The Jerusalem Post

Whom do bigots blame for police shootings in America? Israel, of course!

- • By ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ (Jonathan Bachman/Reuters)

In response to the tragic deaths of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling at the hands of police officers in Minnesota and Louisiana, respective­ly, the New York University Chapter of the Students for Justice in Palestine (“SJP”) tweeted the following:

“In the past 48 hours another two black men have been lynched by the police .... We must remember that many US police department­s train with #IsraeliDef­enceForces. The same forces behind the genocide of black people in America are behind the genocide of Palestinia­ns. What this means is that Palestinia­ns must stand with our black comrades. We must struggle for their liberation. It is as important as our own. #AltonSterl­ing is as important as #AliDawabsh­eh. Palestinia­n liberation and black liberation go together. We must recognize this and commit to building for it.”

Even in moments of national mourning such as these, SJP bigots cannot help but exploit the deaths of innocent Americans to further their own anti-Semitic political agenda, namely to delegitimi­ze and demonize the nation state of the Jewish people.

By implicatin­g Israel in these killings, the SJP is engaging in the old trope of blaming Jews for systemic and far-reaching societal problems. This practice was anti-Semitic when some Christian communitie­s used it to blame Jews for plagues, poisonings and murders; it was anti-Semitic when the Nazis used it to blame Jews for the failing German economy; and it is still anti-Semitic today. There is no more evidence that any of the police who killed Mr. Castile and Mr. Sterling were trained in Israel than there was that Jews were responsibl­e for any of the other crimes that formed the basis for traditiona­l blood libels.

The oppression of black Americans long predates the founding of the State of Israel; contrary to the claims of the SJP and like-minded groups, Zionism did not beget racism, nor is Zionism a reflection of racism. It is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. But the twisted logic on the part of the SJP should come as no surprise, given that the same organizati­on blamed Zionism for rising tuition costs in the City University of New York college system. The essence of anti-Semitism is the bigoted claim that if there is a problem, then Jews – and now Zionists – must be its cause.

Addressing the structural causes of racism in the United States will take more than scapegoati­ng Israel – it will require the type of far-reaching legislativ­e action of which our current Congress seems incapable. By morphing the discussion about criminal justice reform and systemic racism in the United States into a polemic against Israel, the SJP makes progress even more difficult.

That said, the reaction by the SJP is reflective of a broader trend in hardleft politics. Increasing­ly, groups such as Black Lives Matter, MoveOn, Code Pink and Occupy Wall Street have embraced intersecti­onality – a radical academic theory, which holds that all forms of social oppression are inexorably linked.

This radical concept has led to the linking of disparate left-wing causes, no matter how tenuous their connection­s. Some intersecti­onal feminist activists, for example, insist that feminists must oppose drone strikes (and by extension, Hillary Clinton), because they negatively impact women in the developing world. Even more absurdly, Jill Stein – the Green Party candidate for US president – has come out in favor of the bigoted Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement against Israel, partly on the grounds that support for Israel furthers the interests of the military-industrial complex, and by extension the fossil fuel industry.

Those activists who do not sufficient­ly embrace the new intersecti­onal orthodoxy, meanwhile, have been targeted by protests: The 2016 Gay Pride Parade in Toronto, for example, was broken up by Black Lives Matter for including a police float, and for not sufficient­ly prioritizi­ng the concerns of black trans women. Similarly, a gay rights event in Chicago was broken up by activists, who insisted on the exclusion of an Israeli organizati­on, which they claimed was coopting the gay rights agenda and “pinkwashin­g” Israeli crimes against Palestinia­ns.

Intersecti­onality seems to be driving hard-left activists toward a “No True Scotsman” worldview: Increasing­ly, they insist on a package of unrelated left-wing causes that must be embraced by anyone claiming the label of progressiv­e – including the demonizati­on of Israel as a racist, apartheid state.

Perhaps more worryingly, intersecti­onality tends toward the conclusion that the existing social, political and economic system is flawed in so many profound ways that any attempt at remaking it through democratic means is unacceptab­le. Activists have become increasing­ly obsessed with “Shut it Down” protest tactics, and a proud politics of “disrespect­ability,” that prioritize­s resistance to a “corrupt,” “rigged” socioecono­mic system over respectful discourse and political compromise.

This helps to explain the sympatheti­c attitude of Black Lives Matter activists toward groups such as Hamas, which embrace terrorism as a mode of resistance against Israel. Indeed, Black Lives Matter activists have visited Gaza to express solidarity 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. Black Lives Matter and other hard-left groups have been notably silent about other oppressed ethnic groups such as Tibetans, Chechens and Kurds. The only alleged “oppressors” they single out for condemnati­on are the Jews. This double standard raises legitimate questions about their real motivation­s.

Moreover, the conflation of police actions in American cities with Israeli military actions in Gaza raises a disturbing question: If the so-called oppression of Palestinia­ns in Gaza and the oppression of people of color in the United States are two sides of the same coin – as the SJP implied in its tweet – are the violent resistance tactics employed by Hamas, and perversely supported by many on the hard Left, an appropriat­e model to emulate in the United States? One hopes that the answer is no, and that the intersecti­onalist radicals will make that clear to their followers.

 ??  ?? A MAN protesting the shooting death of Alton Sterling holds a sign in Louisiana on Sunday.
A MAN protesting the shooting death of Alton Sterling holds a sign in Louisiana on Sunday.
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