Opinion Anti-Semitic hate is surging. It’s time to take a stand - We cannot stay silent in the face of anti-Jewish bigotry and violence

By Marina Rosenberg. (Senior Vice-President of the ADL, by the way.)

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Many records were broken in 2023. The World Health Organisation celebrated a landmark year for disease elimination. Advancements in artificial intelligence now empower us to do anything from writing a Beatles-inspired song to identifying individuals at high risk of pancreatic cancer. Meanwhile, Taylor Swift made music history by simultaneously charting 10 albums on the US Billboard 200, and Prince Harry’s memoir, “Spare” secured the title of the fastest-selling non-fiction book ever.

However, 2023 also marked a much darker milestone. The Anti-Defamation League recorded its highest ever number of anti-Semitic incidents in the United States. The staggering 8,873 incidents constitute a 140 per cent increase from 2022, which was already a record-breaking year. This alarming figure isn’t confined to domestic concerns within the United States; it’s a global wake-up call.

After Hamas’ horrendous attack on Israeli innocents, anti-Semitic incidents skyrocketed around the globe, with 5,204 recorded post-October 7 in the United States alone. We must confront this reality head-on and call it what it is: a global state of emergency.
On August 3, a group of Jewish students in Melbourne, Australia were on a public bus. A self-proclaimed “Nazi” threatened them with a knife and chased them, shouting anti-Semitic slurs. Some 16,000 kilometers away on September 9, a young man made his way to synagogue in Marseille, France. Attackers tried to run him over with their car and yelled “I’m going to massacre you, get on your knees, you dirty Jew”. On December 18, a Jewish man was violently assaulted in London’s Finsbury Park by an attacker who was shouting “kill the Jew.”
These aren’t just statistics; they are real attacks on real people.

This truth became even more evident last month when I had the honor of hosting a group of Jewish leaders from around the world. During a collaborative roundtable discussion at our annual Never Is Now summit, we brought together 60 inspiring leaders from dozens of Jewish communities across the globe, including the UK, Argentina, Australia, France, South Africa, Chile, and many more. Each community grappled with a different form of the same rise in hate.

Preliminary findings from a survey ADL fielded earlier this year in the seven countries with the largest Jewish diasporas, show that the percentage of British adults who harbor significant anti-Semitic attitudes has more than doubled within the last year. This alarming rise in anti-Semitic attitudes in the UK parallel the alarming spike in hate crimes targeting Jewish individuals and institutions in the country.

As the transatlantic parallels of anti-Semitism spikes become increasingly evident, Britons cannot afford to ignore the data emerging from the United States. The rising tide of hatred knows no borders, and we have no choice but to stand in solidarity against anti-Semitism wherever it rears its head. Recognising the interconnectedness of our experiences and the shared responsibility to combat bigotry, we must acknowledge a fundamental truth: anti-Semitism concerns us all.

While distinctive in its nature, anti-Semitism shares a common trait with other forms of hate – it thrives in silence and flourishes in complacency. By standing together against it, we send a powerful message that discrimination of any kind has no place in our communities.

Article - Archive
 
Anti Semitism is just a conspiracy to pressure jews into becoming Israelis so they can have more taxpayers for their war
The question is how we can funnel those funds into the KiwiFarms

I mean. I see it a lot lately. Lots of people point out the hate but no one asks why the hate exists in the first place. Trannies do it too, they complain about everyone being transphobic bit no one on their side asks why.
 
Trannies do it too, they complain about everyone being transphobic bit no one on their side asks why.

The article says people need to take a stand against anti-semitism, but never posits a reason why.
Because me. Me. Mememememe.

MY cause is important and I subscribe to the religion of safetyism, wherein if I feel "unsafe" (even if that only means there is a vague threat substantiated by vaguer statistics and common belief by a fringe group), someone has to DO SOMETHING.

And if I don't get enough love, the terrorists win.
 
I walked down to the grocery store yesterday. I went to the butcher shop to get some chicken.

There's a young lady working there who is really nice. You can't get mad at this person because she has such a positive demeanor. You all know the type, I'm sure.

When she saw me, a regular, she said, "thank God, a normal person!"

She said she was having a tough shift, because some woman had yelled at her.

I was shocked.

"This lady came in trying to get a brisket, because it's Passover," she said. "We didn't have one and she started screaming at me, like, 'You'd never do this to me if it was Christmas, huh?!' I didnt know what to do."

The unpleasantness of jews, ladies and gentlemen.
 
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Maybe you guys should stop being the scorpion to your frog's host nation. Now society is gonna collapse into a Islamic caliphate in 100-200 years and its all your fault. Mostly.

Anti Semitism is just a conspiracy to pressure jews into becoming Zionists so they can have more taxpayers for their war
FIFY
 
However, 2023 also marked a much darker milestone. The Anti-Defamation League recorded its highest ever number of anti-Semitic incidents in the United States. The staggering 8,873 incidents constitute a 140 per cent increase from 2022, which was already a record-breaking year. This alarming figure isn’t confined to domestic concerns within the United States; it’s a global wake-up call.
I see that vandalized poster at the top of the article. How many of the "crimes" were taking those down? Those things have been shitting up the area for a long time, and given we're not in Israel, there's not a damn thing we can really do about missing people who aren't even wherever those posters are put up.
 
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