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Distorting Facts to Blame the Left for Antisemitism – FAIR

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Do yourself a favor and read this thread, tweeted scheduled RNC speaker Mary Ann Mendozawhich included the claim that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is not a fabrication. And it certainly is not anti-Semetic [sic] to point out this fact (CNN, 8/25/20).

A recent iteration comes from one of Jewish medias main voices, the Forward (7/30/20), where Yale law student Emily Shire complains that progressives pull their punches when antisemitism comes from the left.

Her op-ed spends most of its time worrying about antisemitism from athletes and celebrities, like rapper Ice Cube, and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. But while Ice Cubes contributions to hip-hop are legendary, his influence on the US political left is almost nonexistent. Thats noteworthy because Public Enemy, whose lyrics are much more associated with the left, actually did have a member who said antisemitic things, and was promptly removed from the group (New York Times, 8/11/89).

The association of Farrakhan with the left is a giveaway: Just because he is Black and talks about poverty doesnt make him a leftist. As the late contrarian journalist Christopher Hitchens, then a columnist at the Nation, said on C-SPAN (3/1/93) upon the release of Spike Lees Malcolm X biopic, the NoIs obsession with small businesses, sobriety and sexual traditionalism makes it, if anything, a poster child for the Reaganite right. As political scientist Adolph Reed Jr. wrote in Class Notes, the NoIs

racial militancy often rests atop basically conventional, if not conservative, aspirations: for example, the desire to penetrateor create Black-controlled alternatives tothe glass ceiling barring access to the upper reaches of corporate wealth and power. Radical rhetoric is attractive when it speaks to their frustrations as members of a minority, as long as it does not conflict with their hopes for corporate success.

Take any essay about the current Black-led uprisings around the country from left publications; a lot of groups and names come up, but the Nation of Islam and Farrakhan are pretty much absent.

This kind of bad-faith rhetoric (jumping from a rapper and a well-known demagogue to the entire political left) is part of a trend in US media that tries to divorce the rise of antisemitism from the rise of far-right leaders like Donald Trump (or Hungarys Viktor Orbn, or Frances Marine Le Pen). The narrative these pieces insinuate goes: Yes, much of the violent antisemitism we see in the world today comes from the far-right, but anti-Israel sentiment on the left is another head of the same beastand one that seems more interesting to talk about, for whatever reasons.

The New York Times (11/14/19) illustrates an op-ed about progressive antisemitism with a photo of anti-Israel demonstrators.

George Washington University undergraduate Blake Flayton wrote in the New York Times (11/14/19) about the hostility Zionists face on campus, conflating anti-Zionism with antisemitism, as is old hat, and even Times columnist Michelle Goldberg (10/7/18) has debunked this equation. But Flayton offers something more when he complains that a group on his campus had described Zionism as a transnational project, an antisemitic trope that characterizes the desire for a Jewish state as a bid for global domination by the Jewish people.

This is just gaslighting. Zionism is by definition the idea of relocating Diasporic Jews to Israel, and thus inherently transnational. This idea has sustained numerous international groups dedicated to strengthening ties between Jews in the Diaspora with Israel, not just so that they might support the Jewish state, but in hopes that some might move there.

In the Washington Post (8/13/19), columnist Marc Thiessen also sounded the alarm about rising left antisemitismagain, mostly going over old territory about how Israel gets unfairly singled out for criticism by the left, supposedly an indication of latent antisemitism although this argument has been called out as whataboutism in places like Middle East Monitor (8/30/16) . But he goes beyond suggesting that advocacy of Palestinian rights is motivated by Jew hatred, lumping the left in with actual fascismquoting Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum director Piotr Cywiski saying, Do not forget that the Nazi Party in Germany was a party of workers. We are many times thinking about the Nazis as far right, Cywiski adds, but the party spoke to the left, using some leftist language.

In superficial internet debates, pointing out that the National Socialist Workers Party had the words socialist and workers in it is a common trope, but we should expect more serious analysis on an important opinion page. The main tendency Cywiski is alluding to is a Nazi faction called the Strasserists, named for two brothers who promoted a supposedly pro-worker version of fascism, calling for empowering Aryan workers against what they saw as Jewish-dominated capitalism. But this flank was purged out of the party by 1934, when Gregor Strasser was murdered in the Night of the Long Knives, allowing Adolf Hitler to monopolize Nazism almost completely.

The Washington Post (8/13/19) represents the rise of antisemitism on the left with a photo of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.

And much as Trump caters to white working-class voters with false promises of bringing back manufacturing jobswhile ripping up union rights and attacking socialistsso too did the Nazis trumpet the supremacy of its nations pure and Aryan workers while crushing trade unions, and waging literal war against Communists and socialists, tying the Jewish threat to Bolshevism.

Interestingly, the Washington Post (2/4/20) later published a piece denouncing the very kind of rhetorical trick Thiessen used, with historian Ronald Granieri calling the attempt to tie left-leaning parties to Nazism nothing less than historical and political sophistry that attempts to turn effect into cause and victim into victimizer.

There are more examples of strained efforts to link the left to antisemitism. Jill Filipovic at CNN (7/29/20) balanced overt antisemitism from the Republicans with, again, reference to Ice Cube and Farrakhan. David Hirsh, an academic who campaigns against academic boycotts of Israel, wrote a book about how anti-Zionism in progressive spaces masks antisemitism, although his critics like the Electronic Intifada (3/5/13) have described his perspectives as misrepresentation.

The bitter irony here is that this weaponization of Jewishness and exaggeration of antisemitism on the left is, as FAIR (1/28/20, 12/21/19) has pointed out, a frequent tool the press has used against Jeremy Corbyn and Bernie Sanders, the latter of whom is a Jewish socialist who has had to endure antisemitic attacks from the right and center. And many left outlets, like The Nation, Progressive and In These Times, do, in fact, frequently confront antisemitism.

The New York Post (8/24/20) accused the Biden campaign of privately pandering to anti-Israel activists after an aide apologized for the pain caused by the campaigns denunciation of Muslim American activist Linda Sarsour.

Media attempts to label the left as antisemitic have caused headaches for the Democrats as well. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, calling himself a vehement opponent of antisemitism, attempted to distance himself from Muslim activist Linda Sarsour for her outspoken criticism of Israel (New York Post, 8/19/20). But Biden needs Arab and Muslim votes in order to win states like Michigan, so his participation in this narrative forced him into damage-control mode, apologizing to Muslim Democrats for speaking out against Sarsour (New York Post, 8/24/20). Theres a familiar theme in this thread, because much of the accusation of antisemitism against Sarsour, a key organizer of the Womens March, rests on her unwillingness to denounce Farrakhan (Atlantic, 3/8/18).

There is nothing wrong with diving deep into antisemitisms ability to creep across the political spectrum, or even into anti-Israel circlesfor example, when a KKK leader like David Duke complains about Zionists, we can safely assume hes using it as a code word for Jews. The New Yorker (1/3/20) took a relatively more nuanced approach to identifying antisemitism as hard to pin as left or right. And when there are legitimate cases of antisemitic activism on the left, there are usually voices on the left that raise the issue (Guardian, 8/26/15). Writer April Rosenblum published a pamphlet on the topic.

But as FAIR (11/6/18) has covered in the past, journalists have often, in the face of antisemitic violence from the right (like the Tree of Life massacre), looked to exaggerate instances of liberals or leftists saying unsavory things as a way to provide a kind of partisan balance. This is as unfair as it is insensitive to the victims of right-wing terror: A closed-borders zealot shooting up a synagogue is just not in the same category as college students being too loud about suffering in Gaza.

Pieces like these are ideologically driven, which is fine, but they feel the need to distort facts to get the conclusion they want. They use red herrings like Farrakhan to somehow represent the ascendant left, engage in dubious history and demand that certain aspects of a prominent political movement simply cant be uttered. This is as offensive to Jews as it is to journalism.

Featured image: The Forwards collage (7/30/20) of left antisemites: Former Philadelphia NAACP head Rodney Muhammad, rapper Ice Cube, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and pop singer Madonna.

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Distorting Facts to Blame the Left for Antisemitism - FAIR

No deal can legitimize the Zionist regime: Khaled al- Qaddumi – Mehr News Agency – English Version

Posted By on August 26, 2020

US President Donald Trump, who had earlier offered the so-called Deal of the Century in favor of the Zionist regime, announced that he has brokered an agreement between the Israeli regime and the United Arab Emirates for normalization of ties.While US and Israeli officials termed the agreement as a great breakthrough, Palestinian factions strongly condemned the measure unanimously.

The Representative of the Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) in Tehran Khaled al- Qaddumi and the Representative of the PalestinianIslamic JihadMovement in TehranNaser Abousharifcondemned the UAE's betrayal of the Palestinian cause during a specialized meeting titled "Objectives to UAE-Israeli tie normalization"at the Mehr news agency.

During the panel,Khaled al- Qaddumi answered some questions on the issue ofUAE-Israeli regime tie normalization and its consequences.

When asked about the reason behind themove of choosing amicroscopic countrylike the UAE for normalization of ties between the Israeli regime and some Arab countries, al- Qaddumi said, "First of all, I should say that the UAE itself has chosen to be chosen for this mission and this is not new. They have always been in contact with the Zionist regime in the past and now just everything is disclosed publicly."

"The reason is that now Trump and Netanyahu are in crisispolitically, economically, sociallyand duo to the consequences of coronavirus. To go out of thesecrisesjust 3 months before the US presidential election, Trump is going to demonstrate that how he is going to secure the Israeli regimes security and the UAE which its rulers are open to such measures is a good choice for him. Of course, the rulers of such countries are open to such measures, not their people," he added.

"People in the region are in solidarity and partnership with Palestine. We are talking about some officials, which try to get close to the Zionist regime just for the own personal interests," he noted.

Commenting on the benefits of normalization of ties between UAE and Zionist regime, Hamas'representativesaid, Any of the countries that have normalized ties with the Zionist regime since 1978 have not achieved any of those announced goals neither economic nor political ones. Political figures in Tel Aviv use normalization of ties with othercountries just as a tool to save themselves.

Answering the question whether normalization of ties with some rulers in the region can pave the way for legitimizing the regime, al- Qaddumi said, During the past 72 years since the regime was created, despite support from superpowers and even general-secretary of the UN and Europeans still it is in intense need of recognition of the minor countries in the region."

He went on to say, "So we can understand how much they are legitimate or illegitimate. Palestinians are the real owner of the Palestinian lands and they are the real custodians of the holy sites. We will continue our struggle. Nobody is allowed to do business with Palestine and Palestinian rights. This deal like the previous ones will fail. We will not compromise over our legitimate rights for money and we won't let others do the same."

"These kinds of deals may delay our victory but cannot prevent it and cannot legitimize Israel's regime. Everybody should know that we are not against any religion or humanity; we are just against an illegal and inhuman entity called Zionism. This political entity is not only a threat to the region but also to the whole world," he stressed.

He further commented on the Palestinians' expectations and the responsibility of some leading Arab rulers in backing Palestinian people and said, " We don't expect anything. we don't need their help and armies to defend and support us. We just expect them not to stab the Palestinian nation in back."

Reported by Zahra Mirzafarjouyan

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No deal can legitimize the Zionist regime: Khaled al- Qaddumi - Mehr News Agency - English Version

‘Americans and Zionists are fomenting conflict between Sunnis and Shiites in Lebanon’ – United World International

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Interview with President Aouns ex-advisor Elie Hatem

Elie Hatem is Barrister-at-Law at the Paris Bar Association and at the International Criminal Court of the Hague. He has been the advisor of current President Michel Aoun of Lebanon, during the exile of this latter in France. Dr. Elie Hatem was also the advisor of former Secretary General of the United Nations, the late Boutros Boutros-Ghali. He was close to Rauf Denktash in Cyprus and to many Heads of States around the world. He remains the political advisor of Mr. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the founder of the National Front in France, and member of the steering committee of Action Franaise, founded in the last century by the famous Charles Maurras. He is of Lebanese origin and the direct descendent of Sheikh Eid Hatem, who was the Administrator of Mount Lebanon in 1861.

Mr. Hatem lets start with the latest news. What is your opinion regarding the UN Tribunals ruling on Rafik Hariris killing? What does it mean, and do you think it will have repercussions on Lebanons domestic dynamics?

The assassination of Rafik Hariri in 2005 was a political act. Its objective was to lead Lebanon back to a phase of instability, 15 years after the end of the war, decided internationally under the auspices of the United States of America. This assassination coincided with the start of an American-Zionist political project to sow discord in the Middle East between the different communities there: the invasion of Iraq and dislocation of the Iraqi State, the Arab spring, etc By accusing Syria of being behind this act, pressure was put on the latter to push her to leave the country she occupied with the US benediction. After blaming Syria, they tried to accuse Hezbollah in order to create tension between Sunnis and Shiites in Lebanon. We are in the same situation today. Without tangible proof, the Tribunal tried to accuse a stooge by recalling his time in Hezbollah.

But the court could not determine the sponsors and will never be able to do so. Indeed, this act was carried out by secret services in a sophisticated way. Like all political crimes committed this way, we will never know who is behind it. Do we know who assassinated President Kennedy? Mrs Benazir Bhutto? Can we know for which intelligence services worked Salim Ayyash (the person whose guilt was established by the Tribunal)? We all know that there are members of Hezbollah who work for Israeli intelligent services like Mohamad Shorba, who was a security official in this organization, or another one who played a role in the assassination of Imad Mughniyeh, or Ali Rafik Yaghi, etc I dont think that the unclear decision of this Tribunal will have real repercussions given that it did not satisfy anyone. It only showed how an international institution that cost 1.5 billion dollars is unable to conduct a serious investigation.

The Beirut port blast shocked the whole world. Speculations are running wild, but there still is no evidence regarding whether it was an accident or sabotage. Could you briefly share your views on the issue?

All hypotheses are possible: a pure accident or a terrorist act. But it is rather strange that this explosion took place in a convenient context, 3 days before the judgment which was to be rendered by the STL concerning the assassination of Late Prime minister Rafik Hariri, which had to be postponed to August 18 after the explosion. In addition, the inhabitants of Beirut all heard the passage of military planes a minute or two before the explosion. President Michel Aoun has not ruled out that a missile could be behind the detonation which was intended to cause an instantaneous explosion of this magnitude. This explosion has benefited those who want to excite public opinion, both Lebanese and international, turning it against President Michel Aoun, against the state and highlighting Hezbollah in order to create chaos and a vacuum of power, a constitutional crisis and the end of Lebanese institutions, followed by a return to military conflicts with foreign interventions.

The Lebanon explosion and the Israel-UAE deal in the eyes of the intelligence community

All things considered, do you believe that Hezbollah is a boon or a burden for the Lebanese people? Why?

Hezbollah is both: a political party and a militia. It is moreover the only militia which was able to maintain its weapons after the agreements of Taif of 1990, which demilitarized all militias with the exception of Hezbollah. However, these agreements which were signed in Saudi Arabia had Americas blessing, and were designed in order to leave open the possibility of sparking an civil war in Lebanon. Knowing that the Lebanese Shiite community had a creeping demography, they thought they could create fear in other communities, especially Christians. Because of the military power of this militia, it was thought to be able to rekindle the feeling of community imbalance and provoke, in due course, a civil war. But, starting with the arrival of Hassan Nasrallah as head of Hezbollah in 1992, the party evolved. In 2000 and after the Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, (this withdrawal was attributed to Hezbollah), this political group became the axis of the national Lebanese resistance against the Israeli occupier. It should be noted that Israel still occupies a piece of the territory of the south of Lebanon. Moreover, Hezbollah receives technologically advanced weapons, more powerful than those of the national army. Indeed, the United States, which is arming the Lebanese army, refuses to provide its newly sophisticated weapons so it will not be able to counter the Zionists.

The ideal way to solve this dilemma will be to integrate the Hezbollah militia into the Lebanese army (under a special battalion) and take advantage of the good relations that Hezbollah maintains with Iran in order to be able to obtain sophisticated weapons to ensure the defense of Lebanon from the Israeli enemy.

Dr. Marwa Osman: Theres anger on the streets of Beirut after the explosion

In the near future, what developments do you foresee in Lebanon?

It is very difficult to predict any developments. It all depends on the regional context. Lebanon was the victim of a political project aimed at destroying its multi-communitarian model. The contexts have been exploited for this purpose without result. I hope that the Lebanese succeed in overcoming their divisions and that they do not fall into the trap of those who want to destroy their institutions via different pretexts. They must maintain their institutions and their State, despite its present imperfections. This is a time for wisdom. The Lebanese must maintain national cohesion, take advantage of the friendships and links that communities or political and social groups have with foreign countries or foreign powers in the exclusive interest of the Nation, without being subservient to foreign powers.

Israel and the UAE recently signed a peace deal. What do you think is the main purpose of the agreement? What other Arab countries do you think will normalize their relations with Israel next?

Israel destroyed the Arab world and did the same with the Palestinian resistance by creating dissensions within it between Fatah and Hamas. With the Unites States of America, they created conflict between Muslims and pushed for the emergence of political Islam. They did it, of course, in Afghanistan and at the same time in Iran. Then, they pushed for war between Iraq and Iran (paradoxically the latter was receiving help from Israel) with the aim of creating a Sunni-Shiite war and the break-up of Iraq. Today, they have managed to increase this tension between Sunnis and Shiites, especially during the war in Yemen. The Emirates and other Sunni-majority Arab countries fear Shia Iran more than Israel. This explains the normalization with Israel, to the detriment of the Arab cause. I think that the Sultanate of Oman will follow, as well as Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Sudan and Morocco because all of these countries have informal relations with the Zionist entity.

Who stands to benefit from the Beirut Explosion?

Sure. But I think that the main aim is not to isolate Iran, but to instrumentalize this country which is considered the protector of the Shiites in the Sunni Shiite conflict. In addition, the technological advances and progress that this country has made in recent years bothers the United States and Israel, who want to see all the countries of the Middle East regressing. Sooner or later, Iran will no longer be targeted like it is today. In addition, it must be added that this country has done its part to thwart the American-Zionist political project of bringing out Sunni extremism (Daesh, Al Nusra, Al Qaida, etc).

As the Beirut port has become unusable, Irans only way to reach its ally in Lebanon is by land via highways passing through Iraq & Syria. Do you fear a new destabilization process on this axis?

Unfortunately, yes. The logic of things is that a Sunni Shiite conflict in Lebanon could quickly be exported to Iraq where the institutions are weak. Then, it will return to Syria which, for the moment, is difficult to destabilize thanks to the Russian intervention which allowed it to safeguard its institutions.

French President Emmanuel Macron presented himself as the sole saviour of the Lebanese people during his trip to Beirut. Does Macron wish to restore French colonial rule in the Middle East?

I do not think so. President Emmanuel Macron wanted to reconnect with Lebanon. In fact, France has been ousted from the Near and Middle East since the coming to power of President Nicolas Sarkozy, who looked at this area of the world solely through the Israeli prism. He had also been widely supported by the Israelis and the Americans to win the elections. Since then, French foreign policy has been totally subservient to NATO and the United States. This was continued under Franois Hollande. France therefore abandoned Lebanon and then Syria. President Macron wants to straighten out French diplomacy. He reached out to Russia as he had with Iran. He came to reconnect with Lebanon during this visit. Some Lebanese, made desperate by the situation, had sentimental reactions which were misinterpreted especially by those who do not want France to return to the international scene.

This reminds me of the reaction to General de Gaulles press conference in 1967 a couple of days after the attack of the Airport of Beirut by Israel, during which he pronounced the famous sentence which provoked serious controversy concerning Israelis: an elite people, sure of themselves and domineering

Emmanuel Macron didnt manage to contain the Yellow Vest protests, but tries to meddle in other nations internal affairs. Do you see a contradiction in his mindset?

Indeed, President Macron has encountered several internal difficulties, including popular protests (those of the Yellow Vests). Some have attributed this movement to outside hands trying to weaken and destabilize him. From a domestic policy perspective, he may not have chosen a good team to deal with the internal problems of France. But, in foreign policy, I think that he is attempting to bring back France to the political scene and to emancipate his country from American domination. By the way, he described NATO as being in a comatic state. Today, we need the emergence of new powers to counter the American superpower which, along with the Zionist lobby, conducts direct and indirect terrorism on numerous nations. Thus, France wants to reconnect with its diplomatic traditions by upholding international law and ensuring a balance on the international political scene. I also sent a note, in this sense, to President Macron after his election, and I see that the ideas developed in my long study are being taken into account. I dont know if this is a coincidence or not

What was your first reaction when you saw how French President Emmanuel Macron treated Lebanons President Michel Aoun?

Looking at the short clips on television and out of context, I thought it was a discrediting of the Lebanese Head of State, but after talking to President Aoun on the phone and then to his daughter who takes care of him, I understood what happened. Indeed, President Aoun is 85 years old. The people around him at the Presidential Palace and his family are very afraid he might catch the coronavirus. This would not only pose a danger for his person, but also for Lebanon by creating a crisis resulting from the impediment of the President of the Republic, or even a constitutional vacuum. Thus, President Aouns entourage insisted that the French President not accompany him and that he not mix with the crowd. This is what led President Macron to do so, insisting on it several times, in a filial and friendly manner. This just goes to show how much the images and the media can mislead us.

What do you think would be the best solution to assure a peaceful coexistence between different religious, ethnic and confessional groups in Lebanon? Is the Taif system outdated?

Inter-community coexistence is embedded in Lebanese sociology. It should be pointed out that the war in Lebanon was never an inter-religious war, although we tried to make this aspect emerge in 1975. It was a war between social communities, not religious ones. I would even say the conflicts have been intra-community, insofar as within each community, we have witnessed internal conflicts between political parties turn into the creation of militias. Differential and plural factors in Lebanon facilitated the interference and fueled divisions.

It is above all necessary to save Lebanese state and institutions first, and to avoid falling into the trap of those who want to undermine the Lebanese multi-faith model which is the antidote to the Israeli ethnocratic and racial model. To do so, it is necessary to suppress political parties responsible for the divisions and to establish direct democracy.

Since the Phoenician period, Lebanon has been made up of city-states. Administrative and political decentralization should be carried out today within this model, allowing each region to have autonomy: a government of the people, by the people, and for the people, with a Parliament and deputies endowed with a special mandate, not a national one.

Of course, at the top of the state a government made up of technocrats with a federative Head of State and mediator could represent the Nation. This is what my ancestor, Sheikh Eid Hatem, envisioned in 1861 when he was appointed General Administrator of Mount Lebanon, thanks to the efforts of Louis-Napolon Bonaparte. Finally, Lebanon will have to take advantage of its relations not only with Western countries, but also with Eastern ones. It needs to turn more and more towards the new free world: the one which is led by Moscow and has been joined by China, as the political philosopher Alexander Dugin has imagined, and as President Putin has undertaken.

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'Americans and Zionists are fomenting conflict between Sunnis and Shiites in Lebanon' - United World International

British rapper Wiley repeats tropes about Jewish power and money in new interview – Forward

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Image by Getty/Tabatha Fireman/Str...

The artist Wiley prompted a Twitter walkout of British Jews after an anti-Semitic tirade posted on the platform.

(JTA) The British rapper Wiley in a new interview repeated tropes about Jewish power and money that saw him removed from social media platforms.

Wiley doubled down on many of his remarks, including that Jews run the Earth, are very rich and stick together, in an interview with the 1 Po Show on the FilthyFellas YouTube channel.

The rapper said that his initial 48-hour social media tirade against Jews late last month was triggered by Nick Cannon, who espoused anti-Semitic conspiracy theories in a June episode of his podcast. Cannon, who was fired from ViacomCBS, has apologized for his remarks and taken steps to learn more about the Jewish community.

Wileys Jewish manager cut ties with him after the remarks.

The creators of the FilthyFellas channel said in a statement accompanying the video that Wiley is not without his faults and 1 PO SHOW and FilthyFellas will acknowledge them. In our opinion (his) recent tirade was wrong and poorly considered and very dangerous. There is more to him than those Tweets though and we wanted to make sure we gave him the opportunity to clear-up as much of the mess has been left behind as possible.

Wiley wasremoved late last month from Facebook,Twitterand Instagram, and earlier this month from YouTube, following a series of tweets widely regarded as anti-Semitic and other social media posts.

In Fridays interview, Wiley said that he never had a problem with anyone in business other than with some of the Jewish community and that it is not anti-Semitic to say Jews do, with other societies, run the Earth.

They own everything. Im not anti-Semitic if I say the Jewish communitys very powerful, they own this, they own that Im not wrong. Im not wrong, Wiley said.

He again referenced comments made in 2018 by Israeli Sephardi Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef in which he used Talmudic language that compares Black people to monkeys and used the ethnic slur Kushi. Yosef was roundly criticized for the remarks by Israeli leaders of all sides.

The post British rapper Wiley repeats tropes about Jewish power and money in new interview appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

British rapper Wiley repeats tropes about Jewish power and money in new interview

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British rapper Wiley repeats tropes about Jewish power and money in new interview - Forward

RNC speaker criticized for several actions seen as dogwhistles to alt-right – Forward

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Image by Courtesy of Cawthorn for ...

Congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn

A day after the last-minute ouster of a scheduled speaker at the Republican National Convention due to accusations of antisemitic Twitter activity, another guest is also attracting criticism.

Madison Cawthorn, 24, is the Republican nominee in a solid-red North Carolina congressional district. He has also garnered attention for a series of posts and actions that detractors say are dogwhistles to the so-called alt-right.

On a 2017 trip to Germany, Cawthorn made a point of visiting the Eagles Nest, Adolf Hitlers vacation home. He later later posted pictures of the visit on Instagram, saying it was part of his bucket list and referring to the Nazi leader by the German honorific Fuhrer. (The caption also said the Eagles Nest was a place where Supreme Evil shared laughs and good times with his compatriots.)

Cawthorn deleted the posts earlier this month.

Cawthorns real estate company is called SPQR Holdings, a reference to the Roman motto Senatus Populusque Romanus, or the Senate and People of Rome. The phrase was a commonplace reference to Roman government in antiquity, but in modern times has been coopted by white nationalist groups.

In one of his campaign videos, Cawthorn can be seen displaying a Spartan helmet on his chest as he aims a rifle. The Spartan helmet, in addition to being the logo of Michigan State University sports teams, has also been appropriated as the logo for the Oathkeepers, one of the largest anti-government militia groups in the United States, with some 30,000 members as of 2016, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Cawthorn has denied that he is racist, noting that his fiancee is half-Black.

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RNC speaker criticized for several actions seen as dogwhistles to alt-right - Forward

#HoloHoax: Researchers say Facebook and Twitter have a conceptual blindspot around Holocaust denial – CTech

Posted By on August 26, 2020

While anti-Semitism has been prevalent on social media for many years, a new study by the Institute of Strategic Dialogue (ISD) has found cases where platforms like Facebook are actively promoting Holocaust denial in their recommendation algorithms.

Its study, Hosting the Holohoax: A Snapshot of Holocaust Denial Across Social Media addresses how certain words and phrases are used across major social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, and Youtube.

Facebook responded to the findings saying it does remove posts that violate its policies on hate speech, though Holocaust denial does not always meet the threshold.

The publication of the ISD study comes after increasing pressure has been put on social media companies to curb the anti-Semitism and other prejudices found on their platforms. The online campaign, Stop Hate For Profit, was a July 2020 event that set to boycott advertising on Facebooks platform in an attempt to pressure them to change some of their policies surrounding hate speech.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Following the publication of the story, Twitter responded the following:

"As outlined in the Twitter Rules, we do not tolerate targeted instances of hateful conduct, including making references to violent events or types of violence where protected categories were the primary victims, or attempts to deny or diminish such events. We also have a robust glorification of violence policy in place and take action against content that glorifies or praises the Holocaust. These policies also apply to content included in profile elements including banners, avatars and bios."

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#HoloHoax: Researchers say Facebook and Twitter have a conceptual blindspot around Holocaust denial - CTech

Will the UKs housebuilding algorithm join the governments growing AI graveyard? – The Next Web

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Its been a seriously rough few weeks for algorithms in the UK.

The problems started on August 7, whenthe British government scrapped analgorithm used in visa applications, following allegations that it was creating speedy boarding for white people.

Weeks later,England joined Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland in ditching a model used to calculate school exam resultsafter evidence emerged that it had penalized poorer students.

The algorithms must have thought their month couldnt get any worse. But in the last two days, theyve beenhit with another double dose of bad news.

Yesterday, the Guardian revealed that around 20 councils localgovernment authorities in the UK have stoppedusing an algorithm to detect fraudulent welfare claims.

[Read:Facebook algorithm actively promotes Holocaust denial]

Researchers from the Data Justice Lab (CDJL)found that one algorithm was dumped after falsely flagging low-risk claims as high-risk, while another was dropped because it simply didnt make a difference to the councils work.

The CDJL also discovered that Sunderland council had scrapped a separatealgorithm designed to make efficiency savings, while Hackney had ditched one that identified children at risk of abuse.

Algorithmic and predictive decision systems are leading to a wide range of harms globally, and a number of government bodies across different countries are pausing or canceling their use of these kinds of systems,Dr Joanna Redden from the Data Justice Lab told the Guardian.

She might not have long to wait to add another to the list.

The British government recently introduced anew formula for calculating where new housing is built. But planning consultancy Litchfields today claimed the algorithm would lead to more homesbeing constructed in the countryside and suburbs typically Tory-voting areas and fewer intowns and city centers.

The plans have achieved the rare feat of attracting critics from across the political spectrum.

Conservative MPNeil OBrien warned Tory-voters wouldnt want more housing where they live; Labours Kate Hollern accused the government of leveling-down areas; and the Green Partys Natalie Benett said the plans would step up regional inequality even further, and hack into the greenbelt for the benefit of mass housebuilders.

Whether the housebuilding algorithm joins the ones used for exam results and welfare claims on the shelf. Butit will certainly be under increased scrutiny over the months to come.

So you like our media brand Neural? You should join our Neural event track at TNW2020, where youll hear how artificial intelligenceis transforming industries and businesses.

Published August 25, 2020 18:06 UTC

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Will the UKs housebuilding algorithm join the governments growing AI graveyard? - The Next Web

After 18 Years, ADL’s Amanda Susskind Moves to the Constitutional Rights Foundation – Jewish Journal

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Over the past few years of her 18-year tenure as the Los Angeles Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Amanda Susskind said she began noticing a subversion of the democratic process throughout the nation. The trend, she said, may have been brought into focus by the current administration, but it certainly didnt start there.

Nonetheless, when trends that she considers existential threats rear their heads, the Berkeley-raised Susskind runs toward the conflict with a mindset geared toward bringing about meaningful change.

The thought that there has been this shift is what wakes me up in the middle of the night and makes me want to leap out of bed the next morning to go to work, she said. What am I doing to fix this? What am I doing to give back?

Susskind will start answering those questions this week as she kicks off her new position as the president of the Constitutional Rights Foundation (CRF). Through curriculum-based programs, the 58-year-old nonprofit works to educate and empower youth around the principles of democracy.

In certain ways, the position at CRF will have demands that tap the same skill set she used at the ADL. Raising funds and awareness are a perpetual challenge for any nonprofit. The fact that CRF is well known in the legal community and uses lawyers as volunteers and consultants to develop many of its programs puts Susskind a former public policy and environmental law attorney on comfortable ground.

The thought that there has been this shift [due to existential threats] is what wakes me up in the middle of the night and makes me want to leap out of bed the next morning to go to work.What am I doing to fix this? What am I doing to give back? Amanda Susskind

The challenge and I hope I say this with utter respect for everything that has come before me is that not enough people know about the CRF, Susskind said. Unlike the ADL or the American Civil Liberties Union, it doesnt seem to be as much of a household name. In current times, when this is a topic on everybodys mind, it feels like the opportunity is there to bring a little more awareness and show how you can be involved in the cause.

CRF has a great record of responding to the moment, she continued, whether its the (1992) riots after the acquittal of the police officers who beat Rodney King, to the moment were in now, combating systemic racism in police forces. These are opportunities for civic engagement by high schoolers through CRF programs. There has to be a certain nimbleness to respond to whatever the issue is of the day.

During her nearly two decades at the ADL, Susskind was nothing if not nimble as well as creative. Hailed as a first-rate bridge-builder, Susskind opened up partnerships between the ADL and new sets of community organizations and leaders across the entertainment, sports, high-tech, finance and fashion industries. She takes pride in the establishment of a Latino-Jewish roundtable and of the LA For Good steering committee that united diverse Los Angeles groups in an effort to combat hate. When she arrived at the ADL in 2002, the Los Angeles office had a staff of 36 and was raising $2.1 million per year. By the time she left this past June, a staff of 21 was raising $6.5 million.

I was proud as I built those connectors to different sectors of the community and diversified the fundraising base, but I was also able to lift up and diversify the message itself, Susskind said. Its all related to building up an organizations profile, which is what I want to do at CRF.

At CRF, Susskind succeeds Marshall Croddy, who had led the organization since 2013. Croddy had been scheduled to retire after the organizations May gala, but the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of the event and changed the timeline of his retirement. Although the CRF offices have undergone some recent remodeling, the staff will largely be working remotely.

But whether Susskind will be doing her CRF work in person or on the other end of a Zoom call, the nonprofit is delighted to have her aboard, said CRF Board Chair Kimberly Dunne.

The fact that in a time of COVID we were able to find somebody of her experience in the educational arena with a focus on equity and issues and rights and values embedded in the Constitution, we couldnt be more thrilled, Dunne said.

As a child and grandchild of Holocaust survivors, Susskind is gratified to have led an organization that brings education and awareness to new generations. She wishes her successor, Jeffrey Abrams, and the ADL team continued success. The organizations mission, she said, is no less urgent today than it was when she arrived.

Working with the Museum of Tolerance, the Museum of the Holocaust and the Shoah Foundation, we have been working consecutively every year for over 30 years to bring Holocaust education to high school teachers and even more diverse stakeholders, Susskind said. Teaching about the Holocaust is one of the best antidotes to Holocaust denial. Give people the facts.

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After 18 Years, ADL's Amanda Susskind Moves to the Constitutional Rights Foundation - Jewish Journal

InterVarsity Press and the Jews: A Troubled History – The Times of Israel

Posted By on August 26, 2020

Earlier this year, InterVarsity Press, an Evangelical publishing house in the U.S. which shares content with the similarly named Inter-Varsity Press in the United Kingdom, published a 192- page book about Christians who saved Jews during the Holocaust. The book, released on March 17, 2020, is titled Defying the Holocaust: Ten Courageous Christians Who Supported Jews.

Written by Jim Dowley, a U.K. historian who, according to his bio, has written widely on church history and music, describes the small number of Christians who chose to stand with suffering Jews in the Holocaust, while lamenting that [M]any more Christians however, chose to stare silently away from the flames while embodying twenty centuries of anti-Jewish theology. In his introduction, Dowley adds that helping Jews escape the Nazis was the exception.

Given the history of IVP in both the United States and England, the publication of Dowleys book, with its repudiation of twenty centuries of anti-Jewish theology, can be interpreted as a gesture of contrition. The two IVP publishing houses have a lot to atone for.

Rev. Dr. Stephen Sizer speaking at a Christ at a 2017 Checkpoint Conference in Oklahoma. (Photo: Dexter Van Zile)

IVPs wings in both the U.S. and U.K. distributed two notoriously hostile books that, sadly enough, contributed to 20 centuries of anti-Jewish theology. In 2004 IVP published Christian Zionism: Road Map to Armageddon? and in 2007 it released Zions Christian Soldiers? The Bible, Israel and the Church (2007) by Rev. Dr. Stephen Sizer, a particularly hostile and bigoted critic of the Jewish state and its supporters.

In 2008, Sizer appeared at a Holocaust denial conference in Jakarta. Six years later, he spoke at a conference in Iran, a huge exporter of genocidal antisemitism, about the evils of Christian Zionism.

He has even suggested, on Irans PressTV no less, that because of their misdeeds, Jews might be thrust forth from the Holy Land (as if the mullahs in Iran needed another polemic to justify their hostility toward the Jewish state). He did it during a 2008 interview with Alan Hart, who asked Sizer Are you saying that by its behavior at the moment the Zionist state of Israel is setting Israeli Jews up to be exiled again? Sizer responded by saying, Yes, I am unfortunately.

Huh? Israeli Jews are some of the best-behaved people in the Middle East, but its they, and not folks like Bashar Al Assad or the Mullahs in Iran who risk being exiled. Funny how that works.

Sizer was eventually instructed by his bishop to refrain from speaking publicly about the Arabi-Israeli conflict and finally, after some more controversies, he finally retired from his post as an Anglican priest in 2017.

Sizers hostility was astonishing. His IVP-distributed texts portrayed Christian Zionists as having the power of veto over peace in the Middle East, as if groups like Hamas and Hezbollah do not have a role to play in the lack of peace between Israel and the Palestinians. In his 2007 book, Sizer described Christian Zionism as a formidable and dangerous movement that is leading the West, and the church with it, into a confrontation with Islam (as if Muslim extremists hadnt been oppressing and attacking Christians in the Middle East for centuries).

His 2004 book Christian Zionism: Road Map to Armageddon? falsely declared that Arab children born in Israel are stateless at birth, and must earn Israeli citizenship, whereas the Jewish child is born with it. He also falsely declared that an Israeli childs benefits are contingent on parents completing military service and since most Arabs do not serve in the military, Arab children do not receive state benefits. (So much for the fact checkers at IVPs wing in the United Kingdom.)

It gets worse. Researchers at the UK-based blog, Harrys Place, uncovered a number of other huge problems with this text. For example, on page 251 of his 2004 book, Sizer used a footnote to suggest Israel was responsible for 9/11. He also approvingly cited the writings of Rev. Dale Crowley, a well-known antisemite who, before his death, gave the invocation at a Holocaust denial conference organized by the Barnes Review. Sizer described Crowley as a religious broadcaster, omitting any reference to his antisemitism.

Sizers real assault on the modern state of Israel is theological. In his books, every effort for the Jewish people to affirm their sovereignty over contested territory whether it be Jerusalem or the West Bank is a violation of Christianitys strictures placed around the Jewish people after the arrival, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus is deployed not as a source of blessing for the world, but as a curse directed at the Jews, stripping them of their rights as a sovereign people and de-legitimizing their historical and physical reality.

In Sizers writings, Israels claims on Jerusalem contradict the New Testaments shift away from an earthly Jerusalem to a heavenly Jerusalem. With this hermeneutic, Sizer turns Evangelical support for Israels efforts to exercise sovereignty over its capital into a heretical act.

The underlying logic is that Christians cannot support the presence of sovereign Jews in the Holy Land without betraying the Gospel and Jesus Christ himself. The implication is that for Christians to be faithful to their religion, they must refrain from assisting Jews as they struggle to maintain their sovereign presence in their homeland and turn a blind eye to Arab and Muslim attempts to deprive Jews of their state.

Predictably, Sizer portrays Christian organizations that have the temerity to point out the problems of antisemitism in the Middle East as promoting hatred for Arabs. The overall impact of Sizers IVP books was to hinder or problematize Jewish efforts to achieve self-determination and safety in the Holy Land while turning a blind eye to Arab and Muslim efforts to undermine these rights.

Fortunately, both wings of the IVP conglomerate stopped publishing Sizers books in 2016. That same year, they published The New Christian Zionism: Fresh Perspectives on Israel and the Land, which was edited by Rev. Gerald R. McDermott, Ph.D. The messages in this book are that Christians can support Israel without resorting to dispensationalist arguments regarding the end times and can support Jewish self-determination without betraying their faith and that there are even ways to read the Gospel that affirms the continued existence of the Jews.

Sadly, IVP has fallen off the wagon when it comes to Jew-hatred. It recently published two books that portray Jewish sovereignty and not efforts to undermine it as a threat to human right rights and world peace. The books are not as explicitly hostile to Israel as Sizers, but theyre bad enough.

First, theres Beyond Hashtag Activism: Comprehensive Justice in a Complicated Age by Rev. Dr. Mae Cannon. This text, published by IVP on May 26, 2020, problematizes Jewish sovereignty while affirming the Palestinian push for statehood, without acknowledging the violent and corrupt actions perpetrated by Hamas and the Palestinian Authority against Palestinians and Israelis. Cannon also obscures the manner in which Palestinian Christians have lent their voices to the cause of anti-Zionism in the Holy Land.

For example, Cannon whitewashes the anti-Jewish hostility inherent in the liberation theology promoted by notorious anti-Zionist Naim Ateek, emending his writing to obscure from her readers how he tries to strip Jesus of his Jewishness. In a book quoted by Cannon, Ateek wrote Jesus Christ was a Palestinian as we are. In her text Cannon alters Ateeks sentence to read: Jesus Christ was a Palestinian [Jew] as we are. A sneaky bit of editing.

Cannon also downplays the anti-Israel hostility inherent in the Hamas-organized March of Return, describing it as an effort to draw attention to the right of return demanded by the Palestinians. Affirming the pipe dream of the right of return, which has consigned several generations of Palestinians to fruitless conflict with Israel, is unkind toward the people she is trying to help.

It is worse, however, for Cannon to ignore the genocidal rhetoric promoted by March of Return organizers. One organizer, Hamas Political Bureau member Fathi Hammad, declared in a July 2019 speech that Palestinians abroad should attack every Jew on planet Earth and slaughter and kill them.

On June 16, 2020, IVP published another book, The Other Side of the Wall: A Palestinian Christian Narrative of Lament and Hope by Rev. Dr. Munther Isaac, academic dean at Bethlehem Bible College and a prominent organizer of Christ at the Checkpoint Conferences. In this text, Isaac tells us that Palestinians cant be antisemitic because they themselves are semites and that Western Christians are trying to atone for the Holocaust by forcing Christians in the Middle East to accept the theology of Christian Zionism, a theology designed to solve a Western problem (anti-Semitism) with the purpose of dealing with the inner guilt. He adds it is ironic that the West, which has a long history of anti-Semitism, wants to educate Palestinians on this issueeven rebuke and correct us now, and teach us the right way.

Isaac writes these things as if his readers do not know about the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Haj Amin Al Husseinis meetings with Hitler during World War II, or the letters he wrote to Nazi officials telling them not to trade Jewish children headed to death camps for German prisoners of war. He writes these things as if his readers do not know about the Grand Muftis Arabic radio broadcasts from Germany during the war in which he incited hostility toward Jews throughout the Middle East.

In February, 2020, IVPs wing in the U.S. published a book lamenting the failure of Christians to stand up to antisemitism in Europe and just a few months later, it releases two books that do just that in the context of the Middle East. IVP will come to the defense of dead Jews killed in the 20th century, but it promotes a Christian narrative that undermines the ability of living and breathing Jews to defend themselves in the 21st century. (So much for confronting twenty centuries of anti-Jewish theology.)

And what was that about the Christian obligation to stand with the Jews in the face of Jew-hatred again?

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InterVarsity Press and the Jews: A Troubled History - The Times of Israel

Trump on QAnon Followers: ‘These Are People That Love Our Country’ – The New York Times

Posted By on August 24, 2020

WASHINGTON President Trump on Wednesday offered encouragement to proponents of QAnon, a viral conspiracy theory that has gained a widespread following among people who believe the president is secretly battling a criminal band of sex traffickers, and suggested that its proponents were patriots upset with unrest in Democratic cities.

Ive heard these are people that love our country, Mr. Trump said during a White House news conference ostensibly about the coronavirus. So I dont know really anything about it other than they do supposedly like me.

When told by a reporter about the central premise of the QAnon theory a belief that Mr. Trump is saving the world from a satanic cult made up of pedophiles and cannibals connected to Democratic Party figures, so-called deep-state actors and Hollywood celebrities Mr. Trump did not question the validity of the movement or the truth of those claims.

Instead, he offered his help.

Is that supposed to be a bad thing or a good thing? the president said lightly, responding to a reporter who asked if he could support that theory. If I can help save the world from problems, I am willing to do it. Im willing to put myself out there.

Mr. Trumps cavalier response was a remarkable public expression of support for conspiracy theorists who have operated in the darkest corners of the internet and have at times been charged with domestic terrorism and planned kidnapping.

QAnon conspiracy theorists spread disinformation and foster a climate of extremism and paranoia, which in some cases has led to violence. Condemning this movement should not be difficult, said Jonathan A. Greenblatt, the chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League. Its downright dangerous when a leader not only refuses to do so, but also wonders whether what they are doing is a good thing.

Mr. Trumps comments also elevated a group of people who the F.B.I. has said poses a domestic terrorism threat.

QAnon is promoting political disinformation, medical disinformation and carrying on a legacy of anti-Semitic tropes, Joan Donovan, the research director at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, said in an interview. Attention from the president is only going to embolden these groups to grow their ranks.

Although a majority of Americans say they remain unfamiliar with the particulars of the movement research shows that people who use social media platforms like Twitter and Reddit are more likely to be familiar with QAnon those who study the behavior of fringe groups have warned of the power to produce extremism among followers.

QAnon is a larger and many-tentacled version of the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, which falsely claimed that Hillary Clinton was operating a child sex-trafficking ring out of the basement of a Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant. In December 2016, a man who said he was on the hunt for proof of child abuse was arrested after firing a rifle inside the restaurant.

QAnon supporters often flood social media pages with memes and YouTube videos that target well-known figures like Mrs. Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and the actor Tom Hanks with unfounded claims about their links to child abuse. Lately, activists have used anti-child-trafficking hashtags as a recruitment tool.

Its not just a conspiracy theory, this is a domestic extremist movement, said Travis View, a host of QAnon Anonymous, a podcast that seeks to explain the movement. Mr. View said that Twitter and Facebook pages exploded with comments from gleeful followers after Mr. Trumps comments.

Mr. View pointed out that the president answered the question by supporting the central premise of the QAnon theory that he is battling a cabal of left-wing pedophiles rather than addressing the lack of evidence behind the movement.

They are very practiced at trying to interpret any comment from Trump as validation, Mr. View said of the movements followers. And Trump very coyly indicated he would help if he could.

In recent weeks, platforms including Twitter and Facebook have rushed to dismantle a mushrooming number of QAnon-related accounts and fan pages, a move that people who study the movement say is too little and too late. On Wednesday, after a record amount of QAnon-related growth on the site, Facebook said it removed 790 QAnon groups and was restricting another 1,950 groups, 440 pages and more than 10,000 Instagram accounts.

On Facebook alone, activity on some of the largest QAnon groups rose 200 to 300 percent in the past six months, according to data gathered by The New York Times.

We have seen growing movements that, while not directly organizing violence, have celebrated violent acts, shown that they have weapons and suggest they will use them, or have individual followers with patterns of violent behavior, Facebook said in a statement, adding that it would also block QAnon hashtags like #digitalarmy and #thestorm.

But the movement made the jump from social media long ago: With dozens of QAnon supporters running this year for Congress including several who have won Republican primaries in Oregon and Georgia QAnon is knocking on the door of mainstream politics, and has done so with the presidents help.

QAnons origins are murky. In October 2017, a post appeared on the 4chan message board from an anonymous account calling itself Q Clearance Patriot. This poster, who became known simply as Q, claimed to be an intelligence officer with access to classified information about a war Mr. Trump was waging against the global cabal.

According to QAnon lore, Mr. Trump was recruited by top military generals to run for president in 2016 in order to break up the cabals criminal conspiracy, end its control of politics and the media, and bring its members to justice.

It has also incorporated elements of other conspiracy theories, including claims about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the existence of U.F.O.s and the 9/11 truther movement.

For years, Mr. Trump and his campaign have flirted with the QAnon movement. Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press secretary, has interviewed supporters in her role as a spokeswoman for the Trump campaign, creating footage that was later promoted to Mr. Trumps supporters.

If you could say one thing to the president, what would you say? Ms. McEnany said to a supporter outside a campaign rally in February as several attendees shouted, Q! The two talked about what it meant to be a digital soldier for Mr. Trump.

Who is Q? the man replied. Ms. McEnany said that she would pass the message along.

For his part, the president has often reposted QAnon-centric content into his Twitter feed. And QAnon followers have long interpreted messages from Dan Scavino, the White House director of social media, as promoting tongue-in-cheek symbols associated with the movement.

Im not surprised at all by his reaction, and I dont think QAnon conspirators are surprised either. Its terrifying, Vanessa Bouch, an associate professor of political science at Texas Christian University, said in an interview. In a democratic society, we make decisions based on information. And if people are believing these lies, then were in a very dangerous position.

Last week, Mr. Trump tweeted his support of Marjorie Taylor Greene, a QAnon follower who won her House primary runoff in Georgia, but he declined to directly embrace the movement itself during a White House news conference.

She won by a lot, he said. She comes from a great state.

But on Twitter, Mr. Trump endorsed Ms. Greene, calling her a future Republican Star and a real WINNER!

Katie Rogers reported from Washington, and Kevin Roose from San Francisco. Sheera Frenkel contributed reporting from San Francisco.

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Trump on QAnon Followers: 'These Are People That Love Our Country' - The New York Times


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