• Something Different - Haley Largely Blames REPUBLICANS For Inflation

    From 51b.1055@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 24 19:40:29 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    https://www.dailywire.com/news/nikki-haley-calls-out-republicans-on-inflation-defends-israel-aid-in-first-gop-debate

    Haley then addressed the country’s high inflation, saying
    Republicans and the Trump administration contributed to
    the situation.

    “The truth is that Biden didn’t do this to us. Our Republicans
    did this to us too when they passed that $2.2 trillion COVID
    stimulus bill,” she said.

    Later, in a heated back-and-forth with Vivek Ramaswamy, a
    tech entrepreneur and political newcomer, Haley slammed
    Ramaswamy on his foreign policy views.

    Former Ambassador Nikki Haley slams Vivek Ramaswamy at the
    GOP debate on Ukraine and foreign policy:

    - also, in regards to Ramaswamys' Ukraine position -

    “You are choosing a murderer over a pro-American country …
    You would make America less safe. You have no foreign
    policy experience and it shows. It shows.

    . . .

    She's kind of correct - the Covid stimulus was a HUGE
    unplanned expense and the USA (and many others) are
    now trying to make up for it. Not entirely sure we
    CAN (and the UK looks like a total fail).

    Now was the stimulus NECESSARY ?

    To a point, yes. Didn't need to be that much for that
    long however. The left was positively obsessed with
    maintaining max lock-down for as long as possible
    plus most Republicans WENT ALONG WITH THAT for quite
    a long time. I can see the lefties motives, but why
    so many Republicans too ???

    In any case, the Covid reaction was to put a halt to
    all sorts of business - no buying and selling, no
    profits, no sales taxes ... money OUT but little
    back IN.

    Where the next administration failed was in MANAGING
    said deficits - could have been less inflation and
    not in a huge sudden attack.

    And as for Ukraine ... Haley is absolutely correct.
    We can NOT let Russia get away with it, horrible
    precedent. Friends are where you find them, and
    it's not just a matter of momentary convenience
    unless you're a sociopath.

    A week or so ago Ramaswamy also said he'd stab Taiwan
    in the back the minute the USA had enough new chip
    factories. NO principle or ethics or anything else
    worthy to be found in that.

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  • From pothead@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Fri Aug 25 01:15:05 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    On 2023-08-24, 51b.1055 <[email protected]> wrote:
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/nikki-haley-calls-out-republicans-on-inflation-defends-israel-aid-in-first-gop-debate

    Haley then addressed the country’s high inflation, saying
    Republicans and the Trump administration contributed to
    the situation.

    “The truth is that Biden didn’t do this to us. Our Republicans
    did this to us too when they passed that $2.2 trillion COVID
    stimulus bill,” she said.

    Later, in a heated back-and-forth with Vivek Ramaswamy, a
    tech entrepreneur and political newcomer, Haley slammed
    Ramaswamy on his foreign policy views.

    Former Ambassador Nikki Haley slams Vivek Ramaswamy at the
    GOP debate on Ukraine and foreign policy:

    - also, in regards to Ramaswamys' Ukraine position -

    “You are choosing a murderer over a pro-American country …
    You would make America less safe. You have no foreign
    policy experience and it shows. It shows.

    . . .

    She's kind of correct - the Covid stimulus was a HUGE
    unplanned expense and the USA (and many others) are
    now trying to make up for it. Not entirely sure we
    CAN (and the UK looks like a total fail).

    Now was the stimulus NECESSARY ?

    To a point, yes. Didn't need to be that much for that
    long however. The left was positively obsessed with
    maintaining max lock-down for as long as possible
    plus most Republicans WENT ALONG WITH THAT for quite
    a long time. I can see the lefties motives, but why
    so many Republicans too ???

    In any case, the Covid reaction was to put a halt to
    all sorts of business - no buying and selling, no
    profits, no sales taxes ... money OUT but little
    back IN.

    Where the next administration failed was in MANAGING
    said deficits - could have been less inflation and
    not in a huge sudden attack.

    And as for Ukraine ... Haley is absolutely correct.
    We can NOT let Russia get away with it, horrible
    precedent. Friends are where you find them, and
    it's not just a matter of momentary convenience
    unless you're a sociopath.

    A week or so ago Ramaswamy also said he'd stab Taiwan
    in the back the minute the USA had enough new chip
    factories. NO principle or ethics or anything else
    worthy to be found in that.

    She is right. It's both parties that have caused this worldwide situation. COVID was an experiment by the elites to see how far they could go WRT controlling the population.
    Not the virus itself, but the reaction to it.

    Ramaswamy is right. We need Taiwan for semiconductor production and nothing else. It's the same as
    the Middle East where strategic bases and oil are the focus.


    --
    pothead
    Tommy Chong For President 2024.
    Crazy Joe Biden Is A Demented Imbecile.
    Impeach Joe Biden 2022.

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  • From Mitchell Holman@21:1/5 to pothead on Fri Aug 25 01:52:03 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    pothead <[email protected]> wrote in
    news:uc8vap$3n0hf$[email protected]:



    Ramaswamy is right. We need Taiwan for semiconductor production and
    nothing else


    We don't even need Israel for that.

    Should we pull our defense dollars
    out of there as well?

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  • From 51b.1055@21:1/5 to pothead on Thu Aug 24 22:38:05 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    On 8/24/23 9:15 PM, pothead wrote:
    On 2023-08-24, 51b.1055 <[email protected]> wrote:
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/nikki-haley-calls-out-republicans-on-inflation-defends-israel-aid-in-first-gop-debate

    Haley then addressed the country’s high inflation, saying
    Republicans and the Trump administration contributed to
    the situation.

    “The truth is that Biden didn’t do this to us. Our Republicans
    did this to us too when they passed that $2.2 trillion COVID
    stimulus bill,” she said.

    Later, in a heated back-and-forth with Vivek Ramaswamy, a
    tech entrepreneur and political newcomer, Haley slammed
    Ramaswamy on his foreign policy views.

    Former Ambassador Nikki Haley slams Vivek Ramaswamy at the
    GOP debate on Ukraine and foreign policy:

    - also, in regards to Ramaswamys' Ukraine position -

    “You are choosing a murderer over a pro-American country …
    You would make America less safe. You have no foreign
    policy experience and it shows. It shows.

    . . .

    She's kind of correct - the Covid stimulus was a HUGE
    unplanned expense and the USA (and many others) are
    now trying to make up for it. Not entirely sure we
    CAN (and the UK looks like a total fail).

    Now was the stimulus NECESSARY ?

    To a point, yes. Didn't need to be that much for that
    long however. The left was positively obsessed with
    maintaining max lock-down for as long as possible
    plus most Republicans WENT ALONG WITH THAT for quite
    a long time. I can see the lefties motives, but why
    so many Republicans too ???

    In any case, the Covid reaction was to put a halt to
    all sorts of business - no buying and selling, no
    profits, no sales taxes ... money OUT but little
    back IN.

    Where the next administration failed was in MANAGING
    said deficits - could have been less inflation and
    not in a huge sudden attack.

    And as for Ukraine ... Haley is absolutely correct.
    We can NOT let Russia get away with it, horrible
    precedent. Friends are where you find them, and
    it's not just a matter of momentary convenience
    unless you're a sociopath.

    A week or so ago Ramaswamy also said he'd stab Taiwan
    in the back the minute the USA had enough new chip
    factories. NO principle or ethics or anything else
    worthy to be found in that.

    She is right. It's both parties that have caused this worldwide situation. COVID was an experiment by the elites to see how far they could go WRT controlling the population.
    Not the virus itself, but the reaction to it.


    Ummm ... kinda ... but it wasn't that coordinated. It
    was a mix of Not Knowing What To Do mixed with bunch
    of small medium and eventually large conspiracies.

    ANYway, the Great Covid Cluster-Fuck fucked us all.
    In the USA the GOP was equally complicit, but now
    the left made it far worse than it had to be.

    Ramaswamy is right. We need Taiwan for semiconductor production and nothing else. It's the same as
    the Middle East where strategic bases and oil are the focus.

    Whomever you vote for, I'll vote for someone else now ......

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  • From Mike Colangelo@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 24 20:27:48 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    On 8/24/2023 4:40 PM, 51b.1055 wrote:
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/nikki-haley-calls-out-republicans-on-inflation-defends-israel-aid-in-first-gop-debate

    Haley then addressed the country’s high inflation,

    The country does not currently have high inflation.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Manham@21:1/5 to All on Fri Aug 25 04:23:20 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.elections, alt.politics.republicans
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    pothead <[email protected]> wrote in
    news:uc8vap$3n0hf$[email protected]:



    Ramaswamy is right. We need Taiwan for semiconductor production and
    nothing else


    We don't even need Israel for that.

    Should we pull our defense dollars
    out of there as well?

    Israel is a rightwing socialist bloodsucker state that the USA props up
    with generous welfare for their socialist health care and other socialist programs.


    The Real Reason So Many Republicans Love Israel? Their Own White
    Supremacy.

    Share on Facebook
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    Trump Rally

    GREENVILLE, NC � JULY 17: President Donald Trump speaks during a Keep
    America Great rally on July 17, 2019 in Greenville, North Carolina. Trump
    is speaking in North Carolina only hours after The House of
    Representatives voted down an effort from a Texas Democrat to impeach the President. (Photo by Zach Gibson/Getty Images) Image by Getty Images
    Peter Beinart

    Peter Beinart July 29, 2019

    If you listened earlier this month to Republican responses to Donald
    Trump�s call for Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and
    Ayanna Pressley to �go back� to the �places from which they came,� you
    noticed something odd. Trump�s defenders kept mentioning Israel.

    �They hate Israel,�replied Lindsey Graham when asked about Trump�s attacks
    on The Squad. Republican Congressman Lee Zeldin called Omar and Tlaib �anti-Israel.� Trump himself responded to the controversy by declaring
    that Omar �hates Israel.�

    This is strange. As reprehensible as it is to demand that an American politician leave America for allegedly expressing insufficient patriotism,
    the demand is at least familiar.

    �America, love it or leave it,� has been a conservative slogan since the
    1960s. What�s virtually unprecedented is demanding that an American
    politician leave America because they�ve expressed insufficient devotion
    to a foreign country. Can anyone imagine Republicans defending Trump�s
    calls for expelling Omar and company by accusing them of hating Canada,
    India or Japan?

    Of course not. The reason is that Republicans no longer talk about Israel
    like it�s a foreign country. They conflate love of Israel with love of
    America because they see Israel as a model for what they want America to
    be: An ethnic democracy.

    Israel is a Jewish state. Trump and many of his allies want America to be
    a white, Judeo-Christian state. Israel, despite its free elections and parliamentary institutions, structurally privileges one ethnic and
    religious group over others. That�s what many Republicans want here.

    In the press, commentators often overlook the right�s affinity for ethnic democracy in favor of other explanations for GOP support of Israel. But
    those other explanations are at best incomplete. One common argument is
    that Republicans love Israel because of its commitment to democracy and
    human rights.

    But in the Trump era, democracy and human rights are not Republican
    foreign policy priorities. It�s not just Trump who admires authoritarian leaders. Rank and file Republicans do too. They hold a more favorable view
    than Democrats of both Russia and Saudi Arabia. And when The Economist and YouGov asked Americans last December whether �Human rights abuses should
    be a principal concern in our dealings with countries,� Republicans were
    only half as likely as Democrats to say yes.

    Most Republicans also want Israel to rule the West Bank, where
    Palestinians live under military law without the right to vote for the government that controls their lives. If you support Israel�s undemocratic control of the West Bank, democracy is probably not the reason you support Israel.

    Another common argument for why Republicans love Israel concerns theology. Journalists often note that many evangelical Christians � most of whom
    vote Republican � see Jewish control of the holy land as necessary to
    bring about the second coming of Jesus. But it�s easy to exaggerate
    religion�s role. According to a 2019 Gallup study, �even the least
    religious Republicans are significantly more positive about Israel than
    the most religious Democrats. The impact of religiosity is swamped by the
    power of partisanship.�

    A primary reason for this is race. Many religious Democrats are African American or Latino, and African American and Latino Christians � even
    African American and Latino evangelical Christians � are far more critical
    of Israel than their white counterparts. This spring, according to the Pew Research Center, members of historically black churches disapproved of the Israeli government by a margin of 34 points.

    Republican support for Israel, in other words, isn�t driven by American Christians as a whole. It�s driven by conservative white Christians, whose political identity sits at the intersection of religion and race. In the
    Trump era, conservative white Christians have grown increasingly obsessed
    with preserving America�s religious and racial character, and they see
    Israel as a country that�s doing just that.

    Most Republicans fear a less white, less Christian America. Earlier this
    year, Pew asked Americans whether it would strengthen or weaken �American customs and values� if whites ceased being the majority. By a margin of 46 points, Republicans said America would become weaker. And if Republicans
    fear America becoming less white, they also fear it becoming more Muslim.
    A New America poll last November found that 71 percent of Republicans
    believe Islam is incompatible with American values and 74 percent,
    according to an Economist/YouGov survey last June, think Muslims should be temporarily banned from entering the United States.

    These racial and religious fears form the backbone of Republican
    opposition to immigration. As Clemson University�s Steven V. Miller has
    shown, Americans who want less immigration are almost six times more
    likely to be motivated by racial resentment than by economic anxiety.

    So it�s a measure of the power of racial resentment inside the GOP that immigration is now, by far, the issue that Republicans care about most.
    Last December, when Quinnipiac College asked Americans what Congress
    should make its top priority, more Republicans answered immigration than
    all the other choices combined.

    In June, when Reuters asked Republicans to name their top political
    concern, immigration again trounced the second most common answer by a
    factor of more than three to one.

    For Republicans who want to preserve America�s demographic character,
    Israel � which makes immigrating and gaining citizenship easy for Jews but extremely difficult for non-Jews � represents a model. In her 2016 book,
    Adios America, which shaped Trump�s immigration rhetoric, Ann Coulter
    wrote that �Israel says, quite correctly, that changing Israel�s ethnicity would change the idea of Israel. Well, changing America�s ethnicity
    changes the idea of America too.�

    In 2017, in response to a news article about Israel�s plan to deport
    African migrants, she tweeted, �Netanyahu for President!�

    Netanyahu for President! Israel to deport recalcitrant illegal
    immigrants, circumvent Supreme Court ruling � https://t.co/9EclA2yHMV

    � Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) October 25, 2017

    When the New York Times reported in 2018 on Israeli soldiers shooting Palestinians who were marching towards the fence that encloses the Gaza
    Strip, she asked, �Can we do that?�

    It�s not just Coulter. �Everybody acts like �Oh what Trump has said is so amazing,�� exclaimed Mike Huckabee, in defending Trump�s Muslim ban. �It�s
    not that amazing in Israel. You don�t have open borders to Muslims here.�

    Rick Santorum has cited Israel to justify profiling Muslims who come to
    the United States.

    Last December, in a monologue arguing for Trump�s wall on the southern
    border, Tucker Carlson declared that, �Israelis know how effective walls
    are.�

    Ted Cruz has said, �There is a great deal we can learn on border security
    from Israel.� And Trump himself has claimed that, �If you really want to
    find out how effective a wall is, just ask Israel.�

    This view isn�t confined to Republican elites. Public opinion surveys
    suggest a strong correlation between hostility to immigration, hostility
    to Muslims and support for Israel. When University of Maryland Professor Shibley Telhami, at my request, crunched the data from polling he
    conducted last fall, he found that Americans who said the United States government should �lean toward the Palestinians� in mediating the Israeli- Palestinian conflict supported making immigration to the US easier by a
    margin of 60 points.

    Americans who said the US should �lean toward Israel,� by contrast,
    supported making immigration to the United States harder by a margin of 20 points. Similarly, almost 70 percent of respondents who said the US should �lean toward Israel� had an unfavorable of Islam compared with less than
    33 percent of respondents who said America should �lean toward the Palestinians.�

    But the right�s admiration for Israel�s ethnic democracy extends beyond immigration. Israel doesn�t just maintain Jewish dominance by keeping non-
    Jews out of the country. It also delegitimizes and limits political participation by the non-Jews under its control.

    On Election Day in 2015, Netanyahu warned that, �Arab voters are coming
    out in droves.� This year, Likud activists placed 1200 hidden cameras in polling stations in Palestinian areas in an effort to intimidate
    Palestinian citizens of Israel from voting.

    Netanyahu�s Likud Party also asked Israel�s election committee to bar a Palestinian party, Ram-Balad, from running for the Knesset on the grounds
    that it supports terrorism and does not want Israel to be a Jewish state. (Under Israeli law, parties that reject Israel�s existence as a Jewish or
    a democratic state, or support racism or violence, cannot participate in elections.
    Related

    opinionJoe Biden�s Moral Cowardice On israel

    Since many Palestinian citizens of Israel don�t want Israel to be a Jewish state, the Israeli right regularly uses this law to challenge their
    parties� ability to run. So far, these efforts at barring them have failed
    in the Israeli Supreme Court.)

    These efforts aren�t primarily about race. After all, roughly fifty
    percent of Israeli Jews hail from North Africa and the Middle East, and
    thus themselves would not qualify as white by American definitions. Nonetheless, it�s easy to see parallels between the Israeli right�s
    attempt to limit political participation by Palestinians and the
    Republican Party�s efforts to impede � or at least delegitimize �
    political participation by people of color, whether by claiming that
    Barack Obama was not a United States citizen, by passing laws that make it harder for minorities to vote, or by adding a citizenship question to the census in the hopes that fewer Latinos would then fill it out.

    Even Trump�s attack on The Squad echoes an argument that Netanyahu has
    long employed. In his tweet, Trump argued that the four non-white members
    of Congress should leave the United States because they hail from
    �countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe, the
    worst, most corrupt and inept anywhere in the world.�

    The insinuation is that because Omar, Ocasio-Cortez, Tlaib and Pressley
    hail from supposedly uncivilized cultures, they lack the right to
    participate politically in the United States. That claim has deep roots in American history: It was central to the argument for denying blacks and
    other non-whites American citizenship in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. But it has also been central to Netanyahu�s argument for why Palestinians in the West Bank lack the right to citizenship either in
    Israel or in a state of their own.

    In his most important book, A Durable Peace, Netanyahu quotes former
    British officials as declaring that, �Left to themselves, the Arabs of Palestine would not in a thousand years have taken steps toward the
    irrigation and electrification of Palestine� and that �The Arab is a poor fighter, though an [sic] adept at looting, sabotage and murder.� The implication is the same as Trump�s: People from uncivilized cultures don�t deserve political rights.

    Understanding that Israel serves as a model for the ethnic democracy that
    many Republicans wish to create in the United States is crucial to understanding the way contemporary Republicans discuss anti-Semitism.

    Trump and his defenders have not only called Omar and other members of The Squad anti-Israel, they�ve also called them anti-Semitic. The irony is
    that Trump has trafficked in exactly the same stereotypes that Omar has.

    Omar got in trouble for saying AIPAC�s influence was �all about the
    Benjamins�; Trump in 2015 told the Republican Jewish Coalition, �You�re
    not going to support me, because I don�t want your money.�

    Omar exacerbated her woes by suggesting that pro-Israel groups �push for allegiance to a foreign country�; speaking to the RJC this April, Trump
    called Netanyahu �your prime minister.� Of the two, in fact, Trump has the
    much longer and more egregious history of Jew-baiting. The key to
    understanding the GOP�s outrage, then, is not what Omar said but who she
    is: A black Muslim immigrant woman.

    Since Omar is black and most Jews in contemporary America are considered
    white, making her the face of anti-Semitism furthers the right�s
    contention that most discrimination in contemporary America is reverse discrimination: By people of color and Muslims against whites, Christians
    and Jews.

    In addition to calling members of The Squad anti-Semitic, Trump has called
    them �very Racist,� presumably against whites. This weekend he called
    African American Congressman Elijah Cummings a �racist� too. On Fox News, Democrats are frequently called �anti-white.�

    Republicans also emphasize what Rush Limbaugh has called the �Democrats�
    War on Christianity.� Ralph Reed has called hostility to evangelicals �the
    last acceptable bigotry.� Trump�s Justice Department has made battling discrimination against Christians a centerpiece of its work, even as it
    defends his Muslim travel ban.
    Related

    opinionNetanyahu Has Changed The Democratic Party � One Candidate At A
    Time

    These arguments shape public opinion. According to an April 2019 Pew
    Research poll, Republicans are more likely to say that whites face �a lot�
    of discrimination than do blacks. They�re more likely to say Christians
    face �a lot� of discrimination than do Muslims. This belief that reverse discrimination is the dominant form of discrimination in contemporary
    America has enormous implications. It allows Republicans to cast their
    efforts to limit the free speech and political participation of Muslims
    and people of color not as acts of bigotry but as responses to bigotry.

    If boycotting Israel is anti-Semitic, as Trump officials say, then criminalizing Palestinian activism in the US, as many Republicans and some Democrats in Congress have tried to do, is a necessary defense against discrimination.

    If Sharia is inherently anti-Semitic and anti-Christian, then passing laws against it � as 14 states have done � doesn�t infringe upon the rights of Muslims. It protects the rights of Christians and Jews. And if Omar � the
    first Muslim woman ever to sit on the House Foreign Relations Committee �
    is anti-Semitic, then removing her from that committee, as Vice President
    Mike Pence has demanded, is simply a way of safeguarding Jews.

    People of color are, of course, capable of all kinds of bigotry, including anti-Semitism. But the right�s effort to make Omar, Rashida Tlaib,
    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Linda Sarsour, Tamika Mallory and Marc Lamont
    Hill the face of contemporary American anti-Semitism � despite Trump�s
    long history of invoking anti-Jewish stereotypes and despite the recent synagogue massacres by white nationalists in Pittsburgh and Poway �
    constitutes an effort to draw American Jews into the ethnic democracy
    project.

    By calling America a �Judeo-Christian� nation, conservatives offer Jews
    full inclusion in a national identity that excludes Muslims. It�s an offer
    some Jews are eager to accept. The Zionist Organization of America�s Mort Klein, for instance, has justified Trump�s ban on admitting Syrian
    refugees by explaining that, �We�re opposed to bringing in people who have enormous antipathy toward Jews and Israel.�

    But to the consternation of many conservatives, most American Jews have
    spurned the offer and continued voting Democratic, thus allying themselves
    with the very people of color who Republicans insist threaten them. While
    most American Jews believe that in a post-Holocaust world it�s important
    that Israel remain a country with a special obligation to represent and
    protect Jews, they don�t consider Israel�s ethnic democracy a model for
    the United States.

    Instead, since at least the civil rights movement, American Jews have considered the struggle for equality by America�s most historically
    oppressed groups integral to their own equality. That continues in the
    Trump era. By clear majorities, Jews oppose Trump�s immigration policies
    and hold a favorable view of Muslims.
    Related


    This helps explain the right�s obsession with George Soros. His high-
    profile activism on behalf of immigrant and Muslim rights epitomizes
    American Jewry�s rejection of the right�s invitation to help build a
    white, Judeo-Christian republic. And it helps explain the strange
    phenomenon of conservative Christians calling progressive Jews anti-
    Semitic. If people of color are the real anti-Semites, and limiting their numbers and influence is the way to combat anti-Semitism, then Jews who
    oppose doing that are complicit in anti-Semitism.

    Republican attacks on Omar and her colleagues as anti-Israel and anti-
    Semitic aren�t ultimately about Israel or Jews. They�re an effort to use
    Israel and Jews to further the central goal of the Trump-era right:
    Maintaining white Christian dominance in the face of demographic change.

    Rejecting that project may spawn more white nationalist anti-Semitism. The Pittsburgh shooter loathed Jews for supporting the rights of Central
    American refugees. Ann Coulter earlier this year castigated �Jews who
    think they�re black.� But most American Jews know in our bones that
    narrow, exclusive definitions of Americanism only leave us more
    vulnerable. By contrast, the more America welcomes Somali immigrants and Guatemalan asylum seekers not only into the country but into the political process � the more it truly becomes a multi-ethnic, multi-racial, multi-
    faith liberal democracy � the safer we will be.

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