RamsayBolton
Superstar

How America’s Jews Became America’s ‘New Blacks’
Few progressive maxims are more sacrosanct than the idea that African Americans are “incapable of racism.” Racism is a specific evil directed at black people; it is particularist, not universal. This

More than 15 months after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, the global tide of anti-Semitism has left me with little doubt that this is no longer true, if it ever was. For today, white people certainly can and do experience racism. Or at least, people who have been assigned “whiteness,” let us say. American Jews are considered, and are ethnically categorized as, white in this country.
We are living through a moment when Jews are being chased, pogrom-like, through the streets of Amsterdam, placed on “anti-Zionist” lists preventing them from earning a living, denied the ability to attend university classes at their own schools, and having their homes and businesses menaced and vandalized simply because they are Jews—so what else can we call this but racism?
Author is a trump lover emboldened by daddy and republicans

Trump won big with black men— now he must convince them to become better fathers
Trump is uniquely positioned to help improve black families.

Just as many pollsters predicted, Donald Trump scored record numbers of African-American votes last week — particularly among black men.
Some 21% of them voted for Trump, up 2% from 2020, with nearly one-third of black men under 45 rallying behind the once and future president.
It’s a startling figure to many people, particularly considering that Trump’s rival, Kamala Harris, is African American and how her campaign placed an outsized emphasis on securing votes from black men.
Harris still managed to win the majority of the black vote, including 91% of women. But black men clearly cared less about Harris’ celebrity-filled rallies and patronizing pleas from the Obamas and more about the economy and inflation.
Trump may never have uttered the words #BlackLivesMatter, but black votes certainly mattered last week.
Today, Trump can, and must, make black fatherhood matter.