New York Post

Beijing Is Pushing Global Antisemiti­sm

- Jonah GoldberG

‘ China.’ Slave labor . . . endures in

WHILE the whole world is talking about Israel, let’s take a moment to talk about China. Why? Well for starters, one of the reasons the whole world is talking about Israel, is that’s the way China wants it. In the wake of Hamas’ barbaric anti-Jewish pogrom on Oct. 7, anti-Jewish hate has exploded exponentia­lly on the Chinese-owned socialmedi­a platform TikTok. This has reignited calls for banning the platform in the United States.

Opponents note — correctly — that antisemiti­sm has exploded on other social media platforms, and TikTok itself insists that it is working hard to combat the spike in bigotry and death threats.

It’s going going to have its work cut out because the Chinese state, which ultimately controls the platform, has been encouragin­g antisemiti­sm and anti-Zionism for years now. State-run media regularly claims that Jews control the world economy and US foreign policy.

Social-media “influencer­s” have a free hand to cheer on Hamas and claim Israelis are Nazis.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Chinese companies

Baidu and Alibaba literally erased

Israel from their maps. When

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently visited Beijing, a debate erupted over whether China should deal with an “old Jewish lady” who has a dual loyalty to the interests of the US government and to Wall Street.

Lest you try to pass all of this off on independen­t voices in China, you need to remember that — very much unlike Israel — China bans criticism it doesn’t like.

You can’t even post a picture of

Winnie the Pooh because it’s seen as a jab at Xi Jinping. But you can rant about Jewish hunger for blood and money all you like.

The argument for a US ban on TikTok doesn’t rely on Chinese efforts to foment antisemiti­sm in the US — or at home — but on its broader threats to national security. Yet that a foreign power thinks it has an interest in amplifying Jew-hatred in America should inform how we think about the issue.

It should also inform how we think about not only China but many of Israel’s critics.

The standard indictment of Zionism is that it’s “racist” because it practices Jewish “apartheid.” The Atlantic’s Adam Serwer writes, “There is nothing anti-Semitic about anti-Zionists who believe that the existence of a religious or ethnically defined state is inherently racist.”

Whatever you think of such statements in a vacuum, it does make one wonder why this standard is applied so selectivel­y to Israel. By almost any measure, China’s the most nativist nation on Earth. Even North Korea has more immigrants.

Thanks to Chinese conception­s of racial purity, as of 2020, only 0.001% (16,595) of China’s 1.4 billion citizens are naturalize­d citizens. But not all Chinese citizens are equal.

Many non-Han Chinese are secondclas­s citizens, required to show internal passports to leave their, increasing­ly occupied, territorie­s.

Indeed, Beijing is practicing “settler-colonialis­m” on a massive scale. Local customs and the teaching of minority languages are widely banned. Han Chinese are erasing ancient cultures in Mongolia, Tibet and most acutely in Xinjiang, the home of the Uyghurs.

Even Uyghurs not put in prison camps are banned from practicing their religion; their mosques and cemeteries are being being razed.

Under what might be called “Jim Crow with Chinese Characteri­stics,” Uyghurs and Tibetans can be denied service and hotel rooms.

Anti-African racism is common. Judaism, which isn’t recognized as a religion, must be practiced in secret. Slave labor, mostly performed by Muslims, endures in China.

After meeting with China’s Xi Jinping, Mahmoud Abbas assured the world that China’s persecutio­n of Muslim Uyghurs “had nothing to do with human rights.”

But Israel, where a fifth of citizens are Muslim or non-Jewish, is a unique threat to human rights and democracy? The UN seems to think so. While it downplays China’s abuses, the General Assembly has condemned Israel 140 times since 2015. Russia comes in second with 23 condemnati­ons. China? Zero.

This points to China’s motive for fomenting hatred of Israel and Jews. It’s a useful distractio­n from its own sins and a way to pander to, and encourage, global antisemiti­sm and anti-Americanis­m.

But it doesn’t explain why so many people are so eager to believe that a bigoted, oppressive, regime has the moral authority to condemn Israel, demonize Jews and celebrate their slaughter. Nor why so many supposed exponents of liberal Western values are uniquely offended by Israel alone.

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