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This isn't just about the Jews. It never was

This isn't just about the Jews. It never was

Fox News09-07-2025
In the aftermath of what's now being called the "12-Day War," involving Israel, the U.S. and Iran, antisemitic rhetoric and incidents have reached new and disturbing heights. This is beyond even the devastating rise we've seen since Oct. 7.
The Anti-Defamation League's recent report should stop every decent human being in their tracks. For many of us in the Jewish community, it was not a surprise. Painful, yes. alarming, absolutely. But shocking? Tragically, no.
We didn't need the data. We live it.
For the Jew today, especially high school and college students, this isn't just a sociological trend. This is the air they breathe. Young Jews are coming of age in a world that bombards them with slogans not about political policy, but about their very identity. From graffiti and shattered windows in cities across the country to violent chants on campuses and real threats of harm, the current climate does not reflect honest debate about international politics. Instead, it reveals a barely hidden, and often blatant, hatred of Jews, normalized in places where people are supposed to feel safe.
I wear a yarmulke. I wear tzitzit (traditional Jewish fringes). I walk in the world as a very visible member-of-the-tribe. Before a single slur is thrown my way, no one asks me my thoughts on the last Israeli election. No one stops to inquire about my stance on a two-state solution. Like so many others who wear their Judaism proudly and publicly, I am targeted not for anything I've done, thought or said, but simply for who I am. They see a kippah, a mezuzah, a Jewish name or symbol and they lash out. That hatred is not academic or theoretical. It's real, it's visceral, and it makes no distinction.
I've experienced my fair share of aggressive and dangerous antisemitism, but what chills me most is not my own experience. It's fear in the eyes of the next generation. Students who feel they must hide their identities. High school students walking out of their Jewish Student Union (JSU) clubs wondering if they should remove their Star of David necklaces before their next class with a certain teacher. College kids who are afraid that simply being Jewish might make them social pariahs, or worse. They are expected, sometimes obligated, to celebrate everyone else's identity, but always hide their own. The double standard is glaring.
Let me be crystal clear: thoughtful and critical discourse about Israeli policy is not antisemitic. In fact, it's necessary. Israel is a democratic country with its share of flaws and tough decisions to make. But when I hear people shouting, "Burn Tel Aviv to the ground" or "Globalize the Intifada," this is not policy critique. This is not intellectual opposition. This is a genocidal threat. We cannot let ourselves pretend otherwise.
Antisemitism is no longer hiding in the shadows, rather showing up in polite society. The ADL report is chilling: mainstream voices are spreading conspiracy theories that Jews control policy, while slogans calling for Israel's destruction and "Death to America" flood social media. What's worse, White supremacists, radical Islamists, far-left activists and college professors now unite in their hatred of Jews. We've heard this before. We know where it leads. If you're not Jewish, reach out to your Jewish friends. Learn. Speak up. Challenge hate. When only one people is asked to justify their existence, something is deeply broken. Call it out.
Above all, understand this: antisemitism is not a Jewish problem. It is a human problem. Wherever Jew-hatred was allowed to grow, so too grows the targeting of all other minorities. Societies that target Jews first never stop there.
We Jews will not disappear nor cower. We will not apologize for existing. But we ask, simply, for your hand to stand together. Will you stand with us? Not just because we are your neighbors, colleagues, classmates and friends. But because all our children deserve a world where hatred is called out, justice is pursued and no one has to hide who they are.
I still hold onto that dream. A world with more light, more courage and more compassion is possible. Let's build it together.
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Early results from Utah's municipal primary elections
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Early results from Utah's municipal primary elections

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Cox, 382 Jared Michael Eborn, 412 Aaron Lee Holbrook, 174 City Council, District 3 (top 2 move on): Clark Bullen, 713 Scott Goodman, 317 Ben Peck, 424 Leann Parker-Reed, 162 Riverton Mayor (top 2 move on): Tish Buroker, 3,693 Tawnee McCay, 2,033 John Scott, 402 Sandy Mayor (top 2 move on): Monica Zoltanski (incumbent), 9,139 Alison Stroud, 1,909 Cyndi Sharkey, 4,358 Justin Hilgendorff, 95 Roger Downward, 223 City Council, District 3 (top 2 move on): Iva Williams, 978 Kris Nicholl, 1,770 Matthew Ostrander, 630 Parry Harrison, 921 West Jordan City Council (3 seats, top 6 move on): Rob Bennett, 1,986 Kayleen Whitelock, 2,790 Jessica Wignall, 2,040 Chris McConnehey, 2,051 Kevin Seal, 609 Sergio Sotelo, 1,876 JD Sheppard, 1,107 Rulon Green, 663 Kelvin Green, 1,807 David F. Pack, 1,782 Annette Harris, 2,632 Eric Hanna, 240 West Valley City City Council, at-large (top 2 move on): Heidi Roggenbuck, 2,398 Lars Nordfelt, 2,608 Ryan L. Mahoney, 892 Justin J. 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Spencer, 3,180 Truman Van Cott, 731 Payson City Council (2 seats, top 4 move on): Easton Brady, 558 Kirk D. Beecher, 517 Brett Christensen, 404 Lacee Smith, 644 Bob Provstgaard, 867 Joseph Hansen, 193 Provo Mayor (top 2 move on): Michelle Kaufusi (incumbent), 4,436 Marsha Judkins, 3,877 Eric Mutch, 265 Thatcher Alain Longman, 285 City Council City Wide I (1 seat, top 2 move on): Katrice MacKay, 4,939 Adam Shin, 2,555 Tom Fifita Sitake Sr., 1,170 City Council District 2 (1 seat, top 2 move on): Sally Clayton, 164 Jeff Whitlock, 886 Hannah Petersen, 836 City Council District 5 (1 seat, top 2 move on): Sam Blackburn, 113 Rachel Whipple, 450 Shay Aslett, 65 Tim Jafek, 41 Saratoga Springs City Council (2 seats, top 4 move on): Emma Wilson, 1,009 Kevin McMillan, 564 Michael D.S. 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New Zealand prime minister says Israel's Netanyahu has 'lost the plot'
New Zealand prime minister says Israel's Netanyahu has 'lost the plot'

Yahoo

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New Zealand prime minister says Israel's Netanyahu has 'lost the plot'

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Leaving a top Trump administration post? The president may have an ambassadorship for you
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time29 minutes ago

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