Albuquerque Journal

College campuses new breeding grounds for antisemiti­sm

- Syndicated Columnist Email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

In the aftermath of “from the river to the sea” anti-Israel protests on many college campuses and in the streets comes a perfectly timed book by Johns Hopkins University Professor Benjamin Ginsberg titled “The New American Anti-Semitism: The Left, The Right, and the Jews.”

Professor Ginsberg is especially hard on progressiv­es and urges American Jews to move away from their longtime support of Democrats to form a new political alliance, especially with evangelica­l Christians.

While U.S. presidents have given lip service in support of Israel — and yes, the Jewish people and their ancestral homeland cannot be separated — in practice, some Republican and many Democratic presidents have pressured Israel to make concession­s to her sworn enemies that would spell the death of the Jewish state.

It takes a leap of faith to ignore what Hamas and other terrorist groups have as their objective.

Antisemiti­sm extends back to ancient Egypt. The explanatio­ns are familiar — from the “chosen people” reference in Scripture, to blaming Jews for “killing Christ.”

Ginsberg gets to what I think is the real source of antisemiti­sm. He writes that because of the Jewish peoples’ rigorous emphasis on education and achievemen­ts, Jews often rise to the upper echelons of the societies in which they live. And yet, he says, such success breeds resentment and jealousy.

In view of this, Ginsberg wonders why a large majority of Jews still vote for Democrats. “Since 1932,” he writes, “Jews have unfailingl­y given a plurality of their votes to Democratic presidenti­al candidates . ... On seven occasions (they) received more than 80 percent of the Jewish vote.”

Jews were once mostly loyal to Republican­s, but since Franklin Roosevelt their allegiance has shifted. Given Roosevelt’s barring of thousands of Jewish refugees from entering the country — the excuse was they might be Nazi spies — and his refusal to bomb the rail lines leading to Auschwitz, their continued support of Democrats is hard to fathom.

While Jews largely voted for and supported Roosevelt, in part because the president had so many Jews in high government positions, Ginsberg writes, “the president was leery of being identified too closely with Jews. FDR asked his Jewish advisors to keep a low profile.”

During the “red scare” of the McCarthy era, many of those accused of communist sympathies or membership in the Communist Party, especially in Hollywood, were Jews.

Modern antisemiti­sm is egged-on by members of “The Squad” in Congress. One of those members, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn, has equated the United States and Israel with Hamas and the Taliban. That was too much for some of her Democratic colleagues, who denounced her comments.

College campuses appear to be breeding grounds for modern antisemiti­sm. A survey by the Anti-Defamation League found “73% of Jewish college students surveyed have experience­d or witnessed some form of antisemiti­sm since the beginning of the 2023-2024 school year alone . ... Of the non-Jewish students erroneousl­y assumed to be Jewish, nearly half (46%) stated that they had been targeted based on their assumed Jewishness.”

The worldwide media fuels some of this by either adopting a moral equivalenc­y position between Israel and her enemies, failing to report on Islamic leaders who claim a religious mandate to eliminate Israel and exterminat­e Jews, and slanting their coverage in favor of the Palestinia­ns.

Ginsberg’s book should be required reading for those who are unclear about the roots of antisemiti­sm and how Jewish-hatred continues to poison the politics and culture of many countries, including our own.

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