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June 18, 2020

Trump Retweets BDS Activist Max Blumenthal for Criticizing Bolton

President Donald Trump retweeted a tweet from Max Blumenthal, a well-known activist for the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement, on June 17 that criticized Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton.

Haaretz first reported on the Trump retweet. Blumenthal’s tweet stated, “John Bolton, a notoriously mendacious enemy of all living beings on the planet, is discovering what every other great Republican hope of the Resistance has: liberals will eagerly lap up any piece of hysterical Cold War propaganda if they think it can be leveraged against Trump.”

 

Tablet senior writer Yair Rosenberg tweeted that the Trump retweet “was always the inevitable endgame for Max Blumenthal, pseudo-progressive apologist for war criminals and fascists. At this point, if you’re falling for his grift, it’s because you want to.”

https://twitter.com/Yair_Rosenberg/status/1273637246650941440?s=20

 

Jerusalem Post senior contributing editor Lahav Harkov tweeted that calling Blumenthal a BDS supporter is “an understatement. Max Blumenthal is an anti-Semite who supports [Syrian President Bashar] Assad.”

Blumenthal, the son of former President Bill Clinton associate Sidney Blumenthal, has previously come under fire for tweeting in 2016 shortly after renowned Holocaust survivor and author Elie Wiesel died, “Elie Wiesel is dead. He spent his last years inciting hatred, defending apartheid & palling around with fascists.” Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign rebuked Blumenthal’s remarks at the time, calling his tweets “hateful.”

Additionally, Blumenthal’s 2013 book, “Goliath: Life and Loathing in Israel,” came under fire from The Nation’s Eric Alterman, who wrote at the time that Blumenthal’s “book could have been published by the Hamas Book-of-the-Month Club (if it existed).”

Blumenthal, who is Jewish, has defended himself from accusations of anti-Semitism, stating at a 2016 speaking event in Toronto, “What certain groups — which are very partisan, right-wing groups affiliated with the Republican Party in the U.S. and the Conservative Party here — decided to do is to declare me an anti-Semite, that I actually hate Jews. However I decide to observe Judaism is irrelevant, because in their view, you can disagree all you want with Moses, but you can’t disagree with King Bibi [Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu].”

He later said at the event, “What we’re seeing is an organized campaign by the pro-Israel lobby, which represents the greatest threat to free speech in the West. It’s time to stand up to it.”

Trump has tweeted and retweeted various criticisms of Bolton over the past 24 hours in response Bolton’s upcoming book, “The Room Where It Happened.” Among the reported allegations in the book include that Trump wanted help from Chinese President Xi Jinping and praised the Chinese government’s internment of millions of Uighur Muslims into camps. The Department of Justice has attempted to block publication of Bolton’s book, arguing that “it contains instances of information that, if disclosed, reasonably could be expected to cause serious damage, or exceptionally grave damage, to the national security of the United States.”

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Make Dad a Bobblehead for Father’s Day

If you need a last-minute present — or gag gift — for Father’s Day, look no further. Make him his own bobblehead. You can create one using your dad’s photo along with an empty toilet paper roll, construction paper and a pipe cleaner. It’s way more fun than a boring necktie. In fact, make one for everyone in the family, and you can all bobble your heads in time. 

What you’ll need:

Empty toilet paper or paper towel tube
Construction paper
Glue and/or glue stick
Scissors
Pipe cleaner

 

1. Start with an empty toilet paper tube, or cut a paper towel tube to about four inches in length.

 

2. Glue construction paper around the toilet paper tube to give it some color. You can also paint it. 

 

3. Cut a small one-inch long triangle out of the bottom of the tube. This triangle creates the legs of the bobblehead.

 

4. Cut out a shirt or jacket shape from construction paper and draw any details on it that will personalize it for your dad. Then glue it to the top of the tube right above the triangle cutout.

 

5. Cut a five-inch length of pipe cleaner. Glue one inch of the pipe cleaner at the inside top of the toilet paper tube. Then arch the pipe cleaner like a cane so the tip lands just above the shirt/jacket.

 

6. Print out a photo of your dad and cut it out. The heads on bobbleheads are always bigger and out of proportion to the rest of the body, so size the head to at least two inches high. 

 

7. Glue the back of the head to the tip of the pipe cleaner. After the glue is set, adjust the head so it lands in front of the body.

 

8. Cut some ovals for the shoes and bend them in half. Glue half of each oval on the inside of the toilet paper roll where the triangle cutout is. You can also cut out some hand and arm shapes and glue them to the ends of the sleeves.

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John Bolton Book Says Netanyahu Was Concerned About Jared Kushner Handling Peace Plan

(JTA) — John Bolton, a former Trump administration national security adviser, says in his new book that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu questioned Jared Kushner’s ability to develop a Middle East peace plan.

In “The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir,” which is due out next week, Bolton wrote that he spoke with Netanyahu before Bolton joined the Trump administration in April 2018, according to CNN and The Washington Post. Both obtained advance copies of the book.

Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush, served in the Trump administration for 17 months. Kushner, a senior White House adviser, is also President Donald Trump’s son-in-law.

Netanyahu “was dubious about assigning the task of bringing an end to the Israel-Palestinian conflict to Kushner, whose family Netanyahu had known for many years,” Bolton wrote, according to CNN. “He was enough of a politician not to oppose the idea publicly, but like much of the world, he wondered why Kushner thought he would succeed where the likes of Kissinger had failed.”

The Washington Post reported that Bolton wrote that Kushner was a meddler who was “doing international negotiations he shouldn’t have been doing (along with the never-quite-ready Middle East peace plan).”

The Prime Minister’s Office responded to the publication of the quotes by saying that Netanyahu “has complete faith in Jared Kushner’s abilities and resolve and rejects any description to the contrary. Kushner has greatly contributed to furthering peace in the Middle East.”

The statement added that Kushner contributed to Trump’s historic decisions to recognize Jerusalem, move the U.S. Embassy there, recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights and helped advance Israel’s relations with the Arab world.

“With these accomplishments alone and under President Trump’s leadership, Kushner has already achieved what others before him did not accomplish. We are confident that working together we can achieve the lasting and secure peace that we all desire.”

The White House has sued Bolton to prevent the publication of the book, alleging that it contains classified information and its publication could harm national security.

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Trump Campaign Uses Symbol Identified With Nazis to Slam Antifa

WASHINGTON (JTA) — President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign pushed back against claims that it knowingly used a Nazi symbol in an ad.

A series of the campaign’s Facebook ads targeting Antifa, a loose coalition of local groups that confront the far right, and that Trump and his followers insist is a terrorist group, feature an upside down red triangle. Facebook removed the ad after the Anti-Defamation League said the triangle closely resembled the badge the Nazis used to identify political prisoners in concentration camps, The Washington Post reported.

The Trump War Room account, an arm of the reelection campaign, said that the symbol is not in the ADL’s database of hate imagery.

An ADL spokesman told the Post that the symbol is not in their database because it does not contain “historical Nazi symbols.” Instead it tracks “symbols commonly used by modern extremists and white supremacists in the United States,” he said.

“It is not difficult for one to criticize their political opponent without using Nazi-era imagery,” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement. “We implore the Trump campaign to take greater caution and familiarize themselves with the historical context before doing so. Ignorance is not an excuse for appropriating hateful symbols.”

It’s not immediately clear from the ads why the inverted triangle, which the Nazis used to identify political prisoners in concentration camps, appears in the Antifa ads. Other Trump campaign ads with identical text use yellow and back symbols similar to traffic signs that warn drivers to slow down or stop, the Post reported. The ad text warns that “dangerous MOBS of far-left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem.”

The Trump War Room account tweeted that Antifa used the red triangle first and provided a link to an example of an Antifa poster with the symbol.

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Jeff Ross, Gilbert Gottfried, and Other Jewish Comedians Compete in ‘Tournament of Laughs’

Jewish comedians including Jeff Ross, Gilbert Gottfried, Judah Friedlander, Michael Rapaport, Josh Wolf, the Sklar Brothers, Moshe Kasher, Natasha Leggero, Jessica Kirson and Robert Smigel (as Triumph the Insult Comic Dog) are among the 32 standups who will go head to head in “Tournament of Laughs,” premiering June 21 at 10 p.m. on TBS. 

Like sports tournaments, the competition splits the players into regional brackets, with face-offs each week until there’s a final two. Contestants will create their own comedy videos, to be judged by the viewing audience which can be viewed here. Jason Sudeikis will host. 

“We may be without some of our favorite sports right now but we can still partake in some fierce rivalries” Brett Weitz, General Manager of TNT, TBS, and truTV said. “These comics promise to bring the funny each week, but the audience will get to decide who gets the last laugh.”

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Trump Campaign Uses Nazi Symbol to Slam Antifa

President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign pushed back against claims that it knowingly used a Nazi symbol in an ad.

A series of the campaign’s Facebook ads targeting Antifa, a loose coalition of local groups that confront the far right, and that Trump and his followers insist is a terrorist group, feature an upside down red triangle. Facebook removed the ad after the Anti-Defamation League said the triangle closely resembled the badge the Nazis used to identify political prisoners in concentration camps, The Washington Post reported.

The Trump War Room account, an arm of the reelection campaign, said that the symbol is not in the ADL’s database of hate imagery.

An ADL spokesman told the Post that the symbol is not in their database because it does not contain “historical Nazi symbols.” Instead it tracks “symbols commonly used by modern extremists and white supremacists in the United States,” he said.

“It is not difficult for one to criticize their political opponent without using Nazi-era imagery,” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement. “We implore the Trump campaign to take greater caution and familiarize themselves with the historical context before doing so. Ignorance is not an excuse for appropriating hateful symbols.”

It’s not immediately clear from the ads why the inverted triangle, which the Nazis used to identify political prisoners in concentration camps, appears in the Antifa ads. Other Trump campaign ads with identical text use yellow and back symbols similar to traffic signs that warn drivers to slow down or stop, the Post reported. The ad text warns that “dangerous MOBS of far-left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem.”

The Trump War Room account tweeted that Antifa used the red triangle first and provided a link to an example of an Antifa poster with the symbol.

Trump Campaign Uses Nazi Symbol to Slam Antifa Read More »

Vote of No Confidence Against FSU Student Senate President Fails

A vote of no confidence against Florida State University (FSU) Student Senate President Ahmad Daraldik failed on the evening of June 17.

The final tally of the vote, which took place on a Zoom conference call, was not disclosed.

FSU Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) celebrated the failed no-confidence vote.

“We are proud to announce Ahmad Daraldik has kept his seat as Senate President!” the group tweeted. “Things are changing. Now it’s not only international law on our side but public opinion too.”

 

StandWithUs CEO and co-founder Roz Rothstein condemned the failed no-confidence vote.

“The senate voted against removing their president based on blatantly false claims,” she said. “It was repeatedly stated that all of his anti-Semitic statements occurred many years ago, when in fact he equated Israelis with Nazis in a video posted literally this month. The lies promoted by those tripping all over themselves to defend him are almost as bad as his many anti-Semitic posts and comments.”

Daraldik, who is a Palestinian-American, had been under fire for his past social media posts stating “f— Israel” and “stupid Jew.” He also appeared to have a website comparing Israel to Nazi Germany. He explained in a video that his “f— Israel” post was after he had a bad experience at an Israeli checkpoint when he was visiting the West Bank.

The previous student senate president, Jack Denton, was ousted on June 5 after he said in a private GroupMe chat that the Black Lives Matter movement and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) supported policies that went against Catholic theology. The vote tally against Denton was revealed to be 86% in favor of removing him.

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How This Iconic Yiddish Song Became an Anthem for Black Americans

What makes one person tick is totally subjective, but science confirms that people are hard-wired to respond to music. It lifts our moods, eases pain and triggers powerful emotions.

Some songs become so popular that they transcend their original meaning. Take “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad” — today it’s known as a popular children’s folk song, but the origins of its lyrics lie in caricaturing Black dialect, and it makes light of the abusive and exploitive conditions endured by Black laborers. More recent examples include patriotic uses of Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” — it’s actually about a Vietnam vet’s desperate situation — as well as the popular wedding song “Every Breath You Take,” by the Police, which is really about an obsessive, jealous ex.

Songs that describe the plight of a particular group can sometimes become the soundtrack for a different plight for a different people. “Eli, Eli,” a Yiddish song first popularized in the 1920s, is one such example. Though the song describes a Jewish person’s persecution because of her faith, it was later embraced by Black jazz artists like Duke Ellington and Ethel Waters, who were drawn to the somber melody and feelings of despair and oppression evoked by the lyrics.

This song — not to be confused with Hannah Szenes’ song/poem “A Walk to Caesarea,” which is commonly called “Eli, Eli,” as it shares the same first line — rose to prominence among African-American musicians, though it was first composed by Jacob Koppel Sandler in 1896.

Its lyrics are drawn from the Book of Psalms 22:2, in which King David laments, “Eli, Eli, why hast Thou forsaken me?” (“Eli, Eli, lama azavtani?”). This iconic phrase is repeated twice in the New Testament: in Matthew 27:46, and in Mark 15:34, marking Jesus’ last words as he’s crucified. Revered by both Christians and Jews as an exclamation of despair, Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews also chant the psalm on Purim for the Fast of Esther.

Sandler wrote “Eili, Eili” (an alternative Yiddish spelling) for a Yiddish operetta, in which a Jewish girl sings a song of despair while being crucified for her faith. The song begins in Hebrew, is followed by Yiddish lyrics and concludes with the Shema prayer. Here’s an English translation of a portion:

In Fire and flame have men been tortured
And everywhere we went we were shamed and ridiculed
No one could make us turn away from our faith
From you, my god, from your holy Torah, your law!

In 1917, the public caught wind of this haunting Yiddish tune when the popular Jewish contralto Sophie Breslau performed it with New York’s Metropolitan Opera.

From there, Sandler’s composition was republished by various artists and by 1927 the popularity of “Eli, Eli” was fueled by Cantor Josef “Yossele” Rosenblatt. He wrote his own version for “The Jazz Singer” — the first motion picture with music — with Al Jolson as Jakie Rabinowitz, a cantor’s son who just wants to make jazz music (albeit, yes, in blackface). Of the cantor’s melancholy melody, a critic wrote: “When Yossele Rosenblatt chanted ‘Eili, Eili,’ angels in heaven seemed to sing along with him.”

 

When the Black-Jewish musician Willie “The Lion” Smith covered “Eli, Eli,” he catalyzed it as a standard cover for Black artists. (In fact, he knew the melody and Yiddish diction so well that he corrected a performer singing with the Duke Ellington Band.) The Jewish publication the Forward published a cartoon in the 1920s parodying the fad: Dubbed “An Upside Down World,” a Jewish cantor sang from “Aida” while an African-American man, donning a yarmulke, sang a Yiddish song. The cartoon was meant to illustrate the bond between two vastly different communities who shared a common identity as outcasts.

According to Jeffrey Melnick in his book “A Right to Sing the Blues,” the song’s “expression of faith in most training circumstances” are what turned African-Americans onto this Jewish tune.

The performance of the song by Black people “mirrors the historical process by which African American slaves, instructed mostly in New Testament Christianity, found their deeper associations with the Israelites of the Old Testament,” Melnick wrote.

Waters, a Black singer, added “Eli, Eli” to her repertoire in the early 1920s after hearing the amazing response that George Dewey Washington received for his version of the song.

“It tells the tragic history of the Jews as much as one song can,” Waters said, “and that history of their age-old grief and despair is so similar to that of my own people that I felt I was telling the story of my own race, too.”

When Jules Bledsoe, one of the first African-American artists to secure regular work on Broadway, performed “Eli, Eli” in 1929 at the Palace Theatre in Yiddish and Hebrew, he “threw the house into a white heat of appreciation” and performed “Ol’ Man River” as an encore.

Incredibly, this Jewish song of sorrow didn’t lose its fire over the years: In 1951, the iconic Black jazzman Lionel Hampton (and his orchestra) performed a beautiful rendition of Sandler’s original song.

As the African-American singer and political activist Paul Robeson told Hasia Diner, a historian of American Jewry, responding to a question about why he performs Yiddish music like “Eli, Eli” but not French, German or Italian works: “I do not understand the psychology of these people, their history has no parallels with the history of my forebearers who were slaves. The Jewish sign and tear are close to me. I feel that these people are closer to the traditions of my race.”

In 1958, the African-American and Native American singer Johnny Mathis featured the “Jewish Folk Song” on his album “Goodnight Dear Lord,” which debuted on Billboard’s list of the 25 best-selling pop LPs in the U.S.

“I’ve always felt a kinship to all religions,” Mathis said. “I was never concerned about what kind of religious music I was singing. What mattered was that it gave me a lot of satisfaction.”

In the face of racism and anti-Semitism, Black and Jewish people harmoniously wailed this song of despair for more than three decades, a trend that seemed to fade in the 1960s when, as commonly believed, “the once wonderful alliance dissolved and split,” as historian Marc Dollinger told NPR. The reality of this “split” is rather complicated but, as he explains, the rise in Black nationalism in turn inspired Zionism among American Jewish youth — an event further catalyzed by Israel’s victory in the Six-Day War.

“The consensus of the 1950s that was Blacks and Jews together became a new consensus of the late ’60s and ’70s, with each of the communities doing the same thing apart,” Dollinger said. “And I saw that both communities were borrowing back and forth through nationalism as a consequence of the rise of Black power.”

In the past few weeks, fueled by the murder of George Floyd, enraged Americans have taken to the streets to protest police brutality and inequality. As Jewish activists, organizations and community members alike rise up to demand justice for Black Americans, perhaps we are returning to that “wonderful alliance.” How beautiful would it be to revive “Eli, Eli” — the shared cry for justice — as a protest song? With its powerful lyrics, every somber note underlies the irrefutable fact that Black Lives Matter.

This story originally appeared on Kveller.

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Petition Launched Calling on ESPN to Cancel Ice Cube’s 30-for-30 Documentary Over Tweets Criticized as Anti-Semitic

A petition is calling on ESPN to cancel rapper Ice Cube’s “Straight Outta L.A.” 30-for-30 series documentary because of Ice Cube’s recent tweets that have been criticized as being anti-Semitic.

The petition states, “During June 2020, Ice Cube used his Twitter account to spread decade’s old conspiracy theories about how the Jewish people ‘run the world’ and how we’ve made our money on the backs of African-American slaves. He’s tweeted out his support for Louis Farrakhan, a man who has said that the ‘Satanic Jews that run everything and mostly everybody’ and ‘I’m not an anti-Semite, I’m anti-Termite.’ ”

The petition goes on to argue that the documentary should be canceled to send a message that anti-Semitism is unacceptable.

“If you choose to keep this on your network, you’re sending a clear message to the Jewish community of the United States of America that you and your company support anti-Semitism,” the petition concludes. “Cancel Ice Cube!”

Bryan Leib, former national director of the Americans Against Anti-Semitism watchdog, told the Journal in an email that he launched the petition and asked why “the cancel culture” movement has been silent on Ice Cube.

“Why is there a double standard?” Leib wrote. “Why does anti-Semitism go unchecked by the Hollywood elite and mainstream media?”

Ice Cube’s “Straight Outta L.A.” documentary focuses on how the Raiders football team, which played in Los Angeles from 1982-94, came to symbolize the rise in rap music that became prevalent in the city during that timeframe.

As of this writing, the petition has nearly 700 signatures. ESPN did not respond to the Journal’s request for comment.

Ice Cube, born O’Shea Jackson, has tweeted images of a Star of David with a Black Cube of Saturn — a reference to occult worship — and an image of a mural showing six old white men with hooked noses playing a board game laying on African American men. Ice Cube responded to criticism that he’s anti-Semitic in a tweet stating, “What if I was just pro-Black? This is the truth brother. I didn’t lie on anyone. I didn’t say I was anti anybody. DONT BELIEVE THE HYPE. I’ve been telling my truth.”

Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) columnist Jonathan Tobin argued in a June 16 op-ed that although there are plenty of examples of people being “canceled” over criticism of the Black Lives Matter movement, people who engage in anti-Semitism do not face the same type of scrutiny. He pointed to Chelsea Handler’s June 15 Instagram post calling a Louis Farrakhan video “powerful” as an example.

“In the current moral panic about racism, one might have expected a surge of anger directed towards Handler by her colleagues in the entertainment industry, in addition to announcements that indicated that both individuals and companies wouldn’t work with her in the future,” Tobin wrote. “That didn’t happen. Instead, several celebrities even more famous, such as Jennifer Anniston, Jennifer Garner and Michelle Pfeiffer, voiced support for Handler.”

He later added: “We already know that the consequences of giving anti-Semites a pass can lead to horror. Apparently, those who pose as the supposedly enlightened guardians of our culture have either forgotten that or no longer care about it.”

Petition Launched Calling on ESPN to Cancel Ice Cube’s 30-for-30 Documentary Over Tweets Criticized as Anti-Semitic Read More »

Israeli Scientists Develop Self-Disinfecting Face Mask

Israeli scientists have developed a self-disinfecting, reusable face mask as the demand for protective masks has risen dramatically since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

The mask was developed at the Haifa-based Technion-Israel Institute of Technology’s Faculty of Materials Science and Engineering by a team of scientists led by Professor Yair Ein-Eli.

A patent application has been submitted in the United States, the Technion said in a statement. The research team is talking to industrial companies about mass producing the masks, according to the statement. In some countries, demand has far outstripped the supply of face masks amid the pandemic.

Here’s how the mask works: A layer of carbon fibers can be heated using a USB port with a low current source such as a phone charger in a process that destroys viruses that may have accumulated on the mask.

In Israel, wearing a mask in public is mandatory, and those not in compliance can be fined.

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