imo the campus events are created by the Zionist lobby entirely for gagging free speech, in hopes of aiding the bill getting pushed through, they don't want people talking exposing them
Opposition to the policies of the State of Israel is not "anti-semitism".
Israel is a parliamentary democracy; Netanyahu leads a coalition government. Elections are by proportional representation and any party with 1% of the vote gets one seat. Economic left-right is one criterion but also Arab-Israel relations and also secular-religious axis (the degree to which the Jewish religion ought to be reflected in government policy). Opposition parties have varying degrees of disagreement with Netanyahu government on various issues. There are two primarily Arab parties: United Arab List (5 seats) and Hadash Ta'al (5 seats). A number of niche parties exist but have no seats including the Arab Democratic Party, and Rappeh (a party to protest Covid restrictions). The Green Party exists in Israel (no seats). (Party information from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_political_parties_in_Israel)
No one can argue that merely being opposed to the present Netanyahu government = anti-semitism or a huge swath of Israel itself would be classed as such!
Some are Jews... some pretend to be Jews and others are minions of them both. I give you Congress.
None of them are Jews. The Jews died with Jesus.
Think of the Patriot Act and the creation of Homeland Security quickly after 9/11.
...the camel's nose under the tent...
Most Jews I know are against this, not all tho.
imo the campus events are created by the Zionist lobby entirely for gagging free speech, in hopes of aiding the bill getting pushed through, they don't want people talking exposing them
...distinct possibility...
Opposition to the policies of the State of Israel is not "anti-semitism".
Israel is a parliamentary democracy; Netanyahu leads a coalition government. Elections are by proportional representation and any party with 1% of the vote gets one seat. Economic left-right is one criterion but also Arab-Israel relations and also secular-religious axis (the degree to which the Jewish religion ought to be reflected in government policy). Opposition parties have varying degrees of disagreement with Netanyahu government on various issues. There are two primarily Arab parties: United Arab List (5 seats) and Hadash Ta'al (5 seats). A number of niche parties exist but have no seats including the Arab Democratic Party, and Rappeh (a party to protest Covid restrictions). The Green Party exists in Israel (no seats). (Party information from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_political_parties_in_Israel)
No one can argue that merely being opposed to the present Netanyahu government = anti-semitism or a huge swath of Israel itself would be classed as such!
...compelling addendum...