Monday, October 3, 2011

Truths from Caroline Glick

Boy, has the Jerusalem Post's Caroline Glick nailed it when she states that Jewish Americans cannot tell the difference between who is their friend and who is their enemy. It's difficult to believe that such normally intelligent individuals can be so blind to what stares them right in the face, as in Barack Obama's allegiance to Muslims and his disdain of the children of Isaac, the father of Abraham's Jewish descendants.

All they had to do was listen to a clip of Jeremiah Wright's rants against Israel. Dear ole Barry and Michelle sat glued to their seats for twenty years listening to this anti-Semite. And then there was the ENDLESS list of advisors who just coincidentally shared a disdain for Israel. Yet, many are shocked that Obama is a lover of all things Muslim.

But, politically speaking isn't the only way American Jews are blinded. They blame the wrong religious groups for anti-Semitism.

Read from Israel Matzav:

American Jewish fools

"Caroline Glick reports that American Jews cannot tell their friends from their enemies.


'According to a Gallup poll released last month, 80% of American Jews have favorable views of American Muslims. Seventy percent believe that they are not supportive of al-Qaida. These data indicate that American Jews are second only to American Muslims in their support for Muslim Americans. Indeed 6% more American Jews than American Muslims believe that American Muslims face prejudice due to their religion.

American Jewish championing of American Muslims is disconcerting when compared with American Jewish treatment of the philo-Semitic Evangelical Christians. Matthew Knee discussed this issue in depth in a recent article published at the Legal Insurrection website.

In a 2003 Pew survey, 42% of American Jews expressed antagonism towards Evangelical Christians. In a 2004 American National Election Study, Jews on average rated Evangelical Christians at 30 out of 100 on a "feeling thermometer," where 1 was cold and 100 was hot.

A 2005 American Jewish Committee survey found that Jews assessed that following Muslims, Evangelical Christians have the highest propensity for being anti-Semites. And yet, in the same 2004 American National Election Survey, Evangelical Christians rated Jews an average of 82 on the 1- 100 feelings scale. Evangelical Christians rated Catholics at 80.

Consistent survey data show that levels of anti- Semitism among Evangelical Christians is either the same as or slightly lower than the national average. According to a 2007 ADL survey, the US average is 15%.

There is a clear disparity between survey data on anti-Semitism among various American ethnic groups and American Jews' assessment of the prevalence of anti-Semitism among the same groups. The AJC survey found that American Jews believed that 29% of Evangelicals are largely anti- Semitic. They assessed that only 7% of Hispanics and 19% of African-Americans are anti-Semites.

As it works out, their perceptions are completely incorrect. According to the 2007 ADL survey, foreign born Hispanics, and African-Americans, harbor significantly stronger anti-Semitic views than the national average. Twenty-nine percent of foreign born Hispanics harbor very anti-Semitic views. Thirty-two percent of African-Americans harbor deeply anti-Semitic views.

Like Jews, Hispanics, African-Americans and Muslims vote disproportionately for the Democratic Party. Evangelical Christians on the other hand, are reliably Republican. A 2009 survey on US anti- Semitism conducted by the Institute for Jewish and Community Research in San Francisco found that Democrats are more likely to be anti-Semitic than Republicans.

The Gallup survey from last month showing American Jews' deep support for American Muslims is of particular interest because that support stands in stark contrast with survey data concerning American Jewish perception of Muslim American anti-Semitism
.'


Read the whole thing. The post by Matthew Knee of Legal Insurrection, which is cited by Caroline extensively, is here."

1 comments:

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Caroline Glick is an American journalist Makor Rishon-Israel and is the associate editor of The Jerusalem Post.