• media white wash of leftist anti-semetism

    From Popping Mad@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 8 18:26:03 2024
    Whitewashing Leftist and Islamist Jew-hatred
    Two professors take to the New York Times to blur the connection between
    DEI and the Left's response to Oct.7th. Take note: When a criminal's
    identity is omitted, it usually means that we are talking about a Muslim
    or an African American perpetrator. Opinion.
    Prof.Phyllis Chesler
    Dec 6, 2024, 8:00 AM (GMT+2)
    The New York Times
    Prof. Phyllis Chesler

    2 minutes

    Prof. Phyllis Chesler
    Prof. Phyllis CheslerJoan Roth

    These days, when one ponders misogyny and antisemitism, one’s mind
    should almost immediately turn to Hamas’s “genocidal” and sadistic
    rapes, kidnappings, and murders of Israeli women on 10/7. Of Israeli
    men, too.

    But let’s be clear. Hamas is a Muslim, Islamist, terrorist group funded
    by Iran, Qatar, and major Western philanthropists, and covered for by
    both the Western intelligentsia and the Western media.

    As for the media: Consider the op-ed published in the New York Times on
    Dec. 2. It’s written by two professors, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela and
    Rachel Schreiber, both of whom teach at the New School. Remember it’s
    the school that had the first faculty led anti-Israel/pro Hamas
    encampment in Manhattan. The piece is titled “Misogyny and Antisemitism
    Are a Toxic Brew.” Good title, important subject, but guess what?

    Is Hamas or Iran correctly identified, targeted, focused upon?
    Absolutely not.

    The co-authors do note, but only in passing, that “antisemitism and
    misogyny can be found across the political spectrum” but do not name or describe any alleged wrong-doers among Democrats, on the American Left,
    or in the Muslim world.

    Instead, they specifically, and rather shockingly, name President-elect
    Trump. “The problem is rampant on the right, as conservatives platform a Hitler apologist and lionize Donald Trump, a man who has been found
    liable for sexual abuse and scapegoated Jews in anticipation of a
    possible loss.”

    First of all, “conservatives” didn’t platform a Hitler apologist, Tucker Carlson (inexcusably) did. Last time I looked, Carlson was banished from
    the most widely watched conservative cable news channel, Fox.

    Secondly, are the Times authors saying that Trump sexually abused Jewish
    women? Because they were Jews? Did his Orthodox Jewish daughter have
    anything to say about this? Or are they mixing it all up due to the lack
    of corroborating evidence and joining Trump’s alleged abuse of
    non-Jewish women with statements he made about the Jewish vote? Utterly incoherent.

    Petrzela and Schreiber also describe a rapist in Texas “who put on
    Christmas music and raped (a woman) after she disclosed she was Jewish.”

    One is meant to assume that the Texas rapist is a Christian.

    This is all passing strange. Here’s why.

    These co-authors begin their piece this way: “Zio bitch! A young man in
    a kaffieyeh and Black Lives Matter T-shirt barked at one of us.”

    We are not told the young man’s name, skin-color, or religion. When
    something is omitted, it usually means that we are talking about a
    Muslim or an African American perpetrator. Courtesy of DEI, even if this
    might be an accurate description — it will still be perceived as a
    racist or “Islamophobic” statement. One will be fired, cancelled, ostracized.

    Thus, consider the gang-rape of the 12 year-old girl in France, which
    the op-ed mentions. Everyone in France knows that the French media and
    the French police do not mention race, skin-color, ethnicity, or country
    of origin in criminal matters. It was the Jewish community which
    informed the public that the girl was a Jew, and that the young rapists
    “used antisemitic slurs while they violated her.” Does anyone believe
    that White, Catholic Crusaders or white Nazis did this?

    Please recall, that the mobs on the “Jew hunt” in Amsterdam were mainly Muslims whose country of origin was Morocco. One is not allowed to write
    this — and frankly, since so many Caucasian Dutch soon supported the
    “Jew hunt,” perhaps it matters a bit less.

    The silence of feminists globally after 10/7 is something I know a bit
    about. The co-authors mention it as well as the “hostility” towards
    anyone who tried to break this silence. But what’s this point doing
    here? Being de-platformed is not the same as being raped, is it? Are the feminist censors rapists, or at least rape-collaborators? If so, why not
    say so?

    Petrzela and Schreiber mention pornography, pogroms, and Jews, and quote
    Jean Paul Sartre and Andrea Dworkin who both refer to 20th century
    matters. What the Hamas terrorists did on 10/7, in the 21st century was,
    in part, influenced by pornography but they also took it a step further,
    by video-ing it, proudly sending their crimes to their victims’
    families, and turning it loose on the internet.

    Finally, the co-authors point out how “intersectionalists” have sought
    to redress all forms of bias — except that of antisemitism. White,
    Jewish women, in particular, are “soft targets,” and remain unprotected
    by academic DEI feminists. The co-authors are right. But they fail to
    connect this with the silence of feminists on 10/7. Or to place the
    silence in the larger context of Islamist/left-wing Jew-hatred.

    I wonder how heavily edited this piece was — or whether the co-authors themselves are proud of it just as it is.

    Phyllis Chesler is an emerita professor of psychology at the City
    University of New York and the author of 20 books, including Women and
    Madness, The New Antisemitism, and An American Bride in Kabul. She
    co-founded the Association for Women in Psychology, the National Women’s Health Network, and the Jerusalem-based Original Women of the Wall. She
    has conducted four studies about honor killing and also published Divrei
    Torah.

    Reposted from writer's substack, also appeared in the Spectator

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