ADL head warns: U.S. at risk of ‘normalizing’ antisemitism
“We’re in an environment where a term like ‘globalists’ have moved from
the corners of the internet to the Cabinet Room of the West Wing,”
Greenblatt said.
By Michael Wilner
WASHINGTON – The head of the Anti-Defamation League is sounding an alarm
that antisemitism has become normalized in America’s political
discourse, following an historic massacre of Jews in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania on Saturday.

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post, Jonathan Greenblatt, national director
of the ADL, said that antisemitic dog whistles long held at the fringes
of American political life have entered the mainstream at little cost.“I
worry that antisemitism has become normalized – literally. That too
many people roll their eyes when certain politicians evoke George Soros –
‘the Jewish financier George Soros, or the Jewish financier Sheldon
Adelson,’” Greenblatt said. “They just shake their head at it and
dismiss it.”
On television programs and in the press, Greenblatt has provided
guidance to a nation non-conversant in a growing crisis of antisemitism,
tracked by his organization’s annual reports. That crisis hit an
inflection point on Saturday as a 46 year-old man entered a synagogue
yelling antisemitic epithets, shooting and killing 11 worshipers and
wounding several others.
“We’re in an environment where a term like ‘globalists’ have moved from
the corners of the internet to the Cabinet Room of the West Wing,”
Greenblatt said, referring to a term used in antisemitic conspiracies
claiming that Jews control various levers of world power.
“We can demand that leaders lead,” Greenblatt said. “We can demand that they do better.”
Each year, the ADL tracks incidents of vandalism, harassment and
assaults documented by law enforcement, in media accounts and directly
by victims themselves. In 2017, the organization found that assaults
decreased from the prior years but that acts of vandalism and harassment
spiked.
In total, the organization identified a 34% increase in incidents from
2015 to 2016 – and an increase in 2017 of 57% from the prior year. That
amounts to the largest single-year increase since the organization began
tracking incidents in 1979, and an explosive short-term trend.Incidents
were trending downward until the exceptionally divisive election year
of 2016, when Donald Trump successfully campaigned for the presidency,
the data shows.
“I think for us, we’re very focused on the data,” Greenblatt said. “The
data doesn’t lie, and I think both the toxic political atmosphere, the
access of social media and how its accelerated and amplified some of the
worst voices.”
Greenblatt offered muted praise to Trump for quickly condemning the
Pittsburgh attack on Saturday, suggesting doing so was a minimal
requirement of an American head of state. He also said that political
figures who fail to condemn brazen discrimination toward Jews should
have no place in public life.
“The first thing that can happen is that people in positions of
authority should stop hate when it happens,” he added. “There’s no doubt
that the president has the largest platform, the biggest megaphone, and
just by the power of his words he can contribute to the fight against
antisemitism.”
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