As Vladimir Putin Sidles Up to the Mullahs, the Threat to the U.S. and Israel Grows
Russia just helped Iran launch a surveillance satellite.
August 12, 2022
How racism and anti-Semitism work together in the minds of the Charlottesville marchers.
Five years ago today, in Charlottesville, Virginia, a group of far-right fanatics chanting “Jews will not replace us” faced off against a group of counter-protestors chanting “Black lives matter.” The irony that the latter slogan has been adopted by a movement that believes that Jews—uniquely among all the world’s peoples—have no right to sovereignty in their native land was of course lost on those present. As for the first slogan, it did not indicate that the participants in the “Unite the Right” rally were worried that their place in society would be taken by Jews, but instead that Jews would nefariously “replace” white Americans with Hispanics and other non-white immigrants. In race-focused America, this particular combination of anti-Semitism and racism is often misunderstood. James Loeffler, drawing on evidence presented at the civil trial of some of the leaders of the Charlottesville march, adds some clarity:
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Login or SubscribeRussia just helped Iran launch a surveillance satellite.
Israel’s triumph rested in not giving in to terrorists’ demands—and also on luck.
How racism and anti-Semitism work together in the minds of the Charlottesville marchers.
A talmudic legend of a wicked emperor’s demise, set to verse.
There were an estimated 3,000 Jewish delis in New York City in the 1930s; now there are just a few dozen.