PDA

View Full Version : Pox Britannica


Mediocrates
04-01-2009, 08:31 AM
http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=e3d8e9b1-8caa-4290-b566-2aff2216016e

The New Republic
Pox Britannica
by Howard Jacobson
English anti-Semitism on the march.
Post Date Wednesday, April 15, 2009

'England's made a Jew of me in only eight weeks," says Nathan Zuckerman on the last page of Philip Roth's The Counterlife. It is not meant to be a compliment. What makes a Jew of Zuckerman is the "strong sense of difference" the English induce in him, a "latent and pervasive" anti-Semitism, rarely rampantly expressed except for a "peculiarly immoderate, un-English-like Israel-loathing."
http://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/media.canada.com/24be34eb-ecfe-4969-88c2-5aa898db4139/jacobson.jpg?size=l

Credit: Robert Neubecker

http://www.tnr.com/images/single_line.gif
At the time--The Counterlife was published in England in 1987--Zuckerman's account of Anglo-Jewish relations struck an English-born Jew like me as a mite thin-skinned. It was possible that an American Jew detected what we did not, but more likely that he detected what was not there. Whatever the truth of it, a comfortable existence was better served by assuming the latter. We all had our own tales of anti-Semitism to tell--my grandmother's headstone, for example, had just been defaced with a swastika in a skinhead raid on a Jewish cemetery in Manchester--but mainly they were isolated, low-level acts of idle vandalism or reflexes of minor intolerance, more comic than alarming, and not personal, however you viewed them. Apart, that is, from the Israel-loathing, but then that wasn't--was it?--to be confused with anti-Semitism.

Twenty years on, it is difficult to imagine Nathan Zuckerman lasting eight days in England, let alone eight weeks. There is something in the air here, something you can smell, but also, in a number of cases, something more immediately affronting to Jews. It is important not to exaggerate. Most English Jews walk safely through their streets, express themselves freely, enjoy the friendship of non-Jews, and feel no less confidently a part of English life than they ever have. Organizations monitoring anti-Jewish incidents in England have reported a dramatic increase after Gaza: the daubing of slogans such as "kill the jews" on walls and bus shelters in Jewish neighborhoods, abuse of Jewish children on school playgrounds, arson attacks on synagogues, physical assaults on Jews conspicuous by their yarmulkes or shtreimels. But, while these incidents ought not to be treated blithely, they are still exceptional occurrences.

And yet, in the tone of the debate, in the spirit of the national conversation about Israel, in the slow seepage of familiar anti-Semitic calumnies into the conversation--there, it seems to me, one can find growing reason for English Jews to be concerned. Mindless acts of vandalism come and go; but what takes root in the intellectual life of a nation is harder to identify and remove. Was it anti-Semitic of the Labour politician Tam Dalyell to talk of Jewish advisers excessively influencing Tony Blair's foreign policy? Was it anti-Semitic of the Liberal Democrat Baroness Tonge to refer to the "financial grips" that the pro-Israel lobby exerts on the world? Such allusions to a pro-Israel conspiracy of influence and wealth, usually accompanied by protestations of innocence in regard to Jews themselves--"I am sick of being accused of anti-Semitism," Baroness Tonge has said, "when what I am doing is criticizing Israel"--have become the commonplaces of anti-Israel discourse in the years since Philip Roth wrote The Counterlife. And, whatever their intention, their gradual effect has been to normalize, under cover of criticism of Israel, assumptions that 50 years ago would have been exclusively the property of overt Jew-haters. The peculiarly immoderate Israel-loathing that Roth remarked upon in 1987 is now a deranged revulsion, intemperate and unconcealed, which nothing Israel itself has done could justify or explain were it ten times the barbaric apartheid state it figures as in the English imagination.

maven
04-01-2009, 08:45 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYnGmnHNpaU

"Where have all the anti-Semites gone? short time passing.
Where have all the anti-Semites gone? Not long ago.
Where have all the anti-Semites gone: become anti-Zionists every one.
When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn?

Where have all the neo-Nazis gone, short time passing.
Where have all the neo-Nazis gone? Not long ago.
Where have all the neo-Nazis gone, pledged to Allah everyone.
When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn.

Where have all the lefties gone? Short time passing.
Where have all the lefties gone? Not long ago.
Where have all the lefties gone? Sworn to Hamas everyone.
When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn"

Where have all the fascists gone? Short time passing.
Where have all the fascists gone? Short time ago.
Where have all the fascists gone? Wearing turbans everyone.
When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn.

Where have all the UN gone? Short time passing.
Where have all the UN gone? Not long ago.
Where have all the UN gone? Indicting Israel everyone.
When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn?"

maven
04-01-2009, 11:18 AM
In England, the BBC's new adaptation of Oliver Twist (aired in the U.S. on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre) adds an abundance of anti-Semitism to the production. Both BBC and PBS are funded with public tax dollars. 2/17/09.

In London, England, a "FREE PALESTINE/BOYCOTT ISRAELI GOODS" sticker was placed on a poster advertising the Holocaust Exhibition held at the Imperial War Museum. 2/21/09.

In London, England, the London Conference on Combating Anti-Semitism reached the consensus "anti-Semitism has reached new heights and poses a clear and present danger". 2/17/09.

In England, anti-Semitism is on the rise, averaging 7 events per day. One letter-writer states, "I for one resent the fact that I can no longer congregate outside my synagogue. I resent the fact that my children attend Jewish school protected by security fences, concrete blocks and guard posts. I resent the fact that my eldest daughter ...... should feel intimidated on campus and questioned in a hostile, finger-pointing manner how she feels as a Jewess on the question of Gaza, and if she supports the Israeli actions." 2/17/09.

http://zionism-israel.com/israel_news/2009/02/anti-semitism-watch.html

AlanSilver
04-06-2009, 03:30 AM
It is almost like being a jew is a sin. but supporting suicide bombers, terrorists etc is a badge of honour. it is like saying all Irish agreed and supported the IRA!! or all Basques, ETA.

what makes me laugh is people make judgements about the situation in the middle east without the slightest knowledge or understanding of what is REALLY happening. All they see is what is played out on the news. Although most anti-semitic attacks are carried out by local Muslims.

Israel should hire whoever advises Hamas etc on their public relations (only joking of course but you know what I mean), as that is where Israel is losing big time.