Monday, October 31, 2022

When The Music Stops

ADL CEO
Jonathan Greenblatt
Dana Milbank had an essay in the Washington Post this past week. One line jumped off the screen, immediately burning itself into my mind:

As Jews, we know at some point the music stops," Greenblatt said. "This is burned into the collective consciousness of every Jewish person."

 At some point, the music stops. 

The music stops.

Are We, the Jewish People, back to musical counties? Who will take us? Who will bar our entry? Where will our children be safe? Will we be able to start all over again?

If we learned nothing else from Germany in the 1930s, we learned nice neighbors draw the drapes so they can say they didn't know about the atrocities. 

Or did we?

On 60 MINUTES last night Scott Pelly of 60 minutes did a segment (beginning at minute 2:00) on the ballot and voting. Watching was enough to make me want to move abroad.  Pelly  opened with the following statement:

It's the vote. It's the vote that holds America together; belief that with a ballot voices are heard, disputes are addressed, and there's always another chance. Countries without this belief, tend to be in bondage, or at war.

Watch it. It's possibly the scariest thing you can see because it is all true.

Since they can no longer win elections by telling the truth, the GOP is using grass roots, lower level elections to spread the BIG lie... the one where Feckless Asshole won the last presidential election. Instead of having just the big offices out there, they are going after other state offices to move their agenda forward. This is absolutely the case in Minnesota, but we're not alone. Just like Minnesota, election deniers are running for governor in 19 states,  attorney general in 10 states, and secretary of state in 12 states. Pelly goes on to point out that although no fraud that would have changed the outcome of the election has ever been found, getting an endorsement from Feckless is dependent on a candidate's ability to spread doubt. 

So, how does this dovetail into the upswing of antisemitism? 

It's all about spreading doubt. Plant the seed, water it with rhetoric, then sit back to watch it sprout. That said, it's not as direct or obvious as one might think. Follow my thought train for a moment. 

As the Big Lie dominates the airwaves in the form of political ads for election denier candidates, we become inured to the rhetoric. As tired as We, the People, are of the lies, we've stopped calling them out. At the same time, slurs and hate speech on social media platforms have expanded exponentially according to a variety of sources, including LeBron James:

I dont know Elon Musk and, tbh, I could care less who owns twitter. But I will say that if this is true, I hope he and his people take this very seriously because this is scary AF. So many damn unfit people saying hate speech is free speech.
Yoel Roth, Twitter's chief "integrity" officer, responded thusly:
Over the last 48 hours, we’ve seen a small number of accounts post a ton of Tweets that include slurs and other derogatory terms. To give you a sense of scale: More than 50,000 Tweets repeatedly using a particular slur came from just 300 accounts.
Doesn't matter; the damage is done. 

The electronic banner reading Kanye is right about the jews that scrolled across TIAA Bank Field at the end of the University of Florida v. Georgia football game was not, according to an email released by Jacksonville's sheriff's office, a hate crime. 
At this time, the Sheriff’s Office has not identified any crimes having been committed; the comments displayed do not include any type of threat and are protected by the First Amendment. We will continue to monitor any reports of this nature to determine if they rise to level of a criminal nature.

I tend to be a free-speech advocate, but I'm not certain, considering the context, that this is not a dog-whistle threat. The FBI and other agencies are looking into it, but what does the sheriff's office imply with that statement? I'm just not sure. 

On Friday, Banners appeared over interstates reading "End Jewish Supremacy in America" and "Honk if you know it's the Jews."

This is not isolated; these banners are not unlike the ones hanging in Los Angeles last week. The upswing in incidents indicates this is a growing trend. The real question, the one that addresses how to stop it, has yet to be answered. 

German Jews believed they were safe in liberal, intellectual Germany. They were not. When the music stopped there, too many Jews waited for it to start up again. The scene was repeated in a domino chain of countries, even the US. We, the People, rounded up those of Japanese ancestry and origin at the same time we were turning away Jewish refugees. Ergo, this isn't exactly an aberration. 

I was thinking about Sukkot (being thankful it was finally over) and remembering some happier times when we would sit around a table in someone's sukkah and argue about Ushpizin...the 7 honored guests. Who would we invite? Who would we omit? But I also remember one sukkot, a more somber one, when we talked about where we would go when the curtain fell on free America. I think I prefer the image of the music stopping better than the curtain falling.

I don't think there is a Jew in America who has not had this conversation with someone. How sad is that?

The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week
Do be a good scout. 
Be prepared.

7 comments:

  1. How many Jews were there in the german executive branch? The following is a list of Jews in the current executive administration. I'm counting on them to speak up. In addition there are many very influential Jews in the US business world.
    Thankfully we don't have to count on George Soros.

    Ron Klain Chief of Staff
    Janet Yellin Secretary of Treasury
    Alejandro Mayorkas Secretary of Homeland Security
    Tony Blinken Secretary of State
    Merrick Garland Attorney General
    Jared Bernstein Council of Economic Advisers
    Rochelle Walensky Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    Wendy Sherman Deputy Secretary of State
    Anne Neuberger Deputy National Security Adviser for Cybersecurity
    Jeffrey Zients COVID-19 Response Coordinator
    David Kessler Co-chair of the COVID-19 Advisory Board and Head of Operation Warp Speed
    David Cohen CIA Deputy Director
    Avril Haines Director of National Intelligence
    Rachel Levine Deputy Health Secretary
    Jennifer Klein Co-chair Council on Gender Policy
    Jessica Rosenworcel Chair of the Federal Communications Commission
    Stephanie Pollack Deputy Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration
    Polly Trottenberg Deputy Secretary of Transportation
    Mira Resnick State Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Regional Security
    Roberta Jacobson National Security Council “border czar”
    Gary Gensler Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman*
    Genine Macks Fidler National Council on the Humanities
    Shelley Greenspan White House liaison to the Jewish community
    Thomas Nides U.S. Ambassador to Israel
    Amy Gutmann U.S. Ambassador to Germany
    David Cohen U.S. Ambassador to Canada
    Mark Gitenstein U.S. Ambassador to the European Union
    Deborah Lipstadt Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism
    Jonathan Kaplan U.S. Ambassador to Singapore
    Marc Stanley U.S. Ambassador to Argentina
    Rahm Emanuel U.S. Ambassador to Japan
    Sharon Kleinbaum Commissioner of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
    Dan Shapiro Adviser on Iran
    Alan Leventhal U.S. Ambassador to Denmark
    Michael Adler U.S. Ambassador to Belgium
    Michèle Taylor U.S. Representative to the United Nations Human Rights Council
    Jonathan Kanter Assistant Attorney General in the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division
    Jed Kolko Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs at the Department of Commerce
    Aaron Keyak Deputy Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism
    Stuart Eizenstat Special Adviser on Holocaust Issues
    Steven Dettelbach Director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
    Amos Hochstein Bureau of Energy Resources Special Envoy
    Eric Lander Science and Technology Adviser

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    1. Thank you for the list. However, if the GOP takes control of the government, how many of them do you think will be there when the dust settles? My guess is very few.

      the WP

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  2. #StandUpToJewishHate: It Is Hate
    aired during televised NFL game on 10/30/22
    financed by one of ten Jewish (out of 32) NFL owners
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWCz4icaTWc

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  3. Sadly, this is a very poignant peice of writing Wifely Person. I thiunk you are 1005 accurate when you say there isn't a Jewish person in the United States who hasn't had this conversation. My father used to say "it's never 'if' with us, it's 'when' ".
    Profound statement: "we learned nice neighbors draw the drapes so they can say they didn't know about the atrocities."

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  4. I would not draw my drapes I promise you I would not. Thank you for your blog.

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  5. As Jonathan Turley writes in "The Hill" ahead of your expected rants next Monday:
    "The Constitution has weathered every storm in our history, including a Civil War and a 'war' over civil rights. We’ve tackled everything from a depression to desegregation; we’ve faced periods of violence and vitriol that tore us apart. And yet, we remain.
    The U.S. Constitution is not an elegant or poetic document, but it has one thing to commend it: It is designed to survive the worst of times and the worst of leaders, and it has done just that.
    The Democrats’ democracy-or-death mantra is not just demagoguery. It is defamation of a constitutional system that has proven itself, time and again, to be up to any challenge. Democrats indeed may be in danger in this midterm — but democracy is not."

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    1. I wish I could share your optimism, but alas, I cannot. When one party seeks to install election deniers as secretaries of state whose job is to certify free and fair elections but refuse to accept the last presidential outcome, I fear for the future of democracy. When one party says its goal is to repeal civil rights for certain classes of people, I have concerns about who is next. Never have we had an attempted coup, and never have we had one party remain silent on the matter of the attempted overthrow of the government...in fact, some members of the party encouraged it. That's downright scary. Changes in media and mass communication have changed how we act, as well as how We, the People, perceive the Bill of Rights. This, too is concerning.

      If you're not concerned, well, maybe it's because you're part of the protected majority. I'm not. I'm worried.

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