No, much as that'd be convenient for you in this argument.OK, so we're just fully in "none of it happened" territory.
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No, much as that'd be convenient for you in this argument.OK, so we're just fully in "none of it happened" territory.
That's how it read. Or, to be perhaps more specific, it read as a fundamental lack of concern about the issue itself.No, much as that'd be convenient for you in this argument.
Is what actually happened an issue I should be concerned about?That's how it read. Or, to be perhaps more specific, it read as a fundamental lack of concern about the issue itself.
Because it's not a nonsense narrative.And how does endorsing a nonsense narrative against one's own party help in that endeavor?
No more than? It seems less, really. Apart from that one idiot with the Rothschild memes, there was only Israel-related stuff that seemed more or less as 'antisemitic' as Norman Finkelstein's politics.All the argument that Labour is no more antisemitic than general society
Now, a political party that wants to include Zionists probably shouldn't be as strident about Israel-Palestine as Norman Finkelstein, nor as dismissive of the feelings of Zionists or other people who, for whatever reason, are emotionally invested in seeing a middle eastern apartheid state as 'the good guys', but I find his reasoning very difficult to argue with as it comes to antisemitism in specific. A party that wants to include Muslims also shouldn't treat Naz Shah as it did-- a trick which, I'll note, also made its way to the United States to be used on Ilhan Omar and also, if I remember correctly, Rashida Tlaib.You can see this overlap between the Labour Right and pro-Israel groups personified in individuals like Jonathan Freedland, a Blairite hack who also regularly plays the antisemitism card. He’s combined these two hobbies to attack Corbyn. Incidentally, when my book, The Holocaust Industry, came out in 2000, Freedland wrote that I was 'closer to the people who created the Holocaust than to those who suffered in it'. Although he appears to be, oh, so politically correct now, he didn’t find it inappropriate to suggest that I resembled the Nazis who gassed my family.
We appeared on a television program together. Before the program, he approached me to shake my hand. When I refused, he reacted in stunned silence. Why wouldn’t I shake his hand? He couldn’t comprehend it. It tells you something about these dull-witted creeps. The smears, the slanders – for them, it’s all in a day’s work. Why should anyone get agitated? Later, on the program, it was pointed out that the Guardian, where he worked, had serialised The Holocaust Industry across two issues. He was asked by the presenter, if my book was the equivalent of Mein Kampf, would he resign from the paper? Of course not. Didn’t the presenter get that it’s all a game?
Compare the American scene. Our Corbyn is Bernie Sanders. In all the primaries in the US, Bernie has been sweeping the Arab and Muslim vote. It’s been a wondrous moment: the first Jewish presidential candidate in American history has forged a principled alliance with Arabs and Muslims. Meanwhile, what are the Blairite-Israel lobby creeps up to in the UK? They’re fanning the embers of hate and creating new discord between Jews and Muslims by going after Naz Shah, a Muslim woman who has attained public office. They’re making her pass through these rituals of public self-degradation, as she is forced to apologise once, twice, three times over for a tongue-in-cheek cartoon reposted from my website. And it’s not yet over! Because now they say she’s on a ‘journey’. Of course, what they mean is, ‘she’s on a journey of self-revelation, and epiphany, to understanding the inner antisemite at the core of her being’. But do you know on what journey she’s really on? She’s on a journey to becoming an antisemite. Because of these people; because they fill any sane, normal person with revulsion.
Here is this Muslim woman MP who is trying to integrate Muslims into British political life, and to set by her own person an example both to British society at large and to the Muslim community writ small. She is, by all accounts from her constituents, a respected and honourable person. You can only imagine how proud her parents, her siblings, must be. How proud the Muslim community must be. We’re always told how Muslim women are oppressed, repressed and depressed, and now you have this Muslim woman who has attained office. But now she’s being crucified, her career wrecked, her life ruined, her future in tatters, branded an ‘antisemite’ and a closet Nazi, and inflicted with these rituals of self-abasement. It’s not hard to imagine what her Muslim constituents must think now about Jews. These power hungry creeps are creating new hate by their petty machinations. As Donald Trump likes to say – it’s disgusting.
Labour has now set up an inquiry that is supposed to produce a workable definition of ‘antisemitism’ – which is to say, to achieve the impossible. It’s been tried countless times before, and it’s always proven futile. The only beneficiaries of such a mandate will be academic ‘specialists’ on antisemitism, who will receive hefty consultancy fees (I can already see Richard Evans at the head of the queue), and Israel, which will no longer be in the spotlight. I understand the short-term political rationale. But at some point, you have to say, ‘enough already’. Jews are prospering as never before in the UK. The polls show that the number of, so to speak, hard-core antisemites is miniscule. It’s time to put a stop to this periodic charade, because it ends up besmirching the victims of the Nazi holocaust, diverting from the real suffering of the Palestinian people, and poisoning relations between the Jewish and Muslim communities. You just had an antisemitism hysteria last year, and it was a farce. And now again? Another inquiry? Another investigation? No.
In order to put an end to this, there has to be a decisive repudiation of this political blackmail. Bernie Sanders was brutally pressured to back down on his claim that Israel had used disproportionate force during its 2014 assault on Gaza. He wouldn’t budge, he wouldn’t retreat. He showed real backbone. Corbyn should take heart and inspiration from Bernie’s example. He has to say: no more reports, no more investigations, we’re not going there any more. The game is up. It’s long past time that these antisemitism-mongers crawled back into their sewer – but not before humbly apologising to Naz Shah, and begging her forgiveness.
I can't help but notice you're doing anything other than addressing the basis of the problem. Who gives a damn about Finkelstein's objections to a Guardian journalist? Neither of them are the Labour Party.snip
From a US perspective, the concerns you listed seem frankly bizarre. And the media reaction surreal.He failed to grasp the magnitude of the problem and to deal with it.
I am not totally without sympathy for Corbyn, because I actually think it's true that the right-wing rags maginified it hugely compared to equivalent problems, such as the Tory party's racist members and relaxed attitude to investigating them. But there really was a problem, and he really didn't sort it out effectively, and it left plenty of real victims (abused Jews) and damaged the party. For Corbyn to blithely respond "it's all an exaggeration"... fuck.From a US perspective, the concerns you listed seem frankly bizarre. And the media reaction surreal.
He didn't actually say that, notably.For Corbyn to blithely respond "it's all an exaggeration"... fuck.
Not literally, no. He said: "One antisemite is one too many, but the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media."He didn't actually say that, notably.
He is also 100% correct about that.Not literally, no. He said: "One antisemite is one too many, but the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media."
So that it was an exaggeration was the message he wanted to put out, and that everyone was going to hear and take away from him.
Uh, no, they haven't agreed with that. Source: I can read!I remember years ago when I argued Crobyn was an antisemite you were up in arms and defended him. Now that he was kicked to the curb by his own party you suddenly toe the line and agree. Both Agema and Silvanius.
Failing to deal with antisemitism in one's organisation is not the same thing as personally being an antisemite - the former can just be incompetence. And I certainly think Corbyn has no shortage of incompetence.I remember years ago when I argued Crobyn was an antisemite you were up in arms and defended him. Now that he was kicked to the curb by his own party you suddenly toe the line and agree. Both Agema and Silvanius.
He can call up ADL for one of those I'm sure they will be thrilled. Maybe visit the memorials in Poland for good measure, make a show out of it.Failing to deal with antisemitism in one's organisation is not the same thing as personally being an antisemite - the former can just be incompetence. And I certainly think Corbyn has no shortage of incompetence.
Mind you, I'll freely grant that Corbyn has numerous incidents on antisemitism that are uncomfortable. Some people have said that he has a bit of a "blind spot" to antisemitism - he's not very good at recognising it compared to other forms of discrimination. But I think to look at his career over the decades, he has a long record of staunch opposition to any form of discrimination and can't help but feel that outweighs his possible mis-steps.
Perhaps this is the answer to resolve the issue: tell Corbyn he needs to go on a certified antisemistism awareness course.
He is also 100% correct about that.
This is precisely why few people are more supportive of Corbyn’s overall political project than those Jews in the LP who remain on the Left, and there are still many of us. Finally, though it is so hard to unearth, buried under mountains of misinformation, comparing two YouGov polls on antisemitism in 2015 and 2017, reveals that antisemitism had significantly declined within the LP under Corbyn.
So, let’s be clear: there is antisemitism in the Labour Party, as the recent report found; there was also some interference in the speed with which complaints were handled (though details of the nature of this interference remain ambiguous). At the same time, it is obvious that Corbyn faced an unrelentingly hostile campaign of disinformation, as compellingly confirmed by media research led by Justin Schlosberg and Laura Laker. Corbyn accepted the evidence provided by the EHRC, and said it should be acted upon. And though others may feel his timing was poor, in my view it is understandable that Corbyn should attempt to reassure Jews that the extent of antisemitism in LP had been grossly exaggerated in the media and by others not as a way to opposing antisemitism, but rather as a way of attacking him.
We should all be able to agree that any such practice undermines the importance of the very struggle it claims to support, as when the media, in line with Corbyn’s critics, promoted the false belief that 34 per cent of the LP had been accused of antisemitism, when in reality it was 0.3 per cent (exaggerated by a factor of 100).
Finally, if Starmer wants to follow the suggestions of the EHRC he will reinstate Corbyn forthwith. This is because that document explicitly protects freedom of expression, with enhanced protection under Article 10 to protect LP members who ‘express their opinions on internal Party matters, such as the scale of antisemitism within the Party, based on their own experience and within the law’.
How many of those actually happened in the way described by critics?Mind you, I'll freely grant that Corbyn has numerous incidents on antisemitism that are uncomfortable.
Depends on the critic. I don''t think any are watertight or compelling, they're all pretty borderline.How many of those actually happened in the way described by critics?
Wasn’t that actually a pretty famous Latin American mural, or by a widely renowned artist? I feel like I remember seeing it in a Spanish class I took. Kinda odd to pick on Corbyn for it if that was the case.Depends on the critic. I don''t think any are watertight or compelling, they're all pretty borderline.
Such as the mural with antisemitic figures - Corbyn says he didn't look at it carefully, and it is credible that he might not have done (because don't we all sometimes bash off some comments without enough scrutiny?) A lot of people are inclined to fill that void of certainty with their prejudices.
Corbyn could be picked on for his interactions with it. The artist would hold responsibility for making the mural (whatever that entails), of course.Wasn’t that actually a pretty famous Latin American mural, or by a widely renowned artist? I feel like I remember seeing it in a Spanish class I took. Kinda odd to pick on Corbyn for it if that was the case.