest opposition to abortion within the sphere of misogynist groups thus appears to stem from an overlap with the white supremacist movement and concern for the decline of Western culture.

In 2019, Valizadeh announced that he had found God and would no longer promote casual sex. His prior arguments about male control of women and his opposition to abortion and contraception on the basis of concern about population decline, however, fit seamlessly into his new perspective, demonstrating how easy it can be to shift from secular to religious misogyny.

As elements of the male supremacist sphere take on more anti-abortion and white supremacist positions, the confluence of this overt misogyny and racism with the anti-abortion movement may strengthen the support for harsher anti-abortion legislation that eschews the anti-abortion pragmatism of the past and becomes more overt about its criminalization of pregnant people. In 2019, Georgia passed a six-week abortion ban, currently blocked in court, that applies criminal penalties for murder (which includes life imprisonment or the death penalty) for terminating a pregnancy, with no exception for pregnant people self-terminating. Bills like this fulfill Trumps and Abolish Human Abortions claims that the criminalization of abortion should include punishments for women; even though Trump backpedaled because of concerns from mainstream anti-choice groups, his support for this position is already out there, along with his dog whistles to white and male supremacists.

Anti-abortion violence has also been climbing in recent years, as has white supremacist and misogynist violence. Given the history of fatal anti-abortion violence in the 1990s perpetrated by individuals with the connections with white supremacist and anti-Semitic groups, the confluence of these ideologies must be cause for concern beyond the political realm as well.

View original post here:
The Long History of the Anti-Abortion Movement's Links to White Supremacists - The Nation

DC Fire Finds No Racist Intent by Recruits Making Hand Gesture in Photo – NBC4 Washington

Posted By on February 4, 2020

The D.C. Fire and EMS Department investigation into a group photo of recruits taken at the training academy in April found there was no racist intent.

The hand sign seen in the photo is similar to the nonverbal expression for "OK," but has come to be associated with white supremacy.

D.C. Fire and EMS said it was made aware of the photo this month.

Its investigation concluded the three recruits were making the gesture as part of a game and did not realize the gesture could be associated with white supremacy.

All 22 recruits in the photo were interviewed and none stated they believe there was any racist intent.

The Anti-Defamation League says on its website the "OK" hand gesture acquired a different significance in 2017 because of a hoax perpetuated on the online message board 4chan. The idea was to troll liberals by taking an innocent symbol and making them believe it was racist.

The hoax was so successful the symbol became a popular trolling tactic with right-leaning individuals and, ironically, some white supremacists, the ADL said.

Go here to see the original:
DC Fire Finds No Racist Intent by Recruits Making Hand Gesture in Photo - NBC4 Washington

Political extremists have found a home on this GOP-backed Facebook group – City & State

Posted By on February 4, 2020

When a group of self-described patriots known as Three Percenters flashed a hand gesture popular with white supremacists outside the state Capitol in January last year, there were few people around to notice. But one year later, their cause has joined the cacophony of voices opposing newly enacted criminal justice reforms from within a Facebook group called Repeal Bail Reform that is moderated by high-ranking New York Republican operatives, where a link to the photo has appeared more than two dozen times in recent weeks among the comments on various posts.

The groups moderators include state Republican Party Political Director James Thompson, Erie County GOP Chair Jesse Prieto and Assembly Minority Director of Conference Press Operations Nick Wilock none of whom answered questions sent to them by City & State. The Facebook group has rapidly grown to more than 160,000 members since Sheriff Jeff Murphy of Washington County, which borders Lake George and Massachusetts, created it in early January. Many of the posts concern news stories about the purported excesses of bail reform, the laws that passed last session to reduce the use of bail in minor offenses, but these in turn have led to more inflammatory commentary that targets Democrats, immigrants, Muslims and others in the comments sections.

It exposes the what has been the undercurrent for us of the bail rollback movement, Jessica Wisneski, a co-director of Citizens Action of New York, said of the Facebook group. It's this undercurrent of racism and it's an undercurrent that is perpetuating this kind of Trumpian fear-mongering, racist, anti-immigrant, anti-woman rhetoric that is all over right wing national politics showing up right here in New York.

The Repeal Bail Reform page is hardly the only online forum filled with incivility, but it is one used by GOP lawmakers and political operators to promote their views on the politically charged bail issue. Their success in reaching a wide audience in turn has catalyzed a response from group members that includes inflammatory comments that violate the groups stated code of conduct in a variety of ways, whether it is profane, racist, or violent language. One user said Gov. Andrew Cuomo needs to have some low life he released curb stomp him. Another post tied bail reform to an international conspiracy against western civilization: This is exactly what happened in Germany Sweden etc only they used Muslims Our legislators are using the indigenous lowlife population and crying racism Who is to say that these people havent been paid by the likes of Soros etc al?

While Murphy acknowledges that such incivility has required him to step up oversight of the group, he appears to view it as the cost of reaching such a large number of bail reform opponents with just a few clicks.We cannot monitor it 24/7, Murphy said in an email, about the Facebook page. The small percentage of people who made these inexcusable remarks does not take away from the more than 160,000 good New Yorkers from all backgrounds and ethnicity who are outraged by this policy and participate actively on this site. He said more than 400,000 posts and comments have been made to the group in January.

To join the group, a Facebook user must request membership on the page that is subject to moderator approval based on their agreement to obey a code of conduct and their answer to a yes or no question about whether they support bail reform. We have a zero-tolerance policy and have already blocked and deleted many of these comments and users already, Murphy said. Moderators later contacted by City & State did not clarify by publication time whether posts and comments are subject to the approval of moderators.

The new criminal justice reforms include limits on cash bail for most non-violent misdemeanors and felonies, which supporters say even the playing field between rich and poor criminal defendants. Criticisms posted to the page cross the boundary of normal political discourse on a number of fronts. This includes misogynistic comments directed at state Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes, racial dog whistles, suggestions of vigilante justice against criminal defendants, references to Islamophobic tropes, and a general demonization of supporters of bial reform. Why are all democrats evil and not just the lawmakers you agree with, commented one group member. Why does the whole party have to be evil?

While GOP lawmakers and their staff have not made such comments themselves, their posts have offered digital space for others to do so. In a comment under apost by state Sen. Fred Akshar, for example, another group member wrote that hog farms make good disposal sites for criminal defendants who might be targeted by vigilantes. Another comment thread, in response to a post by Senate GOP spokeswoman Candice Giove, included the comment that we are OBLIGATED to take back our government by force if necessary directly before Giove made her own comment warning that Democrats want to enact additional criminal justice reforms. The Senate GOP did not provide comment for this story.

The moderators have not condoned the use of politically incendiary language. And the groups code of conduct technically prohibits degrading comments about things like race, religion, culture, sexual orientation, gender or identity. At least one time, a moderator pushed back. A Jan. 18 post by Murphy promoting a petition against bail reform asked members to please be civil and courteous on this page because not doing so will get you blocked and you will be of no help to our cause. But rhetoric that violates the groups rules, is routinely posted in the comments, without drawing any response from the moderators.

Republicans have seized on bail reform as an issue that could help them find their way out of the political wilderness in a state where Democrats control the state Legislature and the governors mansion. We're going to hammer this every single day, state Senate Minority Leader John Flanagan of Long Island, who is not affiliated with the Facebook group, told reporters at the state Capitol on Jan. 9. It remains to be seen whether the issue will propel the GOP to regain some of the political ground they lost after the 2018 elections, allowingDemocrats to gaincontrol of the state Senate for the first time in a decade. While the Facebook group is just one part of their social media outreach to voters, it has clearly allowed them to reach a large audience through a minimal investment of money and time.

In addition to stoking resentment against Democrats and criminal justice reforms, some posts have also contributed to misconceptions about how the new criminal justice reforms work. A case in point is a Jan. 24 opinion column in the New York Post that includes a stock image photo that shows a man with a handgun robbing another person for a stack of $100 bills under the headline It looks like New Yorks getting the crime uptick politicians have been asking for. The column concerns a rise in some reported crimes in New York City in January 2020 compared to January 2019, but it should be noted that armed robbery with a handgun is a criminal offense where the applicability of cash bail has not been affected by the new law. Such nuance has evidently been lost among some members of the group who responded to apost that linked to the columnin a comment thread focused on how Democrats are supposedly intentionally promoting lawlessness to promote a Marxist takeover of state government.

Fears like these have helped drive new recruits to causes including an upstate chapter of the Three Percenters, which is organizing a March rally in Albany against bail reform that has been plugged in the Repeal Bail Reform group in the comments by various users more than two dozen times. While that might be just a tiny fraction of the overall comments on the site, the Three Percenters have gotten a lot more attention than they typically do. There could be a couple hundred people came off that bail reform page and came onto my page, said John Smaldon, a resident of Booneville in the Adirondacks, who manages a Facebook page of New York Three Percenters. Weve done a lot of marches in the past, and not many people come in New York. Even a few comments among hundreds of thousands can make a big difference for groups on the political fringes.

The Three Percenters name is a reference to the 3% of American colonists who supposedly took part in the American Revolution. That is what Smaldon said his group was referencing by pinching the forefinger and thumb and holding up the other three fingers. That same gesture has also been identified with white supremacists who adopted it in recent years following its introduction into right-wing political circles through the website 4chan. It began as a fake gesture of White Power to troll liberals, but eventually became a real gesture. The 'okay'gesture hoax was merely the latest in a series of similar 4chan hoaxes using various innocuous symbols, reads a post on the website of the Anti-Defamation League. In each case, the hoaxers hoped that the media and liberals would overreact by condemning a common image as white supremacist. Extremists now use it at times to signal white power, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

While the Three Percent movement in the past has been identified with white supremacy movement members reportedly provided security for white nationalist protesters at the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia there have been efforts in recent years to draw a distinction, including in Smaldons group. You cant say its anything racial because we take anybody: black, white, Puerto Ricans, he said. It has nothing to do with race. The group was among those that participated in a January rally in Richmond, Virginia that brought together a broad array of groups from the political right to protest new gun control laws.

Smaldon said that he, like other supporters of President Donald Trump, believes bail reform is just another sign that the country is getting overrun by undocumented immigrants, political radicals and general lawlessness. All law-abiding citizens right now are at risk we are all at danger for what our government did, Smaldon said. It just seems like everybody is against us all of a sudden.

While Smaldon and his fellow Three Percenters exist on the fringes of the political right, they are taking advantage of the same political opportunity that mainstream Republicans see in bail reform. With a significant segment of the statewide electorate in opposition, both the GOP and the fringe groups the party has flirted with in recent years stand to gain if they can only reach their target audiences. This has really been a real hot topic, said Smaldon.

See the article here:
Political extremists have found a home on this GOP-backed Facebook group - City & State

Remarginalizing the Jews; Regression to the Mean | Eric Rozenman – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 4, 2020

Americas status as home to the largest, freest, most prosperous Jewish diaspora has not closed. But it may be closing.

Another Holocaust is not about to begin, not so long as the United States and Israelthe only two countries able and willing to do socontain the current Iranian regime. That regimes position, certainly regarding the nearly seven million Jews who live in Israel, is the Holocaust never happened, and we intend to finish it.

The position of its key surrogate, Hezbollah in Lebanon, as expressed by its leader, Hassan Nasrallah, is if all Jews gather in Israel, it will save us the trouble of going after them worldwide.

The United States and Israel are home to roughly 12 million of the worlds 14 million Jews. Nevertheless, social-cultural conditions underlying the status of American Jewry have been unraveling, the percentage of people in countries of the democratic West who, while neither neo-Nazis or jihadis, are tired, even dismissive of Jews and their concerns, continues to grow.

A 2017 survey by the Anti-Defamation League showed 14 percent of Americans held anti-Jewish beliefs. A 2019 ADL poll in 14 European countries found 25 percent harbored strongly antisemitic attitudes.

Upheavals and revolutions are attempted by determined minorities; the question is whether they can draw fence-sitters to their sides.

The U.S. State Department has something it did not possess before 2004. That is a special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism. The current envoy, Elan Carr, felt it necessary to say last summer that every American synagogue and Jewish community center should have armed guards.

If a fairly senior U.S. government official had made such a statement 10 years ago, he or she would have been deemed unstable.

Last Decembers murderous attack on a kosher market in Jersey City, N.J.the primary target may have been an adjacent Jewish schoolthe butcher knife attack on a rabbis Chanukah celebration in Monsey, New York, and Novembers nearly-fatal stabbing of a congregant walking to a synagogue in the same area stunned, but perhaps should not have surprised.

Antisemitism is a euphemism for hatred of Judaism, Jews, andsince 1948increasingly hatred of the Jewish state. Nineteenth century German bigots introduced it to make their ancient prejudice sound scientific. It worked.

Old wine, new bottles

Hatred of Jews, veiled as national or racial antisemitism, would become common even as medieval church-based demonization of Jews declined. Karl Marx channeled Martin Luther, the former basically substituting his parasitical capitalist Jew for the latters demonic, anti-Christian one. Adolf Hitler would discover the simultaneously inferior yet dangerously cunning Jew leading oxymoronic capitalist-Bolsheviks in a war to the death against his imagined Aryan race.

The visible excesses of Nazi Jew-hatred that victorious Allied troops found as they liberated concentration camps in 1945 made open antisemitism disreputable in the West. For a generation or two. But no matter how many times Jews and non-Jews insisted Never again! no matter how many memorials and museums they erected, such actions did not establish a permanent new norm.

Robert Wistrich, one of the leading historians of antisemitism, observed in 2015 that [W]e must recognize much more clearly than before than since 1975 (with the passage of the scandalous U.N. resolution condemning Zionism as racism) hatred of Israel has increasingly mutated into the chief vector for the new antisemitism.

Central to anti-Zionist antisemitism is the false Palestinian narrative of Zionist displacement and Israeli oppression. False in that, as Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt both noted, migrationmuch of it illegalby Arabs to Jewish-developed areas of Mandatory Palestine, outpaced British-limited legal Jewish immigration. Also false in that Palestinian Arabs under Israeli control, according to a 2005 report by the U.N., of all sources, enjoyed higher living standards than Arabs in many Middle Eastern countries.

Regardless, the Palestinian narrative hasthrough incessant reiteration and eventual widespread acceptanceproved a gateway drug. By fomenting anti-Zionism, it helped renormalize antisemitism.

Shortly before murdering 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life synagogue in October, 2018 the accused posted that Jews were the spawn of Satan, the Trump administration part of the Z.O.G.Zionist Occupied Governmentand that the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, which brought many Jews to the United States around the turn of the 20th century, now supported immigration to undermine his people, white nationalists.

Six months later, a similar white supremacist killed one and wounded others at a synagogue in Poway, California. The death toll might have been higher, but several members not only were armed but also trained, and the congregation itself had received security trainingwhat to do, who to heed, where to goin case of attack.

Contrary to the belief of many liberal American Jews, the threat did not originate with the 2016 election of Donald Trump as president. A few weeks after al-Qaedas Sept. 11, 2001 destruction of New Yorks World Trade Center and attack on the Pentagon, journalist Jonathan Rosen, writing in The New York Times Magazine, confessed:

I had somehow believed that the Jewish Question, which so obsessed both Jews and antisemites in the 19th and 20th centuries, had been solvedmost horribly by Hitlers final solution, most hopefully by Zionism. But more and more I feel Jews being turned into a question mark once again. How is it, the world still asksabout Israel, about Jews, about methat you are still here?

The next year, 2002, a mob at San Francisco State University surrounded pro-Israel students and shouted, Hitler didnt finish the job! Go back to Russia! and Get out or well kill you! Prof. Laurie Zoloth, director of Jewish studies at the school, recalled:

I turned to the police and to every administrator I could find and asked them to remove the counter-demonstrators. The police told me that they had been told not to arrest anyone, and that if they did, it would start a riot. I told them that it already was a riot. Eventually, police marched the pro-Israel students to the Hillel House and posted a guard.

In 2017, conditions at San Francisco State only having deteriorated during the intervening 15 years, Jewish students filed a federal civil rights suit against the university for enabling creation of a hostile learning environment. That is, an environment of aggressive anti-Zionist antisemitism.

Chronic and acute

The year before, in 2016, Prof. Alvin Rosenfeld, a specialist in the study of antisemitism at the University of Indiana, acknowledged that hed been wrong for many years to believe that after the Holocaust hatred of Jews would not reappear as a major trend throughout the West.

Examples, on-campus and off, since 9/11 are virtually endless. Just a few, from 2019 and early 2020:

Last August, Jewish and pro-Israel representatives criticized a proposed model ethnic studies curriculum for California high schools not only for its shocking omission of any mention of Jewish Americans or antisemitism or its blatant anti-Israel bias but also for its clear attempt to politically indoctrinate students to adopt the view that Israel and its Jewish supporters are part of interlocking systems of oppression and privilege that must be fought with direct action and resistance.

Halted by the legislature, the question remained: How did California teachers, administrators and educational consultants draft such a plan in the first place?

In September, Columbia Universitys Global Leaders Forum hosted Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Mohamad is a self-proclaimed antisemite and Israel-hater. Hes also a Holocaust denier and believes the United States, not Muslims, staged the 9/11 attacks. Columbia hosted Mohamad, but we can be sure it will not feature any anti-black, anti-Hispanic, anti-women, or anti-LGBTQ global leaders. A certain people, a particular stripe, is being removed from the rainbow coalition.

In December, a Jersey City school board member called local Jews brutes attempting to intimidate blacks into selling their homes and expressed sympathy for the kosher market killers. Are we brave enough to stop the assault on black communities of America? she asked. The mayor and governor called for her resignation.

But a New Jersey congressional candidate urged empathy for the board member. The county Democratic Black Caucus said shed rightly drawn attention to important issues. At a subsequent board meeting, one of several supporters called her the Rosa Parks of this era. The antisemitic label is a bunch of crap, throw it away, and shes not resigning.

As for empathy, The Washington Post, in its print editions, did not cover the January 5 New York City march against Jew-hatred in which an estimated 25,000 people participated. Marchers included many from the Washington area. Marginalization proceeds by omission as well as commission.

A 2019 American Jewish Committee survey showed nearly one-third of U.S. Jews avoid wearing clothing or displaying items that would publicly identify them as Jews.

How did Jew-hatred re-emerge, vampire-like, in Western Europe and North America, moving from the fringes of the left and right toward the center?

The woke vampire

Generational turnover helped. This was the passing of World War II veterans who fought the Nazis. For them, domestic antisemites sounded like Nazis.

An ideological shift also contributed. The erosion of traditional understanding of right and wrong by post-modern relativism permitted a non-judgmentalism that blurred identification of and judgment against enemies of the West. It supported the noxious claim that one persons terrorist could become another persons freedom fighter. Especially if those being terrorized were Israelis, were Jews.

While Jew-hatred from the anti-democratic right in America is sometimes homicidal, it does not shape the culture. That happens through the influence of the illiberal left. The avatar of the movement was Columbia University Professor of Literature Edward Said.

A member of the Palestine Liberation Organizations national council, Said wrote the tremendously influential 1979 work, Orientalism. This paved the way for the terrorist-freedom fighter equation and helped found an entire discipline, post-colonial studies. Through it, Israel was delegitimized and the West tarred as racist and imperialist. Those who benefitted greatly in a liberal democratic, capitalist Westamong them the Jews as a groupincreasingly are tarred by woke progressives in the United States.

Propagated for nearly two generations now in academia and secondarily through communications media and recurrently even the entertainment industry, this ideology brings us the Jersey City school board member, her defenders and more articulate bigots like Linda Sarsour.

Sarsour has been one of the leaders of the Womens March movement. A Palestinian American, she believes nothing is creepier than Zionismthe Jewish peoples national liberation movementthat Israel is a country based on Judaisms white supremacist outlook, and that a feminist cannot be a Zionist.

Something of a hijab-wearing fashion plate and a progressive in good standing, Sarsour was one of Glamour magazines 2017 women of the year. She also has served as an official campaign surrogate for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) run for the Democratic Partys presidential nomination.

In addition to generational and ideological shifts has come a demographic-religious one. In 1960, Americas population was 180 million, a large majority of whom were Protestants and Catholics who went to church at least occasionally. Six millionthree percentwere Jews. Jews who did not need armed guards at synagogues and JCCs.

In 2020, there are close to 330 million people in America. And while Christians remain by far the largest religious group, their percentage of the whole declines. Meanwhile, according to presidential exit polling, the fastest growing denominational group, now nearly 20 percent, is the Nones, those who identify with no established church.

An estimated 5.5 millionabout 1.6 percentare Jews. They represent a declining percentage of the population in which blacks comprise more than 12 percent, Hispanics 17 percent.

Selling the ideas of Judeo-Christian ethics as the backbone of American civic culture, of a special relationship between a United States and Israel of shared, democratic values, and of Jews as members of an historically oppressed minority group rather than as a conspicuous part of the purported oppressive, capitalist, white patriarchy could become increasingly difficult. Especially when an ADL survey indicates 29 percent of African Americans hold antisemitic attitudes and another poll shows a majority of millennials dont know what Auschwitz means.

A news photograph from singer Aretha Franklins 2018 funeral showed four men sitting on the altar, facing the 4,000 mourner-celebrants. They were the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. Al Sharpton, Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan, and former President Bill Clinton.

Sharpton helped incite the deadly anti-Jewish 1991 Crown Heights riots and 1995 Freddys Fashion Mart killings, never apologized but went on to host an MSNBC program and advise President Barack Obama on civil rights. Farrakhan is perhaps the countrys highest profile Jew-hater and one who, like the Pittsburgh shooter, remains obsessed with satanic Jews. Tolerance of these men, confirmed by Clintons presence, also speaks to marginalization of Jews and their concerns.

Historian Wistrich observed that there is an illusory belief that more Holocaust education and memorialization can serve as an effective antidote to contemporary antisemitism. This notion is quite unfounded. On the contrary, today Holocaust inversion (the perverse transformation of Jews into Nazis and Muslims into victimized Jews) all-too-often becomes a weapon with which to pillory Israel and denigrate the Jewish people.

Instead, said Wistrich, Jews can and must first clarify for ourselves our vocation, raison detre, moral priorities and the deeper meaning of our near-miraculous return to the historic homeland. This is the other side of the coin in our essential and relentless fight against antisemitism. [L]et us be worthy of the scriptural promise that the Torah will come forth from Zion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.

A U.S. Jewish community that embraces its historic mission, that refuses to tolerate its adversaries or those who do, that makes growth in knowledge and numbers priorities and asserts both its American citizenship and Jewish peoplehood, will be a more desirable coalition partner and less likely to be marginalized.

Eric Rozenman is communications consultant for the Jewish Policy Center. This article draws on his book, Jews Make the Best Demons: Palestine and the Jewish Question (2018, New English Review Press). Any opinions expressed above are his own.

Link:
Remarginalizing the Jews; Regression to the Mean | Eric Rozenman - The Times of Israel

Stephen King Quits Facebook In A Huff For ‘Flood Of False Information’ – The Daily Wire

Posted By on February 4, 2020

Author Stephen King has decided to quit Facebook, objecting to the social media giants refusal to fact-check political advertisements.

King, 72, was a big user of Facebook, but deactivated his account on Friday.

In a weird, 21st century twist, King took to another social media platform, Twitter, to announce his departure.

Im quitting Facebook. Not comfortable with the flood of false information thats allowed in its political advertising, nor am I confident in its ability to protect its users privacy. Follow me (and Molly, aka The Thing of Evil) on Twitter, if you like, King wrote to his 5.6 million followers.

King, the author of The Shining and numerous other horror novels, was reacting to Facebooks refusal to ban paid political ads. Facebook has also refused to fact-check political ads, which has also prompted others to leave the site.

Explaining its decision, Facebook wrote that in the absence of regulation, Facebook and other companies are left to design their own policies. We have based ours on the principle that people should be able to hear from those who wish to lead them, warts and all, and that what they say should be scrutinized and debated in public.

On the same day that King announced he was quitting Facebook, founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg spoke at at the Silicon Slopes Tech Summit in Utah, vowing to support free speech. Increasingly were getting called to censor a lot of different kinds of content that makes me really uncomfortable, Zuckerberg said.

King follows another Hollywood icon, actor Mark Hamill, in leaving the social media giant.In January, he announced that he was quitting Facebook, also criticizing the companys policy on political ads.

So disappointed that #MarkZuckerberg values profit more than truthfulness that Ive decided to delete my @Facebook account. I know this is a big Who Cares? for the world at large, but Ill sleep better at night, he wrote on Twitter. He hashtagged the post #PatriotismOverProfits.

In his tweet, Hamill linked a New York Times story about Facebooks decision. Rob Leathern, Facebooks director of product management, defended Facebooks decision to accept all political ads, telling The Times, Ultimately, we dont think decisions about political ads should be made by private companies.

In the absence of regulation, Facebook and other companies are left to design their own policies. We have based ours on the principle that people should be able to hear from those who wish to lead them, warts and all, and that what they say should be scrutinized and debated in public, Leathern said.

Other high-profile figures who have deleted their accounts include the singer Cher, comedian Will Ferrell, actor Jim Carrey and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Borat actor Sacha Baron Cohen criticized Facebook in a November speech as he accepted an award from the Anti-Defamation League, saying that if Facebook had existed during Adolf Hitlers reign atop the Third Reich, he could have posted 30-second ads on his solution to the Jewish problem.

Facebook fired back, saying Cohen misrepresented Facebooks policies because Facebook bans hate speech.

While Hamill may have quit Facebook, he remains active on Twitter and Instagram (which, by the way, is owned by Facebook). Twitter, though, has banned all political advertisements from its platform, with the companys chief executive Jack Dorsey tweeting that he believed political message reach should be earned, not bought.

See more here:
Stephen King Quits Facebook In A Huff For 'Flood Of False Information' - The Daily Wire

Black history ‘cant be like some old faded book. Its got to come alive.’ Local events offered to learn more – Tulsa World

Posted By on February 4, 2020

Alicia Latimer didnt lack for an education in black history as a child.

I grew up in Mobile, in the Alabama of George Wallace and little girls being burned in a church, she said.

In Tulsa, Latimer has made a career out of helping a city confront a chapter in black history many preferred to keep hidden.

Now the African-American Resource Center coordinator at the Tulsa City-County Library, Latimer said she had lived here for 20 years when her mother-in-law mentioned something about a riot in casual conversation.

I said: What riot? I had no idea. Thats a shame! Latimer said. My son attended Booker T. Washington (High School), and he never learned about it.

Its painful, but I did the research. My husbands uncles were in Tulsa at the time. One of them was a detainee. I am a member of Mount Zion Baptist Church, which was burned to the ground. I really do have skin in the game all of Tulsa has skin in the game.

Latimer is among a host of Tulsans leading Black History Month events in February who say theyre still trying to right age-old wrongs in the teaching of American history, in general, while embracing new educational opportunities amid global interest in the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

This years African-American Heritage Bowl, an annual quiz bowl held during Black History Month at the Rudisill Regional Library, will focus solely on the massacre. It will serve as the kick off of full year of events leading to the 100th anniversary.

Latimer and members of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission wrote a special quiz book for the event with 200 questions and answers. In it, she included an African proverb that guides her work: Until the lion tells the tale, stories of victory of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.

A quiz bowl may sound a bit trite, but Latimers aim is to get the community, and especially youth, to engage with their hometowns own black history.

For me, its in my soul. Weve got to tell this story and tell it in a passionate way. It cant be like some old faded book. Its got to come alive, she said. Yes, theres winning and its fun, but theres a message and education in it.

Another community event, which has already drawn interest from more than 1,100 Facebook users, will be a discussion of race and responsibility as depicted in the wildly popular HBO TV series called Watchmen.

Sean Latham, director of the Oklahoma Center for the Humanities and an English professor at the University of Tulsa, will frame the discussion with Nehemiah Frank, founder and editor of The Black Wall Street Times.

Black history is U.S. history, but for so long, U.S. history and U.S. literature and culture was taught through a white lens, said Latham.

The extraordinary thing Watchmen did was retell the history of super heroes in 20th century America by making the Tulsa Race Massacre the pivotal moment.

What happens if we saw that as an event that was every bit as important as World War II or the invention of the atomic bomb? It imagines reparations that were paid to those who lost lives and property and imagines a fundamentally different future.

The latest installment of Real Talk, a series of panel discussions about topics of critical importance to marginalized communities, will focus on the common struggle for equal rights experienced by blacks and Jews in the United States.

Among the invited panelists will be Andrew Spector, a former Tulsa elementary school teacher who is now working at Leadership Tulsa on a childrens social justice program he co-founded called Tulsa Changemakers.

I think I was asked to speak because of a combination of my Jewish background and my interest in racial, economic and immigration justice, Spector said.

There is a shared oppression and persecution of both black people and Jewish people, as well as the shared activism. I hope that my voice and my experiences can speak to the importance of Black History Month and Black history as American History.

And while every day is black history day in Anthony Cherrys history and African-American studies classroom at Booker T. Washington High School, Cherry says that still is not something to be taken for granted in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

He grew up here but never learned about the Tulsa Race Massacre, Oklahomas historically black towns or the complicated history of black and Native American relations until college. Cherry attended predominantly white schools in the 80s and 90s, and between kindergarten and 12th grade, he had only one teacher who was not white.

My goal became to give the kind of empowering lessons I wish I could have had as a young student, he said. High-quality black history lessons were practically nonexistent.

Cherry recalled asking his eighth-grade English teacher why that was, and her response had a profound impact on him and the course of his life.

She told me that she couldnt think of how black history applied to her curriculum, he said. Her flippancy and dismissiveness of black literary contributions confused and even angered me. When I tried to press the issue, she threatened to discipline me if I did not leave her alone immediately.

He began his own quest to learn black history, with encouragement from his parents, that set him on a path that led all the way to earning a masters degree in American history from the University of Tulsa.

I fell in love with American history in general. It became my passion to uncover hidden truths about myself, the often overlooked contributions of my ancestors and the potential for a more prosperous future in American society, Cherry said.

Black History Month will be commemorated in Cherrys classroom with a special unit on the World War I era from black perspectives, including the Harlem Hellfighters, the Great Migration, the Harlem Renaissance, the birth of jazz, and the Tulsa Race Massacre.

This is the time period I am most passionate about due to the many dynamic challenges and triumphs for black Americans, Cherry said.

Originally posted here:

Black history 'cant be like some old faded book. Its got to come alive.' Local events offered to learn more - Tulsa World


Page 1,229«..1020..1,2281,2291,2301,231..1,2401,250..»

matomo tracker