"Okay, now that we’ve dispensed with Israel-Palestine, it’s time to tackle something less controversial: critical race theory." My latest newsletter, in which I answer reader questions: newsletters.theatlantic.com/deep-shtetl/61…
This is obviously pathetic on the dad's part, but also a good example of why the Bidens should have named their new dog "Brandon"
Guy was a jerk on a Christmas call for children with the president, and since there's no defense for that, he needs to be preemptively turned into the victim of this exchange with some bizarro fan fiction. Can't defend, so fantasize instead.
If you want to see how Twitter breaks people's brains and causes them to treat other human beings in cruel and pathetic ways for no real purpose, I encourage you to read these replies, then go spend some time with your family and friends doing something more worthwhile.
My latest: Yair Lapid, the architect of Israel's new government, wants to unite the country’s Jewish and Arab mainstream against anti-democratic extremists. But will he find enough takers? My profile of the man slated to be Israel's next prime minister: newsletters.theatlantic.com/deep-shtetl/61…
Yair Lapid to me on why he has been pushing civil equality for Israel's Arab community: “When you are a citizen in a democratic country, you deserve the same rights as everyone else... It kind of amazes me that there is even a question mark on this.” newsletters.theatlantic.com/deep-shtetl/61…
Other Lapid lines:
- On patriotism: "You can’t talk from morning until evening about how much you love this country if you hate most of the people that live in it."
- On Israel's treatment of its Arabs: "There are no second-class citizens in a country that respects itself."
If someone wanted to do some genuine good in the world, they'd cut this into a simple ad and run it on Fox News and targeting Trump voters on Facebook. Boosters are the best defense against Omicron, and everyone deserves that chance.
Not surprised Trump got the booster. Pleasantly surprised that he publicly pushed it. He also reportedly said: “We saved tens of millions worldwide by creating the vaccine… We should take credit for it and you play right into their hands [when you doubt it].” Put it in the ad!
Here's the video of Trump hyping the vaccines to his followers—and getting them to cheer—telling them to take credit for the vaccine drive which "saved tens of millions worldwide." Turn this into an ad and run it on Fox, Newsmax, OANN, and Facebook.
For those unfamiliar, the dials going up to 11 is a reference to the amazing mockumentary "This is Spinal Tap," which was directed by ... a Jew: @robreiner. As much as antisemites hate Jews, they can't escape us even when trying to troll us.
Another day, another Trump rant about Jews, another time I wish this piece of mine about him was no longer relevant: washingtonpost.com/outlook/2019/0…
My concern here is whether we're getting to the second part of my thesis, which is that the philosemitic coin can easily be flipped into straight-up antisemitism when convenient.
Jews are not a monolith, we don't exist to play a political role in the imagination of others, and we are really tired of outsiders reducing us to both. Please grant us the same complexity and humanity you would want granted to yourselves and your own community.
My latest: To get beyond the typical talking points of the Latinx debate, I spoke to a Palestinian scholar in Israel about his community's experience and about how minority identities evolve over time. newsletters.theatlantic.com/deep-shtetl/61…
1. There's been much debate over "Latinx," which most Latinos do not use, but many media outlets and some politicians do. In Israel, there's a similar debate over the identity of Arab citizens, who are often dubbed simply "Palestinians," but call themselves many other things.
2. Growing Arab citizen identification with Israel is actually not new, but you probably haven't heard much about it, because it hasn't gotten much attention in elite discourse: newsletters.theatlantic.com/deep-shtetl/61…