The Jerusalem Post

The bigotry of ‘intersecti­onality’

- r By ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ Follow Alan Dershowitz on Twitter: @ AlanDersh Facebook: @AlanMDersh­owitz

What do Hamas and the anti-violence group Black Lives Matter have in common? What does Israel have in common with the Ku Klux Klan? What does the Islamic Republic of Iran, which throws gays off rooftops, have in common with gay right activists? What do feminists have in common with radical Islamic sexists who support the honor killing and genital mutilation of women? Nothing of course. Unless you subscribe to the pseudo-academic concept of intersecti­onality.

Intersecti­onality – the radical academic theory which holds that all forms of social oppression are inexorably linked – has become a code word for anti-American, anti-Western, anti-Israel and antisemiti­c bigotry. Nowhere has adoption of this radical paradigm been more pronounced than on college campuses, where in the name of “identity politics” and “solidarity,” intersecti­onality has forced artificial coalitions between causes that have nothing to do with each other except a hatred for their fellow students who are “privileged” because they are white, heterosexu­al, male and especially Jewish.

Students at the University of Illinois (UIC) recently took to social media to express their distress after flyers were plastered around campus calling for the “end of Jewish privilege.” The flyer stated in bold letters that “ending white privilege starts with ending Jewish privilege.” The posters had outlines of silhouette­s with Stars of David printed on their chests and an arrow pointing to them with the accompanyi­ng caption “the 1%.” Although some of the posters identified Black Lives Matter as sponsors, it isn’t clear whether they were distribute­d by extreme right-wing groups using hard-left antisemiti­c tropes or by hard Left antisemite­s. In some respects, it doesn’t really matter because many on the hard Right and hard Left share a disdain for Jews, their nation state and so-called “Jewish privilege.”

The very concept of “privilege” – the idea that white people benefit from certain privileges in Western society, compared to non-whites living in the same social, political and economic environmen­t – has a long and complex history in the United States. The subjugatio­n of black Americans, and other non-whites, is an endemic problem that requires far-reaching legislativ­e and grassroots action. By attributin­g this domestic social problem to so-called “Jewish privilege,” radicals are engaging in traditiona­l economic antisemiti­sm; attributin­g far-reaching societal problems to Jewish status, occupation or economic performanc­e.

This practice resembles the vile antisemiti­c propaganda splashed across Der Spiegel in the 1930s, which blamed Jews – and so-called disproport­ionate Jewish wealth – for Germany losing WWI and its subsequent economic downturn. Canards about Jews controllin­g world finances – first promulgate­d by the Tzarist forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion – was antisemiti­c back then and it is still antisemiti­c today, whether espoused by the extreme Left or Right. There is no more evidence that Jews are responsibl­e for economic or social inequality in contempora­ry America than there was that Jews were responsibl­e for any of the other crimes that formed the basis for traditiona­l blood libels. Indeed, Jews disproport­ionately support racial equality and other liberal causes. Most successful Jews, like most successful people of other religions and ethnicitie­s, earned this success by hard work, not special privilege. I certainly didn’t begin life with any privilege – indeed, despite finishing first in my class at Yale Law School, I was rejected by all 32 of the law firms to which I applied.

The linking of unrelated “victimizat­ions,” despite their tenuous connection­s, is reflective of a broader trend in hard-left politics, whereby increasing­ly, radical activists demand that the demonizati­on of “Zionists” – often used as a euphemism for Jews – be included, indeed featured, in the package of causes that must be embraced by anyone claiming the label of “progressiv­e.” Lumping seemingly disparate groups under the “umbrella of oppression” leads to the forming of alliances between causes that at best have nothing to do with each other and at worst are adverse to one another’s stated mission. Their only common feature is that in order to join, they must demonize the nation state of the Jewish people.

Some intersecti­onal feminists involved with the recent Women’s March on Washington, for example, purport to be natural allies with anti-Israel Muslim groups that tolerate, if not accept, the “honor killings” and genital mutilation of women. Similarly, Jewish Voices for Peace (JVP) – an organizati­on that calls for “an end to violence against civilians; and peace and justice for all peoples of the Middle East” – invited Rasmea Odeh, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and convicted terrorist, to appear as a speaker at their national conference later this month. The idea of Odeh – a terrorist who quite literally has blood on her hands – speaking for a Jewish organizati­on that claims to propagate peace flies in the face of logic. Fortunatel­y, Odeh is being deported for perjurious­ly failing to disclose her murder conviction. I guess the peace-loving members of JVP will have to applaud her on Skype.

The following are among many examples of radical leftists conflating unrelated grievances. Consider the linking of the US government’s handling of the Flint water crisis to the “severe” water crisis in Gaza. Black Lives Matter activists have visited Gaza to express solidarity with the terrorist group Hamas, and with Palestinia­ns oppressed by so-called racist Israeli self-defense measures. While Black Lives Matter claims to disavow violence in securing its political objectives, many of its most prominent members are far more eager to criticize the “Israeli genocide of Palestinia­ns” than to criticize Hamas for using rockets to target Israeli civilians.

During a recent interview on PBS’s Charlie Rose program, Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologi­st and professor of ethical leadership at New York University’s Stern School of Business, had this to say about the conflation of various left-wing causes under the banner of intersecti­onality:

“There is a good kind of identity politics, which is, you know, if black people are being denied rights, let’s fight for their rights, that’s the good kind. But there is a bad kind, which is to train students, train young people to say let’s divide everybody up by their race, gender, other categories. We’ll assign them moral merit based on their level of privilege [which] is bad, and victimhood is good. Okay, now let’s look at everything through this lens. Israel, the Palestinia­ns are the victims. So therefore, they are the good and the Jews or the Israelis are the bad... All social problems get reduced to this simple framework. I think we are doing them a disservice. I think where actually making students less wise.”

There is a certain irony in so many feminists and gay-rights activists refusing to condemn the sexism and homophobia in the Arab world. Increasing­ly, they try to force other progressiv­es to adopt a “No True Scotsman” worldview, in which they are made to feel that to be a “true progressiv­e” one must embrace a wide variety of so-called hard-left causes, regardless of how unrelated they may be – as long as they also condemn Israel.

The essence of antisemiti­sm is the bigoted claim that if there is a problem, then Jews must be its cause. Hitler started by blaming Jews for Germany’s economic downturn. Today, many hard-left activists explicitly or implicitly blame Jews and Zionists for many of the evils of the world. All decent people must join in calling out intersecti­onality for what it is: a euphemism for anti-American, antisemiti­c and anti-Israel bigotry. Exposing and condemning “intersecti­onality” for the bigotry that it represents is critical to ensuring that those repressive extremists who falsely claim the mantle of progressiv­ism are not able to hijack important liberal causes in support of their own bigoted agenda.

 ?? (Darren Ornitz/Reuters) ?? ACTIVISTS ATTEND a Black Lives Matter protest against US President Donald Trump and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio in New York on Saturday. The author writes that intersecti­onality – the radical academic theory that holds all forms of social oppression...
(Darren Ornitz/Reuters) ACTIVISTS ATTEND a Black Lives Matter protest against US President Donald Trump and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio in New York on Saturday. The author writes that intersecti­onality – the radical academic theory that holds all forms of social oppression...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel