Miami Herald (Sunday)

Conservati­ves, too, must attack the roots of anti-Semitism and bigotry

- Robert F. Sanchez, of Tallahasse­e, is a former member of the Miami Herald Editorial Board. He writes for the Herald’s conservati­ve opinion newsletter, Right to the Point. It’s weekly, and it’s free. To subscribe, go to miamihe rald.com/righttothe­point. BY

The fight against anti-Semitism has taken on a new sense of urgency following a series of troubling incidents. In Broward County, for instance, they included the all-toocommon acts in which cowardly vandals spray paint Nazi symbols and anti-Semitic slurs on street signs and traffic signal boxes.

Yet far more troubling was the emergence nationwide of displays echoing the hateful anti-Semitic rants of the celebrity now known as Ye, aka Kanye West. From Los Angeles to Jacksonvil­le last weekend, banners and electronic signs proclaimed that “Kanye was right about the Jews.”

Equally worrisome, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which tracks antiSemiti­c incidents, reported that Florida saw a 50% increase in such incidents in 2021. Nationwide the number of anti-Semitic incidents rose 34%.

The Tampa Bay Times has reported that an ADL investigat­ion “found that Florida is home to an overlappin­g network of white supremacis­ts and anti-Semitic groups responsibl­e for organizing numerous rallies and distributi­ng hateful propaganda.”

Given the rising concerns, the ADL’s annual “Never Is Now Summit” on Nov. 10 in New York is especially timely since will follow one of America’s most divisive elections, one in which too many candidates have unabashedl­y peddled absurd conspiracy theories.

The Summit will feature a wide range of speakers and panelists. They not only include well-known public figures such as Liz Cheney, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray and actor David Schwimmer, but also rabbis, professors, journalist­s, college students and the ADL’s experts who track the activities of hate groups.

The timely topics include “After the Midterms: Elections, Extremism and Disinforma­tion,” and “How Q-Anon and other Conspiracy Theories Fuel Anti-Semitism and Hate.”

The ADL’s hope is that this Never Is Now Summit’s participan­ts will return home better informed on how to fight anti-Semitism in their communitie­s and on their college campuses.

On the other hand, there’s an old saying — preaching to the choir — that may apply to this situation. Chances are that nobody who attends next week’s Summit will dispute the evidence that anti-Semitism, unchecked, could pose a serious threat to what’s left of our nation’s domestic tranquilit­y.

However, the remedy must also include steps beyond merely deploring anti-Semitism — as well as racism, homophobia and other forms of bigotry against groups whose members are often targeted for abuses ranging from slurs and ostracism to vandalism and violence.

One step would include examining the root causes of bigotry directed at entire groups of people. Psychologi­cal studies suggest that such scapegoati­ng is a way that some people deal with life’s frustratio­ns.

In their troubled minds, the reasoning often goes like this: “I have problems. This can’t be my fault, so it must be somebody else’s fault. It must be the Jews … or the

Blacks or all those illegal immigrants now pouring in, take your pick.”

At a time when the U.S. economy’s problems are causing widespread discontent, the cohort of people looking for someone to blame may well continue to grow, so the need for bipartisan cooperatio­n to deal with those economic and societal problems is more urgent than ever — and, sadly, seems more unlikely than ever.

Political conservati­ves in Congress and elsewhere could play a helpful role — if they would detach themselves from the conspiracy theories and white nationalis­t leanings of some of those in Donald Trump’s inner circle.

There’s a precedent. During the peak of the

Red Scare of the 1950s, a group known as the John Birch Society emerged touting conspiracy theories suggesting that even President Eisenhower was somehow soft on communism.

William F. Buckley, Jr., now regarded as “the father of modern conservati­sm,” denounced the John Birch Society and urged conservati­ves to distance themselves from it. It’s time for today’s conservati­ves to take a similar stand.

Meanwhile, the battle against anti-Semitism must begin to examine with the root causes of such scapegoati­ng while also intensifyi­ng its educationa­l campaigns if it’s to counter the possibilit­y that the next wave antiSemiti­c incidents will be even uglier — and far more dangerous.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR AP ?? Mourners’ flowers outside the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, where a gunman killed 11 people during a Shabbat prayer service in 2018.
GENE J. PUSKAR AP Mourners’ flowers outside the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, where a gunman killed 11 people during a Shabbat prayer service in 2018.
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