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Anti-Zionism and antisemitism – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on December 25, 2019

The reports, both in Israel and abroad, about the resolution passed by the French National Assembly on December 3 on combating antisemitism in Europe in general and France in particular were an example of sloppy reporting.Some reports declared that what was passed by the National Assembly, by a vote of 154 deputies in favor and 72 against, was a law rather than a resolution. Some reported that the resolution equated anti-Zionism with antisemitism. Some declared that President Emmanuel Macron, who supported the initiation of the resolution, had in fact declared himself an antisemite since he also supported the European Union decision in its demand that all products manufactured in Jewish settlements in the West Bank and the Golan Heights be marked as such, and not as products of Israel.Let us put some order into this story. First of all, the resolution, which endorses the operational definition of antisemitism used by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA an intergovernmental organization founded in 1998 to strengthen, advance and promote Holocaust education research and remembrance) as a useful educational and training tool for the support of the judicial and law enforcement authorities in their efforts to detect and prosecute antisemitic attacks more efficiently and effectively, called upon the French government, to disseminate this definition in educational work, within the law enforcement and judicial services.The term anti-Zionism was not mentioned in the resolution itself, but only in the explanatory introduction to the resolution (that is not part of the resolution itself), which stated: Anti-Zionism acts can sometimes obscure antisemitic realities. Criticizing the very existence of Israel as a collective composed of Jewish citizens is tantamount to hatred toward the Jewish community as a whole, just as collectively holding Jews accountable for the policies of the Israeli authorities is an expression of antisemitism.Among those who contributed to the disinformation on this issue was the Prime Ministers Office. On February 20 Macron stated at the 34th annual dinner of the Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions that he was planning to get France to adopt a definition of antisemitism, to combat the rising tide of antisemitism, which would mention hatred of Israel. On the same day he informed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the declaration would use the definition of antisemitism issued by IHRA, and Netanyahus office reacted by saying that this definition determines that anti-Zionism is a form of antisemitism.Well, it does not. The non-legally binding working definition of antisemitism issued by IHRA on May 26, 2016 (and adopted by Israels 34th government on January 22, 2017), does not mention the term anti-Zionism. The definition states that antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.There follows a list of examples to illustrate what is meant by this definition. Among 11 examples mentioned, the following five relate to Israel: Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor. Applying double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation. Using the symbols and images associated with classic antisemitism (e.g., claims of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to characterize Israel or Israelis. Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis. Holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the State of Israel.Only the first of these relates to anti-Zionism, using the most basic definition of Zionism as the realization of the right of the Jewish people to a state. It doesnt say anything about the Jewish state holding sovereignty in only part of the Land of Israel, and that there is another people living in the same territory, and also claiming rights in it. Consequently, it also does not relate to the question whether criticism of Israel for the way it handles 20% of its citizens, who are Arabs, and millions of Palestinians living in parts of the Land of Israel that are not part of the sovereign territory of the State of Israel, but which it controls to various degrees, may be considered antisemitic or anti-Zionist. Israels Jewish right-wing and religious parties would certainly answer this question in the affirmative. Israels Jewish center-left parties would answer it in the negative. This divergence results from different perceptions of what Zionism is all about, besides the realization of the right of the Jewish people to self-determination.One may also wonder whether criticism of the fact that Israel does not always act in accordance with the principles mentioned in its Proclamation of Independence, relating to democracy and minority rights, or its ambivalence regarding inconvenient rules of international law, can or cannot be considered manifestations of antisemitism or anti-Zionism. Again, how one answers this question depends on ones political and even religious positions.IN SHORT, while the IHRA definition of antisemitism is certainly a worthy effort, on some issues it introduces more confusion than clarity.As to the French National Assembly adopting the definition, following its adoption by several European organizations, the US, Germany and a handful of other states, it should be noted that of the 577 deputies in the Assembly, under 40% participated in the vote, and many of those who stayed away (including many members of Macrons party, La Rpublique En Marche!) did so because they had reservations about its adoption.Will the resolution make a significant contribution to the French effort to combat growing manifestations of antisemitism in France? Probably not, especially since the definition does not profess to be legally binding in any way, and the problem is not really one of semantics but, rather, of tangible manifestations of hatred.Will the resolution improve relations between Israel and France? Not really, because the problems in French-Israeli relations are not about how well France deals with manifestations of antisemitism in its territory, but disagreements over the policies of the governments of the two countries toward the Middle East in general and Iran and the Palestinians in particular. Perhaps a change of government in Israel will do the trick.

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Anti-Zionism and antisemitism - The Jerusalem Post

Hindu nationalists are seeking the Israelification of India; they must be stopped Middle East Monitor – The Union Journal

Posted By on December 25, 2019

Of their quest to refashion India as a Hindu state, Hindutva extremists have positioned themselves on a collision course with the nations secular structure. Their objective is a minimum of the reformation of India as an ethno-religious state affording particular rights and privileges to Hindus inside a multi-tier system of citizenship. The mannequin state that they aspire to duplicate is Israel.

The Zionist state has turn into an aspiration as a lot as an inspiration for far-right nationalists all over the world, India included. Based to guard the exclusivity of 1 ethno-religious majority over all people else particularly the indigenous inhabitants Israel is seemed upon with envy by the likes of white nationalist Richard Spencer. The far-right extremist, who as soon as described himself as a white Zionist, praised Israel gushingly following its adoption of the Nation-State Regulation final yr, which declared Israel to be a state of the Jewish folks solely. The invoice was criticised strongly for relegating non-Jews to secondary standing in a transfer akin to the US or Britain declaring themselves to be white, Christian nations by regulation.

Israels capability to cross itself off as a democracy regardless of relegating minorities to second-class standing has a particular enchantment for ultra-nationalists. Its energy as a extremely militarised nation, capable of keep an apartheid system with out struggling any penalties on the worldwide stage, has a singular attraction. The success of the Zionist state has turned what had been as soon as ultra-nationalist fantasies which many thought, mistakenly, had been relegated to the dustbin of historical past into a sensible political imaginative and prescient in a world beset by worry and battle.

In truth, removed from being a democracy, Israel is exclusive in the way in which that it has created a multi-tier citizenship modal inside the state for the aim of sustaining its Jewish character. Numerous legal guidelines have been enacted to construct the state round institutionalised discrimination. The 1950 Regulation of Return, for instance, incorporates the elemental ideology of Zionism: all Jews, irrespective of the place they had been born, have the inalienable proper emigrate to Israel. Its simple to see why ethno-nationalists internationally wish to see this replicated elsewhere.

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The 1952 Regulation of Citizenship (higher referred to as the Nationality Regulation), in the meantime, provides all individuals whore accorded Jewish nationality within the above Regulation of Return the proper to say Israeli citizenship routinely upon arriving at Ben Gurion Airport, Tel Aviv, with none formal procedures. The identical regulation, nevertheless, stipulates particular protocols for non-Jews who want to have citizenship.

Proper-wing nationalists discover Israels extraterritorial notion of sovereignty interesting. On this type of political order, citizenship is granted to anybody sharing the identical ethnicity or faith, no matter the place they stay on the earth. In Israels case, solely Jews are granted nationality rights, whereas non-Jews residing in the identical territory are disadvantaged of such rights.

Not like liberal democracies within the West, Israel upholds a constitutionally-imposed distinction between citizenship and nationality. Solely Jews are granted nationality and capable of benefit from the full spectrum of rights granted by the state. An odious system of delivering state advantages is used so as to foster an impression that Israel is just not discriminating in opposition to non-Jews.

The separation of providers between nationwide establishment and authorities establishment permits for the authorized siphoning-off of sources to supply providers for Jewish residents solely. For instance, establishments financed by Zionist teams such because the Jewish Nationwide Fund can and do discriminate brazenly in favour of Jews with out seeming to taint the apparently democratic authorities with the stench of racism.

OPINION: This triumvirate of evil has turned its sights on Kashmir

This sort of Jew/non-Jew bifurcation of public providers denies non-Jewish residents of the state from accessing funds and providers open to Jews solely. With 92 per cent of the land of Israel owned by the JNF, a lot of it expropriated from Palestinians, non-Jewish Israeli residents are disadvantaged of entry; theyre unable by regulation to personal, lease, stay or work on it.

Israel is thus a mannequin to mimic so far as Hindutva ideologues are involved. Guided by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Hindu nationalists search to Israelify India right into a racialised state. Their reasoning is easy: if Israel is accepted because the solely democracy within the Center East regardless of its many apartheid insurance policies, then why cant India proceed to say to be the biggest democracy on the earth whereas turning into an ethno-religious state?

Such a undertaking is fraught with hazard. The Hindutva imaginative and prescient for India is sort of sure to fire up the demon of communal strife, the like of which led to the killing of thousands and thousands in the course of the nations partition and independence in 1948.

Not like Israel, which was based on ethno-religious tribalism moderately like Pakistan Hindutva ideologues must abolish the nations secular structure to grasp their imaginative and prescient. The conceptual shift made doable via propaganda and rhetoric has been underway for a while, with among the worst dehumanising language getting used to explain Indian Muslims now turning into socially and politically acceptable.

Indian ministers have fuelled anti-Muslim hostility by demanding the discount of authorized safety for minorities and suggesting that western requirements of human rights are by some means not suitable with India. The same argument was made by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in defence of Israels proper to proceed its annexation coverage by disregarding the human, civil and political rights of Palestinians and insisting that making use of worldwide regulation to the state of affairs in Israel-Palestine merely isnt possible.

In fact, simply as there are anti-Zionist Jews who problem Israel with regard to its discriminatory insurance policies, not all Hindus endorse Modis racist political undertaking. Certainly, many denounce Hindutvas ideology as a malign distortion of Hinduism itself.

Nonetheless, as is commonly the case in such ideological battles for hearts and minds, reasonable voices are drowned out by the roar of fanatics looking for to recreate what they envisage to be imagined previous glories. Spurred on by the worldwide paralysis of assist for human rights and the rising disregard of worldwide regulation, despots, autocrats and ideologues of all political and spiritual backgrounds are seizing this second to push the boundaries of whats and isnt acceptable.

Past the rhetoric, measures are underway to vary the face of India. Amongst the inflammatory steps taken by Modi since his re-election in Might is the push for brand new laws, the Citizenship Modification Invoice (CAB). This controversial transfer, which threatens to demote the standing of the nations 2 hundred million Muslim residents, sparked protests throughout the nation lately; no less than 20 folks have been killed in clashes with the safety forces.

The invoice grants amnesty to non-Muslim unlawful immigrants from three neighbouring international locations, specifically Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Whereas Indias federal authorities says that the regulation will defend spiritual minorities fleeing persecution, opponents say that by dividing alleged migrants into Muslims and non-Muslim classes, it explicitly and blatantly seeks to enshrine spiritual discrimination within the regulation, opposite to the nations longstanding, secular structure and ethos.

The CAB is barely one of many initiatives threatening Indias structure. One other is the pan-India citizen verification course of referred to as the Nationwide Register of Residents (NRC). Critics say that it has turn into weaponised by hard-line Hindus and that its true motive is to disenfranchise lots of Indias Muslims. When it was trialled within the Indian State of Assam, 1.9 million primarily Muslim residents had been made stateless in a single day.

OPINION: India annexes Kashmir below the darkish shadow of Netanyahu and Modis far-right embrace

By themselves, the CAB and NRC might seem innocent. Seen inside the context of the rise of Hindutva and the march in the direction of re-creating India as a Hindu state, although, these measures serve a hostile and divisive political agenda.

The worldwide group should assist all Indians of their resistance to the hard-line Hindu nationalists and never indulge Hindutvas racist ideologues in the identical method that it has indulged Zionism since 1948. Hindu nationalists are clearly looking for the Israelification of India; they have to be stopped.

The views expressed on this article belong to the creator and dont essentially mirror the editorial coverage of Center East Monitor.

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Hindu nationalists are seeking the Israelification of India; they must be stopped Middle East Monitor - The Union Journal

The International Criminal Court’s Incoherent Case against Israel – Mosaic

Posted By on December 25, 2019

Last Friday, in response to a petition filed by the Palestinian Authority, Fatou Bensouda, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), announced that she is opening an investigation against Jerusalem for alleged war crimes committed during the 2014 Gaza war and in subsequent anti-terror efforts. Twice before, Bensouda had rebuffed the courts request that she investigate Israel for other allegations. Ben-Dror Yemini points out some of the many flaws of the current investigation:

[First], a complaint to the ICC can only be filed by a state, which Palestine is not. In addition, the Oslo Accords state that the Palestinian Authority does not possess the legal standing to file such a petition at an international court. But . . . this is an assembly of judges who have been appointed by nations hostile to Israel.

It is a fact that the majority of fatalities [in military conflicts around the world] over the last two decades have been innocent civilians. Sometimes it is done with malice, such as the Darfur genocide or the use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime against its civilians or the Iranian-sponsored bombings and starvation in Yemen. Sometimes it is done unintentionally, such as the death and destruction in the Iraqi city of Mosul, where some 190,000 civilians perished in the battle against Islamic State.

Apart from the former president of Sudan, Omar al-Bashir, none of the people involved in these incidents was ever indicted. Bashir was never extradited, due to widespread support from various Arab and Muslim nations, nations in Africa, as well as China and Russia.

[Moreover], the data show that compared with other militaries around the world, Israel has far fewer civilian casualties during its military operations.

Read more at Ynet

More about: ICC, International Law, Palestinian Authority, Sudan, Syrian civil war

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The International Criminal Court's Incoherent Case against Israel - Mosaic

Anti-Defamation League Wants Jersey City School Trustee To …

Posted By on December 25, 2019

JERSEY CITY, NJ The Anti-Defamation League has called for embattled school board trustee Joan Terrell-Paige to resign from her position following "her anti-Semitic, inflammatory, and deeply-hurtful comments."

Terrell-Paige said in a long, since-deleted Facebook post said "Where was all this faith and hope when black homeowners were threatened, intimidated, and harassed by I WANT TO BUY YOUR HOUSE brutes of the Jewish community?"

Terrell-Paige made the comments just days after a mass shooting in Jersey City's Greenville neighborhood left six people dead, including Joseph Seals, a longtime city police detective.

The ADL said in a statement it "wholeheartedly rejects and condemns" Terrell-Paige's comments in the strongest possible terms."

The anti-hate organization said that Terrell-Paige's "lack of remorse or self-reflection following the incident has rendered her unfit to continue to serve on the Board of Education a body entrusted with modeling our shared values of diversity, tolerance, and inclusion for students in our local Jersey City public schools."

Terrell-Paige also said that the Jewish "brutes" waved bags of money at black homeowners in Ward F, according to a report on NorthJersey.com, which showed a screenshot of the comments.

"By insinuating that Jewish 'brutes' have taken Jersey City, waving 'bags of money' to force people out of their homes, Ms. Terrell-Paige has invoked deeply painful anti-Semitic stereotypes related to wealth, greed, and control. She has also drawn gross generalization about the Jewish community based on the actions of a few."

The ADL also claims that Terrell-Paige has "also brazenly suggested" that the victims of the shooting "were somehow responsible for being targeted, and that the attack was therefore somehow justified. It is hard to understand how reprehensible, and how harmful, this is to a community still reeling from the attacks. There is absolutely no excuse for domestic terrorism, and this is a message that we would expect every Jersey City School Board member to make abundantly clear to our young people."

Besides the ADL, Gov. Phil Murphy, Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, and Jersey City Board of Education President Sudhan Thomas have all called for Terrell-Paige to resign from the board.

Fulop said in a tweet Tuesday morning that he was "saddened" by Terrell Paige's comments.

"Her comments don't represent Jersey City or the sentiment in the community at all," Fulop said. "The African-American community in Greenville has been nothing short of amazing over the last week helping neighbors."

One of the suspects in the mass shooting, David Anderson, 47, appeared to have a connection to the Black Hebrew Israelite movement, a law enforcement official told The New York Times. The Southern Poverty Law Center has called the movement a hate group. The movement has no connection to mainstream Judaism.

Related:

Email: daniel.hubbard@patch.com

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Anti-Defamation League Wants Jersey City School Trustee To ...

Protesters call on Boston police to withdraw from Israel trip – The Boston Globe

Posted By on December 25, 2019

Participants learn about Israeli security forces strategies to deter and disrupt terrorist attacks, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Those are practices Jewish Voice for Peace and other critics believe lead to unfair treatment of Palestinians by the Israeli government.

A Boston police spokesman said the department has sent leaders on the trip in the past, but did not know whether there are plans to participate in future seminars.

The ADLs Boston branch declined a request for comment. The organization has in the past criticized Jewish Voice for Peace, saying the group unfairly connects its program with American police misconduct.

It is perfectly legitimate to criticize Israeli policies. But JVP single-minded desire to paint Israel as a source of racism and violence has led it far beyond legitimate criticism of Israel, ADL officials wrote in an unsigned statement on their website in 2017.

On Monday, the second night of Hanukkah, a group of about 50 activists marched from the Massachusetts State House steps to the Anti-Defamation Leagues office near Government Center.

They stopped outside the Park Street MBTA station, and again among the shoppers at Downtown Crossing, to read eight short statements representing the eight candles on the menorah. The statements discussed topics including police brutality, racism, and climate change.

Melissa Nussbaum Freeman, a Boston organizer for Jewish Voice for Peace, wore a sign around her neck that read Another queer Jewish bubbie for Palestinian freedom.

It means grandma! she called out to bystanders on the Boston Common, translating the Yiddish word.

We decided to do this event on Hanukkah on a real Hanukkah day, not on an arbitrary day because we are angry at the ADL for acting in our name and sending US law enforcement officers to Israel to learn from police and military worst practices, Nussbaum Freeman said. It does militarize their actions, even more. So were asking were demanding of the ADL that the money that theyre spending goes back into our communities, because real safety comes through solidarity.

Jewish Voice for Peace branches have been calling for police departments to withdraw from the trips for two years as part of a campaign called Deadly Exchange, Gurvitch said.

Last year police in Northampton and Durham, N.C., decided not to attend the seminars.

Vermont State Police, which had sent a director on the trip in the past, also decided to withdraw last year.

A previous Vermont State Police director attended the seminar in the past and found it informative and useful, Vermont State Police spokesman Adam Silverman said in an e-mail. But after hearing concerns about the seminar, the departments leader and the states commissioner of public safety weighed the pros and cons of the trip and decided to withdraw.

This decision should not be interpreted as an endorsement of the positions held by the groups that spoke out against the trip, Silverman said.

Gal Tziperman Lotan can be reached at gal.lotan@globe.com or at 617-929-2043.

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Protesters call on Boston police to withdraw from Israel trip - The Boston Globe

How can ‘Kill the Jew’ and ‘Sieg Heil’ really mean ‘anti-Israel sentiment’? – Haaretz

Posted By on December 25, 2019

For 50 years, the Anti-Defamation League has conducted a standardized survey across language groups and cultures, reporting on anti-Semitic attitudes worldwide. In their most recent report, they reported a 47 percent incidence of anti-Semitic attitudes in South Africa. In 2014, that figure was 38 percent.

The South African Jewish Board of Deputies, the community's umbrella representative body, has publicly disparaged and vociferously rejected the ADL report, calling it "deeply misleading and unreliable."

They ask: "Why would anti-Semitic sentiment be so widespread in a country that consistently records dramatically lower levels of actual anti-Jewish behavior compared with most Diaspora countries?" Explanations abound.

First, theres not necessarily a correlation between attitudes and violent action. Secondly, violent action could be coming from a focused group of the population (e.g., in France, which has an anti-Semitism rate of just 17 percent). Further, anti-Semitic attitudes are often more readily expressed covertly, e.g., in social media - or in surveys. The ADL survey examines attitudes, not hate crimes.

The South African Jewish Board of Deputies asks how the rate could be 47 percent when, in response to the general question as to what people thought about Jews, only 26 percent of respondents had a negative view.

Again this is explainable: General questions can mask true beliefs. Only when specific statements are put - Jews are "more loyal to Israel" than to South Africa (60 percent), Jews have "too much power" in the business world (55 percent), Jews "dont care" what happens to anyone but their own kind (54 percent) - are underlying beliefs unearthed. Thats what a tried and trusted survey is designed to reveal.

Of the ADL survey, its Associate Director, David Saks, further asserted: "Most of those interviewed have never met a Jew and know far too little about them to have been able to answer the fairly complex questions put to them in the ADL survey."

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This is nave, at best. A defining element of anti-Semitism is that it is not based on knowledge. In whatever manner anti-Semitic attitudes propagate and travel, travel they do, and theres no evidence people have to know something about Jews to be anti-Semitic. Further, to allege respondents didnt understand the questions is condescending at best - and based on zero evidence presented.

The Board calls the ADL report "a crass ranking," bearing "no relation to other crucial South African data" and that it runs "counter to the expert opinions of theSAJBD." Their "crucial South African data" is a 2016 study of 40 households by the Kaplan Institute in Cape Town which polled Blacks only, no Whites, no Muslims, a much narrower focus than the ADL sample size of 515 which was also stratified across races. The SAJBD is choosing to disbelieve peoples answers to the ADL questions. But data has a habit of rejecting preconceived notions, including those of experts.

Recently, Professor Milton Shain, the distinguished historian of South African Jewry, drew attention to surveys conducted between 1970 to 1994, showing strong anti-Jewish attitudes, widely held among Blacks and those of mixed race. Further, a 2008 Pew Global Attitudes Survey found that South Africans hold some of the most negative views of Jews outside of the Muslim world. Elsewhere, Professor Shain has documented a long history of virulent anti-Semitism and selective demonization of Israel among Muslims in South Africa and at the highest levels of the ANC government.

The SAJBD dismisses the ADL questions themselves as relevant only to "the Americas and Europe," with their "different cultural and historical context." This is a slippery slope. Recently, in her denial of Myanmars Rohingya genocide, Aung San Suu Kyi berated outsiders for refusing to acknowledge Myanmars complex ethnic and social make-up. Like the South African Jewish Board of Deputies, she claimed "cultural exceptionalism." Translation: "Dont tell us whats going on in our own country!"

And whats going on in South Africa is a lot of anti-Jewish activity, and press bias. In a powerful article for the Mail & Guardian, Benjamin Pogrund, the anti-apartheid hero, described the oppressive, censoring attitudes of the press in South Africa, from the Left, singularly biased against Israel. High-profile Jewish anti-Zionist cartoonist Zapiros work selectively portrays Israel as genocidal child-killers and an evil state, often with a Magen David displayed to ensure we dont miss the Jewish connection.

In 2001, at the notorious Durban UN World Conference on Racism, thousands of keffiyah-wearing South Africans of all races demonstrated support for Islamist terrorist organizations dedicated to the elimination of the only Jewish state in the world. In 2014, a pigs head was placed in the kosher meat section of Woolworths in Cape Town by militants of the Congress of South African Students, an affiliate of the ruling ANC party.

With regularity the ANC Government selectively threatens to expel Israeli diplomats and "downgrade" relations with Israel, while totalitarian governments are embraced. "One Zionist, one bullet" is frequently chanted at anti-Israel marches. On the Witwatersrand University campus in Johannesburg, "progressive activists" have threatened Jewish students with chants of "Well come for you Zionists next." Jewish students have been greeted by flags of Hamas and Hezbollah, Sieg Heils and goose-stepping; a BDS leader promoted the singing of "Shoot the Jew"; and graffiti reading "Kill a Jew" and "Fuck the Jews" appeared on campus.

The SAJBD quaintly refers to all this as "anti-Israel sentiment." To regard this as anything other than deeply threatening anti-Jewish activity is pretense and denial. In South Africa, anti-Semitism is evidently in the ether, pervasive. Regardless that the source is now more from the Left than the Right in SA, how can this not affect peoples attitudes, conscious or otherwise?

The SAJBD seems desperate to avoid being ranked by the ADL second only to Poland for the ubiquity of anti-Semitic sentiment. But South Africa isnt second: Many Arab countries are above 80 percent. Turkey's rate of anti-Semitic attitudes stands at 71 percent.

Does it matter whether the figure is 47 percent or 38 percent or 30 percent? Its high. All evidence current and past points to powerful and prevalent anti-Semitic forces at work in South Africa, including in the press, the ANC Government, and the Economic Freedom Party, not to mention the far Right. The press and the government dont necessarily assault you in the street, but they can profoundly and broadly undermine attitudes and tolerance.

Bari Weiss' recent book, "How to Fight Anti-Semitism," shows how in times of conflict, economic hardship, or immigrant issues, anti-Semitism rises. She also shows how in recent years, the traditional perpetrators - the far Right - have been more than matched by the hard Left / Corbynite-types and Radical Islam.

Like the Cape ostrich, the South African Jewish Board of Deputies appears to have its head in the sand. Why is it fighting so hard against findings that have been consistent over decades? One can only speculate. Wouldnt Jews everywhere be better served if they took all that energy and expertise to engage community bodies and the ANC Rainbow Nation government to discuss how to combat it?

Dr Eric Hassall, MBChB (UCT), FRCPC is Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver BC. He grew up in South Africa and Rhodesia, before it was Zimbabwe.As a medical student in Cape Town, he was active in the anti-apartheid movement. He lives in San Francisco, California

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How can 'Kill the Jew' and 'Sieg Heil' really mean 'anti-Israel sentiment'? - Haaretz

Why Rudy Giuliani thinks George Soros conspiracy theories are kosher – Haaretz

Posted By on December 25, 2019

On the surface, the declaration of U.S. President Donald Trumps attorney Rudolph Giuliani that billionaire philanthropist and Holocaust survivor George Soros is hardly a Jew, an enemy of Israel and that the Catholic former New York mayor is more of a Jew than Soros is appeared to be a breathtaking display of chutzpah.

As angry as Giulianis critics may be for his presumptuous decision to be, as Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt put it, the arbiter of who is Jewish and who is not, or what is anti-Semitic and what is not, the presidents attorneys statements need to be put into context.

Giuliani was, after all, echoing sentiments previously expressed by prominent and powerful Jews in both the United States and Israel most prominently, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his son Yair and their allies in the right-wing Israeli and American Jewish circles in which Giuliani travels.

Greenblatt was the American Jewish leader who came down hardest on Giuliani, demanding an apology for Giulianis baffling and offensive words.

For decades, George Soros philanthropy has been used as fodder for outsized anti-Semitic conspiracy theories insisting there exists Jewish control and manipulation of countries and global events, Greenblatt told the Daily Beast. Mr. Giuliani should apologize and retract his comments immediately, unless he seeks to dog whistle to hardcore anti-Semites and white supremacists who believe this garbage.

Giulianis attack on Soros took place during the formers boozy interview with New York Magazine journalist Olivia Nuzzi, published under the headline A Conversation With Rudy Giuliani Over Bloody Marys at the Mark Hotel. Between cocktails, Giuliani repeated a popular right-wing deep state conspiracy theory, asserting that former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch Giuliani was active in having her removed was a puppet controlled by Soros, who had put four ambassadors in their posts and is employing the FBI agents.

Giuliani then launched an attempted preemptive strike against those who would call his statements racist: Dont tell me Im anti-Semitic if I oppose him. Soros is hardly a Jew. Im more of a Jew than Soros is. I probably know more about he doesnt go to church, he doesnt go to religion synagogue. He doesnt belong to a synagogue, he doesnt support Israel, hes an enemy of Israel. Hes elected eight anarchist DAs in the United States. Hes a horrible human being.

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As outrageous and unhinged as Giulianis assertions may sound, they follow years of demonization and near excommunication of Soros by members of his own tribe. So it shouldnt come as a shock that Giuliani drunkenly or not could feel confident that his words would receive a kosher stamp of approval.

Only two months ago, Yair Netanyahu was in Budapest, Hungary, at the invitation of a pro-government think tank, asserting that Soros is destroying Israel from the inside and that his Open Society Foundations and other groups he funds are working day and night with an unlimited budget to rob the country of its Jewish identity.

According to a report in Hungary Today, Netanyahu said that the European Union was funding hundreds of radical Soros organizations in Israel that were hoping to put an end to the Jewish state by eroding its Jewish character and flooding it with illegal immigrants.

It was two years ago that the same Yair Netanyahu made headlines when he posted a meme on his Facebook page suggesting that his parents burgeoning legal woes were the result of a Soros-led conspiracy. The meme, popular in anti-Semitic alt-right circles, featured a photo of Soros dangling a globe in front of a reptilian creature, who dangles an alchemy symbol in front of a caricature of a figure reminiscent of the anti-Semitic happy merchant image. The photo had been enhanced to include enemies of the Netanyahus, like former Prime Minister Ehud Barak, anti-Netanyahu protest leader Eldad Yaniv and Meni Naftali, a former chief caretaker at the Netanyahus official residence.

Netanyahus use of the image inspired the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer to run the headline Netanyahus Son Posts Awesome Meme Blaming the Jews for Bringing Down his Jew Father and was approvingly noticed by David Duke, a former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

Prime Minister Netanyahu himself has struck out against Soros. The Yair Netanyahu meme followed on the heels of a public controversy that cast a shadow on the prime ministers trip to Hungary in July 2017. Ahead of the visit, Hungarian leader Victor Orban launched an anti-immigration campaign targeting Soros, plastering his cities with billboards with Soross smiling face, captioned, Lets not let Soros have the last laugh.

Responding to complaints from Hungarian Jews that the posters were sparking an uptick in anti-Semitism, Israels then-ambassador to Hungary condemned the signs, saying that Orbans campaign not only evokes sad memories but also sows hatred and fear and called on the relevant authorities to exert their power and put an end to this cycle.

Netanyahu then personally ordered that the statement be clarified to stress that in no way was the statement meant to delegitimize criticism of George Soros, who continuously undermines Israels democratically elected governments by funding organizations that defame the Jewish state and seek to deny it the right to defend itself.

Netanyahu has made no secret of his battle against Soros support of left-wing, pro-Palestinian organizations, both in Israel and in the U.S., particularly groups like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, which publicly chastise and criticize Israeli policies.

The groups supported by Soros were the targets of Netanyahus so-called NGO law, which passed in 2018 and mandated special reporting requirements for organizations that receive most of their funding from foreign governments. In the midst of the 2017 controversy, Netanyahu loyalist Miki Zohar said he plans to introduce a Soros law, which would ensure that any person donating to organizations acting against Israel will not be allowed to donate to any organization or nonprofit association in Israel.

In 2018, in an attack on the New Israel Fund, Netanyahu called it an organization that receives money from foreign governments and from forces hostile to Israel, like George Soros foundations, which aimed to erase the Jewish nature of Israel and to turn it into a state of all its citizens next to a Palestinian state without any Jews on the 1967 border with its capital as Jerusalem.

The same year, the prime minister was sued for disseminating fake news on Facebook when he posted an article alleging Soros was cooperating with the Iranian regime. Attorney Shachar Ben-Meir claimed that the article posted by Netanyahu was a false article, false and cheap propaganda which was the invention of a false conspiracy theory, under which a man named George Soros collaborated with the totalitarian regime in Iran

Attacks on Soros are also common in the right-wing pro-Israel American Jewish circles where Giuliani has many friends and supporters. During the same period in 2017 when Yair Netanyahu posted the Soros meme, Adam Milstein, the former chairman of the board of the Israeli American Council and a member of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee National Council, tweeted and then deleted another cartoon meme. This one was an image depicting Soros as a multi-tentacled monster squeezing the globe, previously featured on anti-Semitic and pro-Russian websites. After far-left activists pointed out Milsteins use of the image, he removed it, pleading ignorance of its anti-Semitic origins.

Giulianis assertions regarding Soros strongly echoed a recent statement by the leaders of the Zionist Organization of America condemning former Trump White House Director for European and Russian Affairs Fiona Hill. During Hills congressional testimony in the Trump impeachment hearings, she called Soros-centered conspiracy theories the new Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

ZOA National President Morton A. Klein and ZOA Chairman Mark Levenson said that they utterly condemn Fiona Hills absurd, unprincipled and cynical defense of George Soros and said it was wrong to compare the conspiratorial attacks on him to a document that motivated and energized anti-Semites the world over, including the Nazis.

Soros, the ZOA leaders said, is a radical extremist anti Israel billionaire and speculator whose activities have fanned opposition in many countries. They added that while in some cases, the things said about George Soros a Jew, though a thoroughly assimilated one who does not identify either with the Jewish community or the state of Israel, which he loathes and has publicly compared to the Nazis have been tinged with anti-Semitism. ... To assert that criticism of George Soros cannot be voiced because it is anti-Semitic to be critical of him is an intellectually dishonest and absurd argument.

See the rest here:
Why Rudy Giuliani thinks George Soros conspiracy theories are kosher - Haaretz

O.C. Universities Grapple with White Supremacy Incidents – VoiceofOC

Posted By on December 25, 2019

By Maria Kachulis-Moriarty | 15 hours ago

Mirroring a nationwide trend, Chapman University and California State University, Fullerton, have been reeling from incidents viewed by many as hate crimes with administrators grappling on how to respond.

Editors Note: This dispatch is part of the Voice of OC Youth Media program, working with student journalists to cover public policy issues across Orange County. If youwould like to submit your own student media project related to Orange County civics or if you have any response to this work, contact Digital EditorSonya Quick at squick@voiceofoc.org.

Propaganda stickers of a white supremacist group surfaced several times on Chapmans campus this semester, while a flyer promoting a Cal State Fullerton fraternity event that contained a racist slur circulated on social media.

Similar propaganda to that found at Chapman also showed up on the campuses of Saddleback College and the University of California, Irvine, in the spring.

College campuses across the country have seen an increase in racially charged incidents.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, propaganda efforts on college campuses in the United States have increased dramatically, with the total incidents of white supremacist propaganda increasing from 421 in 2017 to 1,187 in 2018.

Cynthia Miller-Idriss, a sociology and education professor at American University, has spent about 20 years researching radical beliefs in youth, especially white supremacist extremism.

U.S. college campuses are often accused by the right of having a liberal bias, so attacking them is a way of attacking university expertise and knowledge more broadly, said Miller-Idriss. She said that while college campuses are also targeted for the purpose of recruiting students into extremist groups, other public places have also seen an increase in paper propaganda fliers.

The increase in incidents have sparked different responses from the administrations of the affected universities, including Chapman and Cal State Fullerton.

On Aug. 26, the first day of classes for Chapman students, stickers and posters were found across campus covering flyers promoting the semester-long exhibit and series of events focused on the issues surrounding the U.S.-Mexico border called La Frontera.

The incident occurred soon after allegations surfaced against a Chapman law student accused of being a member of a white supremacist group, Identity Evropa now the American Identity Movement. Chapman Dean of Students Jerry Price said the current law student and alleged white supremacist was investigated after the claims against him surfaced, but he had not violated the universitys student code of conduct or any laws.

Not stolen, conquered, said the stickers, which were from Patriot Front, a white supremacist group based in Texas. On Sept. 15, more stickers and posters were found on the campus.

Chapman Public Safety opened an investigation into the incidents, but so far have found no video footage leading to a suspect.

Glenn Pfeiffer, the Chapman provost, issued a statement to students regarding the appearance of the stickers and the views of Patriot Front.

The ideology they represent is contrary to everything that Chapman stands for. We denounce this action and their message in the strongest possible way, said Pfeiffer in the statement released in September.

Price also began holding forums for students to discuss the events.

Ramya Sinha, president of Chapmans Black Student Union, said that the university has not done enough to condemn white supremacy on campus, especially amidst the outing of a Chapman law student as an alleged white supremacist this summer.

The administrations response and lack of was somewhat of a turning point for me in the way that I view the university and the administration because Chapman loves to pride itself on how hard they have been working on increasing diversity and inclusion yet they continually fail to help out students of color and neglect to help us feel safe, said Sinha.

Sinha acknowledged the efforts of Chapman administration, but said the forums held by Price have not been enough to ignite real change on campus.

According to Sinha, a group of Chapman students have been working to create a hate crime protocol resolution, aiming to strengthen consequences for discriminatory acts.

Administrative and student responses to these incidents vary and white supremacy experts say there is no proven method, but that there are wrong ways to respond.

Pete Simi, professor of sociology at Chapman, began studying active white supremacists about 25 years ago.

Not talking about these groups does not make them go away it allows them to thrive, said Simi. He said that a main misconception is that ignoring the incidents will limit the groups publicity and attention, and that open and honest discussions need to happen about incidents.

Its a very real threat and you want to take it seriously, but not in a way that creates a moral panic, said Simi.

Meanwhile, at Cal State Fullerton, the racist incident came directly from a student.

In October, Phi Sigma Kappa at the university posted an announcement for a fundraiser the fraternity was hosting that contained a racial slur. While the situation was being investigated, the member who created the flyer was expelled from the fraternity, according to published reports.

In the aftermath, the Black Student Union released 12 demands, including that the university respond to the appeals within four days.

Cal State Fullerton administration responded to each of the demands, calling the incident an act of hate. The letter was signed by university President Fram Virjee and other top level officials, including vice presidents, directors, and the presidents chief of staff.

In its efforts to change the campus climate, the administration agreed to design and implement a diversity training for all of Greek life on campus. It also agreed to review and update the university discrimination policy for disciplining students found in violation.

While administrators and students often do not agree on how to handle these incidents, experts can point campuses in the right direction.

In an op-ed written in December 2018, Miller-Idriss and co-author Jonathan Friedman explained that university responses without a strong stance against hate speech make the administration seem indifferent to the instances.

Campus leaders have often made the mistake of feeling like if they are protecting free speech, they cant also condemn hate speech, said Miller-Idriss. She argued that administrations can condemn white supremacist propaganda as against the universitys stance while explaining that the racist messages are protected under free speech.

Originally posted here:
O.C. Universities Grapple with White Supremacy Incidents - VoiceofOC

Texas attorney and clients charged with hiding income from IRS to take case to Dallas jury – The Dallas Morning News

Posted By on December 25, 2019

Thomas and Michelle Selgas have long disputed owing federal taxes. The former Garland resident even questioned his U.S. citizenship and the legitimacy of his Social Security number in his attempt to thwart IRS collection efforts, public records show.

He and his wife did business in gold coins. And they filed an affidavit of incompetency, claiming not to understand what the IRS was talking about.

But they didnt just hide behind frivolous anti-tax arguments, federal prosecutors say. The couple hid money from the government using their lawyers client trust account, according to prosecutors. For that, they have been charged with tax evasion and conspiring to defraud the government. As of July, their tax debt had reached about $979,000, prosecutors said.

Their lawyer for civil matters, John Green, also is charged in the case with conspiracy to defraud the United States for his role in the alleged scheme. Green paid the Selgases personal expenses like credit card bills out of his trust account, the indictment says. The trust accounts are supposed to hold clients money for short periods.

Green, a conservative member of the Idaho state legislature whos licensed to practice law in Texas, holds contempt for the federal government and believes the IRS is corrupt, court filings say. He hasnt voluntarily filed a tax return since at least 2000, prosecutors said.

All three are scheduled to go to trial in January in Dallas.

The case highlights the growing problem of tax evasion in the U.S., experts say, particularly involving tax protesters, also known as tax defiers. The Anti-Defamation League calls such people anti-government extremists. An April report by the Brookings Institution, a Washington D.C. nonprofit, estimated that the annual amount of unpaid taxes is about 75% of the size of the federal budget deficit.

People who evade taxes are not just cheating the government, they are also stealing from their neighbors who are following tax laws and regulations, the report concluded.

The Selgases tax debt stems from a $1.1 million payout they earned from a 2005 patent infringement lawsuit involving MyMail, a tech company in which they were partners, authorities say. The couple did not file a valid income tax return for the 2005 tax year and did not pay taxes on their $1.5 million in income that year, prosecutors said.

The couple used the windfall to buy and sell gold coins to try to hide their income from the government, prosecutors say. The Selgases also bought and sold real estate using gold coins, prosecutors say. For example, they bought an Athens property in East Texas using 1,667 gold coins worth $385,000, authorities said.

By conducting their affairs in this manner, the Selgases were able to keep money out of bank accounts in their names and impair and impede the IRS in the assessment and collection of taxes, said Mara Strier, a Justice Department trial attorney, in a recent filing in the case.

The Selgases also substantially undervalued their income using the face value of gold rather than its market value, Strier said in court filings.

All three were indicted in July 2018. If convicted, the Selgases face up to five years in prison for tax evasion and up to five years for the conspiracy charge. Green also faces a maximum of five years in prison, if hes found guilty.

Ms. Selgas is not guilty of these charges, said John Helms, her attorney. She should not have been charged in the first place. We are confident that the jury will see that.

Attorneys for Thomas Selgas and Green did not respond to requests for comment.

Mark Pitcavage, senior research fellow with the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism, said the tax protest movement appeals to several personality types.

Some of the people are just so angry at the notion of the government taking their taxes that theyll try anything to stop that, he said. Or theyre so desperate for the money, theyll try anything to keep it.

However, there are degrees of devotion, he said, from dabblers to those who embrace the bogus pseudo-legal arguments wholeheartedly.

The real true believers are the ones who go down fighting, Pitcavage said. If an actual attorney is using tax protest arguments, then youve got to think theyre to some degree a true believer; that their ideology has blinded them to the reality of the law.

Green, 60, lives in rural Idaho and maintains his law office out of a converted barn on the Selgas East Texas property, court records show. He and Thomas Selgas are longtime friends and business associates who are partners in one of Selgas companies, court records say. And Thomas Selgas assists Green with his law practice, their attorneys said last year during a court hearing.

Green has compared the U.S. government to Nazi Germany, a federal judge wrote in a December filing.

Robert Kemins, a Justice Department trial attorney, wrote in a recent court filing that Green held the view that sheriffs have the power to resist federal laws and arrest federal officials they believe are violating the Constitution.

Green, who has run for sheriff in the county in which he lives, told an Idaho newspaper earlier this year that the IRS is a criminal organization.

He was elected to the Idaho legislature after being indicted in Texas.

Green says hes being targeted because of the many tax cases hes filed against the IRS. He said in a recent filing that he doesnt challenge the validity of tax laws but holds a different interpretation of those laws.

A former police officer, he obtained his law degree in 1986 from South Texas College of Law. The conservative Republican says he is a constitutional lawyer who concentrates on matters related to liberty.

Green is chief counsel for the U.S. Bill of Rights Foundation, which describes itself as a non-partisan public interest advocacy organization that deals with constitutional issues. Thomas Selgas is the president.

A sound money advocate, John believes many of the ills affecting our liberty are the direct result of a corrupt monetary and tax system, his foundation biography says.

Greens work defending tax protesters in Texas has gotten him in trouble before.

A federal judge in the Eastern District of Texas, which includes Collin and Denton counties, barred Green in 2004 from practicing in that district for five years for unethical conduct. The judge ruled that Green falsely accused a federal magistrate judge of lying while defending a tax protester in a criminal case.

In that case, Green also made controversial arguments that prosecutors called frivolous and nonsensical.

For example, he told the judge that an entity known as the United States of America lacked jurisdiction outside the District of Columbia. And Green filed court briefs in the case that had been written by a tax protester who wasnt an attorney, court records show.

Greens attorney, Michael Louis Minns, told a newspaper in Washington state that federal prosecutors werent interested in his client until he was nominated for the state congress.

The governments heavy burden is to prove that Green had a malicious state of mind, Minns wrote in a court filing. To date, its lawyers have neither offered nor hinted at having such evidence.

Thomas Selgas, 58, is described in various online biographies and articles as a tech industry entrepreneur and inventor who holds numerous patents. He also claims to be a monetary policy expert.

But Strier, the government lawyer, said in court filings that the Selgases espouse tax-defier theories, and she asked the judge not to allow the couple to make those arguments during the trial, for fear of confusing the jury.

In upholding a legal judgment against the couple, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2007 wrote that Thomas Selgas conduct in the case did not appear to be a legitimate attempt to resolve contested legal matters.

We have no sympathy for Selgas behavior or his arguments in defense of what appears to have been a brazen attempt to avoid a few thousand dollars in legitimate tax liability, the court said in its ruling.

Strier said the Selgases and Green knew their gold standard theory had been repeatedly rejected by federal authorities and the courts.

The defendants repeatedly defied the tax laws despite being told by the IRS and other authorities that their position was frivolous, she wrote.

Strier says she plans to introduce evidence during trial that Thomas Selgas was a client of American Rights Litigators, which police raided in 2004. Federal prosecutors have described the Florida organization as the Walmart of tax fraud. It was started by Eddie Ray Kahn, who is known for providing bad tax advice to Hollywood actor Wesley Snipes.

Kahn and Snipes were convicted of tax evasion in federal court in 2008 and sentenced to prison time.

View original post here:
Texas attorney and clients charged with hiding income from IRS to take case to Dallas jury - The Dallas Morning News

How the ‘OK’ hand sign became controversial – Duluth News Tribune

Posted By on December 25, 2019

The "OK" hand sign now lives in a purgatory of meaning, along with other memes that have been at least partially radicalized because online racists thought it would be funny to radicalize them. Pepe the Frog lives there too, as does "Kek," originally an inside joke from World of Warcraft that, by way of 4chan, now appears on banners stylized to look like Nazi flags at white nationalist rallies. We're in purgatory, too, paralyzed by the desire to react strongly to expressions of racist extremism while also acknowledging that the "OK" hand sign simultaneously does and does not signify those beliefs.

It's a trap designed to ensnare well-meaning people by hacking our tools for understanding each other. And it works every time.

The Anti-Defamation League officially included the 'okay' hand sign it in its "Hate on Display" database in 2019. Here's what you need to know about the evolution of the symbol. (The Washington Post)

The circumstances of the latest "OK" sign blowup made the ambiguity all the more unsettling, since it involved U.S. military institutions. At Saturday's Army-Navy game, two U.S. Military Academy cadets and a Naval Academy midshipman flashed upside-down "OK" signs on camera behind an ESPN reporter.

The military academies are now investigating the intent of the students. The hand gestures they did resemble the one that the Anti-Defamation League recently added - with some ambiguity-related caveats - to their database of hate symbols. It also resembles the hand gesture associated with the "circle game," a made-you-look prank that predates the "OK" hand sign's transformation into a sometimes hate symbol.

Both the circle-game and white-power versions of the "OK" hand sign require your attention to work, and you lose as soon as you give it to them.

The circle game's goal is to trick someone into looking at your hand while you're making a circle with index and thumb. If you look, you get punched in the arm. It's an old game, popularized by a 2000 episode of "Malcolm in the Middle." But it's also a running meme on YouTube and TikTok.

The racist version comes with its own punch. When spotted, it tends to cause unstoppable cycle of media amplification that inadvertently helps to draw mainstream attention to extremist views.

When the "OK" sign goes viral, the silos of outrage and claims that the perpetrators were "just trolling" spread way ahead of the context. During the confirmation hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Republican operative Zina Bash was seen resting her hand in an "OK"-like position while visible on camera. When she used the "OK" sign again, days later, #Resistance Twitter accused Bash of signaling to white supremacists. The likely truth is much more mundane: Bash was signaling to a colleague that her request for water had been fulfilled. Nevertheless, it caused a week of agita and speculation.

There have been other examples. An "OK" sign appeared behind a black reporter at a Cubs game. A Coast Guard member was removed from Hurricane Florence relief efforts after he flashed the "OK" sign during a televised media briefing.

Brenton Tarrant, the Australian white supremacist who is accused of killing 51 people in New Zealand, flashed an "OK" symbol during a court appearance. His hand was placed down low and upside down, like the circle-game version. The mass shooting, the manifesto, the live-streaming of the Christchurch massacre were steeped in edgy meme culture and engineered to go viral to serve the gunman's extremist views.

People seem to want the "OK" hand sign to work like a secret decoder ring, identifying white supremacy for those who are otherwise unable to see it. But instead, the "OK" hand sign works more like a sleight of hand.

To understand how, you have to understand Poe's Law.

In 2005, a message board user writing under the name Nathan Poe described how hard it is to figure out the intent of someone else online. At the time, he was talking about creationists. Poe wrote: "Without a winking smiley or other blatant display of humor, it is utterly impossible to parody a Creationist in such a way that someone won't mistake for the genuine article."

Poe's law became a reference point for any situation on the Internet where you can't truly tell someone's motives or intentions, It explains how "just trolling" has become a powerful cover for unironic expressions of racism or extremist views online, said Ryan Milner, an associate professor at the College of Charleston who studies meme culture, in a 2017 interview with The Washington Post.

It can be tough to understand the motivation behind the "OK" hand sign just by looking at it. And so two things can easily happen: People get wrongly accused of promoting white supremacy because of a hand gesture they made and actual uses by attention-seeking extremists can be explained away as misinterpretations of something more innocuous.

"People embrace irony, run to it, and use it as a shield to dip into a more objectionable idea," Milner said in 2017.

Even the Anti-Defamation League's database entry for the "OK" hand symbol notes the trickiness here, noting that the "overwhelming usage of the "OK" hand gesture today is still its traditional purpose". Even as there real white supremacists use it to get our attention, other people will keep flashing "OK," for unrelated reasons, on TikTok and at school and at sporting events.

There is no way to "win" the circle game. All you can do is avoid looking for as long as you can. The game that keeps the "OK" hand sign in the news is even harder: getting trolled is harder to avoid when actual white supremacy has crept out of the shadows, and especially when its adherents are targeting you. You cant' stop seeing it, and everybody keeps punching each other in the arm.

This article was written by Abby Ohlheiser, a reporter for The Washington Post.

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How the 'OK' hand sign became controversial - Duluth News Tribune


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