Sunday, October 28, 2018

SURGE IN ANTISEMITISM HIGHEST ON RECORD BETWEEN 2016-2017


TRUMP'S REIGN OF DESTRUCTION

Multiple people were killed and injured in a shooting Saturday morning at a Pittsburgh synagogue - a shooting that comes amid an increase in anti-Semitic incidents in the United States.
 
The suspected shooter, a white male, has been taken into custody after surrendering to a SWAT team at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Squirrel Hill.
 
Local CBS affiliate KDKA reported that eyewitnesses heard the shooter shout, "All Jews must die" before firing during the morning shabbat service, the busiest time of the week for most synagogues.
 
No information about the shooter's motive has been confirmed yet by authorities, and initial eyewitness accounts sometimes turn out to be wrong as the investigation unfolds. Still, this shooting comes amid a steady increase in anti-Semitic incidents and hate crimes since the 2016 presidential campaign season and, in particular, the inauguration of Donald Trump. The FBI found that in 2016, the most recent year for which data was available, there had been an increase of almost 5 percent in hate crimes since 2015, and 10 percent since 2014. Of the 1,273 crimes for which the FBI found a motivation of religious hatred (about 20 percent of the total), half were against Jews.
 
In the last year for which complete data is available, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), an advocacy group dedicated to combatting anti-Semitism, found that there had been 1,986 reported anti-Semitic incidents in the United States that year, including acts of vandalism as well as physical violence. That figure was a 57 percent increase from 2016, which itself had seen a 35 percent uptick in incidents from 2015.
 
The surge between 2016 and 2017 was the highest increase in incidents on-record since the ADL started reporting on them in 1979. Between mid 2015 and mid 2016, as the 2016 presidential campaign reached a fever pitch, more than 800 journalists received a staggering 19,000 anti-Semitic messages on Twitter.
 
During events like the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, right-wing extremists openly recited Nazi slogans and carried Nazi paraphernalia.
 
Incendiary rhetoric has remained intense throughout 2018. The verbal attacks against liberal billionaire philanthropist George Soros, who is Jewish, and whose political against activities have become the subject of a number of far-right conspiracy theories, have hit a fever pitch.
 
This month alone, Donald Trump publicly blamed Soros for funding the activist opposition to the nomination of now-Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was accused of multiple instances of sexual assault. More recently, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) as well as Kelly Johnson, an executive vice president for Campbell's Soup, blamed Soros for financially supporting the Honduran migrant caravan making its way to the United States border, accusing Soros of being in control of migrants and refugees.
 
Soros was among the recipients of a series of mailed pipe bombs sent to prominent left-wing media outlets and politicians, including the Clintons and Barack Obama this week. A Florida man who openly aired his right-wing views on Twitter and elsewhere, Cesar Sayoc, was arrested Friday and charged for allegedly carrying out the bombings.

https://www.vox.com/2018/10/27/18032250/the-pittsburgh-synagogue-tree-of-life-shooting-antisemitism-soros

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