The “New Antisemitism” Wasn’t Born on the Right
The new anti-Semitism did not break out on the American right.
It was given a microphone there – but it was born in a completely different place.
The new anti-Semitism did not break out on the American right.
It was given a microphone there – but it was born in a completely different place.
The new anti-Semitism doesn’t scream, it smiles.
It doesn’t burn synagogues – it puts on a podcast and it doesn’t come from the margins – it comes from the studio.
How the “right to live” became less important than the right to tweet against you in fluent English
Israel is not the problem – it is the proof.
Proof that Jews have not surrendered – that they have no longer accepted the status of dhimmi, that they dare to be sovereign, armed, and victorious.
The West has forgotten itself… Israel remembers too much
And the light? It’s still there – but it takes courage to turn it on.
A post with a dash of humor and a dash of sadness about the astonishing gap between two words that are not really similar, but for some reason are labeled as “the same thing”:
The rift will not be closed with a speech, nor a reconciliation post, nor a fake hug in the studio.
It will only be closed when one side stops lying or when the other side stops apologizing.
If there is an institution that was once a beacon of knowledge, and now looks more like a broken lantern in a park in southern Tel Aviv – it is the academy.
Because what was once a place where truth was sought, today is a place where your identity is sought – to know if you are allowed to speak.