Thursday, January 11, 2018

The Jewish Panic is Here

Jonathan Weisman is a panicky Jew:


(((Semitism))): Being Jewish in Trump's America
A short, literary, powerful contemplation on how Jews are viewed in America since the election of Donald J. Trump, and how we can move forward to fight anti-Semitism
Anti-Semitism has always been present in American culture, but with the rise of the Alt Right and an uptick of threats to Jewish communities since Trump took office, New York Times editor Jonathan Weisman has produced a book that could not be more important or timely. When Weisman was attacked on Twitter by a wave of neo-Nazis and anti-Semites, witnessing tropes such as the Jew as a leftist anarchist; as a rapacious, Wall Street profiteer; and as a money-bags financier orchestrating war for Israel, he stopped to wonder: How has the Jewish experience changed, especially under a leader like Donald Trump?
He gets great quotes from race huxter Michael Eric Dyson, Palestinian apologist Peter Beniart, and coed chasing intellectual Bernard Henri Levi.

Of course Trump hates Jews so much he just recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital. A clever Jew hater is Trump

Here's Weisman's call to action:


He proposes a unification of American Judaism around the defense of self and of others even more vulnerable: the undocumented immigrants, refugees, Muslim Americans, and black activists who have been directly targeted, not just by the tolerated Alt Right, but by the Trump White House itself.
Wanna talk about how THOSE people feel about the Hebrews?

This is leftism masquerading as Jewish concern trolling. See also J-Street.

Back in the real world, via the Daily Caller, here's what Jews deal with in Poland:

I expected the blistering cold and the horrific Holocaust sites. I did not expect open anti-Semitism. In fact, there was commerce around it.
On the morning before our bus broke down, we arrived at a plaza with a marketplace in the Jewish Quarter. There was an enclave of small stands with a wide variety of merchandise. While looking through the wares on a table, a merchant held out a button and urged me to buy it. My eyes focused on a swastika. I told the man in Polish that I was Jewish and the pin was extremely offensive. In response, he shooed me away from his table.
While stopping in souvenir shops in Krakow the next day, we found a wide variety of demeaning merchandise depicting Jewish people. Figurines of Jewish men with large noses and coins glued to their body, magnets depicting Jews as beggars, and a wooden paddle of a Jewish man who will guard your money are some of the anti-Semitic items we encountered in the market.
Poland: Bad for Jews.

Listening to the Weisman ninny, you'd think roving bands of alt-righters dressed Pepe the Frog are burning down synagogues and boycotting Jewish businesses.

I run into these types on Gab all the time. Mostly their anti-antisemitism is performance art, a young person's cheap thrill. Heck, one from Canada (!) was pestering me, by the time I was finished he'd bought one of my books. Praise Kek!

Canadians make horrible Nazis. 







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