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Dangerous Political Rhetoric: Jews at the Epicenter
From right to left, recent incidents reveal how easily moral lines blur when hate is excused for partisan convenience.
“I love Hitler,” Nazi gas chamber jokes and racist slurs were among messages shared by Young Republican leaders in a private group exposed by Politico. The posts also mocked Blacks as monkeys and joked about sexual assault. The group included state young party chairs from Arizona, Kansas and NY.
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson “roundly condemned” the vile messages and said he did not believe the comments reflected the views of all young Republicans. Vice President JD Vance described the texts as “kids doing stupid things,” even though they were posted by adults. Many were asked to resign or lost their jobs. U.S. Task Force to Combat Antisemitism chair Leo Terrell reacted: “Antisemitism on the right is just as dangerous as antisemitism on the left.”
Nazi Tattoo Excused: ‘He made mistakes’
“I am not a secret Nazi,” was how Maine’s leading Democratic U.S. Senate primary candidate responded after he revealed his Nazi chest tattoo on a podcast. Graham Platner denied knowing that a skull-and-cross bones tattoo he got 18 years ago was associated with Nazi SS units. His former political director countered that “he knows what it means, he’s a military history buff.” CNN confirmed her account and reported that Platner defended Nazi tattoos in social media posts. As of Oct. 27, no Democratic senator had called for him to step down. Sen. Bernie Sanders reiterated his endorsement and Sen. Chris Murphy described him as “a human being who made mistakes.”
Controversies also emerged among Republican candidates. President Trump’s candidate to lead the Office of Special Counsel withdrew after reports surfaced of past bigoted comments. Paul Ingrassia declared that the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday should be “tossed into the seventh circle of hell” and “I have a Nazi streak in me.” The White House had continued to support him despite months of opposition from several Republican senators. He remains the White House liaison to the Dept. of Homeland Security.
The NJ Republican candidate for governor Jack Ciattarelli defended comments that his senior aide and Muslim relations advisor Ibrar Nadeem is not “taking money from Jews.”
Former Students for Justice in Palestine Leader Running for NYC Mayor
Concerns are mounting over Zohran Mamdani’s campaign for mayor of NY. The avowed socialist founded a chapter of the viciously anti-Israel Students for Justice in Palestine at Maine’s Bowdoin College in 2013. The national organization praised the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist massacre of more than 1,200 people – including 46 Americans. Mamdani has refused to condemn calls to “Globalize the Intifada” – violent attacks against Jews – and has met with radical Islamic preachers. Despite this, he has received major endorsements from some Democratic party leaders including U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
More than 1,000 rabbis across America have signed onto a Jewish Majority letter, “Defending the Jewish Future,” warning that Mamdani’s rhetoric “delegitimizes the Jewish community and encourages hostility toward Judaism and Jews.”
All of these examples illustrate a bipartisan erosion of moral standards – where the instinct to promote a political agenda too often outweighs the duty to reject hate.
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