@david_colquhoun @stux
@SummerDay
@adam
@TheezyThee
When folks say that antisemitism is due to a specific politician, as a Jew, I find this highly offensive.
It allows people to ignore the antisemitism in their circles by "othering" it, or making it into a political talking point.
It turns Jew hatred into a political tokenization game whereby Jews are dehumanized and antisemitism is simply "a tool of the left" or "a tool of right".
Please refrain from doing it.
@chucker @david_colquhoun @stux @SummerDay @adam @TheezyThee
This and @david_colquhoun 's reply is highly offensive, and is precisely the antisemitic behavior that Jews such as myself are describing.
When a Jew tells you that antisemitism is not tied to a political party, but ubiquitous, and then expresses concerns of being used as a pawn, and your response is engage in that exact behavior. there's no conclusion to draw other than that you enjoy using Jews as political pawns.
@pattykimura @chucker @david_colquhoun @stux @SummerDay @adam @TheezyThee
100% that there is a role that certain politicians play in rhetoric or policy, but what disturbs me greatly is how often I hear "it's a right wing problem" from the left, and "it's a left wing problem" from the right, both tokenizing and trivializing antisemitism to score political points.
I'm equally afraid of left wing antisemitism as I am of right wing antisemitism.