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Re-sponse-buttal to post “Antisemitism and Trump Defunding UC”

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The primary message of the recent blog essay "Antisemitism and Trump Defunding UC" portends to be anti-Jew bigotry (some call it ‘antisemitism’), but the essay quickly dilutes the subject by layering it beneath crushing layers of unrelated progressive causes. The result is that the central issue, real and rising hostility toward Jews, gets blurred into a cacophony of left-leaning background noise.

Omissions are glaringly obvious. There is no mention of Hamas, no recognition of the ongoing subtle-yet-very-real ‘not-quite-welcome’ that many Jewish students endure on campuses, and of course no reference to the illegal and disgusting demonstration of May 2nd, 2025 where 100%-masked persons shouted with a bullhorn inside the UCD Coffehouse: “We don’t want no two state, we want all the ’48,” an explicit call to end Israel’s existence. Is the subject really anti-Jew bigotry or is the author, like Gary May, hoping such glaringly anti-Jew events are normalized by pretending they didn’t happen?

The assertion that “Jews do best in pluralistic democracies” is presented without evidence. Ask French Jews emigrating to Israel, or British Jews living under constant security advisories, how well pluralism protects them. History shows that even the most tolerant societies can turn hostile with remarkable speed. To present pluralism as a guarantee of Jewish flourishing is not analysis, it is wishful thinking. The cherry on top of the wishing-thinking sundae is the author’s:

“We affirm that as Jews we support diversity and the right to freedom of inquiry and dissent, as we ourselves so long dissented in Christian and Muslim religious-majority-societies where we have lived.”

Um . . . first of all, Jews are losing this ideal in places like Davis and UC Davis (unless they disavow Israel as a country). Second, Jews not only dissented in Christian and Muslim religious-majority-societies, they were all-too-often killed or expelled from them. Since October 7th, I’ve been in a deep-dive into Jewish history. The number of events in which Jews are killed in 4, 5, even six-figure-mortality events is staggering.

The idea that anti-Jew hatred must always be fought “along with” other forms of intolerance sounds noble, but in practice it often ensures Jewish issues are sidelined. Jewish concerns are routinely diluted into broader coalitions that rarely prioritize them. That is not solidarity, it is avoidance dressed in moral language. And DEI is a Jew’s worst enemy, as we are classified simultaneously as victims and oppressors by the bigots, for whatever best fits the Jew-hating narrative.

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The “Project Esther” section undercuts the seriousness of the topic with a forced biblical pun and seems more about anti-Trump sentiment than concern for the Jewish Community. Equating Trump with Ahasuerus, reduced to a “fickle ruler swayed by a pretty girl,” trivializes the discussion. Assigning blame to Christians for drafting the plan while dismissing Jewish voices that support it avoids the real question – and that question is, “do Jews face immediate and escalating threats today?”. The evidence is clear that anti-Jew bigotry, racism, and hatred are proliferating online, on campuses, and in street protests. None of that is being driven by strategy memos in Washington.

As evidence for the online hate, check out the growing and ever-emboldened anti-Jew bigots on YouTube: Rathbone deBuys, Jen Perelman, Peter Hager, Katie Halper, Rania Khalek, Krystal Ball, Kyle Kulinski, Sam Seder, Abby Martin, Norm Finklestein, Cenk Yunger, Ana Kasparian, Glenn Greenwald, Jimmy Dore, Kim Iversen, Amy Goodman, Max Blumenthal and many, many more. A lot of these YouTuber media personalities are Jews themselves — antizionist Jews. They spew hate like daggers from their eyes, yet couch the hate in the concept of ‘antizionism’, as if that is an excuse, and bath themselves in their own self-deluded superior morality.

There was virtually none of this vitriol – even from a good number of these same personalities – until October 7th, 2023. But even if they hide behind ‘antizionism’, one need only look at the comment sections of their YouTube vids: hundreds to thousands of Jew-hating comments, most not even trying to hide behind antizionism. Where any of these people decent human beings, each would condemn the haters in their own comment sections — but they are all silent.

With the backdrop of this ever-increasing sea of anti-Jew bigotry, presenting this serious subject in an essay splattered with liberal causes that many people — including many Jews — would agree with — only dilutes the seriousness of anti-Jew rhetoric that the real Jewish Community knows is being baked ever-deeper into the American psyche. And as a participant, you don’t even know it’s happening within you.

This is how it starts.

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Comments

5 responses to “Re-sponse-buttal to post “Antisemitism and Trump Defunding UC””

  1. South of Davis

    Alan great post. From your posts on the Vanguard over the years I think I am a little younger than you (I started Kindergarten at Baywood Elementary in ’69 not far from where you grew up) and I’m guessing that the ~90% of white kids on the SF Peninsula in the 70’s we probably had a similar childhood with friends of many religions other that you probably went to more bar mitzvahs and bat mitzvahs than I did. I did go to about a half dozen bar mitzvahs and a couple bat mitzvahs and my wife (who went to private schools in Menlo Park and Palo Alto before going to college on the east coast) went to a couple of each. We were talking about it a few years back when we realized that our kids growing up in Davis just went to “one” bar mitzvah (and we didn’t know a single family in town that went to synagogue on a regular basis). While I didn’t grow up very religious most years we went to Christmas and Easter services, and we have done the same with our kids exposing them to the four different Christian religions of their grandparents as well as the Jewish faith (my wife has four first cousins that all took birthright trips to Israel and are now practicing Orthodox Jews). I have always been aware of “some” anti-jew hate in my life, but it was mostly in the fringes of the skinhead/right. Today it seems like most people my age and younger have given up the organized religion of their parents and gone to a strange “religious like” belief in progressive causes and the Democratic party. I recently saw a great post that said “just because I disagree with what your political party run by warmongering narcissistic sociopaths is doing does not mean that I support what the other political party that is also run by warmongering narcissistic sociopaths is doing. The increase in anti-Jewish and anti-Israel hate from the left has increased even faster than the whole trans thing and it seems to be increasing even faster on the East Coast than out here. A Christian friend married a Jewish girl and they raised their daughters Jewish and he added me to his “Stop Zohran Mamdani” email list and I am amazed how much most of his (mostly young mostly progressive” supporters hate Jews.

  2. Ron O

    “You also do not like the Jews?”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ly1cPYSqgR4

  3. Eugene A

    “ The primary message of the recent blog essay “Antisemitism and Trump Defunding UC” portends to be anti-Jew bigotry (some call it ‘antisemitism’).”
    I don’t even know what this means. “Portends to be” … do you mean “pretends to be”? So then I think you are saying the primary message of the post you are responding to is “antisemitism”? Again, not really sure what that means. It seemed pretty clear to me what the primary message is – it’s in the first paragraph:
    “ we cannot be silent as we witness the cultural appropriation of antisemitism by voices in our country that pander to and promote bigotry, racism, and intolerance.”
    If in the first paragraph of a response to an article you misunderstand or misrepresent the article’s premise, in my opinion it invalidates the rest of your response.

  4. Keith

    Ron, that video you posted is hilarious. It should give progressives some food for thought.

  5. South of Davis

    Eugene (since you say it is clear to you) and/or Alan, can one of you take a shot at explaining to me what:
    “the cultural appropriation of antisemitism by voices in our country that pander to and promote bigotry” means?
    If Cultural appropriation is “the adoption of elements of a minority or marginalized culture by a dominant culture” and antisemitism is “hostility to or prejudice against Jewish people.”
    Who are the “voices in our country that pander to and promote bigotry?” and what marginalized culture did they “appropriate” antisemitism from?
    P.S. Thanks for the link Ron, I forgot Hitler was a Vegetarian

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