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Analysis: The resurrection of Isaac Herzog – Jerusalem Post Israel News

Posted By on February 7, 2017

Isaac Herzog. (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

A political cartoon in Maariv on Sunday depicted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu snickering to Isaac Herzog that the best gift he ever received was having him as opposition leader.

But that cartoon may have spoken too soon, just like the countless political eulogies of Herzog over the past year. It may even be time to question the conventional wisdom that the only possible alternatives to the Likud leader in the next election are Yesh Atid chairman Yair Lapid, who is doing well in the polls, or a former IDF chief of staff.

Since that cartoons publication, Herzog has scored a number of important political victories. His candidate, Eran Hermoni, defeated former Labor leader Shelly Yacimovichs former political adviser Yair Yaya Fink for Labor secretary-general, a key post once held by David Ben-Gurion.

Retired generals Yom-Tov Samia, Amiram Levine and Danny Arditi announced that they had joined Labor, following former environmental protection minister Avi Gabbay, proving that the party is still alive and well.

Herzog hosted former prime minister Ehud Barak at a Labor Party event, the first attended by Barak since he split the party six years ago. At the event, it was clear that Herzog was in charge, and Barak said that he was not running for Labor leader, though he added at this stage just in case.

Finally, Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit on Monday closed the corruption case against Herzog without indictment. Allegations had been made that Herzog accepted illegal contributions during the 2013 Labor primaries, failed to report the contributions and filed a false declaration about them.

In late March, Mandelblit initiated a probe into alleged fund-raising violations by Herzog in his campaign against Yacimovich. He was questioned under caution multiple times about alleged campaign fund-raising violations in April, after which the police recommended closing the case.

The acquittal came at a key time for Herzog, who can now freely attack Netanyahu without anyone saying that he, too, is being investigated.

With at least three investigations intensifying, Netanyahu is more vulnerable than ever, and no one knows who the Likuds candidate in the next election will be.

Political attention will now shift to the Labor primary set for July. If in the past it was assumed that the primary would be delayed for a third time in order to allow a former general to run, with Netanyahu looking so weak, the race cannot be postponed again.

That means that in the next couple of months, decisions will have to be made about who is running and who will be sitting out the race. Will Yacimovich run even after losing her chance to control the partys administration through her handpicked secretary-general, who could have helped her win? Former IDF chief of staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz will not be able to run because his three-year cooling off period is not yet over. Barak and another former IDF chief, Moshe Yaalon, are also not running. That leaves only one former IDF chief: Gabi Ashkenazi, whom a recent Maariv poll showed could win a lot more seats for Labor than Herzog.

Had Herzog been the political corpse he was thought to be and had Amir Peretz been faring poor in the polls, perhaps Ashkenazi would be pushed to throw his beret in the ring. But Peretz has received encouraging polls, and Ashkenazi is indebted to him because he appointed him chief of staff.

MK Erel Margalit, who has a seemingly endless supply of money and a no-holdsbarred political strategy, could pose a serious threat to Herzog.

But Herzog is alive and well and looking a lot better than he did in that cartoon on Sunday.

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Analysis: The resurrection of Isaac Herzog - Jerusalem Post Israel News

Jewish American Heritage Month

Posted By on February 7, 2017

simmons | February 7, 2017

BBC News Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true? BBC News There are no reports of an attack in the Saudi capital that month . But two US

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BBC News Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true? and more Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true? - BBC News

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simmons | February 6, 2017

A Place for All People exhibit is on display at Hughes Main Library in observance of Black History Month.(Photo: Provided) Organizations, churches, and institutions throughout the Upstate will observe Black History Month with a variety of events. Below is a list of the information about some of the events, along with their hosts.

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Upstate institutions, organizations to celebrate BHM - Greenville News

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admin | January 9, 2017

National Hispanic Heritage Month is the period from September 15 to October 15 in the United States, when people recognize the contributions of Hispanic and Latino Americans to the groups heritage and culture. Hispanic Heritage Week was established by legislation sponsored by Rep. Edward R

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National Hispanic Heritage Month - Wikipedia

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simmons | December 27, 2016

Close menu Open today from 11 am 5:45 pm. Open today from 11 am 5:45 pm. 1109 5th Ave at 92ndSt New York, NY 10128 Directions Come visit the Jewish Museum and discover why 5th Ave at 92nd St is the intersection of art and Jewish culture.

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The Jewish Museum - Programs - Families

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simmons | December 16, 2016

Initiated by the Jewish Museum of Florida, with the effort led by Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and enacted by the 109th Congress, President George Bush signed a resolution in 2006 that each May would be Jewish American Heritage Month (JAHM).

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Jewish American Heritage Month - jmof.fiu.edu

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admin | December 11, 2016

The Palestinian Authority held a free, democratic election in 2005.

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Myths & Facts: Archived Online Exclusive | Jewish Virtual ...

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simmons | December 8, 2016

January 1 Feast of St. Basil (Christian, Orthodox) 1 Japanese New Year (Japan) 5 Guru Gobind Singhs Birthday (Sikh) 6 Epiphany (Christian) 6 Three Kings Day (Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic) 7 The Nativity of Jesus Christ (Christian, Orthodox) 13 Lohri (Buddhist, Hindu, Sikh) 16 Religious Freedom Day 16 World Religion Day (Bahai) 19 Tu bShvat or Tu BShevat* (Jewish, Israel) 26 India Republic Day February National Black History Month (United States) 2 Imbolc (Wiccan) 3 Chinese Lunar New Year (China, Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam) 3 Tet Nguyen Dan (Vietnam) Year of the Buffalo 4 Rosa Parks Birth Anniversary 5 Mexico Constitution Day 11 National Foundation Day (Japan) 12 NAACP Founded 14 Race Relations Day 17 League of United Latin Citizens (LULAC) Founded American 24 Flag Day (Mexico) March Greek-American Heritage Month Irish-American Heritage Month Spiritual Wellness Month 1 St

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Calendar of Ethnic Holidays | American Ethnic Studies ...

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simmons | December 5, 2016

American Jews Total population 5,425,0008,300,000[1] American Jews, also known as Jewish Americans,[5] are Americans who are Jews, either by religion, ethnicity, or nationality.[6] The Jewish community in the United States is composed predominantly of Ashkenazi Jews and their US-born descendants, making up about 90% of the American Jewish population.[7][8] Minority Jewish ethnic divisions are also represented, including Sephardic Jews, Mizrahi Jews, and a smaller percentage of converts to Judaism. The American Jewish community manifests a wide range of Jewish cultural traditions, as well as encompassing the full spectrum of Jewish religious observance

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American Jews - Wikipedia

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simmons | November 21, 2016

Sunday, October 9. 2016 Boarded by Central Park to the east and Riverside Park to the west, this two and half mile neighborhood a powerhouse of shuls, schools, and Jewish culture boasts of some of the most exceptional residences in NYC, exemplifying Beaux Art, Art Nouveau & Art Deco architecture

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Walking Tour Calendar - Lower East Side Jewish Conservancy

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simmons | November 21, 2016

Title Length Color Rating Everday Use: African-American Heritage Everyday Use: African-American Heritage Everyone is raised within a culture with a set of customs and morals handed down by those generations before us. As individuals, we view and experience heritage in different ways

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Jewish American Heritage Month

Trump's terrorism claim is baloney – CNN

Posted By on February 7, 2017

Now comes President Donald Trump's claim Monday at the key US military base overseeing the war on ISIS -- US Central Command in Tampa, Florida -- that the media aren't reporting terrorism for "reasons" the President didn't elaborate upon.

Trump told the CENTCOM audience, "You've seen what happened in Paris and Nice. All over Europe, it's happening. It's gotten to a point where it's not even being reported. And in many cases, the very, very dishonest press doesn't want to report it. They have their reasons, and you understand that."

To "prove" that the media aren't covering terrorism adequately the Trump White House, which is fighting in court to reinstate a refugee ban citing the terrorist threat, on Monday night released a list of 78 "major" terrorist attacks since September 2014, claiming, "Most have not received the media attention they deserved."

This is one of the biggest baloney sandwiches this White House has foisted on the public since ... well ... the "Bowling Green massacre," but it's a much bigger and harder-to swallow helping of baloney because it is the President who is forcing it down our throats rather than one of his aides.

Taking the White House timeline of terrorist attacks, I ran it through the Nexis database, which is an authoritative resource for tracking media hits of all types, including in newspapers, magazines, wire service reports, TV news shows and the like.

The results show that terrorist attacks over the past couple of years are, in fact, some of the most well-reported stories of our times. The total number of media hits for the 78 terrorist attacks that the White House released Monday is 80,878, or about an average of slightly more than 1,000 mentions per incident.

And those numbers clearly understate how much coverage the media have given these incidents because a Nexis search only will display a maximum of 3,000 mentions for any given search.

There are 16 terrorist attacks on the White House list of purportedly under-covered attacks that each elicited more than 3,000 media mentions.

The following are a representative sample:

In Ottawa in October 2014 Michael Zehaf-Bibeau killed a Canadian soldier.

Two months later in Sydney, Man Haron Monis killed two Australians.

In March 2015, 21 tourists were killed at the Bardo Museum in Tunis, Tunisia.

Two months later in Garland, Texas, two ISIS-inspired militants attacked a Prophet Mohammed cartoon contest. Luckily no one was killed except the terrorists.

In Tunisia, also in 2015, 38 were killed at a beach popular with Westerners.

In October 2015, 224 were killed in Sinai, Egypt, when ISIS brought down a Russian passenger jet with a bomb.

The terror attacks in Paris and Nice, France, that Trump cited in his CENTCOM speech also received more than 3,000 media mentions.

The terrorist attacks that didn't get as much coverage were -- surprise --- the ones where there were no deaths or that took place in countries such as Saudi Arabia or Bangladesh where there is little independent media reporting.

In three cases, there were no articles listed in the publications included in the Nexis database, and in each of those cases there were no casualties.

The media, including CNN, have exhaustively covered terrorism around the globe since the 9/11 attacks made the issue a central national security concern.

And how did so many Americans learn about the terrorist attacks they were so scared of? Here's a clue: It wasn't through telepathy.

Below is the official White House timeline of terrorist attacks since September 2014 with my annotations in bold about the media coverage they each received. (There are a number of incorrectly spelled words I have left as they were in the original.)

TIMELINE: September, 2014 - December, 2016

NUMBER OF ATTACKS: 78

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

September, 2014

TARGET: Two police officers wounded in knife attack

ATTACKER: Abdul Numan Haider

406 stories

TIZI OUZOU, ALGERIA

September, 2014

TARGET: One French citizen beheaded

ATTACKER: Jund al-Khilafah in Algeria

140 stories

QUEBEC, CANADA

October, 2014

TARGET: One soldier killed and one wounded in vehicle attack

ATTACKER: Martin Couture-Rouleau

1,509 stories

OTTAWA, CANADA

October, 2014

TARGET: One soldier killed at war memorial; two wounded in shootings at Parliament building

ATTACKER: Michael Zehaf-Bibeau

More than 3,000 stories

NEW YORK CITY, NY, USA

October, 2014

TARGET: Two police officers wounded in knife attack

ATTACKER: US person

477 stories

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

November, 2014

TARGET: One Danish citizen wounded in shooting

ATTACKERS: Three Saudi Arabia-based ISIL members

10 stories

ABU DHABI, UAE

DATE: December 2014

TARGET: One American killed in knife attack

ATTACKER: Dalal al-Hashimi

24 stories

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

December, 2014

TARGET: Two Australians killed in hostage taking and shooting

ATTACKER: Man Haron Monis

More than 3,000 stories

TOURS, FRANCE

December, 2014

TARGET: Three police officers wounded in knife attack

ATTACKER: Bertrand Nzohabonayo

91 stories

PARIS, FRANCE

January, 2015

TARGET: One police officer and four hostages killed in shooting at a kosher supermarket

ATTACKER: Amedy Coulibaly

More than 3,000 stories

TRIPOLI, LIBYA

January, 2015

TARGET: Ten killed, including one US citizen, and five wounded in bombing and shooting at a hotel frequented by westerners

ATTACKERS: As many as five ISIL-Libya members

837 stories

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

January, 2015

TARGET: Two US citizens wounded in shooting

ATTACKER: Saudi Arabia-based ISIL supporter

5 stories

NICE, FRANCE

February, 2015

TARGET: Two French soldiers wounded in knife attack outside a Jewish community center

ATTACKER: Moussa Coulibaly

268 stories

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

February, 2015

TARGET: One civilian killed in shooting at a free-speech rally and one security guard killed outside the city's main synagogue

ATTACKER: Omar Abdel Hamid el-Hussein

535 stories

TUNIS, TUNISIA

March, 2015

TARGET: 21 tourists killed, including 16 westerners, and 55 wounded in shooting at the Bardo Museum

ATTACKERS: Two ISIL-aligned extremists

More than 3,000 stories

KARACHI, PAKISTAN

April, 2015

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Trump's terrorism claim is baloney - CNN

The age of Trump spells the end of the Zionist dream – +972 Magazine

Posted By on February 7, 2017

When Israel backs an American regime that threatens our liberty as humans and our safety as Jews, the claim that Zionism protects Jews no longer holds.

By Ben Lorber

Protesters near the prime ministers residence, demonstrating against Trumps recent refugee and Muslim ban, Jerusalem, January 29, 2017. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

For most American Jews, Donald Trumps regime has ushered in the most profound and destabilizing existential crisis since the Holocaust. We watch in horror as President Trump launches a full-frontal assault on the institutions, and the very principles, of the liberal democracy upon which we have built our lives for generations. We stand aghast as his administration tramples the civil liberties of our Muslim, immigrant and refugee neighbors, and we brace ourselves as a potent anti-Semitism simmers at the edges of the alt-right movement that helped propel him to power.

American Jewish establishment and legacy institutions, which already possessed little relevance for many of us, seem ill-equipped to guide us through this new reality. And the State of Israel, far from standing with us against this fascist menace, appears to be egging it on. As we all weather the short-term shocks Trump inflicts upon the political and civic institutions of American life, the full reverberations of this longer-term shock have yet to be felt by American Jewry. In the future, the era of Trump will be remembered as the end of the Zionist dream.

The internal crisis the mainstream Jewish American community faces is far more profound than we are willing to admit. For almost a century, the tradition of democratic liberalism in America has provided the bulk of white Jews in the U.S. with safety, prosperity, and a stable modern identity. Across the country, we have built a vibrant network of communal institutions, and poured our energies into strengthening the fabric of American civic, cultural and political life. After the Holocaust, the democratic values of religious and political freedom and civic equality were central to our orientation in a changing world. Today, though a growing portion of our community has moved to the right on political and social issues, a sizable and disproportionate majority of American Jews retains liberal and progressive values.

Now, seemingly overnight, Trumps attacks on the press, judicial institutions, human rights groups and other organs of democracy threaten to erode the foundations of the world that has been comfortable for many of us. And our well-established, amply-resourced communal and legacy institutions, like the Jewish Federations, have barely raised a tepid voice of protest against this onslaught. They were unable to anticipate, comprehend, or combat the startling surge of far-right populism and neo-fascism in this country, and the unprecedented resurgence of anti-Semitism brewing in its wake. Though they appear calm, our leaders, like most others in the countrys establishment political and civic landscape, tremble behind their doors.

Hundreds fill New York Citys Washington Square Park to protest President Trumps decision to ban Muslim refugees from entering the U.S., January 26, 2017. (Gili Getz)

And where is Israel to protect the Jews of America? Trumps words and actions on International Holocaust Remembrance Day were a double affront to American Jewry. Not only did his administrations statement fail to name the Jewish identity of the Holocausts primary victims, or the ideology of anti-Semitism that fueled their annihilation on the very same day, he signed into law a Muslim ban chillingly reminiscent of Americas rejection of Jewish refugees that, in the 1930s, helped seal the fate of so many European Jews. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not only fail to speak out against any of this, but the next day, he praised Trumps decision to build a border wall with a bombastic tweet meant to emulate the swagger of Trump himself.

After the Holocaust, Israel came to be seen by many Jews the world over as an insurance policy, sworn to defend us forevermore against the reappearance of fascism on the world stage. But 70 years later, the world is divided anew into ultra-nationalist statesmen and stateless refugees, into powerful tyrants and defiant rebels. While a few American Jews back Trump, most of us strive to stand against this tyrant of our time. But what the U.S. Jewish community still has to confront is the reality that the government of Israel, along with a majority of its Jewish citizens, actively supports the Trump administration, which seems poised to legitimize Israels fever dreams of settlement expansion and annexation and to crush any remaining hope of Palestinian statehood.

A few notable exceptions notwithstanding, most American Jewish Zionists, since the days of liberal leaders like Louis Brandeis and Stephen Wise, would place their Zionism squarely in the same tradition of American liberalism that has structured the rest of their lives. For years, these progressive Zionists have watched nervously as anti-democratic, illiberal forces have consumed the center of Israeli politics.

Regardless of whether this idea of a progressive Zionism actually reflects the reality unfolding in Israel/Palestine I would argue that it never has the point is that in order to remain morally consistent, American Jews must see their Israel as not only a Jewish state, but a democratic state as well. In the mainstream American Jewish imaginary, Zionism is akin to the civil rights movement of the Jewish people. It must offer the world, in the shape of Jewish liberation, a testament to the promise of universal human emancipation as well.

Donald Trump poses for a photo with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in New York, September 25, 2016. (Kobi Gideon / GPO)

Thats why, as democratic norms have steadily eroded in Israel, American Jews have inwardly wrestled with an impossible contradiction. Over the years, more of us have chosen to speak out against Israels brutal occupation in the West Bank, its relentless bombardment of Palestinians in Gaza, its discriminatory two-tiered legal structure within its borders, and its denial of refugee rights. But the bulk of us have remained silent, because we were taught to trust that somehow, Israels troubling actions were necessary to protect the safety of Jews around the world.

But when Israel backs a regime, here in America, that threatens our liberty as humans and our safety as Jews, the claim that Zionism protects Jews no longer holds. An Israel that cheers on Goliath, as it raises its hand against the Davids of our world, is an Israel that has become startlingly unrecognizable to us. While mainstream American Jewry could choose to ignore the spread of ultra-nationalism and xenophobia in the far-off Jewish homeland, when those same forces wash now upon our own shores, the familial resemblance and active collaboration between Trump and Netanyahu becomes impossible to ignore.

We enter the new fascist era with communal institutions that are unable to speak truth to power, and with a Jewish state that stands among the forces arrayed against us, one whose attacks on political dissent and denial of basic rights to Palestinians serve as a disturbing roadmap to where the U.S. may be headed. Though the bulk of liberal American Jewry has until now remained silent, in the era of Trump, there grows in their gut a dizzying disorientation.

By the time the Trump nightmare finally crashes into flames as all such nightmares eventually do and these liberal American Jews get up, rub their eyes and look around, their gaze will turn in despondence towards Jerusalem. Where once stood their progressive Israel their light unto the nations, symbol of the holy values of democracy and human freedom, spiritual rock of resistance against all tyranny and oppression they will now face a state that, from their vantage point, looks no different than the monster they just helped chase out of their American homeland. The realization that, two generations after the Holocaust, the State of Israel allied itself with the forces of global fascism will be too much for liberal Zionism to bear.

As more and more American Jews face this reality, their sense of betrayal will be immense. As a community, our process of collective mourning and teshuvah (repentance) will be difficult. Our identity as American Jews, supported so long by the foundation-stone of liberal Zionism, will be in crisis. It will take some of our elders a while to admit it, and some never will, but in our hearts we will know that a state which cheered on the tyrant who raised his hand against us can no longer be our Jewish state. With the Zionist dream dead, what Jewish vision will guide us into the future? How will we rebuild?

Over the next few years, the twin barbarisms of the Trump and Netanyahu regimes will continue to dovetail, and the rift between Israel and the bulk of American Jewry will continue to widen. While a few American Jews will cast their lot with Trump, Netanyahu and the rising global forces of fascism, hundreds of thousands more will overcome the inertia of our mainstream institutions and take to the streets to defend our lives and communities against tyranny. Through this experience of struggle, American Jews will reconnect to the social movements from which, for too long, too many of us have been estranged. We will re-learn the muscles of tzedek (justice) and tikkun olam (healing the world) which, for too long, too many of us had failed to put to use.

The old dream of a liberal Zionism will not survive to carry us through the 21st century. But out of the fire of our reborn commitment to our principles, a new diaspora Jewish identity can be formed, founded on prophetic values of social justice, solidarity and love. We will again bear witness to mi-melech malche ha-melachim, to a king who rules over kings, a force of divine righteousness greater than earthly power. Let us cleave to this vision, and this work, without fear, with a clear head and a strong moral compass. It is our only hope.

Ben Lorber is a Campus Coordinator with Jewish Voice for Peace.

For additional original analysis and breaking news, visit +972 Magazine's Facebook page or follow us on Twitter. Our newsletter features a comprehensive round-up of the week's events. Sign up here.

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The age of Trump spells the end of the Zionist dream - +972 Magazine

Trump says terror attacks ‘under-reported’: Is that true? – BBC News

Posted By on February 7, 2017


BBC News
Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true?
BBC News
There are no reports of an attack in the Saudi capital that month. But two US ... What happened: Three soldiers were attacked by a man with a knife outside a Jewish centre in the southern French city. Did we ... What happened: Four American and two ...

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Trump says terror attacks 'under-reported': Is that true? - BBC News

Anti-Defamation League Reports Striking Uptick in "Hate-Related Incidents" in Houston – Houston Press

Posted By on February 7, 2017

Tuesday, February 7, 2017 at 6 a.m.

Swastikas spray-painted on fences and signs in Sienna Plantation. Students saluting Adolf Hitler during Cypress-Ranch High School's senior class picture day. Racist and anti-Semitic fliers distributed at universities and in neighborhoods across Harris, Fort Bend and Montgomery counties. All of that happened in just one week, leading the Anti-Defamation League's Houston branch to issue a statement Friday about the uptick since the start of the year.

According to ADL's Southwest Regional Director Dayan Gross, the Southwest Region usually sees 30 to 40 hate-related incidents per year. So far, the ADL has counted 25 since the start of the year.

There has been a disturbing uptick in the number of apparent hate incidents since the Presidential election, Gross said in a statement. We are working hard to respond to these incidents, and we hope they are not part of a growing trend."

Gross told the Houston Press via email that the ADL tracks the incidents as they are reported in news media or when they receive tips and investigate the incidents on their own accord. "Generally if hate symbols, signs or language are involved, these incidents are classified as hateful incidents," he said of the ADL's criteria.

While the ADL doesn't speculate about the cause of such a drastic increase, Gross said the perpetrators used Trump signage or identified themselves as Trump supporters.

Last week, the Press talked to the group behind the distribution of white nationalist flyers at Rice University, called American Vanguard, whose Texas leader told us that Trump was helping their cause, no matter how he may try to distance himself from white supremacist groups. The fliers, which the ADL cited in its release, encouraged people to defend the white race, which American Vanguard believes is undergoing a slow and steady genocide (let us clarify for the record: "Genocide" is their word, not ours). The recruitment fliers said things like "We have a right to exist" and "Defending your people is a social duty." Others at Texas universities appeared Trump-inspired:"What Made America Great? Blood and soil. Keep it that way, join the Vanguard."

"Trump is a representation of white America whether he likes it or whether he knows it or not," said the leader of American Vanguard's Texas chapter, who said it's the Vanguard's policy to always be anonymous for safety purposes. "I think what he's doing is... uh... he's kind of defending it. Not explicitly, but he's doing things that are helpful for it."

In a Sienna Plantation neighborhood in Fort Bend County, multiple homeowners found swastikas spray-painted on their fences and garages. One homeowner found a Trump-Pence campaign sign, with a swastika painted over it, tacked onto his fence as well. As KTRK reported, the Fort Bend County Sheriff's Office is investigating the incident as a hate crime.

That same week, a seemingly large group of students at Cypress-Ranch High School reportedly yelled "Heil Hitler!" and "Heil Trump" during a senior photo, throwing up the Nazi salute. One student emailed photos to KPRC, telling the news station that it appeared that roughly 70 students participated. Cy-Ranch administrators said those students would be disciplined, and addressed the student body and parents in lengthy statements.

"This inappropriate gesture is symbol of a horrible time in the world, in which countless human atrocities occurred," Principal Bob Hull said in a statement, which you can view in full here."This gesture invokes strong emotion and symbolizes hate that crosses all genders, races and cultural lines. ...I am disheartened that this group are members of our senior class."

Gross said that ADL has offered assistance to law enforcement, educators and victims in the areas where these hate-related incidents occurred, offering educational materials or training wherever needed.

"We continue to do what we always have done, which is to educate against the dangers of hatred and promote diversity and respect. Our staff has stepped up efforts to prevent and to respond acts of hate and will continue to do so as needed."

Continued here:
Anti-Defamation League Reports Striking Uptick in "Hate-Related Incidents" in Houston - Houston Press

ADL files amicus brief supporting challenge to Trump’s immigration order – The Times of Israel

Posted By on February 7, 2017

WASHINGTON The Anti-Defamation League filed an amicus brief in federal court Monday supporting the state of Washingtons challenge to President Donald Trumps highly controversial immigration order.

When America has closed its doors and allowed its core values to be compromised, the country later looked back in shame, said the groups CEO Jonathan Greenblatt in a statement.

On Friday evening, a federal judge issued a nationwide restraining order against the ban, which suspended US entry for people from seven Muslim-majority nations for 90 days and froze the entire US refugee program for 120 days.

It also blocked Syrians from entering the country indefinitely.

The ruling by US District Judge James Robart was harshly criticized by the president, who referred to him in a tweet as a so-called judge and suggested the blame would fall on his shoulders if a terrorist attack ensued that cost American lives.

Just cannot believe a judge would put our country in such peril, Trump posted on Sunday afternoon. If something happens blame him and the court system. People pouring in. Bad!

US President Donald Trump speaks following a visit to the US Central Command and Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base on February 6, 2017 in Tampa, Florida. (AFP PHOTO / MANDEL NGAN)

Trump administration officials have further said they plan to challenge the ruling vigorously, and on Monday evening, the Justice Department urged a federal court to reinstate the ban.

The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit is expected to rule at some point this week on the matter, before it is likely go to the Supreme Court in the months ahead.

The ADLs amicus brief a legal document filed by non-litigants in appellate cases who have a stated interest in the ruling pointed to the history of Jewish refugees being denied entry onto Americas shores, including the denial of passengers of the MS St. Louis, a German ship filled with 937 Jewish refugees, who were denied entry into the United States in 1939.

At other times, when prejudice and fear predominate over reason and compassion, we falter, often with devastating consequences, as set forth below in connection with the St. Louis tragedy, the brief said.

The ADL, a Jewish civil rights organization that monitors and combats anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry around the globe, also cited the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II following the attacks on Pearl Harbor

The document closes by saying the current travel ban risks once again sacrificing the nations core values in favor of prejudice and fear a sacrifice that history has repeatedly proven has profound consequences both to the persons who suffer as a result and to the still-vibrant vision of the shining city on the hill.

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ADL files amicus brief supporting challenge to Trump's immigration order - The Times of Israel

Dan Turner: Zionism is a racist ideology – Monterey County Herald

Posted By on February 6, 2017

The racism implicit in the recent letters and op-eds by pro-Israeli writers really needs to be answered.

One way to define racism is as a philosophy that either makes the case for the superiority of one group, which justifies its right to rule, or the inferiority of another group, which makes its subjugation richly deserved.

Zionism is, very basically, a racist ideology that maintains that Jews are more entitled than Palestinians to rule the land of Palestine. So, its not surprising that the pro-Zionists use racist tropes to justify the Israeli Jews domination of the Palestinians.

For instance, a pro-Zionist writer recently implied that Jews are superior to Palestinians because Jews have many Nobel Prize winners while the Palestinians have none. To him, this demonstrates the superiority of Jewish culture over that of the Palestinians while completely ignoring that this difference is solely an accident of geography. Jews happened to be living in Europe when the great advances in science were made there during the past 500 years. If the Palestinians had also been living there, they would probably have as many Nobel Prize winners as the Jews, as anyone who has knowledge of the role that Palestinians (and Arabs, in general) have played in U.S. academia during the past 50 years can attest. This effort to portray the Palestinians as intellectually and culturally inferior to Jews is blatantly racist.

Palestinians are also portrayed by the pro-Zionists as both unreasonable and psychotically vicious. The pro-Zionists say that the Palestinians have been offered deals by the Israelis for the establishment of a Palestinian state but the Palestinians refused to accept any of them. If you accept that contention at face value, it would make the Palestinians seem unreasonable. Unfortunately, the truth is that it is the Israelis who have never made an offer that any Palestinian politician could accept and it should be obvious, by this point, that the Israelis are not negotiating in good faith but, rather, that the Israelis goal is to immiserate the Palestinians to the point that they will leave voluntarily. The Israelis want all of the land of Palestine for themselves. They will suffer the Palestinians only if they agree to live in completely servile subjugation.

About the Palestinians supposed viciousness and hatred of Jews and the state of Israel, suppose that foreigners came here and occupied California from Monterey to Los Angeles and from the coast to the eastern side of the Salinas Valley (thats about the size of Israel and the occupied West Bank) and immediately dispossessed millions of us, forcing us to live in refugee camps or outside those boundaries. Further, they continued to slowly dispossess those of us still living here and humiliated us daily as we traveled from one little enclave in which we were allowed to live to another. Id be pretty angry about that and Ill bet you would be, too, and no one could blame us for wanting to kill them all.

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So, considering the ongoing dispossession and daily humiliation of the Palestinians and their slaughter in ratios of 100 to 1,000 Palestinians killed for every Israeli they kill, I think the Palestinians have been models of restraint, not vicious beasts. I dont know how many Israelis the Palestinians have killed since Israel was established almost 70 years ago but it is probably only a few hundred as opposed to thousands of Palestinians slaughtered by the Israelis. After all, weve killed thousands of Afghans over the past 15 years and the Afghans never even did anything to us.

Dan Turner is a resident of Monterey and is a past president of local Congregation Beth Israel.

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Dan Turner: Zionism is a racist ideology - Monterey County Herald

Hate, extremism in US focus of ADL meeting – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on February 6, 2017

The Cleveland region of the Anti-Defamation League will host Oren Segal, director of ADLs center on extremism as its guest speaker, at its annual meeting at 7 p.m. Feb. 16 at The Temple-Tifereth Israel in Beachwood.

Segal will discuss The Current Landscape of Hate and Extremism in the U.S. Based in New York City, he plans to give an overview of the state of hate in the U.S., at a time when he calls ADLs work more relevant than ever before in understanding hate and when to push back on it.

We are coming off of a very bad year in terms of different extremist movements and their activity, frankly a divisive sort of presidential election, public discussion, rise in hate incidents that we saw (and) a lot of extremism online, Segal said. So what Id like to do is talk about that and contextualize it and give people some insight into that.

Segal said that since the Nov. 8 election, the ADL has seen an uptick in reported hate-related incidences. He said although ADL needs to complete its annual audit of incidences across the country before making a full assessment of the reports and what they mean on a larger scale, whats striking is how many refer to the presidential election, citing graffiti like Make America White again.

Its just unheard of, he said, also pointing to an increase in reported hate incidents on college, high school and even middle school campuses.

Anita Gray, ADL regional director, said she expects at least 200 people to attend the event, which costs $20 per person and includes a dessert reception, with dietary laws observed. Those interested in attending are advised to RSVP and purchase a ticket here by Feb. 10.

Gray said that she hopes the event opens up a discussion for the community about recent extremism and fears surrounding it.

We hope to educate our community as to what is happening with hate and extremism here in the United States. We think our community needs and wants to have current facts, she said.

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Hate, extremism in US focus of ADL meeting - Cleveland Jewish News

ADL Director Wants Trump To Apologize, ‘Set The Record Straight’ On Holocaust – TPM

Posted By on February 6, 2017

After Politico reported that the White House quashed a State Department statement marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day that specifically mentioned Jewish victims, the director of the Anti-Defamation League called on President Donald Trump to apologize.

"To not include Jews when talking about the Holocaust is to miss the very essence of this low point in human history. Time for President Trump to apologize and set the record straight," ADL director Jonathan Greenblatt said late Thursday in a statement.

Trump's statement marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day last week did not explicitly mention Jewish victims, prompting scrutiny from groups like the ADL.

Politico revealed Thursday that the State Department's Office of the Special Envoy on Holocaust Issues had drafted a statement that did mention Jewish victims, but that the White House blocked it from being released.

An anonymous official told Politico that the White House did not see the statement from the State Department until after the Trump administration had sent out its own version. But unnamed officials at the State Department told Politico that the agency had been preparing a statement for the White House to use.

Trump's aides vigorously defended the administration's remarks remembering Holocaust victims in the face of intense criticism. Trump's chief of staff, Reince Priebus said that the administration did not "mean any ill will to anybody," while White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said that "pathetic" critics of the statement were just "nitpicking."

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ADL Director Wants Trump To Apologize, 'Set The Record Straight' On Holocaust - TPM


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