The Americanization of the Palestinian cause

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ASPartOfMe
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03 Feb 2024, 10:36 am

How Palestine Hijacked the U.S. Civil Rights Movement
Professor Gil Troy, a Senior Fellow in Zionist Thought at the JPPI, the global think tank of the Jewish people, is an American presidential historian, and, most recently, the editor of the three-volume set Theodor Herzl: Zionist Writings, the inaugural publication of The Library of the Jewish People.

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For over 50 years, the American left has tried rebranding the Palestinian cause by camouflaging Palestinian terrorism with the slogans of America’s civil rights movement. Today, a new generation of would-be radicals has stumbled onto this zombie corpse of ahistoric sloganeering with the confident excitement of college freshmen on their first beer run.

Using pseudo-intellectual jargon like “intersectionality,” multiple identity groups and astroturfed leftist political organizations have made fealty to the Palestinian cause a litmus test for belonging to the wider left. That is why many progressives were “exhilarated” by Hamas’ massacre of innocent people, and feminists remained silent about the Gazans’ mass rape of Israeli women. The artificiality, or often absurdity, of the supposed “intersection” between Palestine and the fashionable cause of the moment matters not at all. Hence, Palestine is a queer issue, as much as it is a feminist issue, and a social justice issue. The common thread remains supposed shared oppression—regardless of how homophobic, sexist or dictatorial Palestinian society might be.

But most group identities, no matter how politically fashionable, lack the social, cultural, and political heft to integrate the Palestinians into the new hierarchy of American victim groups and protected minorities. In America, only race has that valence. That is why other identity groups keep trying to graft their victimhood onto the story of the Black civil rights movement to cement their legitimacy.

The Palestinian cause has gained a seat in the progressive sectarian tent by piggybacking off the historical experience of American Blacks. Especially since 2020, Palestine has become thoroughly incorporated into Black Lives Matter sloganeering and visual aesthetics. As a result, an Arab nationalist movement fighting a battle 6,000 miles away from America’s Atlantic coast has become a central component of America’s “anti-racist struggle,” regardless of its lack of even the slightest connection to the historical reality of race-based discrimination in America, or to the values of the American civil rights movement.

The differences between the Palestinian national movement and the American civil rights movement are obvious and fundamental. Palestinians have played no role in American history or the history of slavery. Palestinians played no role in the civil rights struggle. The Palestinian-Israeli clash, which is occurring a world away from America, is national not racial. Most Israelis are dark-skinned, while some Palestinians are light-skinned. Nonviolence fueled the civil rights struggle, while the Palestinian movement keeps perfecting new forms of political violence and terror-porn, from hijacking to suicide bombing.

As this brief history suggests, the identification of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with America’s race problem was hardly made in America. It is a recent foreign import. Long before the “globalization of the intifada,” Soviet communist propagandists “internationalized” the Palestinian “struggle.” In the mid-1960s, under Soviet patronage, Palestine became a global cause for the international left, earning a privileged spot in the constellation of Soviet-backed Third World anti-colonial and anti-imperial “liberation” movements through their use of terror. Today’s movement toward the “Palestinianization” of the Black struggle in America therefore mirrors Soviet propaganda efforts that are now more than half a century old—30 years after Soviet communism imploded. Today’s campus commissars and progressive fanatics use very similar methods toward similar aims. If one wants to understand current rhetorical political alignments, understanding that history is therefore crucial.

As the late Palestinian academic, and member of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s (PLO) Palestinian National Council, Edward Said, put it in The Question of Palestine (1979), the Palestinian movement moved to situate “their struggle in the same framework that includes Vietnam, Algeria, Cuba, and black Africa,” joining “the universal political struggle against colonialism and imperialism.”

The turn toward worldwide anti-colonial revolution and “Third World solidarity” pivoted Palestinian rhetoric around race. As Said explained, “The Zionist settler in Palestine was transformed retrospectively and actually from an implacably silent master into an analogue of white settlers in Africa.”

Groups like the Black Panthers and other extremists fused Black Nationalism with Marxist-Leninism and Maoism. Also seeing themselves as advancing a global struggle, Black Power activists fed off Soviet communism, Maoist China, and Fidel Castro’s and Che Guevara’s Cuba in their search for external sponsors. As the rise of identity politics in the 1960s and 1970s paved the way for America’s grievance-based politics, sectarian activists gained cover to sacrifice individual rights on the altar of collective resentments.

These Maoist Black American figures detested the Constitution-positive, patriotic, liberal-left mainstream Black leadership of Dr. King and his circle. Shut out from the U.S. liberal power structure, these radicals began traveling to the Middle East and Africa and meeting with members of the PLO.

In defying Dr. King and other civil rights liberals they found insufficiently militant—and by defining themselves against Zionism, by extension—a new generation of Black radicals staked their claim to being the “true voice” of angry young men in the cities. They demanded “revolution,” nothing less. While the language of global Marxist radicalism alienated Black churchgoers in the civil rights heartland, it provided Black Power activists with allies and street cred among white Marxist campus radicals who likewise celebrated “revolution” and established trust-fund terrorist organizations like the Weather Underground.

The distance from anti-Zionism to antisemitism was predictably brief. One Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) newsletter portrayed the Jewish state as a tool of “white western colonial governments … helping white America to control and exploit the rich oil deposits of the Arab nations.” The pamphlet included a cartoon with a puppeteer’s hand marked with a Jewish star and a dollar sign, pulling on a rope hanging Egypt’s dictator Gamal Abdul Nasser and heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali; greedy Jews were lynching an iconic Black figure and an Arab leader, side by side. SNCC’s program director Ralph Featherstone denied charges of antisemitism, as would his comrades in their 1970 New York Times ad, claiming the cartoon “only” targeted Jewish oppressors—in Israel and “in the little Jew shops in the [Negro] ghettos.”

When the United Nations branded Zionism to be a form of “racism” in 1975, most mainstream African American leaders openly objected. Martin Luther King’s friend Bayard Rustin wrote a column invoking King’s famous comment that “when people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews, you are talking anti-Semitism.’” Vernon Jordan, the National Urban League president, wrote: “Black people, who recognize code words since we’ve been victimized by code words … can easily smell out the fact that ‘Zionism’ in this context is a code word for anti-Semitism.”

The purpose of the slur is obvious and toxic: It aims to place American Jews, the vast majority of whom identify as some form of Zionist, outside the bounds of normal American morality, while stigmatizing Israel with America’s own historical guilt over race relations.

In the 1980s, the international left’s crusade focused on the apartheid regime in South Africa. Palestinian propagandists quickly appended the term “apartheid” to the Palestinian cause, further entrenching the racialist approach.

The Soviet Union’s collapse in the early 1990s deprived leftists of their ideological glue, while the end of South African apartheid deprived leftists of a favorite cause. Yet paradoxically, in the vacuum, these historic breakthroughs cleared the way for “Palestine” to become the paramount cause célèbre on the activist left.

Since 2010 or so, when progressive Third World sectarianism became quasi-official ideology among all right-thinking people, the Palestinian cause has become increasingly central in left doctrine, bounding to the top of the American left’s “anti-racist” agenda.

BLM has helped Palestine activists repackage their predecessors’ racialist slogans and tailor them to fit America’s current pathological zeitgeist. In addition to run-of-the mill charges of “racism” and “apartheid”—the new hot items, in line with the broader political agenda and official terminology of the Democratic Party, are “white supremacy” and “white nationalism,” resulting in the charge that American Jews and Israelis are beneficiaries of “white privilege,” a statement that casually erases nearly all of Jewish history up to and including the Holocaust. Apparently, Jews—whether American or Israeli—are so privileged that not even centuries of exclusion and pogroms, culminating in the worst genocide in human history, can detract from their inherent status as “privileged,” i.e., evil.

During the George Floyd riots in 2020, Palestinian activists commandeered “I can’t breathe” as part of their transnational campaign painting Blacks and Palestinians as fellow victims of the same “structural violence, occupation, and colonial oppression” inflicted by “whites.” In what was dubbed the “deadly exchange,” intersectional propagandists for Palestine charged that the “Israeli military trains U.S. police in racist and repressive policing tactics, which systematically targets Black and Brown bodies.” This lie transformed some police junkets into nonexistent IDF boot camps where innocent American cops were systematically reeducated into specialized Israeli techniques of racial brutality.

The point of this bizarre accusation was not just that the Jews are oppressors. It was that “the Jews” are guilty of the most heinous crime in the American cosmos. Eerily echoing traditional blood libels, Jews became racist oppressors, complicit in, even responsible for America’s original sin, racist oppression. After all, it was the IDF that “perfected” the chokehold “used to murder George Floyd,” hundreds of academics and students in the University of California system declared. In other words, it was “the Jews” who had actually killed the 21st century’s leading American Black martyr.

In a way, this trajectory was inevitable, once progressives decided on a vision of social justice in which America would be run according to a sectarian quota system, in which they defined which groups would be worthy of everything from university admissions to political power. According to this logic, success and failure is—and should be—a function of group identity, which pigeonholes individuals as either “oppressors” or “oppressed.” Within this new taxonomy, American Jews have been defined as the quintessential “white oppressors,” since “Jew” is defined as being synonymous with “white” and “successful.” The Jewish connection to Israel makes the Jews doubly or triply as oppressive as other “white people.”

It is no coincidence that at its core the Palestinianization of the U.S. civil rights movement is an anti-American project. The intersection of the Palestinian cult of victimhood with the “anti-racist” progressive ideology being pushed institutionally by DEI regimes, not only declares that Israel is inherently racist, it also maligns America as systemically racist. The implication is clear: Both projects should be dismantled.

While I have criticized what I view overly extreme identity politics and noted radicalization of Jews is bad for Jews I have concentrated on events of the last decade or so when this world view entered the mainstream. While I had some awareness of this history, this informed opinion column added to my knowledge of the historical background.

The author obviously conflates anti zionism with antisemitism an opinion I do not share.

The author opines that Americans should not prioritize events occurring thousands of miles away. True or not this argument is a lost cause because it is based on a dated view of the way the world works. Emotionally it does not matter much if the horrific images being repeated on your screen is occurring thousands of miles away or one mile away.


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Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 03 Feb 2024, 1:25 pm, edited 2 times in total.

MaxE
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03 Feb 2024, 10:55 am

I happen to think, however, that the number of people who obsess over this kind of thing, is almost negligible when compared to the MAGA types, or their equivalents in Western countries other than the US.


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ASPartOfMe
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03 Feb 2024, 11:52 am

MaxE wrote:
I happen to think, however, that the number of people who obsess over this kind of thing, is almost negligible when compared to the MAGA types, or their equivalents in Western countries other than the US.

MAGA’s do obsesses over perceived Marxist influence and “wokeness” so while they probably do not obsess over this sub category of Marxist influence and extreme identity politics do have those in common.


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MaxE
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03 Feb 2024, 1:04 pm

ASPartOfMe wrote:
MaxE wrote:
I happen to think, however, that the number of people who obsess over this kind of thing, is almost negligible when compared to the MAGA types, or their equivalents in Western countries other than the US.

MAGA’s do obsesses over perceived Marxist influence and “wokeness” so while they probably do not obsess over this sub category of Marxist influence and extreme identity politics do have those in common.

I meant people who go around talking about intersectionality, oppression of Palestinians, etc. That there are far fewer of them than there are MAGAs. Although TBH I think very few people in the West seriously worry about Marxism. Even MAGAs, most of whom probably have very little idea what a Marxist even is.

EDIT I think this is a good article, don't get me wrong!


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ASPartOfMe
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03 Feb 2024, 1:21 pm

MaxE wrote:
ASPartOfMe wrote:
MaxE wrote:
I happen to think, however, that the number of people who obsess over this kind of thing, is almost negligible when compared to the MAGA types, or their equivalents in Western countries other than the US.

MAGA’s do obsesses over perceived Marxist influence and “wokeness” so while they probably do not obsess over this sub category of Marxist influence and extreme identity politics do have those in common.

I meant people who go around talking about intersectionality, oppression of Palestinians, etc. That there are far fewer of them than there are MAGAs. Although TBH I think very few people in the West seriously worry about Marxism. Even MAGAs, most of whom probably have very little idea what a Marxist even is.

EDIT I think this is a good article, don't get me wrong!

You are probably right that there are more MAGA’s then intersectionalityists.

Thank you complimenting my article choice.


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03 Feb 2024, 3:47 pm

The article is dishonest BS.

Its like saying (to take an extreme example) "this whole hatred of Jeffery Daumier thing is because Anti crime people twenty years ago decided to 'piggy back' hatred of Jeffery Daumier onto the longstanding legit hatred of Jack the Ripper. And now hatred of Geoffery Daumier is 'litmus test' for joining the anti crime club."

The US was knee jerk pro Israel after the Six Day War of 1967 when Israel acquired the occupied territories. But in the years after Blacks broke rank because they id'd with the Palestinian Arabs more than with Israelies. And gradually it became apparent to everyone that Israel mistreated Arabs in the occupied territores. So even Jews in America stopped unquestioning support for Israel. Though only a minority of Americans are outright anti Israel even today.

Not that Israel is as bad (pound for pound) as Daumier but there are good reasons for finding parallels between the things being compared (American racism vs Israeli policy towards the Occupied Territories...and obvious similarities between the two infamous serial killers -Jack and Jeffery).

Not advocating either pro or anti Israel (or pro or anti Palestinian) stance for Americans, just pointing the obvious lie at the heart of the article which is trying to sell the idea that reality isnt reality (that there arent real similarities between historic descrination against Blacks in the US and that of Arabs in Israel today).

And that statement that "we shouldnt be concerned about things thousands of mile away"?

That cuts both ways. If thats the case then we shouldnt be concerned about the acts by Hamas on Oct. 7, and ...should just cut off all aid to Israel right now.



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03 Feb 2024, 4:47 pm

naturalplastic wrote:
The article is dishonest BS.

Yes. Plain and simple.


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03 Feb 2024, 6:54 pm

The article is not a generalist comparison but specifically about that segment of identity politics that places Jews in the white oppressor category. I have bitching about this on this site for years. The author implies that the blacks activists nefariously stole from PLO language or are lazily glomming from Palestinian activist language. I would agree even in the confines of intersectionality the comparison is a natural.

Since the article is discussing the 1960s there are three more factors to be considered.

The article noted that the civil rights leaders were zionists. That did not always translate to the street.

This era saw the rise of the Black Muslims. It was natural to feel sympathy for fellow Muslims(I know not all Palestinians are Muslims but that is how it was and is perceived)

At that time there were a lot of Jewish store owners in black neighborhoods. The feeling that these owners were gypping people contributed to anti Jewish feeling.

There was the 1968 teachers strike in New York City that split the Jewish-Black civil rights alliance. That topic deserves its own thread. The issues that were being fought over were eerily similar to those that have been disputed in recent years.


In General Americans are myopic. We do interpret world events in an American context way too much.


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05 Feb 2024, 1:19 am

Despite what the article claims, I have to question just how many actual progressives supported Hamas' crimes.


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ASPartOfMe
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05 Feb 2024, 11:41 am

Kraichgauer wrote:
Despite what the article claims, I have to question just how many actual progressives supported Hamas' crimes.

I have seen little polling on progressive pro October 7th support and I would not put much stock in any polls of Western progressives that do ask that question because people are loath to admit that type of thing to others and themselves and people who identify as progressives have different understandings of what that means.

Besides outright support for 10/7 the Jews as white privileged oppressors has similarities with the old antisemitic trope of Jews using their money for conspiracy purposes.


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05 Feb 2024, 1:13 pm

I live in the arts district of my small city. We've been having a black-teens-with-guns issue for a few years. I'm a sociologist, so what would I know about it, but I suspect our teen issue has something to do with our co-occurring terrible-schools/drugs/poverty-stricken-parents problem, which also may be related to our embezzlement-city-council problem.

But according to the arts district warriors, what we need to concentrate on here is to FREE PALESTINE. They've plastered these terribly clever and admittedly cool-looking posters all over town. You can't take them down because they've used some kind of paste where you would probably need to use paint thinner and a scraper.

I don't know why they don't focus on people here who really could use the attention of energetic, creative people. Sometimes I wonder if maybe they choose causes based on how unsolvable they are.



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08 Feb 2024, 7:18 pm

Quite often when I see the Palestinian cause being propagated, they use women to do it, specifically Muslim women born and raised in Western countries who identify as feminists (often intersectional feminists and almost always in hijabs - Linda Sarsour is a prime example), giving liberals the idea that Palestine is more feminist than Israel, even though that couldn't be further from the truth. People on Tumblr love to complain about Gal Gadot being in the IDF when she didn't exactly have a choice in that matter - all Israelis have to serve in the IDF, male or female. Some Muslim countries don't even allow women in their militaries. As for Linda Sarsour, she is anything but feminist. She had an arranged marriage at the age of 17. When I was 17, I was still in high school. She regularly shoots down discussions about problems in the Muslim world, including ones that affect Muslim women (such as FGM). She's also very obviously anti-Semitic and tried to exclude Jewish women from the Women's March. The sad thing is, her behavior and attitudes actually deny many Muslim women opportunities to speak out about problems within the Muslim community.