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Mediocrates
03-11-2005, 11:03 AM
GOP representatives have strived to raise a furor over one Democrat's recent statements. Why? To deflect attention from the widespread GOP habit of invoking inappropriate Holocaust rhetoric and Nazi imagery.

As today's Forward reports, what is truly "offensive" is "the sanctimonious and frenzied response of GOP officials and activists who have ignored or downplayed even more egregious Nazi comparisons emanating from their own ranks." The Forward adds that "a slew of prominent Republican lawmakers have employed Nazi comparisons in recent years to bash a variety of Democratic positions, including support for tax hikes, abortion rights and stem-cell research. These attacks failed to draw condemnations from the GOP officials lately leading the charge" against a lone Democrat.

The Forward notes that in addition to other top Republicans, "[Pennsylvania Senator Rick] Santorum displayed similar levels of outrage, a stark contrast with their past silence in the face of Republicans directly tagging Democrats as Nazis." (Click here for full story)

Santorum ranks third in the GOP Senate leadership, and he's often mentioned as a presidential hopeful. Yet he has the chutzpah to hypocritically look the other way as leaders throughout the GOP shamefully invoke Holocaust rhetoric (see examples, below). The time has come for the GOP to stop avoiding responsibility for its continuing problem with Holocaust rhetoric!
Tell Senator Santorum what you think of his double standard. Write to him and tell him -- enough is enough with the GOP habit of invoking Holocaust and Nazi imagery. Click here to send Santorum an e-mail; send him a fax at (202) 228-0604; write to him at 511 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20510-3804; or call him at (202) 224-6324.

The NJDC has documented such highly offensive statements regularly in recent years -- yet where is the GOP outrage in all of these cases? Where was their indignation when White House insider Grover Norquist compared the estate tax to the Holocaust? When a Republican Senator described Democratic tax plans as "right out of Nazi Germany?"

Below, please find NJDC's Top Ten list of recent abuses of Holocaust and Nazi rhetoric by top GOP and conservative leaders.

1. Senator Jeff Sessions (R-AL), October 11, 2004
Speaking in opposition to stem cell research: "We certainly have all seen the rejections of Nazi Germany's abuses of science. As a society and a nation, there ought to be some limit on what we can allow or should allow."

2. Representative Tom Cole (R-OK), March 3, 2004
Under the headline "Cole Claims a Vote Against Bush Is a Vote For Hitler," KTOK News Radio in Oklahoma City reported on its Internet site on March 2 that "Republican Congressman Tom Cole claims a vote against the re-election of President Bush is like supporting Adolph Hitler during World War Two. It's what he said recently before a meeting of Canadian County Republicans."

3. Representative Peter King (R-NY), September 8, 2004
Speaking in opposition to a legal ruling on abortion: "That, Mr. Speaker, is a modern-day equivalent of the Nazi prison guard saying 'I was just following orders.' It was all legal in Nazi Germany at the time."

4. Senator Phil Gramm (R-TX), September 5, 2002
Speaking in opposition to a Democratic tax plan: "Now, forgive me, but that is right out of Nazi Germany. I don't understand ... why all of a sudden we are passing laws that sound as if they are right out of Nazi Germany."

5. White House Insider Grover Norquist, October 2, 2003
As Washington Post Columnist Richard Cohen first noted in his January 6, 2004 column, "extremely influential GOP activist and White House insider Grover Norquist... compared the estate tax to the Holocaust" during an October, 2003 interview on National Public Radio. Norquist -- perhaps the most important non-elected leader of the conservative movement today -- had originally stated on NPR on October 2, 2003, "The argument that some who play to the politics of hate and envy and class division will say is, 'Well, that's only 2 percent -- or, as people get richer, 5 percent, in the near future -- of Americans likely to have to pay [the estate tax].' I mean, that's the morality of the Holocaust: 'Oh, it's only a small percentage. It's not you; it's somebody else.'"

After some had taken note of Norquist's completely unacceptable and quite purposeful rhetoric, a January 23, 2004 article in the Forward gave Norquist a chance to retract his statements. Instead, he asserted that his original statements were "entirely reasonable," and he added a new wrinkle -- a comparison of Democrats to Nazis. The Forward article quotes Norquist as saying, "The Nazis were for gun control, the Nazis were for high marginal tax rates.... Do you want to talk about who's closer politically to national socialism, the Right or the Left?" Moreover, Norquist "told the Forward that he would not hesitate to use Holocaust comparisons in the future." (Click here for the complete Forward article)

6. Bush-Cheney 2004, July, 2004
The Forward reported that "President Bush's re-election campaign is refusing to withdraw an ad containing Nazi imagery from its Web site, despite severe criticism from Jewish organizations and from the Republican chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council." (Click here to view the entire article)

7. Senator James Inhofe (R-OK), October 11, 2004
While speaking on the Kyoto Protocol, an international global warming treaty, Inhofe quoted a Russian official who said the treaty "would deal a powerful blow on the whole humanity similar to the one humanity experienced when Nazism and communism flourished." In reference to the protocol, Inhofe added, in his own voice, "The world has certainly turned on its head that we Americans must look to Russians for speaking out strongly against irrational authoritarian ideologies."

8. Conservative columnist Ralph Peters, January 5, 2004
The Anti-Defamation League has taken note of what they described as "A column in the New York Post by Ralph Peters, a retired Army intelligence officer, which made repeated references to Nazis, the Gestapo and 'Hitler's Brownshirts' to describe the strategies of Democratic presidential hopeful Dr. Howard Dean and his campaign." ADL National Director Abraham Foxman wrote in a letter to the editor of the New York Post on January 6, "Such loathsome comparisons are wholly inappropriate, deeply offensive and repugnant. Surely, Mr. Peters could have found some other words to criticize Dr. Dean without reaching for base comparisons to the perpetrators of the Holocaust. Using such images demeans the Holocaust and the memory of the six million and others who died at the hands of the Nazis.'"

9. Dr. Laura Schlessinger, January 2, 2004
Controversial radio talk show host Dr. Laura Schlessinger compared professional day-care practices in America today to such practices in Nazi Germany. According to the Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, Dr. Laura "read a letter from a listener who criticized the lack of one-on-one attention given to children in some day care centers, especially those calling themselves 'Child Development Centers.' Dr. Schlessinger commented that 'it sounds like something out of Nazi Germany.'"

10. Mississippi Governor and Former GOP Chair Haley Barbour, October, 2003
On October 15th, 2003, the home page of the Internet site for the infamous Council of Conservative Citizens featured a photograph of former Republican Party chairman and current Mississippi governor Haley Barbour at a barbeque "sponsored by the Council of Conservative Citizens to raise money for private academy school buses," according to the site. The same page of the Internet site elaborates on the views of the Council of Conservative Citizens, including an image encouraging viewers to work to "Free Zundel," referring to notorious Holocaust denier and Hitler defender Ernst Zundel.

http://209.59.159.153/

KettleWhistle
03-11-2005, 12:47 PM
I tend to take anything that comes out of the National Jewish Democratic Council with a good grain of salt. They are just a political agitprop organization that's more concerned with appearing liberal and "progressive" (translation: placating to people who hate us) than they are with Jewish life and interests, and the improvement of these.

minusthejihad
03-11-2005, 12:54 PM
Aren't they the ones that had that flash political ad out with the old jewish yenta who crushed the neocons and cut the Bushchimpler's head off?

The one that pissed off a lot of Jews?

KettleWhistle
03-11-2005, 12:54 PM
LOL. I haven't seen this one.

minusthejihad
03-11-2005, 12:57 PM
Yeah this "righteous" ad:

http://victoryfund.njdc.org/bubbie/

minusthejihad
03-11-2005, 01:06 PM
9. Dr. Laura Schlessinger, January 2, 2004
Controversial radio talk show host Dr. Laura Schlessinger compared professional day-care practices in America today to such practices in Nazi Germany. According to the Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, Dr. Laura "read a letter from a listener who criticized the lack of one-on-one attention given to children in some day care centers, especially those calling themselves 'Child Development Centers.' Dr. Schlessinger commented that 'it sounds like something out of Nazi Germany.'"

LOL! Now Dr. Laura is a member of the GOP! hehe. Now that's a stretch. Maybe they should look through every person in history on both sides who compared the other side to Nazis. You'd have a list atound the world. Is teh NJDC saying that no democrats have done the same, or just that they do it less?

Mediocrates
05-19-2005, 11:41 AM
Hypocrisy Alert: Bob Novak, Look in the Mirror

Washington, DC: In his syndicated opinion column, conservative commentator Robert Novak today lambasted Democratic National Committee Chair Gov. Howard Dean for "intemperate language" that "crosses a line." Novak just last weekend compared the possibility of Republicans in the US Senate reaching a compromise with Democrats on judicial nominees to "going to a concentration camp and picking out which people go to the death chamber;" Novak's over-the-top comments were condemned by the non-partisan Anti-Defamation League's National Director, Abraham Foxman, as "abhorrent," "deeply offensive and insensitive" http://adl.org/PresRele/HolNa_52/4715_52.htm

Media Matters has reported that on CNN, Novak previously accused Democrats of opposing Bush judicial nominees because of the nominees' faith http://mediamatters.org/items/200504280008 ; Novak referred to Texas Democrats as "scumbags" http://mediamatters.org/items/200411010003 (http://mediamatters.org/items/200411010003) and Novak referred to Democrats as "so nasty" and Bush inauguration protesters as "a lot of punks and it's none of their business and it isn't free speech (sic)" http://mediamatters.org/items/200501240005 (http://mediamatters.org/items/200501240005)

"Robert Novak calling our Democratic Party leader's rhetoric 'intemperate' is the ultimate example of the pot calling the kettle black," said National Jewish Democratic Council Executive Director Ira N. Forman. "Novak's rhetoric is not just intemperate; it's out of control. His most recent affront last weekend, when he compared the Senate's consideration of judicial nominees to the Holocaust, shows Novak's true colors and his apparent need to say the most offensive thing that comes to mind -- no matter what the consequences or how much pain is caused.

"If Novak wants to see a public figure 'crossing the line' and engaging in wholly inappropriate speech, all he needs to do is hold up a mirror," Forman added.

minusthejihad
05-19-2005, 12:15 PM
National Jewish Democratic Council

You mean the same ones that made this flash ad? http://victoryfund.njdc.org/bubbie/

Yeah, no Nazi references there.

Medio, I think of you the same as Larry David. Another Jew I greatly admire, but think is crazy in regard to his party devotion.

Mediocrates
05-19-2005, 12:59 PM
I'm not actually a registered Democrat. I would have voted for lots of Republicans before John Kerry if any of them had run. Hell I think J.C. Watts should be President.

rockfinder
10-05-2005, 07:37 PM
I've found that often the GOP accuses the other party of what they are doing themselves. This puts the focus on the democrats while they carry out their agenda. This political maneuver is called smokescreening. So they use the nazi references as a means of stirring the public by using a heinous period in world history to alienate the masses on the other party's candidates. Its a hateful, hurtful way to control people, just as keeping the masses paranoid about terrorism to re elect W.

Ephraim
10-06-2005, 07:24 AM
Let me see if I have Political Correctness down:

Only Jews can talk about Nazis.
Nazis (Hitler) are much worse than Communists (Stalin)
Only Blacks or White Liberals can talk about Blacks
Only Browns or White Liberals can talk about Latinos
Only women or Ted Kennedy can talk about women
Only muslims, or white liberals can talk about muslims

Liberals are tolerant while conservatives are not

Jews are ok in government (as in Schummer), but Christians cannot separate their personal beliefs from their religion and are therefore not welcome in public services.

Terrorism has no relationship to Islam

Aborting an unborn or partially born baby is ok but executing a serial murderer is bad

Blacks are not Blacks if they are conservative; they are Uncle Toms.
Jews are not Jews if they are conservative; they are neo-cons.

Women are only women if they are pro-choice, feminists. All other women are slaves to the male-dominated society

Government sponsored Liberalism/Secular Humanism missionary work in public is ok because it is not a religion.

The government should insist that liberal programming on the radio should receive equal time to conservative time. This does not apply in the reverse on public TV of course.

Christ in a jar of pee is art and should be funded by public art funds

AIDS need billions of dollars to fund a cure when telling homosexuals to just say no....or to wear a condom is not doing enough.

--------------------

Everything I have said above is insensitive, homophobic and politically incorrect. :D

Mediocrates
10-06-2005, 07:32 AM
So now you understand when you mix morality, religion, governance and politics.

minusthejihad
10-06-2005, 08:28 AM
I've found that often the GOP accuses the other party of what they are doing themselves. This puts the focus on the democrats while they carry out their agenda. This political maneuver is called smokescreening. So they use the nazi references as a means of stirring the public by using a heinous period in world history to alienate the masses on the other party's candidates. Its a hateful, hurtful way to control people, just as keeping the masses paranoid about terrorism to re elect W.

If someone you think to be as dumb as W can get you paranoid, then you only have yourself to blame.

Let's just get something straight: trying to prove with political party is better than the other is a loosing battle. The fact is, they both suck, they're both evil and they're both good. They're two sides of the same coin and neother you and I are rich enough to run and be elected.

rockfinder
10-06-2005, 10:43 AM
So now you understand when you mix morality, religion, governance and politics.

I've understood it for years, this is the first time I bothered to speak up about it.
:)

rockfinder
10-06-2005, 10:45 AM
[QUOTE=minusthejihad]If someone you think to be as dumb as W can get you paranoid, then you only have yourself to blame.

I never said the W was paranoid, he's too stupid. I said his party used the paranoia to re elect him.

minusthejihad
10-06-2005, 11:17 AM
[QUOTE=minusthejihad]If someone you think to be as dumb as W can get you paranoid, then you only have yourself to blame.

I never said the W was paranoid, he's too stupid. I said his party used the paranoia to re elect him.

I think you misunderstood me. I said, if W or his party can make you paranoid, then you are to blame. I've learned years ago not to take politicians seriously.

MErevolutions
10-06-2005, 12:13 PM
Oh this is real grand :rolleyes:

Because leftists never use "Bush=Hitler," USA="fascist Hitler nation," or "GOP being religious=Hitler" in their arguments.

Mediocrates
10-06-2005, 01:08 PM
I think the key point is that these are statements made by the Republican leadership in their official capacities.

thetruth
10-20-2008, 10:00 PM
The NJDC is really a propaganda organization for the Democrats. They use their Jewish ethnicity and their pro-Israel positions to further the aims of the Democrats. I'm a strong supporter of Israel. The Ira Forman propagandists want to hide left-wing anti-Semitism and anti-Israel propaganda while going after the fringe in the right. I'm an American-Jew. We Jews should know that we agree with the political right and the Republicans when it comes to the issue of Islamism and terrorism.