Page 991«..1020..990991992993..1,0001,010..»

Cincinnati Police Officer Sues Over Being ‘Portrayed As A White Supremacist’ – WVXU

Posted By on August 14, 2020

A Cincinnati police officer filed a lawsuit against four people, alleging their social media posts and complaints to the Citizens Complaint Authority falsely portrayed him as a racist and white supremacist after he made the "OK" gesture in public at City Hall.

The suit, filed July 22 in Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, says police officer M.R. (who filed under a pseudonym) had been working crowd control in a noisy hallway during aBudget and Finance Committee meetingon June 24. A large number of protesters, fueled by outrage over the killing of George Floyd, had gathered to express their opinions about the city budget. Some wanted to defund the police.

And the hallway was noisy, according to the suit. Someone asked M.R. about another officer who recently left the scene; he made the "OK" sign by touching his thumb and index finger together.

NPR reportedthe Anti-Defamation League added the "OK" gesture to its "Hate on Display" database in 2019, saying some people associate the symbol with white supremacy. The Southern Poverty Law Centerhas notedthat the association started on the online imageboard 4Chan, where far-right users announced a coordinated hoax meant to bait left-leaning portions of the internet into embarrassing themselves by misidentifying the OK gesture as one linked to white supremacists.

Then real white supremacists started to use it. The SPLC report the gesture, although not exclusively or evenmostlyused by white supremacists, can be an effective public dogwhistle for some on the far right because it is so commonplace like the original hoax, "what it's about most of the time is a deliberate attempt to 'trigger liberals' into overreacting to a gesture so widely used that virtually anyone has plausible deniability built into their use of it in the first place."

Tuesday morning Judge Meghan Shanahan postponed the trial until next month. An attorney for one of the defendants requested the delay to review an order they received earlier that day.

Judge Shanahan also granted anonymity to the officer who filed the suit while proceedings continue. A series of restraining orders will prohibit those named in the lawsuit from "doxxing" the officer, which means releasing his name or personal information with malicious intent. The officer's attorneys said releasing that information puts the officer and his family in danger.

Iris Roley, with the Cincinnati United Front, is following the case and said M.R.'s requests go against the First Amendment.

"Any public employee, especially in the realm of public safety, that wouldn't want a citizen to be able to identify, talk about, complain or report is outrageous," Roley said. "As taxpayers, they should be able to do that. We created the whole entity, the Citizen Complaint Authority, just to be able to receive these types of complaints. And then to have officers retaliate against citizens makes it even worse."

The lawsuit names four people as defendants: Julie Niesen, James Noe, Terhas White and Alissa Gilley.

Editor's note: Julie Niesen works as a freelance food writer for WVXU.

Continue reading this article on WCPO.com >>

See the article here:
Cincinnati Police Officer Sues Over Being 'Portrayed As A White Supremacist' - WVXU

GOP congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn on the defensive over social media post of visit to Hitler retreat – WICZ

Posted By on August 14, 2020

By Sunlen Serfaty and Clare Foran, CNN

Twenty five-year-old North Carolina GOP congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn is on the defensive over photos on his Instagram page that show him in 2017 visiting Adolf Hitler's vacation house in Germany known as the "Eagle's Nest."

The caption refers to Hitler as "the Fuhrer" and says that a visit to the site -- a popular tourist destination documenting the horrors of the Nazi regime -- had been on his "bucket list for awhile" and "did not disappoint."

"Strange to hear so many laughs and share such a good time with my brother where only 79 years ago a supreme evil shared laughs and good times with his compatriots," the caption states.

Cawthorn captured national attention in June when he scored a stunning political upset, winning a Republican primary runoff for an open House seat as a political newcomer at the age of 24. He defeated the candidate backed by President Donald Trump and his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, to secure the GOP nod for the western North Carolina seat Meadows vacated.

When Cawthorn won his primary, he said that the President called him shortly after his victory to congratulate him. A staunch conservative who supports Trump, Cawthorn was partially paralyzed in a 2014 car accident. He is a motivational speaker and filed to start a real estate investment company last year. Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales rates the 11th District as Solid Republican.

If elected in November, Cawthorn would become the youngest member of Congress -- a title currently held by Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, the progressive upstart who took office when she was 29. Cawthorn has even been referred to by some as "The AOC of the right."

Moe Davis, Cawthorn's Democratic opponent in this fall's general election, seized on the Instagram post this week, tweeting on Monday, "Hitler's vacation retreat is not on my bucket list."

In an interview with CNN, Davis stopped just short of calling Cawthorn a white nationalist, saying, "I think collectively when you put all the pieces together, it paints a pretty clear picture of someone that's at least comfortable in that environment."

Cawthorn denounced white nationalism in a recent interview with WLOS News 13. "I completely and wholeheartedly denounce any kind of white nationalism, any kind of Nazism. We fought a war where the American people went to war to end the scourge of Nazism across this country and I'm very thankful for that because it's evil and its vile," he said.

And Cawthorn pushed back against his Democratic opponent's assertions, accusing Davis in a statement to CNN of promoting "conspiracy theories" and of "bigotry."

"My Democratic opponent is pushing conspiracy theories to hide his radical agenda," Cawthorn said in the statement, adding, "His belief that conservatives in his district are guilty of being white supremacists until proven innocent is dangerous to our democracy. His suggestion that I, a man in a wheelchair, would celebrate a regime that would have had me exterminated is offensive to every thinking person in western North Carolina. He actually doesn't believe any of these things, which makes his bigotry even more repulsive."

Cawthorn has also taken to social media to defend himself, writing on Twitter Tuesday, "Another fake news controversy: When our soldiers were photographed at the Eagle's Nest in 1945 they were clearly celebrating the Allies triumph over one of the greatest evils in human history. They weren't celebrating evil; they were celebrating their victory over evil."

On Facebook, he reiterated that message and added, "When I visited the Eagle's Nest this was the history I had in mind. It was a surreal experience to be remembering their joy in a place where the Nazi regime had plotted unspeakable acts of evil."

Davis is also alleging that the Instagram post is just one of many "dog whistles" he believes Cawthorn is sending.

"The name of his company -- SPQR -- which is a symbol associated with white nationalists, he often does interviews in front of the Betsy Ross flag, which again is used by white nationalists (to) symbolize the good ol' days when white men ruled the country," Davis said, saying that those things "paint a pretty clear picture of someone that's got some explaining to do."

In his statement to CNN, Cawthorn said, "My Democratic opponent is pushing conspiracy theories to hide his radical agenda and support for policies like the Green New Deal, government-run health care and releasing terrorists. Demagogues always have something to hide. In his case, it's the details. His policies are too liberal and too radical for western North Carolina."

He added, "I'm not hiding symbols. He's hiding policies."

SPQR is an abbreviation for Senatus Populusque Romanus, a Latin phrase that translates to the Senate and the Roman People.

Cawthorn has defended the name, saying in a statement responding to Davis' claims in the Charlotte Observer newspaper, "SPQR is a term for Rome," adding, "We can't let extremists on any side hijack or rewrite history because those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it."

The Betsy Ross flag is an early design of the US flag, which features 13 stars in a circle for the original 13 states.

Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow with the Anti-Defamation League's Center on Extremism, said in an interview with CNN that he has seen some instances where the Betsy Ross flag and the term SPQR have been used by white supremacists, but said that in most cases their use by people is innocuous and not associated with extremism in any form.

The Betsy Ross flag is typically used as "a traditional patriotic flag," Pitcavage said, and SPQR is "a pretty innocuous term that is basically short-hand for the Roman republic or the Roman republic and empire."

He cautioned that it would be risky to assume that any association with either means a person is an extremist.

Pitcavage also highlighted the fact that the Instagram post from Cawthorn that has come under scrutiny uses the term "supreme evil" in describing the site. "He made it clear in that very same post that he was not sympathizing with the Nazis. So I didn't see there was much merit to that accusation," Pitcavage said.

Adding to the attention Cawthorn faces over the social media post, there are now new questions about his educational claims.

His website states that he "was nominated to the U.S. Naval Academy by Rep. Mark Meadows in 2014. However, Madison's plans were derailed that year after he nearly died in a tragic automobile accident that left him partially paralyzed and in a wheelchair."

But in a deposition related to the accident obtained first by AVL Watchdog, a non-profit news service, Cawthorn acknowledged that he was rejected by the academy before his accident.

Asked if he was notified by the Naval Academy that he did not get in, Cawthorn replied that he was. When he was then asked if that was before the accident, he responded, "It was."

In the interview with WLOS News 13, Cawthorn contended that he was not misleading.

"I never said I was appointed or accepted to the academy, I knew that I'd only been nominated at that point," he said, adding, "I fully expected to be accepted and to be appointed, but at that point I hadn't received it. So I've been very careful never to mischaracterize who I am as a person."

Follow this link:
GOP congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn on the defensive over social media post of visit to Hitler retreat - WICZ

Need a dose of inspiration? Our Amazing Kids have you covered – Pamplin Media Group

Posted By on August 14, 2020

Don't miss our 2020 Amazing Kids special section, which hits the stands next week.

The Class of 2020 will forever be associated with a global pandemic and its disruptive impact on students, particularly high school and college seniors.

So, too, with our 2020 class of Amazing Kids.

The project, which usually culminates with a celebration at OMSI in May, was postponed because of the virus. We briefly considered skipping a year, but our employees from sales representatives to beat reporters urged us to go forward. And it's a good thing we did.

For in these days where hope and inspiration seem to be in short supply, we have plenty to share.

There's the caring spirit of Riley and Marley Hartgraves, Wilsonville residents and students at Boeckman Creek Primary School who have been consistent volunteers around town for the past few years. Amid the pandemic, their main concern is that they can't be as active as they were before. "We really want to be helping people now," says Marley, who is 11 years old.

There's the energy of 13-year old Alayna Neville, of Powell Butte, who is training Luna, a wild mustang yearling, for fall competition. But don't try and praise her for their success. "I don't think it's as much me," she says, "it's more Luna because she is so smart."

There's the emerging leadership seen in Aslan Newson of Portland, who, at 16, serves on her neighbor association board, is president of the Wilson High School Black Student Union, and has worked with the Anti-Defamation League to offer anti-bias training to incoming first-year students.

"I do get exhausted and burnt out, but I have the privilege of being able to stand up for my community in ways my ancestors did not," says Aslan, whose mother is Native American and father is African American. "I think about them and what they fought for."

We call this publication "Amazing Kids," knowing that some of the young people profiled are more mature than many adults.

A few years back, we asked some of the older honorees if they minded the label. They assured us it was fine.

While some in the Class of 2020 may not be kids, they all, in their own ways, are amazing.

Watch for the Amazing Kids section in your copy of the Lake Oswego Review next week!

You count on us to stay informed and we depend on you to fund our efforts.Quality local journalism takes time and money. Please support us to protect the future of community journalism.

See the article here:
Need a dose of inspiration? Our Amazing Kids have you covered - Pamplin Media Group

Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories and ‘Blackface’ Content Included in Facebook Ban on ‘Implicit’ Hate Speech – Algemeiner

Posted By on August 14, 2020

The Facebook logo.

Social media giant Facebook on Tuesday announced explicit bans on conspiracy theories claiming that the world was controlled by a Jewish cabal as well as on blackface content that derides black people but one top Jewish leader characterized the moves as minor steps.

A statement on the companys website authored by its vice president for integrity, Guy Rosen, confirmed that both Facebook and the Facebook-owned platform Instagram had updated their service policies to more specifically account for certain kinds of implicit hate speech, such as content depicting blackface, or stereotypes about Jewish people controlling the world.

Rosen added that Facebook had continued to prioritize the removal of content that violates our policy against hate groups.

Since October 2019, weve conducted 14 strategic network disruptions to remove 23 different banned organizations, over half of which supported white supremacy, he noted.

The change in policy came amidst an often rancorous month-long campaign to boycott Facebook advertising because of the continued presence of racist content on the companys platforms. More than 1,000 US civil rights organizations have been involved in the effort, including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL).

Jonathan Greenblatt the ADLs chief executive was largely unmoved by Facebooks shift.

Lets be clear, these are minor steps to address urgent issues on the platform, Greenblatt said on Twitter.

Theres plenty more work to #StopHateforProfit, he declared, using the hash tag for the advertising boycott campaign.

Original post:
Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories and 'Blackface' Content Included in Facebook Ban on 'Implicit' Hate Speech - Algemeiner

Making the world a better place: Ann Brunswick, at 94, is off to a good start – Shelter Island – Shelter Island Reporter

Posted By on August 14, 2020

Today we take for granted that a woman can have a family and a career, but when Ann Brunswick was born in 1926, it wasnt like that.

Again and again, in her long life, shes defied expectations, as a brilliant researcher and scientist, raising two very accomplished daughters, and retiring to Shelter Island, where she built a house in 1979. She has lived here full time since 2010.

She was the developer and director of The Longitudinal Harlem Adolescent Cohort Study, one of the landmark social science studies of the 20th Century. Her work followed an initial group of 668 African-American adolescents for five decades, a project that began as a way to understand adolescent health, and became a natural history of the participants, documenting their wellness, substance use, homelessness and HIV infection.

The project uncovered information that helped establish, among other things, the fact of HIV infections in women, the extent of homelessness in Harlem, and the profound differences in male and female health.

Speaking about her lifes work, Ann said she was guided by the idea that a scientist must resist the human urge to fit things into patterns instead of observing and recording what you see. You rarely find a single cause for an observed thing, she added. Its not all nature or all nurture. Its an interaction between the two. All observations that look for a single cause are wrong.

Ann was born to a successful businessman, and a very elegant mother at Miss Lippincotts Sanitarium, a Madison Avenue maternity hospital that catered to New Yorks most prominent families.

At this hospital, she said, new mothers rested, and their babies were brought to them once a day. When they came in and told my mother she had a colicky baby, she would not accept that. Im sending her home to nanny! she said. The familys nanny came in a taxi to take infant Ann home, while Anns mother stayed at Miss Lippincotts to rest.

An early reader, and an excellent student, Ann spent a lot of time in the kitchen of her home in the West 70s with her governess and Thelma, who worked as a maid for the family. Thelma read The Daily News, which included the comic strips, which Ann devoured.

An outstanding student, she attended PS 87, PS 6, PS 93 (Joan of Arc) and Julia Richman High School, whipping through the New York Public School system and Hunter College to graduate at 20 with a Masters Degree in Psychology from Clark College.

Her first job out of grad school was with the Anti-Defamation League, where on her first day of work she was asked to condense an article that had been rejected for publication. When it was accepted, she had her first publication credit, a major accomplishment for an academic so early in a career.

When the ADL started a research department, Ann became interested in survey research, and continued to work there until she married Peter Brunswick in 1950, and moved to Denver, Colo. with him.

Within a year, Ann and her new husband were back in New York, and she went to work for National Opinion Research Center (NORC), where she learned the scientific approach to surveys. In 1953, pregnant with her first child, she finished writing the report on an important project and was walking home to her mothers house when her water broke.

She stayed at home for a time with her daughter Debra, and continued working at NORC through the birth of her second child, Naomi, in 1956. Debra is now retired and living in Jacksonville, Fla., Naomi is a pediatric intensive care doctor, living in New York, and between them Ann has three grandchildren, and three great grandchildren.

Ann went to Columbia University as a Senior Research Scientist in 1966. By then, shed developed a strong sense of the right and wrong way to conduct scientific research, and it had caused her to leave a previous job as research director when she realized that the questions were loaded. I dont believe in rocking chair research. It has to be socially useful, she said.

At Columbia, she began the project of a lifetime, although at the time it was meant to be a one-time survey of adolescents, to help Harlem Hospital determine the need to upgrade its services when the field of adolescent medicine was just beginning.

Combining a medical examination with a parent interview, and participant interviews, the survey sought to create a full report on the health of African-American teenagers in Harlem. I couldnt imagine adolescent girls talking about their periods with a male interviewer, so I matched racially, and by gender, the interviewers and the adolescents, hiring interviewers who were African-American.

The data collection for the Harlem survey was in 1968 and 1969, and at first there was no plan to fund the project in the future. There was so much doubt that anyone could do a survey in Harlem that I was only funded for the first year, she said.

But the project continued to follow the original participants over five decades, gathering data from them in waves that occurred every five or six years through 1994, recording the effects of such public health crises as homelessness, substance abuse and the HIV epidemic of the 1980s.

In 1976, Ann retired, and she and Peter divorced.

A year later, visiting a friend with a home on Shelter Island, Ann stayed behind to sit on her friends deck while the others went to the beach.

Something grabbed me to be able to sit alone in that peace and beauty, she remembered. I had been married to someone who worked for an international airline. We went all over the world, but were never in one place for more than a week.

She rented a house for July 1978, and by the end of the month, she had bought a lot in West Neck. She moved into her own home the next summer.

At first, Ann said she didnt feel integrated into the life of the Island. At that time, newcomers were not so welcome, she said.

Not one to sit idle, she led an effort to establish a program for shop students at the school to receive training to work in a town program to help seniors maintain their homes. Her plan came to naught when she could not get approval from the town to launch the project, in spite of support from the Lions Club and school administrators.

That took the wind out of my sails to do a lot of organizing, she said, although she was an early member of the Shelter Island League of Women Voters, serving as secretary for the non-partisan organization for three years.

Over decades of living here, Ann has come to treasure some of the things about Shelter Island that have never changed. The fact that you can charge at the drugstore. You just walk in and they know your name, she said. The drugstore is one of the wonderful places on Shelter Island. It still has that old-fashioned feeling.

In August 2017, Ann experienced the nightmare that haunts many who live independently a serious fall. While hanging something in her closet, she fell backwards, broke a bone, and was unable to move to get help. Her 50-hour ordeal ended when she failed to show up for dinner with a friend, who asked the Shelter Island police to check on her, which they did at once, rescuing her more than two days after her fall.

She recovered from her injuries, but as a close, and scientific observer of the human lifespan, Ann has seen the way human development fails to follow a predictable line, but proceeds in spurts.

With aging, there are a lot of chemical changes, immunity changes, allergies changes, you stay level for a time and then there is a spurt of aging, Ann said. That concept of change applies to changes in human cultures as well. We are going through one of those big rapid changes now, a social epidemic as well as a viral epidemic.

Lighting Round

What do you always have with you? A tissue.

Favorite place on Shelter Island? Hay Beach, looking out at the Atlantic.

When was the last time you were elated? When I look at my trees. I prefer maples.

When was the last time you were afraid? Im afraid of the COVID situation. Its terrifying. We dont really know how to protect ourselves.

What exasperates you? Artificiality and phoniness.

Favorite book? When I was 15 or 16 I read The Americanization of Edward Bok. As he was dying and his children were around him, he told them, You have to leave the country better off for your having been here.

Favorite person, living or dead, who is not a member of the family? John Lewis the opposite of what we have in the White House. He did not get into good trouble to glorify himself.

See the original post:
Making the world a better place: Ann Brunswick, at 94, is off to a good start - Shelter Island - Shelter Island Reporter

Debate | Who is the future of the Democratic Party and what does it mean for Jews? – Forward

Posted By on August 14, 2020

On Tuesday evening, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden announced his pick for vice president: California Senator Kamala Harris. While that was going on, Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar was in the process of winning her primary. The two women pose starkly different versions of the Democratic Party, especially when it comes to Israel. Harris is a pro-Israel stalwart, while Omar has endorsed the movement to boycott Israel.

We asked our two contributing columnists Joel Swanson and Ari Hoffman which of these politicians represents the future of the Democratic Party and what their victories mean for Jews?

JOEL SWANSON: Yesterday, a candidate won a primary election who has a long record of engaging in deadly anti-Semitic tropes. And no, Im not talking about Minnesota Representative Ilhan Omars convincing victory against Antone Melton-Meaux, though he outraised her by a substantial margin thanks to pro-Israel political action committees eager to unseat one of the very few vocal supporters of BDS in Congress.

Image by Noah Lubin

Joel Swanson

Im talking about Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose victory in a Republican primary in a deep-red Congressional district in Georgia virtually assures her a seat in Congress in November. Greene won her primary yesterday despite a long history of bigoted remarks, including endorsing the far-right QAnon conspiracy theory which the FBI itself calls a potential domestic terrorism threat, and saying that Muslims do not belong in government. Greene has engaged in overt anti-Semitism as well: she has accused the Rothschild family of running the QAnon conspiracy and called George Soros the piece of crap that turned in hes a Jew he turned in his own people over to the Nazis - a repugnant slander against a Hungarian Jewish teenager doing what he needed to do to survive the Holocaust.

Now this anti-Semite will be a member of Congress.

So, why have we heard so much more from American Jewish organizations about Ilhan Omar than we have about Marjorie Taylor Greene?

The American Jewish Committee has repeatedly condemned Rep. Omar, but has said nothing whatsoever about Greene.

Its surprising; after all, whatever you think of BDS, no Jews anywhere have died because of it. Meanwhile, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories about Soros and Rothschild, like the ones spread by soon-to-be Representative Greene, have a body count, directly inspiring the Pittsburgh and Poway shooters. So why have Jewish organizations been so much more vocal about Omar?

I think it reflects the fact that weve so normalized far-right anti-Semitic tropes that a political candidate like Marjorie Taylor Greene hardly registers as notable. After all, conspiracy theories about George Soros, despite inspiring the deadliest violence against Jews in US history, are cited by politicians as mainstream as Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump himself.

Meanwhile, Rep. Omars support for BDS is still an utter minority position in the Democratic Party, so much so that when the House of Representatives voted to condemn BDS last year, only 16 Democrats out of 232 in Congress voted against the resolution.

Omar stands out because she vocally defends Palestinian rights in a way that is completely rare in American politics, whereas someone like Marjorie Taylor Greene just fades into the background of the conspiratorial din of our times.

And that brings me to another important story yesterday. On the same day that Ilhan Omar won her primary election against a much better-funded challenger, Joe Biden chose California Senator Kamala Harris as his vice presidential running mate for November.

Senator Harriss record on Israel is dramatically different from that of Rep. Omar. Harris has given well-received speeches to AIPAC in which she talked about raising money for the Jewish National Fund to plant trees in Israel. Shes to the right of even Barack Obama on support for Israel, as she co-sponsored a Senate resolution rebuking former President Obama for condemning Israels West Bank settlements.

At a time when Kamala Harris, a staunchly pro-Israel Democrat who defends the consensus of US military aid to Israel, is being elevated as a major new voice in the Democratic Party, maybe American Jews should not feel so threatened by the victory of one of the very few voices in Congress trying to challenge that consensus.

Maybe we should welcome Rep. Omar for opening a debate that someone like Kamala Harris would keep closed, by essentially agreeing with Republicans on Israel policy. And maybe our community organizations should have less to say about Ilhan Omar and more to say about the Marjorie Taylor Greenes of the world.

ARI HOFFMAN: Joel: youll find little disagreement here that the victory of people like Marjorie Greene indicate a body politic that is in less than tip top shape. The incursion of fringe and extremist ideologies into broad public discourse is truly one of the maladies of our age, and one of the long-term curses of an online and social media fueled culture with which we are only belatedly and ineffectively starting to reckon. QAnon in particular is a noxious force, and it is an utter disgrace, if utterly unsurprising, that Greene has earned Trumps endorsement. When combined with other instances of anti-Semitism on the right during this primary season, and the persistence of the obsession with George Soros, it paints a picture of a dangerous flirtation with the habits of mind and sickness of spirit that always cash out in terms of blaming the Jews.

Image by Noah Lubin

Ari Hoffman

What is happening on the other side of the aisle is to my mind far more interesting, because it will take center stage in what increasingly looks like a post-Trump future. The selection of Kamala Harris to be Joe Bidens VP nominee on the same day that Ilhan Omar won her primary against an opponent backed by the Democratic pro-Israel establishment is a clarifying moment in the battle for the future of the Party. This has been an ongoing storyline for those following along, from the Bernie ascendance to the wave of progressive upsets in the primary season.

Its hard not to see the Biden-Harris ticket as something like both the triumph of centrist Democrats and their last stand. The next generation might pull the lever for Joe, but their hearts are not with the old man from Scranton.

But heres the crux of the question: Which faction should Jewish Americans support? Here I firmly believe that our community needs to side with the moderates. The rise of the Omar and Tlaib wing has expressed itself in public statements that target Jewish influence and politics in a way that has been mercifully foreign to American politics in recent history, and their antagonism to Israel is existential rather than rooted in policy disagreement. The logic of BDS, of which progressive heroes like Omar, Tlaib and recently elected Cari Bush are all committed, is not only toxic in itself but will inevitably lead to a stance that sees American Jews who value Israel as an internal enemy.

Its easy to scoff at the failed attempts to defeat this new wave, but the truth is that American Jews should be sobered by their political failure to dislodge politicians committed to ends that a vanishingly small number of Jews support.

Americas political parties are not static entities, and this is a moment when both are in moments of profound transition. I consider it fortunate that the presidential primary has led to a ticket where both candidates have stood with American Jews, and reflected their priorities and valued our voice.

To be sure, there have and will be moments of disagreement with both Biden and Harris. The notion that Biden and Harris are indistinguishable from Republicans when it comes to Israel is belied by very real divergences.But what reassures me about them coming out on top is not the transcripts from their AIPAC appearances. It is the urgent need for American Jews to rebuild the center of our politics, a stretch of political terrain that encompasses the center-right, center-left, and center-center.

We need to lead this project because we have the most to lose from a politics that elevates Ilhan Omar and Marjorie Taylor Greene.

When politics are boring and balanced, Jews thrive. Not the worst slogan for Biden-Harris 2020.

JOEL: I bring up Marjorie Taylor Greenes Congressional primary victory yesterday because I find the organized American Jewish communitys muted response to her candidacy, in comparison to their response to the candidacy of Ilhan Omar, quite telling. To take just two examples, the American Jewish Committees website shows that they have talked about Ilhan Omar in 19 press releases, and Marjorie Taylor Greene in zero. The Anti-Defamation League has issued 54 press statements about Ilhan Omar. About Marjorie Greene? Zero.

To be sure, some of this discrepancy might reflect the fact that Rep. Omar has been a public figure for a few years longer. But some of it no doubt reflects the priorities of the organizations that claim to represent American Jews, which for a variety of reasons that we could debate at length have been disproportionately focused on fighting BDS, at the expense of conspiratorial right-wing anti-Semitism.

So here is where I have to push back on your conflation of Ilhan Omar on the left and Marjorie Greene on the right as dual sources of political extremism that threaten American Jews. Rep. Omar can be accused of at worst speaking clumsily about the influence of pro-Israel donation money on the American political debate surrounding Israel. But the truth is, pro-Israel lobbying groups did devote a lot of money to defeat one of the few pro-BDS voices in Congress. Rep. Omars challenger, Antone Melton-Meaux, raised the second most money from Israel lobbying groups in the 2020 election cycle, behind only Rep. Eliot Engel, whose candidacy was also unsuccessful. And the failures of both of these well-funded efforts to support one consistently pro-Israel incumbent and take another incumbent down should cause some reflection in the community about where American Jewish priorities really lie.

Because the truth is, Marjorie Greene and Ilhan Omar are not equal threats to American Jews, and to conflate them is not helpful to our community as we move forward. For one, as the Anti-Defamation League has documented, the vast majority of extremist political violence in the United States today is committed by the sorts of far-right extremists who wade around in the fever swamps of QAnon, and not by BDS-supporting leftists. Out of 270 anti-Semitic incidents documented by the ADL in 2019, at least two-thirds were committed by the far-right. Marjorie Greenes rhetoric has dealt in the sort of tropes that have inspired actual violence against American Jews, in a way that Ilhan Omar, whatever you think of her, simply has not.

And American Jews, whatever the organizations that claim to speak for us may think, perceive this difference clearly. Four in five of us consider the far-right to be a very serious or moderately serious threat to American Jewish lives, while only one-third of us think this about the far-left.

American Jews, on average, just dont perceive BDS to be as much of a threat to our safety as some prominent voices believe, which is probably why we rank Israel-related issues near the bottom of our list of political priorities - twelfth out of fourteen - when we determine our votes.

Your point about Kamala Harris relates to one final important difference between Marjorie Greene and Ilhan Omar that makes me bristle at attempts to compare them as twin sources of ideological extremism in America: Whatever you think of Omars positions, the elevation of the stalwartly pro-Israel Kamala Harris as a major party leader shows that Omars ideas remain marginal within her political party, even if theyre becoming a bit more mainstream.

On the other side, in comparison, Donald Trump echoes the exact same rhetoric coming from Marjorie Greene.

So I ask again, on a day when Kamala Harris is the top political name dominating headlines, where should American Jewish priorities lie?

ARI: I understand your frustration about the sometimes muted response to new forms of ideological danger, and I think youre right to partially attribute it to Omars longer turn on the political stage. But I think there is another reason as well: Anti-Israel politics has long been seen as a form of anti-Jewish politics, from its origins in the Soviet Union and the Arab world into its adoption by elements of the far-left. Organizations have a playbook to combat it, and its jump into something like the political mainstream set off alarm bells that are still ringing for many American Jews.

The alt-right, conspiracy fueled terrain that we are beginning to see penetrate our politics and inflict real world harm is newer, and we need to learn how to fight back effectively. The Jewish organizations you treat with skepticism have actually been at the forefront of fighting these trends, but they need to do more. My hunch is that few of our readers would doubt that white supremacy poses a deadly threat to American Jews, reflecting the numbers youve cited.

I am less interested in exactly quantifying the threat to Jews from the far-left as opposed to the far-right than in fighting both with vim and vigor. I want to keep Jews safe while they pray in shul, and I also want to prevent young Jews on campus from being drummed out because they support Israel. I worry about George Soros conspiracy theories, and stay up late at night noticing how anti-Zionism is increasingly setting the tone in progressive politics. As we have discussed before, Im also inclined to believe that an anti-Zionist politics is bound to land in a place that is hostile to Jews, or else will force them to renounce an element of their Jewishness to gain entry. There is an ugly history of accepting Jews conditionally, and I worry about the litmus tests increasingly in vogue.

If the distance between Harris and Omar is greater than that between Greene and Trump, I think that is a good thing. Nobody should view the GOP under Trump as the model for what a modern political party should aspire to. There is work to be done rebuilding the Republican Party, and the future health of our political system will hinge on that reconstruction.

But it takes two to tango, and I think a Democratic Party committed to old school liberal values that keeps its woke energies at a healthy distance is one that can continue to provide a home for American Jews.

A moderate and vital center is our best shot to keep this whole show together. And yes, that means warding off danger from both right and left. Everything we know about anti-Semitism is that it is of every politics and no politics. It is its own politics, and I dont see why that shouldnt be true on these shores just as much as in faraway lands.

JOEL: Just briefly, Ill begin by responding to what you say about Jews being drummed out of university campus spaces because they support Israel. There are, indeed, examples of that happening, and Ive denounced them before and will continue to do so. But the truth is, most Jewish students feel entirely comfortable on university campuses in the US. A Stanford University study of Jewish students found that an overwhelming majority felt comfortable on their campuses, and, more specifically, comfortable as Jews, while Brandeis scholars find that Jewish students do not think their campus is hostile to Jews. Four in five Jewish university students do not feel that the criticism of Israel they hear on campus is anti-Semitic or blames them as American Jews for the actions of Israel.

A few legitimately bad instances aside, American Jews feel pretty safe and comfortable on campus, which is very far from the anxiety we feel about our place in the broader American culture writ large.

But as for your broader claim that anti-Zionism is setting the tone in progressive politics, I find that claim hard to square with the fact that the Democrats are running a Biden-Harris ticket in 2020, a ticket led by two politicians who, whatever you personally think of the merits of BDS, have consistently opposed it. You and I have debated at great length in the past the question of whether anti-Zionism is inherently anti-Semitic, or whether there are merits to certain anti-Zionist arguments that Jews can accept without renouncing our Jewish peoplehood, so I wont rehash all of that debate right now. But separate from the normative question of anti-Zionism is the descriptive question of how much purchase it has in American politics, and there I think the answer is, very little.

The Democratic Party overwhelmingly opposes BDS, and the Democratic Party platform does not even call for an end to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, let alone acknowledge an anti-Zionist argument against the idea of a Jewish state itself.

Thats why I think we have to be grateful to politicians like Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Cori Bush, for opening up a much-needed discussion of Palestinian rights that is rarely represented in American politics at all. Theres very little danger that an election cycle fought between a Biden-Harris and Trump-Pence ticket is going to ignore the interests of Israel. But there is a lot of danger that, when even the center-left presidential candidate is personally intervening to block his partys platform from mentioning the occupation of the West Bank, Palestinian rights and Palestinian peoplehood will be ignored entirely.

We should be grateful to Ilhan Omar for representing a lone, minority voice against that possibility.

At a fundraiser on Sunday, Trump attacked the overwhelming majority of American Jews who vote Democratic: Unfortunately there are Jews that dont like Israel, he said. This isnt the first time Trump has engaged in this sort of rhetoric; last year he called American Jews who vote Democratic which, remember, is three in four of us very disloyal to Israel.

I think this is important to highlight, because it emphasizes an ideological threat which our community has not fully prepared to address: By emphasizing the supposed anti-Semitic threat posed by BDS supporters who accuse American Jews of being overly loyal to Israel, weve missed out on the fact that the president of the United States himself is accusing us of being dangerous for the opposite reason, for not being loyal enough to Israel, and thereby not fitting into President Trumps ethnonationalist view of the world. As an ethnonationalist, Trump sees the United States as the country of white Christians, so he can understand Jews who prioritize the country of the Jewish people along the same lines. But the fact is, most American Jews dont prioritize Israel in the voting booth. As a minority community that has faced tremendous persecution in our history, American Jews prioritize political pluralism and liberalism; there are more than twice as many self-identified Jewish liberals as conservatives in the US, which is roughly the reverse of the rest of the US population.

Our communitys prioritization of minority rights and pluralism makes us a unique threat to President Trump and everything he represents, which is why he would so much rather interpret Jewish politics as synonymous with Israel politics.

But they arent synonymous, and this is a moment for us to realize that.

ARI: To the extent that a Biden-Harris ticket reflects the values of American Jews, I think that is something to celebrate. But it is also something that has taken work, in front of the cameras and behind the scenes.

To a certain degree, I understand your frustration, and that of many American Jews, with organizations and institutions that seem detached from your concerns and anxieties. I have my own critiques of these organizations who doesnt? But Jews remain a tiny minority in America, and if we continue to find this country a congenial place to live and work, that takes work, not just critique. Our prosperity is more tentative than we know.

It also takes non-Jewish allies like Joe Biden to join the cause with us.

Im also not sure about the Palestinian cause being ignored: Bernie Sanders centered that cause, and nearly won the nomination. Those of us who have moved in elite cultural and educational spaces would be hard-pressed to agree that Palestinians are somehow ignored. I just wish that speaking for Palestinian rights didnt so frequently involve hostility to Jews.

No Jew should take President Trump as the arbiter of what it means to be a Jew, just as we should tune out efforts from the left to tell us that one cannot be both a good Jew and a Zionist. But I do think the comments you highlighted find their counterpoint in the Omar/Tlaib contention that Zionism is a sign of disloyalty.

Tlaib, Omar, and others have a right to their seats. But I refuse to pretend that how they use their platform is good for me, my community, or my vision for this country. It isnt, and Jews should feel comfortable saying that. Even if we lose an election along the way.

Joel Swanson is a contributing columnist for the Forward and a Ph.D. student at the University of Chicago, studying modern Jewish intellectual history and the philosophy of religions. Find him on Twitter @jh_swanson.

Ari Hoffman is a contributing columnist at the Forward, where he writes about politics and culture. His writing has also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Tablet Magazine, The New York Observer, Mosaic Magazine, The Jerusalem Post, The Times of Israel, and The Tel Aviv Review of Books. He holds a Ph.D. in English Literature from Harvard and a law degree from Stanford.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

Debate | Who is the future of the Democratic Party and what does it mean for Jews?

Follow this link:
Debate | Who is the future of the Democratic Party and what does it mean for Jews? - Forward

Fort Collins Brawl: Women Medics Claim Pro-Police Thugs Assaulted Them – Westword

Posted By on August 14, 2020

The Aug. 8 Medic Team, a nonpartisan group that includes LGBTQ members, racial minorities and women, claims that its members were violently attacked by pro-police forces during a so-called "Back the Blue" rally in Fort Collins this past weekend.

In a news release issued in the wee hours of August 13, the team also maintains that members of Fort Collins Police Services "did not take any action to prevent any altercations throughout the entirety of the event. They allowed demonstrators to menace and assault both counter-protesters and medics, and failed to intervene despite witnessing attempted lethal attacks with weapons and targeted hate crimes."

Video of the incident clearly shows the "Back the Blue" crew dishing out ultra-violence as bodies piled into a ditch, yet Fort Collins Police Chief Jeff Swoboda subsequently castigated "both sides" and his take was echoed in much of the mainstream media coverage.

Meanwhile, the conservative press actively pointed the finger of blame at its usual bogeyman, Antifa, without the slightest evidence, as it did during Black Lives Matter protests in downtown Denver earlier this year. Witness The Blaze, which asserted that the whole thing started after an attack on a defenseless veteran in a wheelchair, despite plentiful visual evidence to the contrary.

The Aug. 8 Medic Team, which stresses that it "is not and never has been affiliated with any organization known as 'Antifa,'" points to a report in the Fort Collins Coloradoan that the vet in question actually "jumped out of his wheelchair into the ditch to aid a person who was being beaten by pro-police demonstrators. This is entirely contrary to claims that [he] had been pushed out of his wheelchair."

Whatever sparked the flare-up, members of the pro-cop goon squad apparently relished pounding as much flesh as possible. In footage from the clash, a man with a bullhorn can be heard crowing, "You guys came to the wrong city, boys and girls," while another attempted to act as an utterly unreasonable voice of reason when he yelled, "Everybody keep their hands off their weapons! Keep punching each other in the face. Dont shoot anybody."

Here's a retweet of a now-deleted Instagram video taken by sixteen-year-oldCiara Wilsonn, another witness to the violence.

Following the melee, FCPS announced a criminal-tampering citation leveled against James Reitman, 42, and the busts of Anna Kruger, 25, accused of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest; Michael Townley, 42, charged with disorderly conduct; and Joshua Mischler-DeLeon, taken into custody for disorderly conduct and possession of an illegal weapon. Since then, the agency has cuffed two more people, identified by 9News asMichael Oropeza and Brian Wooley. Both face disorderly-conduct beefs, and a team spokesperson alleges that they were "were among those who attacked medics and counter protesters."

The Aug. 8 Medic Team names two other individuals who allegedly took part in the melee and asks FCPS and Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser to "open an investigation" into their behavior and that of "all others who participated in this attack, for their violent assaults and hate crimes against nonpartisan medics, all of whom are variously members of the LGBTQ community, racial minorities and young women."

We're not identifying the men because they have not been formally accused of any crimes, but the team says they're members of III Percent United Patriots, an affiliate of the III Percent militia movement also known as the Three Percenters, identified as a hate group by the Anti-Defamation League. Westwordoffered details on the group in a 2018 post about Denver Police Officer Michael Traudt, who had the Three Percenters logo tattooed on one hand. Traudt, who pulled the trigger in the controversial 2015 killing of Native American Paul Castaway, insisted that he wasn't a member of the organization, and the Denver Police Department ultimately decided against disciplining him, though he was asked to cover the tattoo while on duty.

As for the Aug. 8 Medic Team, its members "categorically reject" Chief Swoboda's "both sides" description and offer a vivid account of what they witnessed amid the brawl. "All of the medics were clearly marked with multiple Red Crosses, and none were armed," the narrative emphasizes. "Medics were instead confronted and surrounded by 'pro-police groups,' and were subsequently attacked and violently assaulted by this group. The attackers used various weapons, including clubs, poles, and bicycle chains to strike the medics, including multiple attacks aimed at medics heads. They also hurled racial and sexual epithets and slurs whilst violently attacking the medics, constituting a hate crime."

According to the team, the medics "entered the event with the purpose of providing medical support and assistance to all those present, including BOTH Back the Blue ralliers and counter-protesters, as well as to safely escort counter-protesters out of the event and into their cars. Immediately upon arrival, the medics were surrounded, physically blocked from providing medical assistance to injured individuals, verbally and physically assaulted, and called racial and sexual slurs. Despite this, medics still offered water, masks and medical assistance to those surrounding them. Once the Back the Blue attendees decided to allow the medics to move away from the rally, they pursued and attempted to surround the group. The medics were shoved, threatened and continuously insulted on the basis of race, gender and sexual orientation."

After the medics were several blocks away from the event, the release continues, "they were attacked,unprovoked, by several instigators from the Back the Blue Rally. The medics were punched, beaten with batons and other blunt weapons, and put into chokeholds, sustaining severe injuries to the head and body." Yet the "Fort Collins Police officers prevented clearly identifiable medics from providing treatment to a patient with major trauma in a public park, at a time when there was no risk of an altercation," it notes. "FCPD notably did not take any action to prevent other altercations throughout the entirety of the event, instead choosing to let demonstrators menace and assault both counter-protesters and medics."

Westwordprovided Fort Collins Police Services with the Aug. 8 Medic Team's statement. Here's the department's response:

Community members have gathered for numerous demonstrations outside of the FCPS building this year. Consistent with previous gatherings, area officers were available in case law enforcement assistance was needed on August 8. As soon as officers were made aware of the disturbance in the neighborhood to the west of our building, they responded and arrived on scene quickly. Officers worked to contact the individuals directly involved in these disturbances; however, some left the area before police arrived.

We have an active and ongoing investigation into this incident. We are asking people to contact police if they have any information about the people who were physically fighting or the events leading up to the disturbance. We strongly encourage this group to contact detectives directly to report these concerns to aid in the investigation.

We respect everyone's right to peacefully assemble to make their voices heard. For the safety of our community, acts of violence, destruction of property, and other unlawful behavior will not be tolerated from any individual or group, regardless of their ideology.

This post has been updated to clarify that the Aug. 8 Medic Team's membership isn't exclusively female, and to add information about the most recent pair of arrestees, as well as to include a statement from Fort Collins Police Services.

Michael Roberts has written for Westword since October 1990, serving stints as music editor and media columnist. He currently covers everything from breaking news and politics to sports and stories that defy categorization.

Continue reading here:
Fort Collins Brawl: Women Medics Claim Pro-Police Thugs Assaulted Them - Westword

Nick Cannon claims his great-grandfather was a Spanish rabbi – Yahoo New Zealand News

Posted By on August 14, 2020

Nick Cannon has claimed his great-grandfather was a Spanish rabbi.

The 39-year-old star - who was fired by ViacomCBS last month after making anti-Semitic comments on his 'Cannon Class' podcast - has claimed that he only found out about his roots after the recent controversy.

Speaking to Rabbi Noam Marans on American Jewish Committee's 'AJC Advocacy Anywhere' show, he said: "My mother has been calling me every single day since this happened with so much family history. My great-grandfather was a Spanish rabbi. He's a Sephardic Jewish man.

"So, as much heat as I've been catching from the public and the outside, this hit home for my family in a real way because I come from a Black and Jewish family on my mother's side."

Nick later issued an apology and insisted he never meant to spread "hate and propaganda" against Jewish people.

And during his appearance on 'AJC Advocacy Anywhere', he insisted he wanted to move ahead with "truth and reconciliation".

Nick said: "A lot of people may have been upset that I apologised, but I feel like that's what someone of true character is actually supposed to do when they hurt someone.

"Now, let's get through this process of truth and reconciliation."

Last month, in a lengthy apology on social media, Nick said: "First and foremost I extend my deepest and most sincere apologies to my Jewish sisters and brothers for the hurtful and divisive words that came out of my mouth.

"They reinforced the worst stereotypes of a proud and magnificent people and I feel ashamed of the uninformed and naive place that these words came from.

"I am committed to deeper connections, more profound learning and strengthening the bond between our two cultures today and every day going forward."

See the original post:

Nick Cannon claims his great-grandfather was a Spanish rabbi - Yahoo New Zealand News

What I wish they taught us in Hebrew school – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on August 14, 2020

This story originally appeared on Alma.

I received what I believe to be an average Jewish American Conservative synagogue education. I attended Jewish preschool, the full run of weekly, then biweekly Hebrew school, and completed Hebrew high school all the way through the rabbis confirmation class. This was all at my synagogue outside of Philly, with a predominantly Ashkenazi congregation in a predominantly Ashkenazi part of the Jewish Diaspora. And, of course, I am of Ashkenazi descent (99.2%, according to 23andMe).

So what exactly did these many years of Jewish education teach me? I learned the fundamentals of Judaism: stories from the Torah and ancient Israel, holidays and their traditions, Jewish values, to read and write Hebrew (but not actually to understand the meaning), and to decipher trope for cantillation. I also learned about Zionism, the Holocaust, the birth of the State of Israel, and modern-day Israeli culture, providing some context for the past century of Jewish life.

I appreciate what I learned, but Jews have been around for millennia. Why did I only learn about the biblical and early post-biblical times, and then select topics from recent centuries? What happened to us during all those years in between? Again, Jews have been around for millennia, and a lot of this time was not spent in Israel.

I wish I had learned more about the Jewish Diaspora. How has the Diaspora grown throughout history? What are all of the unique Jewish Diaspora populations that have formed? What languages did/do they speak? What pressures have these populations faced and how were their respective cultures shaped? How are these populations doing today?

In Hebrew school, I did hear and learn the terms Ashkenazi, Sephardic and Mizrahi. We even briefly discussed Ethiopian Jews. I didnt give these terms much thought. But of course, these terms these people mean so much more. It wasnt until I took a deep dive into Wikipedias page on the Jewish Diaspora that I learned about more specific cultures within these labels. Apparently theres a large Bukharian Jewish population in New York, which is fascinating to me considering I had never even heard the term Bukharian before. There are Mountain Jews in the Caucasus of Persian Jewish origin. Who knew? Not me! Communities like the Cochin Jews persisted in India for centuries. I certainly had no idea! After a combined 13 years of Jewish education, its all the more baffling that Im just learning about these communities now through some random clicks on Wikipedia.

Even when it came to my own Ashkenazi ancestors, I got a better picture of old-world Ashkenazi life from watching Fiddler on the Roof than anything I learned at my synagogue. I always wondered why, when reciting the Mourners Kaddish at services, my older relatives chanted Yisgadal vyiskadash while my peers and I said Yitgadal vyitkadash. It wasnt until reading Aaron Lanskys book Outwitting History that I learned Conservative congregations across the country changed from Ashkenazic to Sephardic Hebrew. The ostensible reason was to bring liturgical Hebrew in line with the spoken language of the young State of Israel. While I understand the decision to unify Jews of the Diaspora with the official language of Israel, my family came to the U.S. speaking Yiddish. Now that I am aware of it, I dont love this erasure of Yiddishkeit. What else was omitted from my Jewish education?

Maybe if it were 1850, Id be busy in the throes of shtetl life with very little knowledge or care for Jews outside of my personal community. But its 2020, and I live in the great American melting pot with a high-speed internet connection. My countrys Jewish population and my congregation may be predominantly white European Ashkenazim, but we have diverse Jews among us everywhere we look. We have the ability to connect with and learn about Bukharian Jews, Beta Israel, Moroccan Jews, Jews of color and Jewish converts of different backgrounds.

Theres no reason we should have to embark on these Jewish studies on our own. Education on Jewish Diaspora cultures and the diversity of Jewish identities should be an integral part of formal Jewish education. Without this, we are left in a state of ashkenormativity that is damaging to those who dont fit a Eurocentric definition of being Jewish. By taking the time to learn about the different origins and customs of all Jewish backgrounds, we will end up united in a more holistic understanding of Judaism.

Personally, I am in awe of Jewish resilience. But I cannot properly understand or appreciate this resilience without seeing the full spectrum of the Jewish people. I wish my Jewish education could have at least tipped me off to all I was missing.

The post What I wish they taught us in Hebrew school appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

Visit link:

What I wish they taught us in Hebrew school - Cleveland Jewish News

Rocky vs. Howie: The pro- and anti-Trump forces face off in Long Branch | Mulshine – NJ.com

Posted By on August 14, 2020

I was on the phone Sunday commiserating with a fellow scribe about how difficult it is to cover this presidential campaign, with its many virtual events.

Just after I hung up, I got an email about an actual event. President Trump was having a fund-raiser that evening at a private house in the Elberon district of Long Branch. This is the part of town famed for its beautiful beachfront homes and the summer visits of Seven Presidents - the name for the nearby county park.

I realized right away there would be no media access. Politicians of both parties dont want us inkstained wretches watching them beg for bucks. But I needed a news angle.

Thats when I thought of my old surfing buddy Howard Kuker, who lives not far from the county park named for those Seven Presidents who have summered in the town. I figured Howie would know if there were any protests planned against the eighth president in question.

First I had to listen to Howie give me a spiel about The Donald. Trump is a thief and a liar and worse, Howie told me.

Finally he told me what I wanted to know that the anti-Trumpers would be holding a rally at the train station not far from the private home where the fund-raiser was being held.

I put the top down on my sports car and had a pleasant drive north on as beautiful a summer Sunday as youre likely to see.

When I made the final turn to the station, I hit a traffic jam. One car after another went by with horns blaring. Many had pro-Trump banners.

After I made it to the parking lot, I saw that the battle lines had been drawn. The anti-Trumpers were on the south side of the street, where they had erected a giant blow-up doll of Trump as a baby.

On the north side were the pro-Trumpers. There were only a few cops to keep the two apart. But both sides seemed content to shout and scream at those on the other side of the road.

Not Howie. He showed up wearing a hat proclaiming he is a Navy veteran of Vietnam, which he is. His plan was to use the hat as entre to circulate among the pro-Trumpers as he handed out cards for his favorite charity, which fights suicide among veterans.

So far, so good. But he also planned to carry a Dump Trump poster.

Im gonna hand out cards to these pro-Trumpers, Howie told me. You gonna take my picture?

I didnt. But our photographer Ed Murray did. The photo shows Howie facing off with a guy with grey hair. Both are pointing at each other and shouting.

That guys name is Ray Antoky, Rocky to his fellow Elberon residents. I had spoken with Rocky earlier when I saw him pull up in a sports car of his own, an immaculately restored 1959 Triumph TR-3. After we got the subject of sports cars out of the way, I asked him about his political views.

Theyre socialist, communist, whatever you want to call it, he said of the protesters. I saw this morning they were gonna have a protest. I figured Id come by and show that we have our own enthusiasm.

He certainly did. When one of the anti-Trumpers took out a bullhorn, a cop quickly told her no amplification was allowed.

But theres no way to outlaw the human voice. Rocky didnt need any amplification as he shouted, You lost! We won! at the anti-Trumpers.

In reality, no one keeps score of that sort of thing. But if the anti-Trumpers were expecting a warm reception here in Blue Jersey, they had to be sorely disappointed by the Long Branch locals.

Rocky told me that those on his side of the argument are his fellow Sephardic Jews. They are descendants of immigrants from all over the Mideast.

A 2009 New York Times article on the Jewish community in Elberon and neighboring Deal noted that, A generation still speaks Arabic, though some of the earliest Sephardic settlers have moved away, tired of the commute back to Brooklyn.

Rocky said that because of the coronavirus pandemic, a lot of summer-only residents have decided to desert Brooklyn for the Shore.

And the Sephardic Jews are firmly in Trumps corner, he said. One reason is the emergence of The Squad in Congress. Two of the four, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, are seen by many Jews as hostile to Israel.

These people are dangerous, said Rocky. Theyre anti-Israel.

Then there was Trumps decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Rocky said, Trump has been amazing for the Jews. He moved the embassy to Jerusalem. I was there. I saw it.

As for Howie, who is also Jewish but not Sephardic, he said of Trump, He didnt do it because he cares about the Jews. He did it for political reasons.

Maybe he did. But perhaps Joe Biden should do something for political reasons.

Even Howie puts on a better show.

BELOW - A CLASSIC SPORTS CAR:

Rocky Antoky and his 1959 Triumph TR-3 as he showed up to protest anti-Trump protesters in Long Branch Sunday. Note the anti-Trump messages on the minivan behind.

Read more from the original source:

Rocky vs. Howie: The pro- and anti-Trump forces face off in Long Branch | Mulshine - NJ.com


Page 991«..1020..990991992993..1,0001,010..»

matomo tracker