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Juan Williams: Stephen Miller must be fired | TheHill – The Hill

Posted By on December 2, 2019

We need to talk about Stephen MillerStephen MillerCNN's Cuomo tries to discredit Trump on overhearing conversations without speakerphone More than 100 Democrats sign letter calling for Stephen Miller to resign Hillary Clinton: 'Every day Stephen Miller remains in the White House is an emergency' MORE.

Ive got a lot to say here.

Ive been fired after being falsely accused of anti-Muslim bigotry. I know something about the PC police, slimy lies and race-baiting.

The Miller case is different. This goes beyond political mudslinging.

Name any of President TrumpDonald John TrumpPerry ends final day as Energy secretary Mexican officials detain suspects in massacre of members of Mormon sect READ: White House's letter to Nadler saying it won't participate in impeachment hearing MOREs cruel immigration policies from separating families to caging children to banning Muslims and Miller is in the lead, crafting and implementing them.

Critics have long alleged that hatred of non-whites drove Miller to put in place the Trump administrations shameful immigration policies.

Now recently leaked emails fuel the suspicion that he harbors a long-held hatred of immigrants, especially when they are not white.

He pushed that nastiness in emails to a reporter at the alt-right website Breitbart News.

So, this is not about identity politics. It cant be quickly dismissed by the far-right as the excesses of snowflakes, who cant handle policy arguments without playing the race card.

And this is not about cancel culture, the over-reaction to a slip of the tongue, calling out offensive language by a comedian or a commentator.

In Millers case, what was once just suspect or at most thought to be implicit is now explicit.

That hard-edged reality can lead to only one conclusion Miller must be fired.

That means the Miller case is now about you.

Will you, will we, across the political divide, stand as one against racial hate in politics?

Millers awful beliefs are particularly alarming right now because an increasingly racially diverse nation with a rising number of immigrants is seeing its president and the Republican Party becoming the angry face of one race whites.

Republican leaders on Capitol Hill know this is a problem.

When Rep. Steve KingSteven (Steve) Arnold KingWhy the GOP march of mad hatters poses a threat to our Democracy MSNBC's Donny Deutsch: 'Pathetic' Republicans who stormed closed hearing are 'boring, nerdy-looking white guys' Overnight Defense: Trump lifts sanctions on Turkey | 'Small number' of troops to remain by Syrian oil fields | Defense official's impeachment testimony delayed five hours after Republicans storm secure room MORE (R-Iowa) questioned why terms like white nationalist or even white supremacist had become offensive, a comment he made in a January interview with the New York Times the Republican leadership in the House stood up by taking away his committee assignments.

But the Trump White House has taken no action against Miller.

George H.W. Bush, George Bush, Ronald Reagan never would have tolerated any of this, Mike Murphy, the GOP political adviser told NPR. Murphy worked for two presidential candidates, John McCainJohn Sidney McCainStates embrace nudge theory to promote retirement savings Impeachment will make some Senate Republicans squirm Former McCain adviser warns Democrats of going left: A 'sociopath' will always 'beat a socialist' MORE and Mitt RomneyWillard (Mitt) Mitt RomneyImpeachment will make some Senate Republicans squirm Trump uses Camp David to schmooze GOP lawmakers as impeachment vote looms Overnight Health Care: Trump says drug importation plan is coming | Hints at softening vaping flavor ban | Groups sue over Medicaid work requirements in MI MORE.

Vanita Gupta, who runs the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, similarly told NPR, I fear that the line of what is normal is moving I dont think theres any way tonot be profoundly disturbed about what we are allowing at the highest level of government today.

The Newark Star Ledger called for Trump to fire Miller by noting that there is meticulously documented evidence 900 emails that show Miller shared the racist writings of white nationalists and urged others to share them.

If Trump retains Miller, he will have removed the last shreds of benefit of the doubt: He is either himself a racist or someone who gives aid and comfort to avowed racists.

Race relations are at an all-time nadir under President Trump.

An August WSJ/NBC News poll found that 56 percent of Americans say race relations have gotten worse under Trump, 33 percent say they have stayed the same and 10 percent say they have gotten better.

And polling on Trumps anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric all tied to Miller show outright public rejection. After three years of Trump trying to whip up anger at immigrants there is little public demand for these policies.

Even a poll of only white Americans done by Reuters/Ipos in July found whites were 19 percentage points more in support of a path to citizenship for the undocumented or illegal immigrants than they were in 2015.

Among all Americans, a July NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll found 64 percent in support of creating a pathway to citizenship for immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally.

In July, a CNN poll found just 15 percent overall and only 32 percent of Republicans say the nation should prioritize deporting all people living in the U.S. illegally over developing a plan to allow some illegal immigrants to gain legal status.

And a Fox News poll done in June found by a 50-24 percent margin, Americans think Trumps enforcement of immigration laws has gone too far, instead of not far enough."

So, Trumps anti-immigrant policies make no sense as politics. They only make sense as evidence of Millers influence on Trump.

In a letter to the president, 107 Democrats in the House called for Miller to be fired, writing a documented white nationalist has no place in any presidential administration, and especially not in such an influential position.

According to a tally by the Huffington Post, more than 20 senators including Senate Minority Leader Charles SchumerCharles (Chuck) Ellis SchumerWhy a second Trump term and a Democratic Congress could be a nightmare scenario for the GOP Army taking security assessment of TikTok after Schumer warning Trump signs short-term spending bill to avert shutdown MORE (D-N.Y.) and presidential candidates Sens. Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenButtigieg: 'I was slow to realize' South Bend schools were not integrated Yang raises almost 0K in a single day Booker launches first 2020 digital campaign ad MORE (D-Mass.) and Amy KlobucharAmy Jean KlobucharYang raises almost 0K in a single day Klobuchar: 'I don't see' voting to acquit Trump in Senate trial Booker launches first 2020 digital campaign ad MORE (D-Minn.) have also called for Millers ouster.

More than 50 civil rights organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League and the NAACP wrote: Stephen Millers racist, deadly agenda is contributing to this violence and must be stopped.

The only question now is: Where are Republican voices demanding Millers firing?

Juan Williams is an author, and a political analyst for Fox News Channel.

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Juan Williams: Stephen Miller must be fired | TheHill - The Hill

This Week in Technology + Press Freedom: Dec. 1, 2019 – Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

Posted By on December 2, 2019

We hope you all had a lovely Thanksgiving holiday! This newsletter will be slightly shorter than usual.

Heres what the staff of the Technology and Press Freedom Project at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press is tracking this week.

Remember when we told you that Amazonplanned to challenge the Pentagons decisionto award a $10 billion cloud-computing contract to Amazon for the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, project? Well, on Nov. 23, the Washington Postreportedthat Amazon for the first time directly linked President Trumps comments about Amazon and Amazons founder, Jeff Bezos, to the failed bid for the contract. Bezos owns the Post, and both he and the paper have been frequent targets of presidential criticism.

The company notified the U.S. Court of Federal Claims that it plans to use four videos as exhibits, which Amazon claims show improper bias.

The introduction of the presidents statements as evidence of bias in a regulatory proceeding is notable. In the governments appeal of a district courts decision to permit the AT&T/Time Warner merger to proceed, lawyers for the Reporters Committee filed afriend-of-the-court briefin support of neither party. That brief challenged the district courts reasoning in denying a limited discovery request by AT&T to determine the viability of a selective enforcement defense (because Time Warner owns CNN, also a frequent target of the president).

Reporters Committee attorneys argued in the brief that when there is manifest evidence of discriminatory intent such as public statements by the president (as both president and a candidate for office) suggesting a desire to retaliate against a news organization for perceived negative coverage the First Amendment counsels in favor of employing a more permissive standard with respect to limited discovery.

Our brief also noted historical examples of administrations under both parties using regulatory tools, such as antitrust, in efforts to influence the tenor of news coverage about the president.

Lyndsey Wajert

Speaking of selective enforcement, former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowdenhas formally accusedthe U.S. government of selectively enforcing its pre-publication rules against him by filing a lawsuit to block him from profiting off of his memoir. The Permanent Record author argues in court documents that the government has a history of approving books it considers favorable, whereas, given his role as a whistleblower, his book would not have been treated fairly in the process. The TPFP team discussed the legal implications of the governments pre-publication review process in aprevious newsletter.

A spokesperson for the Iranian foreign ministrysays the country rejectsa lawsuit against Iran filed by former Washington Post Tehran correspondent (and current Global Opinions writer) Jason Rezaian. Rezaian was jailed in Iran for 544 days on espionage charges, and a U.S. district courtrecently awardedthe journalist and his family $180 million in damages.

The New York Times recently took a deep dive into deepfakes,highlightinghow technology companies are planning to tackle digitally manipulated and computer-generated videos. We havepreviously discussedhow some states have passed laws to combat deepfakes, and howsome groupsare raising concerns about the First Amendment implications of such laws.

For all of you tweeps out there, the Twitter Safety teamannouncedthat users are now able to enable two-factor authentication without relying on phone numbers. The move comes after the CEOs account wasreportedly hackedby individuals who likely used his phone number.

Actor and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen is receiving mixed reviews on a keynotespeechhe recently delivered at an Anti-Defamation League conference. The actor, who followed the speech with anop-ed in the Washington Post, warned about the dangers of social networks and advocated for amending Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. While some arepraisingCohen for his powerful and entertaining criticism of noxious speech, both online and off, others arepointing outthat Section 230 actually provides platforms with theability to remove bad contentwithout being legally liable as the publisher of other content they leave up. That protection forms the foundation of the modern internet and is particularly important for the viability of smaller or start-up companies.

Gif of the Week: The top story about project JEDI had us wishing we could use the ways of the force to get a second helping of pie this week.

Like what youve read?Sign up to get This Week in Technology + Press Freedom delivered straight to your inbox!

The Technology and Press Freedom Project at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press uses integrated advocacy combining the law, policy analysis, and public education to defend and promote press rights on issues at the intersection of technology and press freedom, such as reporter-source confidentiality protections, electronic surveillance law and policy, and content regulation online and in other media. TPFP is directed by Reporters Committee Attorney Gabe Rottman. He works with Stanton Foundation National Security/Free Press Fellow Linda Moon and Legal Fellows Jordan Murov-Goodman and Lyndsey Wajert.

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This Week in Technology + Press Freedom: Dec. 1, 2019 - Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

GUEST COLUMN: Why anti-Semitism has no place here – Red and Black

Posted By on December 2, 2019

This past week, swastikas were found drawn on a Jewish students door. I wont be discussing the details of this case, but rather the implications. Grady Newsource covers the issues here.

Unfortunately, this is not an isolated occurrence. This is something that occurs with regularity across Georgia and the country. It is something that our Jewish peers are accustomed to.

The Anti-Defamation League, a non-profit organization founded in 1913 to stop the defamation of the Jewish people and secure justice for all, reported 1,879 reports of anti-Semitic incidents, including assault, harassment and vandalism in 2018. This is the third-highest number of incidents the ADL has recorded in a year since it began recording data on these incidents in the 1970s. In 2017, 1,986 incidents were reported.

It is no secret that hatred is behind the symbol of the swastika since the Nazis adopted it and its link to the worst human atrocity in history. But the fact that these ideas have permeated into 2019, to our college campuses and places of worship, is nothing short of horrific. It is also no secret that hatred and bigotry has been bred across America, with the South serving as the historical hub of racism and anti-Semitism. Ironically, this is an area of America that is often categorized as Christian. Christians now have the duty to reverse this stereotype. It is no longer possible to ignore it because it doesnt affect us. Hate against the Jewish people is our problem too.

Christianity stands for love to all people; it is always, in its truest form, against hate of all kinds. It is time, not just to dislike the idea of hate, but to actively stand against hate towards the Jewish people by educating ourselves and others.

While I will make no attempt to charge the entirety of anti-Semitic beliefs on Christians, I, as a Christian myself, will implore my fellow Christians to no longer remain ignorant of the role Judaism plays in the foundations of our faith and why anti-Semitism should be utterly unacceptable to every one of us. Nearly all of the New Testament writers were Jewish. There is no Christianity without Judaism. This is something that many Christians at least the ones Ive come into contact with seem to be painfully unaware of. It should be impossible for Christians to be complacent towards anti-Semitism knowing the relationship our faith has to Judaism.

For too long, Christians have been, if not part of the problem, not part of the solution. Where we should be allies to our Jewish brothers and sisters, we have failed them.

Im not saying that anti-Semitism is worse than other forms of hate but merely giving a timely call to Christians and everyone to ask ourselves not necessarily if were anti-Semitic, but if we are actively against anti-Semitism?

I found myself driving home for Thanksgiving break wondering what I could do to help my Jewish friends, tears welling up in my eyes thinking of the hate theyve felt in their lifetimes for their identity. So, I resolved to write this, not because it will solve the problem, and not because I am the person to educate the population on Jewish faith and identity, but to start a conversation. And also to say to my Jewish friends, the Jewish community, I will try to the best of my ability to be a safe place for you, to fight for you and to be a person who wants to learn from you, to deepen my own understanding and to work toward eradicating the hate against you that has survived far too long.

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GUEST COLUMN: Why anti-Semitism has no place here - Red and Black

FBI: No hate crimes on Mercer Island in 2018 – Mercer Island Reporter

Posted By on December 2, 2019

Recently released data by the FBI shows that an upward trend in the number of hate crimes committed in the state had a slight decline in 2018. Last year, there were 506 total hate crimes reported by law enforcement in the state. Thats down from 2017, in which 513 offenses were reported.

Despite the slight decline, in 2018, Washington still managed to land at the fourth highest number of hate crimes nationwide. On Mercer Island that year, there were no hate crimes reported by law enforcement. The same was reported for 2017 and 2016. In 2015 there was a single hate crime reported on the Island. It was listed as religious based.

Every year the FBI publishes the hate crime statistics, as part of the annual Hate Crime Statistics Act. On top of this, Washington law mandates that law enforcement report their crimes to the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs.

State trends

The trend of hate crimes targeting people based on their sexual orientation has risen again. The FBI classifies these crimes as being anti-bisexual, anti-gay, anti-heterosexual, anti-lesbian or committed against a mixed group of LGBTQ people.

In Washington in 2018, there were 106 crimes committed against someone because of their sexual orientation an increase of more than 30 percent from 79 crimes reported in 2017. That number has trended upward since at least 2013, FBI numbers show.

Its staggering. These numbers just keep going up, said Drew Griffin, Pacific Northwest regional director for PFLAG, the first and largest organization for LGBTQ+ people, their parents and families and allies.

Its up to us to work hard for our communities, Griffin said. Its why all of the PFLAG chapter networks were mobilized to push the Equality Act forward one that would create protections against LGBTQ discrimination when it comes to housing, employment and public services.

While it has passed the U.S. House of Representatives, the bill sits in Congress, awaiting action.

Lack of reporting

Not all hate crimes are being documented. And advocates preach that a continued pattern of under reporting makes it difficult to get the full and accurate picture.

Some agencies do report affirmatively, but sometimes report zero but if you dig deeper there are probably crimes not being reported, said Miri Cypers, the Pacific Northwest regional director of the Anti-Defamation League. I think there are some unfortunate discrepancies and a lot of work to have a stronger reporting system.

The Muslim Advocates Special Counsel for Anti-Muslim Bigotry points to two crimes that werent included in the nationwide report. In 2018, an armed man drove a truck into a convenience store in Denham Springs, Louisiana. The driver suspected the owners were Muslims, the counsel said. And last March, a Muslim family was targeted in a parking lot in Carmel, California.

Some jurisdictions arent required to report their numbers. Hindrance can also come from a lack of officer training, making it difficult for police to discern a bias-fueled crime, and under reporting from immigrants who fear deportation.

State Attorney General Bob Ferguson launched a Multidisciplinary Hate Crime Advisory Working Group in September. It was formed during the 2019 legislative session to help create strategies to not only raise public awareness of hate crimes, but also improve law enforcement and public response.

Cypers, who is also a member of the group, said law enforcement should have ongoing training, to refresh and ensure new trends and behaviors are addressed. And that community outreach is needed to ensure all hate crimes are categorized the right way.

Link:
FBI: No hate crimes on Mercer Island in 2018 - Mercer Island Reporter

Alleged East Bay Jew-hater Ross Farca now charged with lying to US Army – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on December 2, 2019

Update: At the Nov. 26 hearing, the judge determined that Farca would remain in custody.

Ross Farca, the 23-year-old East Bay man facing felony charges after allegedly posting an online plan to murder Jews, falsified an application to join the Army in 2017 in violation of federal law, according to the FBI.

U.S. attorneys filed a criminal complaint last week in federal court in San Francisco, saying Farca lied about his mental health history at an Army recruitment center, in an effort to join the U.S. Army. He was taken into custody on Nov. 21 and remained in detention pending a 10:30 a.m. hearing on Nov. 26 in U.S. District Court in San Francisco.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Sallie Kim is expected to determine whether Farca will be kept in custody, released on bail or ordered released with conditions.

In an email sent Nov. 25, Nancy Appel, senior associate regional director of the Anti-Defamation League, and Rafael Brinner, director of Jewish community security for the S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation, said We encourage you and your members to attend the hearing to demonstrate our communitys continued concern about the potential threat Farca poses.

The federal charge represents the latest development in an increasingly bizarre and unsettling story, particularly for members of the East Bay Jewish community, which first learned about Farcas alleged threats in June. In addition to detailing online his plan to murder Jews, police say they found a modified semi-automatic rifle, more than a dozen high-capacity magazines and Nazi literature in his Concord home.

The charge also indicates mounting legal jeopardy for Farca, who already faces felony weapons charges and an allegation of making criminal threats in Contra Costa County, where he is scheduled for a Dec. 9 preliminary hearing.

According to the felony complaint filed last week, FBI special agent Tyler Esswein said Farca violated the federal statute against knowingly mak[ing] false statements to a government agency after he allegedly lied on a background check form.

Farca went to a recruitment center in Mountain View on June 22, 2017, according to the FBI, and answered no while filling out a computerized form that asked if he had undergone mental health treatment within the last seven years.

This statement and representation is false, wrote Esswein, an Oakland-based agent with the FBIs domestic terrorism squad, as Farca has regularly seen a psychiatrist and taken prescription medication for mental health issues since at least 2011.

According to the complaint, Farca had been receiving mental health treatment at Kaiser Permanente Medical Group for years and met frequently with case managers at a nonprofit in the East Bay that works with the California Department of Developmental Services.

Farcas medical diagnoses were redacted from the complaint, though his defense lawyer, Joseph Tully, has said that his client has autism. Autism does notincrease violent behavior, according to medical researchers.

Farca was accepted into the Army, and on Aug. 28, 2017, he reported to Fort Benning, Georgia, for basic training, records indicate. A few days into boot camp, the complaint said, he was arrested for assaulting a fellow army trainee. Farca was then admitted to a psychiatric unit for approximately 12 days and was discharged on Oct. 3, 2017, citing erroneous enlistment; medical condition disqualifying for military service.

Farca had hoped to join the Army for years prior to his arrest, and documents filed in Contra Costa County and in federal court show his fascination with war was known to mental health providers and to police dating back to 2012.

On at least three occasions Farca asked his psychiatrist for a letter of clearance to join the military, requests his psychiatrist denied, Esswein wrote.

Police were alerted to Farca in at least two instances between 2012 and 2015.

On Oct. 16, 2015, one of his case managers contacted the Concord Police Department, according to an investigative summary prepared by CPD Detective Greg Mahan. The case manager said that she believed Farca may not have been taking his medication and that he fits the profile of someone that would do a school shooting,

On April 27, 2012, according to Mahans report, Farcas father contacted the CPD with concerns that his son was becoming more violent after he was expelled from school for grabbing a teacher. Farcas father reportedly said his son was infatuated with war.

Some of the posts linked to Farca indicate special interest in firearms and military tactics, including a plan to keep his weapon on semi auto during a mass shooting so as to not waste ammo, and an idea to resupply using ammunition from the dead officers.

Police also said Farca assembled an assault weapon himself using a legally purchased firearm frame and accessories purchased from other sources.

In February of this year, Farca purchased an AR-style rifle at the Glaser Arms gun shop in Brentwood, according to Mahans investigative summary. In a later interview with J., CPD Lt. Mike Kindorf said that Farca had purchased a firearm frame or receiver, which he then modified.

The threatening posts were made on the website Steam, an online network for video game enthusiasts, and came from an account linked to the username Adolf Hitler (((6 MILLION))). The FBI said it traced the account to Farcas Concord home using an IP address.

I currently own an AR15 semi auto rifle but I can buy/make the auto sear and get the M16 parts kit, one post said. What do you think of me doing what [Chabad of Poway shooter] John Earnest tried to do, but with a Nazi uniform, an unregistered and illegally converted machine gun and actually livestreaming it with Nazi music?

I would probably get a body count of like 30 Kikes and then like 5 police officers because I would also decide to fight to the death.

Concord police arrested Farca at his home on June 10. The FBI said police officers found a 36 inch sword, a plastic bag containing ammunition, paper gun targets (one used and one fresh) and books about Hitler youth and Nazi life.

The maximum penalty for making false statements to the U.S. government is five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

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Alleged East Bay Jew-hater Ross Farca now charged with lying to US Army - The Jewish News of Northern California

Amazon takes action over Holocaust-themed Christmas decorations – Wessex FM

Posted By on December 2, 2019

Published at 9:47am 2nd December 2019. (Updated at 1:43pm 2nd December 2019)

Amazon has removed Holocaust-themed Christmas decorations from sale after the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum shared pictures of the items on social media.

Christmas tree ornaments and a bottle opener with pictures of the Nazi concentration camp where more than 1.1 million people were murdered were listed on its online marketplace.

The product description of the items listed them as "the ideal city souvenir" and suggested buyers could "give it to a friend on different occasions as a gift".

Although Amazon swiftly deleted those listings, the museum later discovered similar items - including a mousepad described as the "massacre Auschwitcz Birkenau Jewish death".

Of the original items found by the memorial, the organisation wrote: "Selling 'Christmas ornaments' with images of Auschwitz does not seem appropriate. Auschwitz on a bottle opener is rather disturbing and disrespectful. We ask @amazon to remove the items of those suppliers."

The post, which included a link to the site and screengrabs of the items, has been liked more than 26,000 times and has been shared more than 8,000 times.

An Amazon spokeswoman said in a statement that the products had been removed and that "all sellers must follow our selling guidelines and those who do not will be subject to action, including potential removal of their account".

Speaking to the New York Times, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League, said: "It is hard to fathom why anyone would want to hang a Christmas ornament adorned with images of a concentration camp.

"These ornaments are deeply offensive by any measure. Were relieved that Amazon has removed these items from sale."

Earlier this year, the Auschwitz Memorial criticised online retailer Redbubble for selling pillows, T-shirts and miniskirts depicting the former Nazi concentration camp.

As screenshots of the controversial items circulated online back in May, the Auschwitz Memorial had tweeted Redbubble and asked: "Do you really think that selling such products as pillows, miniskirts or tote bags with the images of Auschwitz - a place of enormous human tragedy where over 1.1 million people were murdered - is acceptable?

"This is rather disturbing and disrespectful."

Redbubble removed the items from sale shortly afterwards.

The memorial and museum of Auschwitz-Birkenau is based in Oswiecim, Poland. It works to preserve the site of the former German Nazi concentration and extermination camp.

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Amazon takes action over Holocaust-themed Christmas decorations - Wessex FM

Is there a problem with meme culture? – Utahstatesman

Posted By on December 2, 2019

on November 29, 2019 at 2:36 pm

Since the birth of the world wide web, creative users have whipped up images or comics with the intent of making others laugh.

Within the last decade and the rise of social media, there has been an influx in meme culture that has streamlined across generations to bring small chuckles to internet users throughout the day. In todays world, memes have relatively short lifespans; they are around until they are no longer funny or until another meme takes its place. However, some of these memes have developed darker meanings, allowing people with bad intentions to twist images into something sinister.

Take Pepe the Frog, for example. Pepe was popular throughout 2015 and early 2016. Creator Matt Furie used Pepe the Frog in his comic book series, Boys Club, from 2005 to 2008 and it was never his intention for it to turn into something viral.

Its been kind of inspiring to me to see how mostly kids and teenagers are attracted to the youthfulness of Pepe, Furie said in his interview with The Atlantic in 2016. He never expected something silly that he would send his friends would become a major hit with internet culture.

It all changed when movements began using the image to promote white supremacy. Many used it to represent presidential candidate Donald Trump. Trump himself began to use the image frequently, which increased its use even more. Even Hillary Clinton added a section to her website about Pepe the Frog, calling him a symbol associated with white supremacy. Soon after, the Anti-Defamation League, an American organization opposed to antisemitism, included Pepe as a hate symbol in their database.

Internet trolls began to spread the image of the frog further, giving Pepe a Hitler-style mustache or dressing him in a KKK hood. This angered Furie.

Its my worst nightmare to be tangled forever with a symbol of hate, Furie said.

Furie began fighting for his creation to be removed from websites and posters associated with white supremacy. In fact, in June, he won a $15,000 settlement against the radio show Infowars for using Pepe the Frog on their advertising.

Another meme that was taken too far revolves around popular YouTube creator Felix Kjellberg, known by his online name PewDiePie.

In the race against another channel called T-Series to get 100 million subscribers, fans began a campaign called Subscribe to Pewdiepie, in which posters were hung up and ads were purchased in places like Times Square and the Super Bowl to encourage others to subscribe. There was even a parade held in Estonia.

A lighthearted meme turned dark when users began to take things too far. Racist memes were made about T-Series, which is based in India. A World War II memorial in New York was defaced with Subscribe to Pewdiepie carved into it. Then, to Kjellbergs horror, the shooter who opened fire on a mosque in New Zealand in March used the meme in his manifesto.

To have my name associated with something so unspeakably vile has affected me in more ways than Ive let shown, said Kjellburg, who ended the movement immediately.

Other memes, such as the OK hand symbol and Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker on a set of stairs made popular with the 2019 film have caused problems too, both online and in the real world. So many people have been visiting the stairs from The Joker film that its caused problems with traffic and tourism. All of this begs the question: is there a problem with meme culture?

I dont think the problem is the meme, but the person, said Kinsey Brashears, a senior at Utah State. Memes are often fun things, but sometimes groups of people take things too far.

Brashears was not even aware that some memes had been used for symbols of hate, which asks yet another question: should people who are unaware of the dark side of memes be chastised for using them?

I think that people who use these memes or symbols and are unaware that they are hate symbols or have bad connotations have some responsibility, said Jeffrey Perala-Dewey, another student at USU. I dont think its fair to put all the blame on them, but I would hope that they would do some research or understand why that meme is no longer okay.

There are always bound to be a few bad apples in the bunch when it comes to the creation of memes and how far their idea or image can be taken, but for now, it seems meme culture is here to stay.

@dillydahle

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Is there a problem with meme culture? - Utahstatesman

Influential neo-Nazi eats at soup kitchens, lives in government housing – NBC News

Posted By on December 2, 2019

A fan of Charles Manson and follower of Hitler, James Mason published essays in the 1980s that now act as the inspiration for a militant neo-Nazi group linked to multiple murders in the U.S.

Revolutionary discipline must mean that WE will be the single survivor in a war against the System, Mason wrote in 1985. A TOTAL WAR against the System.

But nowadays, Mason isnt waging war with the system. He is, in fact, dependent on it.

The 67-year-old white supremacist lives in a government subsidized apartment in Denver and eats at soup kitchens.

In a brief interview last week, a few days after he was spotted picking up a meal at a city-run center for homeless and hungry seniors, Mason said he sees no contradiction between his writings and his lifestyle.

Guerilla warfare, man. Guerilla warfare, Mason told NBC's Denver affiliate KUSA. Youve gotta take what you have to get what you need.

Masons old writings have gained new life with the rise of the Atomwaffen Division, a white supremacist group bent on overthrowing the government through terrorist acts and guerrilla warfare tactics.

The extremist organization, whose name means atomic weapons division in German, formed in 2015 in the now defunct neo-Nazi online forum Iron March. Experts say its a largely decentralized group, small in size but large in ambition.

Members see themselves as soldiers preparing themselves for an impending race war, said Joanna Mendelson, senior investigative researcher with the Anti-Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism.

They create this apocalyptic worldview that their future is hanging by a thread. They paint a picture of a genocide and that they see themselves as needing to rise up against the tide that seeks their destruction.

In the past two years alone, men with ties to Atomwaffen have been accused of killings in Florida, California and Virginia.

In the California case, an Atomwaffen Division member named Samuel Woodward was arrested and charged with fatally stabbing Blaze Bernstein, a gay, Jewish student, inside a park in Orange County in January 2018. Woodward pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.

Experts say the group has greatly expanded the influence of Mason and his decades-old writings. His SIEGE newsletters, which have been posted on numerous online forums and compiled into a 563-page book, serve as Atomwaffens ideological foundation.

The enemy today is the U.S. Government itself and it is, by every standard of measure, the most evil thing that has ever existed on earth, Mason wrote in a newsletter published in August 1980.

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Can you picture a scenario like this: that great 'Silent Majority' has at last gotten fed up, found its wits and given the Nazis or the Klan a voter mandate, he wrote in a latter section. The Jews, the Blacks, and the assorted fanatic Reds, etc. least of all to mention the entrenched Capitalist System manned largely by sick, liberal Whites give up, say it was a fair fight, shake hands and turn it all over to us. It's just too crazy to contemplate.

Mason had largely faded into obscurity in the past two decades, but his writings are now seen as helping to fuel a rise in far-right extremism across the globe.

Authorities in Germany and the U.K. told NBC News that Mason is influential among radicals in both countries. A British intelligence official said Masons writings served as inspiration for multiple far-right extremists who were arrested for unspecified crimes.

The FBI declined to comment.

Masons newfound relevance marks a sudden turn in the life of a man whose days of notoriety seemed long behind him.

James Mason was a dried up, has-been neo-Nazi who then had his work get reappropriated and given new life especially by groups like Atomwaffen, Mendelson said.

She described him as a key figure within this movement and this subculture.

He's put on a pedestal along with Timothy McVeigh and Anders Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway, Mendelson said.

Mason, who was raised in Ohio and began working for the American Nazi party in his teens, has a lengthy criminal record.

In 1991, Mason served a 30-day stint in jail after he pleaded guilty to illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material. After his release, Mason told The Cincinnati Enquirer he took lewd photos of a 15-year-old girl at the request of her husband.

Mason moved to Colorado but his criminal problems followed. He was in and out of state prison throughout the late 1990s after he was convicted of menacing in a case involving sexual exploitation of a child, and later found to be in possession of weapons in violation of his parole.

He now lives in a red-brick apartment complex in the heart of Denver. The building is open to people who qualify for subsidized Section 8 housing, according to postings in the lobby. Building management confirmed that all of the apartments are designated for recipients of Section 8 vouchers, a federal subsidy that helps low-income people pay their rent.

Masons apartment has become a magnet for Atomwaffen members. Photos posted online show Mason posing with various young men, some dressed in Nazi regalia and wearing skeleton face paint, in front of swastika flags.

One of Mason's neighbors said she wondered about all of the men heading up to his apartment.

"At first when he had young men coming up there, I thought maybe he was a pervert, to be honest with you," said the 64-year-old neighbor, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The neighbor described Mason as "quite the gentleman" and said he helped with the yard work and eagerly took part in activities like the building's Thanksgiving gathering. But the neighbor said she was stunned when one day last summer she saw signs posted nearby with Mason's photo and a message saying a neo-Nazi lived in the neighborhood.

The neighbor went online and found his writings. "For someone who doesnt like the government, youre living in government housing," she said. "That right there kind of throws me."

In a typed letter, Mason initially declined an interview with KUSA for purely tactical reasons. But a reporter caught up with him this month.

In the interview, Mason rejected the suggestion that Nazis have been in decline since losing World War II.

Look at the shape society is in. Look at the goddamned shootings. Look at the drugs. The suicides and the crime and everything else, Mason said.

I say this country lost. And decade by decade I see my beliefs proven over and over again. Were prophets. Nobodys listening to us, but theyre going right off the cliff thinking were nuts.

Mason initially seemed to push back against the idea that his writing had inspired young neo-Nazis to commit violence. If they were acting on my words, they wouldnt be doing the things theyre doing, he said.

But Mason, who insisted he's not a member of Atomwaffen, followed with an ominous and ambiguous statement about the possibility of violence.

If you must do it, it seems to me to be only common sense that youd want to do it right, Mason said.

Because its the end of your life. You may die out there in the street via SWAT team, or you may spend the rest of your life in the joint. Make it count for gods sake.

He did not elaborate.

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Influential neo-Nazi eats at soup kitchens, lives in government housing - NBC News

Jewish Perceptions of European anti-Semitism are Worryingly Precise – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on December 2, 2019

Photo Credit: Cajander via Wikimedia

{Originally posted to the JNS website}

The following quotes are from Jewish citizens of various European countries, gathered during a survey earlier this year on Jewish perceptions of anti-Semitism that was carried out by the European Union.

Anti-Semitism and racism are like the Wiener Schnitzel. They are part of the Austrian cultural heritage, just as xenophobia and we are different. There is nothing to fight against, just suppressing the consequences has to suffice.

The way things are now, Iexperience, for example, that Jew is awidespread cuss word in Copenhagen. As aJew who has grown up in Denmark, Ihave always avoided showing/telling people Iam aJew.

For the past 12 years, anti-Semitism has no longer been ataboo in Germany, and so it occurs more oftenverbally and physically, on German streets and in social media.

I cant be discriminated against [here in Poland] if no one knows that Iam aJewish. Ianswer adirect question about my nationality with alie.

At work and in the media and social media, anti-Semitism [in France] is adaily and unrepressed occurrence.

There is an air of resignation that hangs over these commentsa sense that hostility towards Jews is something that must be managed, rather than defeated. The Austrian respondent quoted above wittily described anti-Semitism in his country as akin to a schnitzel, an indelible part of that countrys social and cultural fabric that can produce deadly consequences if we are not sufficiently careful. The respondents in Denmark and Poland adopted a similar stance, effectively arguing that the most efficient way of avoiding anti-Semitic harassment was not to admit to being Jewish in the first place.

As difficult as these quotes are to read, they are nonetheless in keeping with the statistical data presented in the E.U. survey of European Jews. A full of 85 percent of respondents across the continent agreed that anti-Semitism was a problem, with a plurality describing it as a big problem. As the European Union observed in the summary accompanying the report, hundreds of respondents personally experienced an anti-Semitic physical attack in the 12 months preceding the survey. More than one in four (28%) of all respondents experienced anti-Semitic harassment at least once during that period. Those who wear, carry or display items in public that could identify them as Jewish are subject to more anti-Semitic harassment (37%) than those who do not (21%).

Another, more recent survey of anti-Semitism by the Anti-Defamation League last weekthis time conducted among non-Jews on four continents, including those 12 European nations whose Jewish citizens were polled by the E.U. surveyshows, rather depressingly, that current Jewish anxieties in Europe are grounded upon a more or less accurate reading of their surrounding reality. Consider, for example, the statement in the ADL poll that much of our lives are being controlled by secret conspiracies arranged by powerful groups. In France, 52 percent of respondents agreed this to be the case, while in Germany the statement won 37 percent agreement, and in Spain 58 percent agreement. Similarly, the three most common anti-Semitic stereotypes in Europe neatly encapsulate the triangular denunciation of the Jews: They dominate our economy and our financial markets; they are more loyal to the State of Israel than they are to us; they talk endlessly of their suffering during the Nazi Holocaust.

Critically, both the E.U. survey of Jews and the ADL survey of non-Jews underline the distribution of anti-Semitic attitudes on the extremes of left and right, as well as across different religious and ethnic communities. Of the hundreds of Jewish respondents questioned by the European Union who had personally experienced anti-Semitic harassment, 30 percent said the perpetrator was someone with Muslim extremist views, 21 percent said they had been targeted by someone with left-wing views, and 13 percent by someone with right-wing views. According to the ADL survey, anti-Semitism is a greater presence on the left in Belgium and the Netherlands, while in Germany and Austria, anti-Semitism stems principally from the right.

What the ADL survey also showed is that whether the manifestation of anti-Semitism is greater on the left or on the right, the underlying animusJewish wealth, Jewish disloyalty, Jewish tribalismis the same for both. Among European Muslims, the ADL found that acceptance of anti-Semitic stereotypes was substantially higher in these communitieson average almost three times as highthan among the national populations in the six countries examined: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom.

There is other data on anti-Semitism that has been gathered in the last 12 months that only bolsters this grim picture. Jewish communities in Germany, France, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Denmark have all reported significant increases in anti-Semitic offenses. At the same time, all of these communities are careful to emphasize that these increases may in fact be bigger than recorded since the majority of victims of anti-Semitism do not report their experiences to either communal bodies or law-enforcement agencies.

All in all, then, 2019 has been a year in which we learned a great deal about how Jews in Europe see anti-Semitism and how non-Jews see it, as well as the scale of the problem and the types of anti-Jewish themes that continue to resonate. We have also learned that even with tougher legal sanctions, there is a limit to what governments are able or willing to do to counter anti-Semitism. The data suggests that it is at the level of what is sometimes called civil societyour schools and colleges, our houses of worship, our political associations and especially our social-media platformsthat the real work of combating anti-Semitism remains to be done.

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Jewish Perceptions of European anti-Semitism are Worryingly Precise - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Who is a Jew? DNA home testing adds new wrinkle to age-old debate – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on December 2, 2019

Part one of our three-part PAST LIVES series on Jewish genealogical research. Parts two and three will be available next week.

Jennifer Ortiz has a screenshot saved on her computer. Its an image that captures a moment that changed her life.

Right there on the screen: Stewart Bloom is your father, she said, describing the message she received when she logged in to see the results of her home DNA test.

Ortiz is one of millions of people who have taken a DNA test like the ones sold by 23andMe or Ancestry.com. Ortiz, who grew up Catholic in Utah, found out from the test that she was 50 percent Ashkenazi Jewish a result that led to the discovery that she was the child of Bloom, a Jewish photographer in San Francisco, and not the man who raised her.

Thats when my world changed, she said.

But what is 50 percent Jewish?

The question itself is a new wrinkle in the age-old debate of just what it means to be Jewish, which has been given a kick in the pants from the commercialization of a field of science that says it can tell you something new: For a price, you can now choose from one of seven commercial genetic tests to find out just how Jewish you are (among other things).

Its a very interesting, different and complicated and morally ambiguous moment, said Steven Weitzman, director of the Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and former director of the Taube Center for Jewish Studies at Stanford University.

In the past few years, commercial gene testing has taken off, driven by aggressive advertising that purports to tell the real story behind your ancestry. The magazine MIT Technology Review analyzed available data to estimate that more than 26 million people had taken at-home tests since they first went on the market more than a decade ago.

Its really beginning to seep into peoples consciousness, Weitzman said.

Sunnyvale-based 23andMe and Ancestry.com, headquartered in Utah, will ask you to spit in a tube and then, several weeks later, will give you a pie chart that might say, for example, 20 percent Swedish, 8 percent Greek and 11 percent German. Or, perhaps, 39 percent Ashkenazi Jewish.

But is there such a thing as 39 percent Ashkenazi? Yes, according to professor of epidemiology and biostatistics Neil Risch, director of UCSFs Institute for Human Genetics.

Its very easy to identify someone whos Ashkenazi Jewish, said Risch, who also does research on population genetics for Kaiser Permanente Northern California.

Thats because there are genetic markers distinct to the Eastern European Jewish population, partly due to a population founder effect, a way of saying that they descend from a small number of ancestors. Also, Jews in Europe tended to marry other Jews, making them endogamous.

Jews were not allowed to intermarry, Risch said. He added that on top of that, there were other external factors; for centuries, Christian churches forbade their flock from marrying Jews.

Ashkenazi Jews share a genetic profile so distinct that even commercial tests can spot it, unlike the difference between, say, Italians and Spaniards, who share a more diffuse Southern European profile. Risch said that although commercial genetic tests will show a percentage of your heritage from very specific regions in Europe, these results should be taken with a grain of salt.

Those kinds of subtle differences are challenging and have to be looked at with some skepticism, Risch said.

I call it entertainment genetics, said Marcus Feldman, a Stanford biology professor and co-director of the universitys Center for Computational, Evolutionary and Human Genetics, when you go and find out where your ancestors came from.

But for Ashkenazi Jews, heritage is pretty clear. Pick a street, Feldman said. Then pick any two Ashkenazi Jews at random walking down it.

Theyd be fifth to ninth cousins at the genetic level, Feldman said. Ashkenazi Jews are actually that closely related, all descended from a small group of people.

But what about Sephardic Jews looking to get a quantitative peek at their heritage? Theyre out of luck. 23andMe communications coordinator Aushawna Collins said that the company hasnt collected enough data on those populations yet to be able to pinpoint what makes them unique in terms of genes. Risch said its because genetically they are not distinct enough from other Mediterranean peoples.

But even if science can determine whether people have Ashkenazi genes, can one extrapolate from that how Jewish they are?

What is 39 percent Jewish? Thats nonsense, said Weitzman, a former professor of Jewish culture and religion at Stanford, where in 2012 he started an interdisciplinary course on Jewish genetics with biology professor Noah Rosenberg. You cant be half Jewish. Youre either Jewish or not Jewish.

Rabbi Yehuda Ferris of Berkeley Chabad would agree.

You cant be part kosher, you cant be part pregnant, you cant be part Jewish, he said.

However, even Ferris and his wife, Miriam, have done at-home DNA tests although they did it to find relatives, not to figure out their Jewishness.

It was extremely shocking, Ferris said dryly. Im 100 percent Ashkenazi Jewish and shes 99 percent.

For zero dollars we could have told you the same thing, Miriam Ferris added.

As an Orthodox rabbi, Ferris goes not by percentages but by the matrilineal rule in establishing Jewishness.

If your mother is Jewish, youre Jewish, he said. Thats it.

The concept of matrilineal descent is an old one, but genetics are giving it a new twist, especially in Israel where the Chief Rabbinate has used gene testing to weigh in on the crucial question of who is a Jew. (In Israel, immigrants must prove their Jewish status to marry, be buried in a Jewish cemetery or undergo other Jewish life-cycle rituals.)

Thats an interesting and disturbing new phenomenon, Weitzman said.

The way the rabbinate has used gene testing is by examining mitochondrial DNA, which gives much less information than testing of the more extensive DNA in the cell nucleus, which is what home tests do. But unlike nuclear DNA, mitochondrial DNA is almost always passed from mothers to their children. This dovetails nicely with the notion of matrilineal Jewish descent, and rabbis in Israel have now begun accepting mitochondrial DNA testing for people, primarily immigrants or children of immigrants from the former Soviet Union, who have inadequate documentation of their Jewish status.

The test can identify Jews descended from four founder women ancestors. However, it can be used only to prove a positive, as half of Ashkenazi Jews dont have the characteristic mitochondrial chromosomes at all. Still, for people who have no paper or eyewitness proof of Jewish descent, genetic testing can be the deciding factor.

When you dont have enough information, it might be the linchpin, Ferris commented.

The rabbinates use of mitochondrial DNA testing is controversial, with some critics calling it humiliating. The Yisrael Beiteinu party, which represents Russian-speaking immigrants, is trying to challenge it in Israels Supreme Court.

Outside of Israel, too, not everyone is comfortable with using science to figure out who is a Jew. Its something the world has seen before.

People were also using science to figure out who people were. We called that race science, Weitzman said.

And the people who did it?

I mean Nazis, he clarified.

Genetics have been used against Jews in the most virulent way, said UCSFs Risch. But he thinks that Jews are inclined right now to trust the science because its a field filled with Jewish researchers. We love science because were all the scientists! he said.

In the past two decades, there has been a rash of research on the genetic components of Judaism, a boom coinciding with the Human Genome Project, which ran from 1990 to 2003. Much of it was done by Jewish scientists. The initial research on mitochondrial DNA in Ashkenazi Jews was done in 2006 by Israeli geneticist Doron Behar; he is now CEO of genetic analysis company Igentify.

In 1997, a study of traits in the Y chromosome, passed only from father to son, found that more than 50 percent of men with the last name Cohen (or Kahan or Kahn or other variants) had a certain marker, giving some support to the idea of a hereditary Jewish priesthood.

In 2010, medical geneticist Harry Ostrer did work that found various communities of Jews shared a common Middle East ancestry. And in 2009, Feldman, who is also director of Stanfords Morrison Institute for Population Biology and Resource Studies, studied to what degree Jewish groups in different places were related. (This last topic has been studied further, including by Risch.)

But Feldman himself has experienced firsthand how his own research has been twisted for what he called racist conclusions when economists drew inferences from his work with fellow Stanford professor Rosenberg to suggest theres a genetic basis for economic success.

We were outraged because those two people were using our data to make these quite racist statements, Feldman said.

Feldman said its common for the public to seize on genome research and try to use it to explain everything from intelligence to criminality; he said scientists have a responsibility to be on alert all the time.

Theres been too much emphasis on the genetic basis of a lot of human behaviors, he said. When genetics is your hammer, everything becomes a nail, he said. So it doesnt matter what human trait youre interested in.

Even if geneticists like Feldman consider home testing kits entertainment, their popularity shows that people are interested in using genetics to figure out who they are, including how Jewish. Weitzman said it might be connected to how hard it is for most Ashkenazi Jews in this country to trace their roots; Jews in Central and Eastern Europe didnt have last names until the 18th or 19th centuries.

A lot of us, we dont know a lot about our ancestors prior to our grandparents, Weitzman said.

So in searching for ancestors, people are turning to the companies that promise results. 23andMes Collins told J. theyd sold 10 million kits in total, and Ancestry.com in May issued an announcement claiming to have tested more than 15 million people.

Cantor Doron Shapira of Peninsula Sinai Congregation in Foster City is one of them. He was always into Sephardic music and food. As a percussionist, he felt drawn to the rhythms.

People have very often asked me, Are you Sephardic? he said. And I always said, Not to my knowledge.

Last year he saw an ad for Ancestry.com, got his DNA testing kit and sent it in with his sample.

It comes back 94 percent no surprise Russian Ashkenazi Jewish European roots, he said.

But the test also revealed 6 percent of his roots were other, including from Southern Europe and the Iberian Peninsula. Maybe Shapira had a Sephardic ancestor after all?

He started to think about which side of the family it could be and considered asking his mom to get tested. It wasnt that the result suggesting a Sephardic ancestor changed his perception of who he was, he said, but it validated something about himself that he and others had always noticed.

I got a little bit excited, he admitted.

And then he got an email update from Ancestry.com.

It says, scratch that, youre now 100 percent Ashkenazi Jewish, he said with a laugh.

But even with the change in result, Shapira says hes not against using home genetic testing to get a peek into his ancestry.

Im inclined to do another one, he said. Just to see if its consistent.

Many others are taking the tests and their results very seriously. People are making life decisions now on the results of this test, Weitzman said. Theyre deciding whether theyre Jewish or not.

Thats what Ortiz has done. If you ask her now if shes Jewish, the 53-year-old has an answer.

Yes, I am, she said. Ill say yes.

She had never been told that the father who raised her was not her biological dad, and when she confronted her parents, they denied it. But she knew it was no mistake when the DNA testing company delivered a startling message with the name of her biological father thats the screenshot shes got saved on her computer.

Ortiz immediately made contact with Stewart Bloom and flew down to San Francisco last year from her home in Portland to visit. There was a lot to process, of course, but for Ortiz its been a wonderful thing and that includes embracing Jewishness, something she said shed always been drawn to.

When I found out Im actually 50 percent, on one level it didnt surprise me, she said.

Now shes converting that number into something deeper: Shes planning a ceremony in Portland with a Jewish Renewal rabbi not a conversion, but something to celebrate her new identity.

It would help me take a step into Judaism, she said. Not just from a biological level but a little more than that.

Thinking about Jewishness in terms of biology is something that bothers Emma Gonzalez-Lesser, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Connecticut and the author of an article titled Bio-logics of Jewishness. If being Jewish is something in the genes, then that excludes people who have come to Judaism in other ways.

People who convert may not be seen as legitimately Jewish as someone who has 30-something percent ancestry from a genetic test, she said.

And beyond that, she added, there are some ideas underlying the current fascination with genetics that arent being questioned, like the question of whether Jews are a race.

I think part of our societal fascination with genetic testing really rests on this assumption that race is really this biological function, she said.

(Prominent researchers like Feldman, Rosenberg and Risch have been caught up in the sensitive question of whether studying the genomics of populations leads to a biological definition of race; the issue has been written about at length and remains controversial.)

Weitzman said the interest in ancestry reflects a trend around the world of turning to biology, genetics and race as a way to encode identity.

Part of whats going on in the Jewish world right now is a reflection of a broader revival of ethno-nationalism, Weitzman said.

In addition, at a time when American Jews are less likely to go to synagogue or practice rituals in the home, they face more questions about what it means to be Jewish. That may incline them to trust in science to determine their identity, especially when they have only a few dusty boxes of papers, if that, to show their family history. That makes Jewish genes a door into the past.

Theres something hiding inside of you that is preserving your identity intact, Weitzman said. To me, thats part of the appeal.

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Who is a Jew? DNA home testing adds new wrinkle to age-old debate - The Jewish News of Northern California


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