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Kip🎗️'s avatar

For the life of me I just can't understand it: these were Jewish men, women and children celebrating Hanukkah, easily the most visible Jewish holiday, murdered heinously en masse by two Muslims, and the DEI guy and Albanese and countless others (including the candidate in Ohio who retracted his condolences to the victims at Bondi) can't even say Jews were targeted and acknowledge it's obviously an antisemitic hate crime? I don't even see how the purported incentives help them. Do these people really think the subhumans who commit these atrocities are their reliable supporters; do they really want to answer to them? And how is it so impossible for them to for once mention antisemitism on its own, in the face of these indisputable atrocities happening right in front of them, without shoehorning "Islamophobia" (a bullshit concept to begin with) into it? Unfuckingbelievable.

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Neural Foundry's avatar

Powerful argument about the necessity of naming antisemitism explicitly. The pattern of political leaders defaulting to "all hate matters" rhetoric when Jews are specifically targeted shows a profound failure to recognize the unique threat. That ISED message you shared is a perfect example of how institutional avoidance creates invisibility. I've seen similar dynamics play out in corporate DEI spaces where antisemitism gets lumped into generic "bias training" and the specifc history and manifestations never get adressed.

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