OPINION
MICHELLE
GOLDBERG
Antisemitism’s March Into the Mainstream
Nov. 28,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/28/opinion/antisemitism-trump-nick-fuentes.html
Michelle
Goldberg
By Michelle
Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
Tom
Stoppard’s wrenching drama “Leopoldstadt,” which I recently saw on Broadway,
begins in 1899 at a Christmas party in the Vienna apartment of Hermann Merz, a
prosperous and assimilated Jewish businessman, who is married to a Catholic and
nominally converted. Hermann is convinced that the antisemitism that plagued
his forefathers is fading into the past.
There’s
still plenty of anti-Jewish prejudice around, he acknowledges, but nothing
comparable to what prior generations endured. His family socializes with
aristocrats, patronizes the arts, worships high culture. “This is the promised
land, and not because it’s some place on a map where my ancestors came from,”
he says to his anxious and pessimistic brother-in-law. “We’re Austrians now.”
The rest of
the play, which ends in 1955, chronicles how misplaced this confidence was.
Seen in 2022 in New York — my own promised land — it felt like both an elegy
and a warning. Jews are thriving in America, and even with the violent
resurgence of antisemitism in the Trump era, I’ve rarely felt personally
threatened, perhaps a function of my privilege. Over the last week, though, I’m
reminded that well-off Jews in other times and places have also imagined that
they’d moved beyond existential danger, and been wrong.
At this
point, there is no excuse for being shocked by anything that Donald Trump does,
yet I confess to being astonished that the former president dined last week
with one of the country’s most influential white supremacists, a smirking
little fascist named Nick Fuentes. There’s nothing new about antisemites in
Trump’s circle, but they usually try to maintain some plausible deniability,
ranting about globalists and George Soros rather than the Jews. Fuentes, by
contrast, is overt. “Jews have too much power in our society,” he recently
wrote on his Telegram channel. “Christians should have all the power, everyone
else very little.”
Fuentes was
brought to Trump’s lair by Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, who was
evidently serious when he threatened to go “death con 3” on the Jews last
month. (The relationship with West is a bit of a coup for Fuentes, who, openly
wishing for conflict between Jews and Black people, has been willing to
sublimate his anti-Black racism in the service of his antisemitism.) According
to Axios, at one point during the dinner Trump turned to Ye and said of
Fuentes: “I really like this guy. He gets me.”
Since then,
Trump has claimed he didn’t know who Fuentes was. I find this unlikely. In
September, I wrote a piece about a Trump-endorsed congressional candidate named
Joe Kent that mentions Fuentes in the first paragraph. Trump scrawled a note of
congratulations on the print version and mailed it to Kent, who sent the image
out on his email list. But even if Trump’s ignorance was sincere, he still
didn’t denounce Fuentes after learning his identity.
Most
Republicans, in turn, spent days declining to criticize Trump, though former
Vice President Mike Pence and several senators finally spoke out on Monday.
There is a good argument that politicians and journalists should avoid
responding to every one of the ex-president’s provocations. In this case, however,
the reluctance to rebuke Trump erodes the already-shaky taboo against
antisemitism in Republican politics.
Early this
year, the Republican House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy — who could soon
become House speaker — castigated Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene and
Paul Gosar for speaking at one of Fuentes’s events. McCarthy’s refusal to say
anything about Fuentes’s meeting with the Republican Party’s most influential
figure suggests that the boundary between the intolerable and the acceptable is
shifting.
That’s what
Trump does: By violating the norms holding together liberal democratic society
with impunity, he renders those norms inoperable. If it were just Trump doing
this, that would be bad enough. But other narcissistic celebrities are now joining
him in reveling in reactionary transgression.
Ye is
launching a vanity presidential campaign run by the far-right provocateur Milo
Yiannopoulos, who recently wrote on Telegram, “We’re done putting Jewish
interests first.” After buying Twitter, Elon Musk enthusiastically welcomed
both Trump and Ye back to the platform, and has been tiptoing up to the edge of
antisemitism himself. On Sunday, he tweeted that Alexander Vindman, the Jewish
retired Army officer who testified about Trump’s attempt to extort Ukraine’s
president, is both “puppet & puppeteer,” echoing an old antisemitic trope
about Jews pulling the strings behind world events. On Monday, Musk tweeted an
image of the alt-right symbol Pepe the Frog.
For most of
my adult life, antisemites — with exceptions like Pat Buchanan and Mel Gibson —
have lacked status in America. The most virulent antisemites tended to hate
Jews from below, blaming them for their own failures and disappointments. Now,
however, anti-Jewish bigotry, or at least tacit approval of anti-Jewish
bigotry, is coming from people with serious power: the leader of a major
political party, a famous pop star, and the world’s richest man.
Such
antisemitism still feels, at least to me, less like an immediate source of
terror than an ominous force offstage, just as it was for the comfortable
fin-de-siècle Austrian Jews in Stoppard’s play. Maybe this time, for the first
time, it won’t get worse.
Michelle
Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several
books about politics, religion and women’s rights, and was part of a team that
won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace
sexual harassment. @michelleinbklyn
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