• Re: Thanedar denounces Tlaib and renounces DSA membership

    From Jason MacDonald@21:1/5 to All on Sat Nov 4 00:11:25 2023
    XPost: mi.misc, alt.politics.democrats, alt.society.liberalism
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.gaza, sac.politics

    In article <uhmifk$2jnm$14@dont-email.me>

    Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-MI) lambasted his Michigan Democratic
    colleague, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, for characterizing Hamas’ attack on
    Israel as “resistance,” in an interview with Jewish Insider on
    Wednesday — minutes after publicly renouncing his lifetime
    membership in the Democratic Socialists of America over the group’s
    stance on the Hamas attack.

    “Everyone needs to unite, denouncing terrorism, as opposed to trying
    to glorify it,” Thanedar told JI. “Calling this resistance is
    dehumanizing. Calling this resistance is denying the suffering of
    ordinary people, innocent people that had nothing to do with any of
    this.”

    “At a time like this, for a member of Congress to call them
    militants, and resistance, as a result of whatever Israel may have
    done in the past is totally insensitive,” he continued — without specifically mentioning Tlaib by name, “and we don’t need such hate
    and bigotry and antisemitism in the halls of Congress.”

    The first-term lawmaker — who at one point in his Michigan
    Statehouse career aligned with critics of Israel — has evolved into
    a committed pro-Israel progressive since coming to Congress.

    “There are no two sides to it when babies have been beheaded and
    people have been murdered — civilians been murdered, kidnapped,”
    Thanedar said.

    He said he had not spoken to Tlaib yet about her comments, but that
    if he did, he would convey a similar message in person. Thanedar did
    not respond to an initial inquiry from JI about Tlaib’s statement
    the day after the attack.

    Tlaib told the Michigan Advance on Wednesday that she does not
    support the targeted killing of Israeli or Palestinian civilians,
    adding “the fact that some have suggested otherwise is offensive and
    rooted in bigoted assumptions about my faith and ethnicity.” The day
    before, she had ignored questions from a Fox News reporter about
    whether she supported the Hamas atrocities.

    Thanedar told JI that he still considers himself a progressive —
    emphasizing that his policies on other issues from health care to
    racial justice haven’t changed — but said he “can no longer
    associate” with the DSA after it promoted a rally in Times Square at
    which speakers expressed support for Hamas.

    “This organization has lost it now,” he said. “I considered staying
    in DSA and helping them understand this, but this is beyond
    something that I can help them understand. I think this is a deep-
    rooted hatred, is a deep-rooted antisemitism. And I do not want to
    associate with them.”

    Thanedar emphasized that he believes that the current conflict is
    “not business as usual” or akin to any of the other Middle East
    crises that have arisen in recent years, pointing to the massive
    loss of life in Israel — the largest mass killing of Jews in one day
    since the Holocaust. “We have had conversations about a two-state
    solution, we’ve talked about what needs to happen, but this is not
    the time to talk about that,” he said.

    As the conflict moves forward, in order to maintain the strong
    bipartisan support for Israel that has emerged in the immediate
    aftermath of the attack, Thanedar said it will be important to
    continue to emphasize that “there is nothing progressive about
    defending terrorism, there is nothing socialistic about defending
    terrorism.”

    “We need to continue to remind our colleagues that we have Hamas as
    a U.S. State Department-recognized terrorist organization,” he said. “Progressives who understand that… we need to provide that
    leadership, we need to provide that education into the progressive
    fold.”

    Thanedar also said that he doesn’t believe the U.S. or the world
    should be “telling Israel how they should respond” to the attack, emphasizing that it’s Israel’s right to protect itself and respond
    on its own terms.

    “I think we should let Israel decide how this will be dealt with so
    that we don’t see these kind of atrocities again,” he said.

    The Detroit congressman emphasized that he wants the Jewish
    community to know that he stands with it and with Israel, and
    “understand[s] the hurt and trauma that they are dealing with right
    now.”

    https://jewishinsider.com/2023/10/rep-shri-thanedar-rep-rashida-
    tlaib/

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