New York Daily News

Jax’s anti-Semitism is glaring, but he can’t recognize it

- STEFAN BONDY

“IT4 went from backing up the Brinks truck to applying for unemployme­nt, an All-Star who was injured during Boston’s 2017 Eastern Conference Finals run, only for the Celtics to turn around and trade him to the Cavaliers the ensuing summer.

Thomas’ large payday never came. His career has never been the same.

The Nets could use offense, and Thomas averaged 12 points and four assists on 41% shooting from three on the Wizards this season.

And if the Nets don’t sign Justin Anderson?

How about Jonah Bolden or Michael Beasley? Bolden played as a stretch four in Philly and shot the three at a 35% clip last season. He didn’t make the cut on the Sixers or Suns this season and has been a free agent most of the year.

Beasley is only two years removed from his best season since 2011. On the Knicks in the 2017-18 season, he averaged 13 points and almost six rebounds while shooting 50% from the field and 40% from three.

There’s no fix-all answer for the Nets in free agency because, well, it’s free agency in the middle of a season. All the good players were signed a long time ago.

But there are some players that help address holes in a Nets roster that has been decimated by injury or the coronaviru­s pandemic. It’s up to Marks to plug those holes the best he can.

To understand the absurdity of Stephen Jackson’s ignorance and inability to understand his anti-Semitism, we have to begin here: Adolf Hitler.

That’s where this all started and it can’t be forgot- ten. You can’t separate Adolf Hitler from bigotry or genocide. There’s no ‘Hitler did some bad things but he had some good ideas.’ Hitler, more so than any figure in history, is synonymous with hate.

Yet when DeSean Jackson, a wide receiver for the Eagles, decided to highlight an anti-Semitic quote attributed to Hitler, Stephen Jackson co-signed and doubledown­ed and revealed himself as, at best, wholly uninformed.

“He’s speaking the truth,” Stephen Jackson, the former NBAer turned media personalit­y/activist, said.

First of all, the quote used by Desean Jackson was fake. It only sounded like Hitler because it cast Jews as trying to “extort America” in their “plan for world domination,” a Hitler-esque sentiment. So here’s a real “truth”:

Through propaganda marking Jews as sub-human creatures who were conniving, corrupt, sex-craved and money-driven, Hitler’s Nazi party earned enough support from the public to follow through on exterminat­ing millions — that’s right, millions — of Jews. Adolf Eichmann, a Nazi who was responsibl­e for the logistics of the Jewish genocide, testified in 1961 that roughly 4 million Jews were killed in exterminat­ion camps and another 2 million were murdered in a variety of other ways.

Women and children were sent into gas chambers for mass execution via asphyxiati­on. The atrocities were so recent that survivors of these concentrat­ion camps can tell you their stories today.

Stephen Jackson would benefit from listening because Wednesday afternoon he regurgitat­ed a well-worn conspiracy theory peddled for centuries and used to justify the Holocaust.

“You just said that Jews aren’t the richest,” Jackson told a person on Instagram. “You know who the Rothchild’s are? They control all the banks, they own all the banks.”

You can’t understate the anti-Semitism and danger attached to that statement. In 1940, the Nazis produced a movie called “The Rothchilds,” with the purpose of stirring up enough Jewish hatred to execute their ethnic cleansing. The Rothchilds were presented by the Nazis as underhande­d and conniving by using war to take over Britain. More recently, the Rothchilds were dubiously accused of owning controllin­g the federal reserve, a theory pushed by extremists and noted anti-Semite/homophobe Louis Farrakhan.

Jackson, however, doesn’t seem to care if he’s offensive and he’s certainly not going to question Farrakhan.

“I love Minister Farrakhan and ain’t nobody is going to change that. Nobody,” Jackson said.

That’s disappoint­ing. Jackson has tried to explain his position with qualifiers like “I love Jews” and “I don’t support Hitler.” He also said, “I don’t know nothing about Hitler,” which is unbelievab­le and should disqualify all his previous statements on the subject.

To be clear, none of this should detract from the powerful and important work Jackson has done promoting policing reform in the wake of George Floyd’s killing. Jackson knew Floyd and has been a leading figure in a worthwhile and momentous movement.

But as he asks for open ears and minds from those who don’t understand his history, the same can be asked of him.

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