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Sedra of the Week: Vayeshev – Jewish News

Posted By on December 21, 2019

Betrayed and abandoned, the 17-year-old Joseph finds himself in an environment that is the polar opposite of the home in which he was brought up.

Far away from the atmosphere of intense spirituality and awareness of God that was palpable in Jacobs home, he is sold into servitude to Potiphar, one of Pharaohs ministers and also now has to find the moral fortitude to withstand the advances of his masters wife.

In what is perhaps one of the most dramatic episodes in the Torah, Joseph manages to rebuff her advances.

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The rabbis add even more colour to the episode, pointing out that the cantillation note above the word, va yimaen, and he refrained, is the rare Shalsheles sound. This is an overextended note that goes up and down in waves and denotes the tension Joseph was experiencing, almost succumbing, but in the end withdrawing from the situation. From where does a 17-year-old get this super human strength?

The Talmud tells us he saw the reflection of an image of his father. This reminded him of home and all the positive associations that came with it. To take things a stage further, his own image is said to have reflected his fathers.

Joseph remembered who he was, where he came from and what his legacy is. The messages he received at home were so strong and positive that he saw himself as an extension of it, despite the distance. This awareness was able to carry him through the greatest challenges and is a lesson for us all.

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Sedra of the Week: Vayeshev - Jewish News

A light in the dark – jewishpresspinellas

Posted By on December 21, 2019

During the shorter and somewhat chillier days of winter, some of us tend to feel a bit more despondent, less motivated, slower to get around, maybe even a little hungrier. Even in the sunnier hemisphere, we can become susceptible to subtle seasonal mood disorders. Add to the shorter days, a barrage of disturbing current events or general climate of anxiety, and you may really feel out of sorts these days.

Our predicament is not a new one.

The rabbis in the Talmud taught in BT Avodah Zarah 8a:

When the first human being saw that the days were getting shorter and shorter, he said: Oy! Woe is me; maybe because I have sinned the world is getting dark and is going to return to chaos! He got up and spent eight days in fasting and prayer.

When he saw that the winter solstice had arrived, and that the days were getting longer again, he said: This is just the order of the world. He went and celebrated a holiday for eight days.

The first human was clearly ahead of his time with regard to observing Hanukkah, a holiday that would not occur for another few thousand years. However, we can connect his sense of relief and joy with our own winter celebrations.

Hanukkah arrives, like many other cultural winter solstice festivals, at the darkest time of the year. As a remedy to the darkness, we, as Jews, are commanded to shed a little light. When we may feel the least motivated to do so, our tradition challenges us to light a candle in the darkness and allow the light to grow and become more illuminating each night of the eight-day festival.

No matter what the weather outside or in our social climate, our tradition commands us to BE the light and share the light to rise above the fray to break out a new latke recipe, set up the chanukiyya, and CELEBRATE!

This year, our festival coincides with Christmas, allowing us to share our traditions, and mingle our joy with the general cheer of the outside world. May the light of the season remind us to put our faith in God during the tough times, just like the first human, just like the Maccabees. As the Prophet Zachariah said, Not by might and not by power, but by My spirit, said the Lord. (Zecharia 4:6)

May we learn from history that our light is a light unto the nations. Even during the darkest hours, we are commanded to shine our inner light and the light of the Chanukah candles. May the holidays bring joy and warmth, comfort and connection to all.

Chag Urim Sameach!

The Rabbinically Speaking column is provided as a public service by the Jewish Press in cooperation with the Pinellas County Board of Rabbis. Columns are assigned on a rotating basis by the board. The views expressed in the column are those of the rabbi and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Jewish Press or the Board of Rabbis.

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A light in the dark - jewishpresspinellas

13 reasons everyone should be sad they dont celebrate Hanukkah – Business Insider

Posted By on December 21, 2019

captionHanukkah candles.sourceJACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images

Many Jewish holidays can be summed up as We fought, we won, now lets eat, and Hanukkah is no exception.

The story goes that while the Jews were living under the Greek empire around 166 BC, King Antiochus IV outlawed Judaism and defiled the Holy Temple that stood in Jerusalem by sacrificing pigs on the altar. A small Jewish army called the Maccabees led a rebellion against the Greeks and won. When they returned to the Temple to relight the ritual menorah (candelabra), they only found enough oil to last one day, but it miraculously lasted eight.

Jewish people commemorate the Maccabees victory during Hannukah by lighting a menorah for eight nights and eating fried foods made with oil.

Hanukkah is one of the most recognizable, widely celebrated Jewish holidays around the world for good reason. Here are 13 reasons why we cant get enough of the Festival of Lights.

Thats eight days of parties, presents, and festive foods.

They go perfectly with applesauce, sour cream, and a variety of dipping sauces.

In addition to a jelly filling, some sufganiyot are filled with chocolate or custard.

Bimuelos, a Ladino variation on the Spanish buneolos, were a popular dish with Spanish Jews known as Marranos in the 15th to 17th centuries.

They come in milk and dark chocolate varieties.

Because of Hanukkahs proximity to Christmas, some people have a custom to give gifts of money instead of material goods in order to distinguish the holiday traditions.

Dreidel is Yiddish for spinning top. It has four sides with a different Hebrew letter on each one. Players start with a supply of coins, chocolate or otherwise, and take turns spinning. Depending on which letter the top lands on, they put a coin in the middle, skip their turn, win half of the coins, or take home the entire pot.

Legend has it that when the Greeks outlawed Jewish practices, people would continue studying sacred texts in secret and whip out this simple game if anyone asked what they were doing.

Because you dont hear Hanukkah songs blasted in shopping malls starting from Thanksgiving, you can actually enjoy them. And Jewish a cappella groups like the Maccabeats and Y-Studs put out Hannukkah-themed parodies of popular hits every year, so the playlist never feels stale.

Hanukkah concerts often include latkes and sufganiyot as part of the ticket price. Win-win.

Good food, good music what more can you ask for from a holiday party?

Publicizing the miracle of Hanukkah is an important tradition with origins in the Talmud. Many organizations hold public menorah lightings in cities around the world.

It doesnt take more than a few minutes to light the flames, recite the blessings, and sing a song or two, but its a memorable tradition.

Holiday lights can create some eye-catching displays, but cozying up to watch flickering candles burn down on a winter night has a magic all its own.

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13 reasons everyone should be sad they dont celebrate Hanukkah - Business Insider

Emily Mayer: The Activism Activator – Forward

Posted By on December 21, 2019

IfNotNow has grown in prominence every year since its 2014 founding. But this past year proved to be its most high-profile one yet. Its campaign against Birthright Israel planting activists to record themselves walking off the free trips earned the group a New York Times profile. Local chapters, called hives, also came into their own, independently partnering with progressive initiatives like the D.C. Dyke March. The organization also took steps to professionalize - delineating an organizational hierarchy and creating a sister organization that can engage in domestic political activities.

As political director, Emily Mayer, 28, has led actions since campaign season kicked off. Activists birddogged presidential candidates, surprising them at town halls and asking them where they stand on Palestinian rights and aid to Israel. Such efforts were likely instrumental in getting many to call for conditions on Israeli aid.

Emily Mayer

What do you have for breakfast? Any kind of carbs I can get my hands on.

Whats the last thing you listened to on your phone? The IfNotNow Soundcloud

Earliest Jewish memory? In the first grade, I came home from Jewish Day School and told my parents that Bill Clinton had broken the Ten Commandments through his relationship with Monica Lewinsky.

Hero: Bernie Sanders he embodies the Jewish tradition of my grandmother, who worked for the United Autoworkers, and my dad, who was an activist in the civil rights and student movements. He also is one of the most prominent Jews using his platform to advocate for Palestinian rights and freedom.

2019 memory: This past April, hundreds of IfNotNow high school and college students showed up outside the Birthright HQ office in Midtown to demand Birthright engage meaningfully with Israels occupation. It was amazing watching so many young people (some as young as 15) act with such moral clarity and courage. A few former campers of mine from Jewish summer camp were there, joining hands across 3rd Ave during rush hour!

What is your favorite thing about being Jewish? So many things a rich tradition centered around argument and (re)interpretation, Ashkenazi speech patterns, how important eating together is. If I had to choose one, I would say the fact that fighting for freedom is embedded into our foundational texts and ritual, and that for thousands of years Jews have been fighting for our own liberation and that of our neighbors. I also just really love The Prince of Egypt.

What app can you not live without? Dont trust any millennial that doesnt answer this question with the most obvious answer texts! But also Twitter so often I find myself laughing out loud at how genius and weird people are.

Weekend ritual: Waking up late and cooking elaborate brunch potatoes, eggs, veggies, condiments, the works with my roommates.

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Emily Mayer: The Activism Activator - Forward

Israel Will Not Be Third Time Lucky – Yahoo Finance

Posted By on December 21, 2019

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Against all expectations, political logic and basic commonsense, Israels major parties have refused to form a unity government, and are dragging an irate public back for a third national election in less than a year.

The contest, scheduled for March 2, will likely reprise the two previous stalemates. Early polls show that the underlying electoral arithmetic hasnt changed. Israel suffers from the same sort of polarization that currently afflicts manyother democracies. It is a recipe for paralysis and disillusionment.

Here is the math. A ruling coalition requires a majority of 61 in the 120-member Knesset. The Likud, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has acohesive center-right blockof 55 that includes ultra-orthodox parties. The centrist Blue and White party, headed by former general Benny Gantz and bolstered by two small left-wing factions, currently has a block of 44.

There are very few actual policy differences between these two coalitions or their leaders. Gantz was Netanyahus army chief; the two worked harmoniously for years. Together they could have formed a government majority with a handshake, but couldnt bring themselves to do it. This was irresponsibleof them both.

It is unclear anythingwill change ahead of another vote. Gantzs voters loathe Netanyahu. They are mostly Ashkenazi, secular, college-educated and, by Israeli standards, liberaljust like the prime minister. This make Bibi, in their eyes, a traitor to his class.The fact that he was recently indicted on three counts of fraud, bribery and breach of trust merely confirms their dire view of him.

On the other side, Likud voters regard theBlue and White crowd as snobs. Likudniks and their allies tend to be Sephardic, religiously orthodox, blue-collar and resentful of the mainstream media. They are not troubled by the prime ministers legal issuesand insist they will stand by their man.

Under Israeli law, an indicted prime minister can continue to serve while being tried. If the Jerusalem district court eventually convicts him, he can hold on to power while the case goes on appeal to the Supreme Court. Given the slow pace of criminal trials, and the quality of his legal team, this could take years. Most leaders wouldnt want to put themselves or their country through such an ordeal;Netanyahu, having long ago concluded that he is a man of destiny, will tryto keep his job by any means necessary.

His best hope to get to the magic 61 seats in March is to bring out a large Likud-bloc vote on election day. The traditional means of achieving this a rhetorical offensive against the growing influence of the anti-Zionist Arab party, known as the Joint List. Netanyahu deployed this tactic in the two previous elections, but it didnt bring out his voters the sufficient numbers. His best shot this time is to goadArab List politicians into making extreme statements.List leaders Ahmed Tibi and Ayman Oudeh are too savvy to fall for this, but there are others, especially in the Balad faction, who are prone to such gaffes.

During recent coalition negotiations, Netanyahu accused Gantz of trying to cut a deal with the Lists 13 Knesset members. Gantz denies this: he is no more than amenable than Netanyahu to partnering with politicians who oppose Israels fundamental right to exist as a Jewish state. But there are senior members of Blue and White who might be more flexible, in the cause of getting rid of Netanyahu.

The ex-general may be a freshman politician, but he understands how unpopular such a partnership would be with the Israeli mainstream, including Blue and White voters. It is very unlikely that any election result will change his mind on that.

The great wild card of Israeli politics is Avigdor Lieberman. At the head of a party with eight members of the Knesset, he had the power to giveNetanyahus coalition a majority after the last election. Lieberman belongs to the innocent until proven guilty camp, was originally a Likudnik and shares the prime ministers hawkish security views. Some Likudniks hoped he would come home and put their man over the top.

Story continues

But that was never going to happen. Lieberman ran to bring Netanyahu down, on a liberal, anti-clerical ticket, promising voters that he would not join a government that included the ultra-orthodox parties that are integral members of the Likud bloc. He watched Netanyahus failed attempts to secure a majority with undisguised pleasure.

The electoral math and the impasse it has created could change if the prime ministerwasnot at the top of the Likud ticket.Blue and White has indicated that it could enter into a coalition with a Netanyahu-less Likud. Lieberman has floated a proposal to grant hima presidential pardon in return for his promise to retire for politics. This is a long shot. A pardon would require Netanayhu to admit guilt, which he probably wont. Besides, he wants to run again.

If he does, the next election could well turn out like the last two. For months Israelis have been fed an unceasing diet of cynicism, lies, blatant self-dealing, intolerance and disregard by politicians of all the parties. Many voters will stay home on March 2. Those who do vote will go to the polls with the sinking feeling that, when the ballots are countered and the coalition bargaining is finished, they may find themselves facing a fourth election.

(Corrects date of the election in second paragraph.)

To contact the author of this story: Zev Chafets at zchafets@gmail.com

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Bobby Ghosh at aghosh73@bloomberg.net

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Zev Chafets is a journalist and author of 14 books. He was a senior aide to Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and the founding managing editor of the Jerusalem Report Magazine.

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com/opinion

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Israel Will Not Be Third Time Lucky - Yahoo Finance

One of the Jersey City shooting suspects believed anti-Semitic conspiracy theory, ADL says – Haaretz

Posted By on December 20, 2019

One of the suspects in the attack on a Jersey City, New Jersey kosher grocery store wrote several Facebook posts demonstrating belief in anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, the Anti-Defamation LeaguerevealedTuesday.

David Anderson, one of the two suspected shooters in the attack, used the alias Dawad Maccabee on Facebook from July to December 2015, according to the ADL. Hundreds of posts revealed his hatred of Jews, white people and the police, the ADL said.

Anderson expressed views that conform with Black Hebrew Israelite ideology. Black Hebrew Israelites believe that people of color are the true descendants of the biblical Israelites and white Jews are impostors. Anderson wrote in July 2015, Brooklyn is full of NAZIS ASHKE-NAZIS (KHAZARS). The citation of Khazars is a reference to adebunkedanti-Semitic conspiracy theory that Ashkenazi Jews arent actually descendant from refugees from biblical Israel but rather from the nomadic Khazar people of Central Asia.

Anderson also claimed in that same post that black people were being killed by law enforcement because of Jews, because the police are their hand now. Anderson and his co-suspect and girlfriend Francine Graham are accused of shooting police officer Joseph Seals before driving to the JC Kosher Supermarket and killing three more people.

In a separate post, Anderson criticized Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who has been known for his anti-Semitism for decades. Anderson called Farrakhan a rat and a con for posing for a picture with representatives from the extremist Orthodox sect Neturei Karta.

For more stories, go towww.forward.com.Sign up for the Forwards daily newsletter athttp://forward.com/newsletter/signup

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One of the Jersey City shooting suspects believed anti-Semitic conspiracy theory, ADL says - Haaretz

ADL Calls for Jersey City Board of Education Trustee Who Called Jews Brutes to Resign – Jewish Journal

Posted By on December 20, 2019

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) New York and New Jersey Regional Director Evan Bernstein released a statement on Dec. 18 calling for Jersey City Board of Education (JCBOE) Trustee Joan Terrell-Paige to resign in light of her remarks calling Jews brutes.

Terrell-Paige wrote in a since-deleted Dec. 15 Facebook comment responding to an op-ed on the Dec. 10 Jersey City shooting, Where was all this faith and hope when black homeowners were threatened, harassed by [the] I WANT TO BUY YOUR HOUSE brutes of the Jewish community? She also wrote that the shooters were trying to send a message and it was worth looking into what that message was. Terrell-Paige told Politico on Dec. 17 that she doesnt regret her comments.

Bernstein condemned Terrell-Paiges remarks as anti-Semitic.

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, Bernstein said. She has also drawn gross generalizations about the Jewish community based on the actions of a few. As we all know, landlords who harm others, and people who commit crimes, do not do so because of their Jewishness, or because they adhere to the tenants of any other faith.

He added that Terrell-Paiges remarks suggested that the victims of last Tuesdays shooting were somehow responsible for being targeted and that the attack was therefore somehow justified. It is hard to understate how reprehensible, and how harmful, this is to a community still reeling from the attack.

Additionally, Terrell-Paige has not shown any contrition over her remarks, thus making her unfit to continue to serve on the Board of Educationa body entrusted with modeling our shared values of diversity, tolerance, and inclusion for students in our local Jersey City public schools, Bernstein said.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) and Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop have also called on Terrell-Paige to step down from her position.

According to NJ.com, the JCBOE was going to consider resolution censuring Terrell-Paige and calling on her to resign at their Dec. 19 meeting; however, the meeting was canceled.

With hundreds of people planning to attend tonights meeting, a decision was made to be proactive and ask the BOE to postpone the meeting, Jersey City Public Safety Director Jim Shea said. To be clear, there were no security risks specifically identified, only the interest of public safety as is the case with any large gathering.

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ADL Calls for Jersey City Board of Education Trustee Who Called Jews Brutes to Resign - Jewish Journal

3 Jewish schools in LA spray-painted with anti-Semitic graffiti days after Beverly Hills synagogue vandalized – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on December 20, 2019

Three Los Angeles Jewish schools were tagged with anti-Semitic graffiti days after a synagogue in Beverly Hills was found vandalized.

A swastika and hateful messages including the phrase time to pay were found spray-painted at the American Jewish University in Bel Air, the Westwood Charter School and Milken Community High School on Tuesday, according to a report on theLAistwebsite.

On Saturday, a suspect described as a white male entered theNessah Synagogue, a Persian Jewish congregation in Beverly Hills, and vandalized the sanctuary, tearing prayer books and strewing Torah scrolls on the floor.

In September,Free Palestine was spray-painted on the front of theBaba SaleCongregation in the Fairfax district of the city and Six million $ was not enough was drawn in marker on the welcome sign affixed to the gate of the citysTemple Ahavat Shalom.

LAist cited the Anti-Defamation League as stating that there have been 36 such incidents in Los Angeles in 2019.

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3 Jewish schools in LA spray-painted with anti-Semitic graffiti days after Beverly Hills synagogue vandalized - The Jewish News of Northern California

When the O.K. Sign Is No Longer O.K. – The New York Times

Posted By on December 20, 2019

The gesture is not the only symbol to have been appropriated and swiftly weaponized by alt-right internet trolls. The Southern Poverty Law Center has identified memes featuring the hoax religion of Kek and the cartoon character Pepe the Frog, among others, as being at the forefront of white nationalists efforts to distract and infuriate liberals.

A number of high-profile figures on the far right have helped spread the gestures racist connotation by flashing it conspicuously in public, including Milo Yiannopolous, an outspoken former Breitbart editor, and Richard B. Spencer, one of the promoters of the white power rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 that resulted in the death of a 32-year-old woman.

The gesture was in the headlines again after Roger Stone, a longtime political adviser to President Trump, met with a group of white nationalists known as the Proud Boys in Salem, Ore., in 2018 and was photographed displaying it with them.

Critics expressed outrage when a former White House aide, Zina Bash, appeared to be flashing the sign as she sat behind Brett M. Kavanaugh during his televised Senate confirmation hearings for his appointment to the Supreme Court. Defenders of Ms. Bash insisted that she had not intended any racist connotation and was merely signaling O.K. to someone.

That the gesture has migrated beyond ironic trolling culture to become a sincere expression of white supremacy, according to the Anti-Defamation League, could be seen in March 2019 when Brenton Tarrant, the white supremacist accused of killing 50 people in back-to-back mass shootings at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, smiled and flashed the sign to reporters at a court hearing on his case.

Some people who have used the gesture publicly in a way that seemed to suggest support for racist views have faced consequences. In 2018, the United States Coast Guard suspended an officer who appeared to use the sign on camera during an MSNBC broadcast. Later that year, four police officers in Jasper, Ala., were suspended after a photo was published showing them flashing the sign below the waist. And over the summer, a baseball fan was barred indefinitely from Wrigley Field in Chicago after making the gesture behind the NBC sports commentator Doug Glanville during a broadcast of a Cubs game.

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When the O.K. Sign Is No Longer O.K. - The New York Times

Senate removes phrase white nationalist from measure intended to screen military enlistees – KTVI Fox 2 St. Louis

Posted By on December 20, 2019

The Republican-controlled Senate quietly cut the phrase white nationalist from a measure in the National Defense Authorization Act, which was intended to explicitly address the threat of white nationalists in the military, altering the language of a House-passed amendment before passing the massive military spending bill Tuesday.

The House amendment, which was passed in July, was drafted to explicitly study the feasibility of screening for white nationalist beliefs in military enlistees.

But the final version of the bill passed by the Senate and sent to President Donald Trump for his signature now only requires the Department of Defense to monitor for extremist and gang-related activity, rather than specifically referencing white nationalism.

We know that white nationalist extremists are actively trying to enlist in our military, and we know they are doing so to acquire combat and weapons training, Rep. Pete Aguilar, the congressman who introduced the House amendment, said in a statement to CNN.

I introduced my amendment because keeping this hateful ideology out of our military is crucial to our national security and to the safety of our service members. We cant address the problem if we wont acknowledge there is one, which is why I was disappointed by the Senate Republicans decision to strike this language, the California Democrat said.

The change was first reported by the Huffington Post and confirmed Thursday after CNN reviewed the discrepancy in the House and Senate versions of the bill. The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Republican Sen. Jim Inhofe, did not immediately respond to CNNs request for comment.

The news comes days after the US military and naval academies launched internal investigations after cadets and midshipmen were captured on ESPNs pre-game show for the Army-Navy game making a hand gesture that some interpreted as white nationalist and others interpreted as innocent.

In a statement Sunday night, the US Military Academy commonly known as West Point said its investigation is looking into the use of hand gestures by a few Cadets during the broadcast before Saturdays game.

The United States Military Academy is fully committed to developing leaders of character who embody the Army Values. I have appointed an Investigation Officer to conduct an administrative investigation into the facts, circumstances, and intent of the Cadets in question, Lt. Gen. Darryl Williams, superintendent of the academy, said.

The gesture in question is when someone forms the OK sign with their fingers and thumb a sign that can be associated with white nationalism.

The Anti-Defamation League, which studies hate messages, said in a report earlier this year that it now considers the OK gesture a hate symbol in some cases.

The ADL has previously said the use of the OK symbol in most contexts is entirely innocuous and harmless. The gesture acquired new significance in 2017 after some members of the website 4CHAN claimed it represented the letters wp for white power, according to the ADL.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which has tracked extremist groups and their actions for decades, applauded the military for investigating the matter.

It is definitely hard to know if they intended this as a white power signal, but given who these people are, they should be sure to take this very seriously. We cannot have people playing around with white supremacy in the military, Heidi Beirich, the director of the Intelligence Project at the SPLC, told CNN. If nothing else, its a teachable moment. Even if they didnt mean it. They should know that the symbol now has two very different meanings.

Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said on Monday that he doesnt believe white nationalism is a problem in the military.

I dont believe its an issue in the military. There is no room whatsoever for anybody to have to be a white nationalist or to be a member of any hate group whatsoever or harbor anything like that, Esper said to reporters while flying back to Washington from a ceremony in Luxembourg marking the 75th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge. That said, I understand some claims were made. I also understand that both academies are investigating these and well see what comes out.

By Zachary Cohen and Jamie Crawford, CNN

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Senate removes phrase white nationalist from measure intended to screen military enlistees - KTVI Fox 2 St. Louis


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