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Sacha Baron Cohen Rips Into Facebook, YouTube and Twitter for Spreading Lies and Hate – Variety

Posted By on November 25, 2019

Calling social media the greatest propaganda machine in history, and the CEOs of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube high-tech robber barons, comedian Sacha Baron Cohen used a speech given to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) this week to call for much more stringent regulation of internet companies.

By now, its pretty clear they cannot be trusted to regulate themselves, Cohen said, adding that it may not be enough to just fine social media companies if they continue to provide a forum to bigotry and hate. Instead, he suggested, CEOs should be held personally liable if their products are used to interfere in elections, or enable genocide. Do it again, and youll go to jail, he said.

Cohen was awarded the International Leadership Award by the ADL Thursday. For his acceptance speech, he for once decided to not appear in character, or as he put it: This is the first time I have given a speech as my least popular character Sacha Baron Cohen.

The comedian readily admitted that his comedy was frequently juvenile, and occasionally offensive. However, Cohen made the point that his jokes work because they help to shed a light on peoples prejudice something thats only possible if people accept facts as a shared truth, and recognize lies and hate when they see it.

That may not be possible for much longer if social media companies enable people to spread lies, he warned. Democracy, which depends on shared truths, is in retreat, Cohen said. On the internet, everything can appear equally legitimate. Breitbart resembles the BBC.

A sewer of bigotry and vile conspiracy theories that threaten our democracy this cant possibly be what the creators of the internet had in mind, he said.

Cohen singled out the Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Alphabet co-founders Sergei Brin and Larry Page, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey as responsible for spreading much of the hate and bigotry on the internet, calling them the Silicon Six, and proclaiming: This is ideological imperialism.

He went on to specifically criticize Zuckerberg, who recently linked Facebooks policies to a defense of free speech around the world. Some of these arguments are simply bulls***, Cohen said, adding that private companies were not government entities. If restaurants could ban patrons, so could social media companies, he argued. Freedom of speech is not freedom of reach.

Cohen also referenced recent changes made by Twitter and Google to their political advertising policies. Twitter announced a few weeks ago that it would ban political advertising altogether, and Google said yesterday that it wouldnt allow political advertisers to target audiences by affiliation anymore. Facebook has thus far resisted any such measures.

If you pay them, Facebook will run any political ad they want, even if its a lie, and they will even help you micro-target those lies to their users for maximum effect, Cohen said. If Facebook were around in the 1930s, they would have allowed Hitler to post 30-second ads on his solution to the Jewish problem.

He called on Facebook to change its political ad policy, and also suggested that Twitter should do more to ban white nationalists something the company has reportedly been avoiding because of the fear that it may also have to ban some prominent Republicans. Maybe that wouldnt be such a bad thing, Cohen said.

Cohen went on to demand that social media companies invest more in content moderation, and that politicians to more tightly regulate these companies. Their entire business model relies on generating more engagement, and nothing generates more engagement than lies, fear and outrage, Cohen said.

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Sacha Baron Cohen Rips Into Facebook, YouTube and Twitter for Spreading Lies and Hate - Variety

White supremacy groups and other hate organizations are getting more active in Colorado – 9News.com KUSA

Posted By on November 25, 2019

DENVER

Vandalism at synagogues, hate symbols found at local schools and even threats of mass violence at places of worship have kept local law enforcement busy as anti-extremism groups raise concerns about Colorados problem with hate.

The state of hate in Colorado is relatively hot right now, said Jeremy Shaver, the associate director of the Anti-Defamation League Mountain States office. Weve seen a rise of extremism both internationally, across the United States and in Colorado.

Over the last several years, 9NEWS and other media outlets have documented a number of incidents involving hate groups,from open displays of white supremacy at Colorado State University to swatstika vandalism at local places of worship.

RELATED: Charges filed against man in connection with incident outside Denver mosque

RELATED: New partnership will address Colorado's growing number of reported crime reports

Just this month, Colorado was thrust into the national spotlight when a Pueblo man with white supremacy ties was arrested for planning to blow up a synagogue.

The Anti-Defamation League has documented a marked increase of anit-Semitic incidents in Colorado over the last six years, from 18 in 2015 to dozens every year after. Shaver said in an email that while not all of the incidents are necessarily criminal, they include reports from victims, the public, media and law enforcement.

Law enforcement agencies are also reporting more criminal behaviors against people based on their race, religion and sexual identity.

For example, CBI reports hate crimes across the state have jumped from 96 in 2017 to 139 in 2018.

Samuel Cordova is accused of vandalizing a Denver book store during a drag queen reading.

Denver Police Department

Samuel Cordova, 21, is facing a bias-motivated charge in Denver after police say he was caught on camera vandalizing a book store during a drag queen reading event on June 27.

Cordova was arrested moments after the incident and a police report said officers found Patriot Front stickers in his backpack.

Patriot Front is classified as white nationalist group by the Anti-Defamation League and is known to spread its message through fliers and stickers on college campuses.

The police report also said Cordova targeted the bookstore because there would be gay rights activists associated with Antifa at the event.

9Wants to Know

A few months after his arrest and amid his pending charge, 9Wants to Know spotted Cordova at a September protest against an all-ages drag show at Mile High Comics in north Denver.

Images show him hanging out with local members of the Proud Boys, another organization labeled as a hate group by the Anti-Defamation league.

9Wants to Know

Colorado Proud Boy Louie Huey admitted white supremacists will show up at the same rallies and protests and try to attach themselves to his group. Huey, who said hes Latino, denied the Proud Boys are a white supremacists group.

Theyve been at rallies that weve been at, Huey told 9NEWS. But that doesnt mean that we hang out.. we both have a common enemy at the time. Doesnt mean we support their ideas. Because we dont.

9Wants to Know

When 9Wants to Know encountered Cordova at his home, he denied any ties to white supremacist groups and declined to discuss his criminal case.

While Cordova doesnt have a violent criminal record, Shaver said its important for the community to focus on discouraging stickers and flyering because the behavior can intensify.

Somebody usually goes through this process of becoming more extreme, more radicalized, more steeped in their racist attitudes and beliefs. They would actually then be propelled to take more violent action, Shaver said.

Cordovas bias-motivated crime charge, which is a misdemeanor, is still pending in Denvers court system. A plea hearing that was scheduled on Nov. 19 was continued to a later date.

Hate crime data experts theorize there are far more incidents and crimes that go unreported because people dont feel comfortable going to police or dont want their names associated with a criminal case.

Dr. Apryl Alexander is a clinical assistant professor at the University of Denver that studies the criminal justice system.

These might be under-reports, Alexander said of the FBI and CBI numbers. It was not that these didnt exist, it was just that now we have better reporting, better protection, and are prosecuting for these victims.

She said the key to accurate reporting is creating spaces where victims feel comfortable reporting crimes against them. They need to feel as though they wont face discrimination or retribution.

We know historically, victims of crimes dont report crimes - period, Alexander said. For a number of different reasons, but one being: Will I be believed? And will the system be responsive to my needs? So when we create these safe spaces for victims of all different backgrounds to report, reporting does go up.

An analysis of Colorado court data also reveals prosecutors have been steadily charging more people with bias-motivated crimes, which can include harassment and assault. But only 32% of the time, those kind of charges resulted with an actual conviction according to the analysis from years 2014 to 2018.

SUGGESTED VIDEOS | Investigations from 9Wants to Know

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White supremacy groups and other hate organizations are getting more active in Colorado - 9News.com KUSA

Luxury fashion brand apologizes for outfit compared to concentration camp uniforms: ‘Uncannily disturbing’ – Yahoo Lifestyle

Posted By on November 25, 2019

Luxuryfashionbrand Loewe pulled an outfit from a new collection following criticism that its clothing looked like a concentration camp uniform.

On Friday night, the Spanish fashion house apologized on its Instagram Stories writing, It was brought to our attention that one of our looks featured in a magazine and part of our Arts and Crafts ceramicist William De Morgan collaboration could be misconstrued as referring to one of the most odious moments in the history of mankind.

It was absolutely never our intention and we apologize to anyone who might feel we were insensitive to sacred memories, read the statement. The products featured have been removed from our commercial offering.

The brand didnt stipulate which items were pulled. According toCNN, the black-and-white shirt and pants were made available on November 14.

Fashion house Loewe has pulled an outfit that some said resembled a concentration camp uniform. (Screenshot: Instagram/Loewe)

The fashion account Diet Prada had called out the fashion house on Thursday, split-screening the striped outfit with images of real uniforms worn by victims of the Holocaust.

Unable to see anything but concentration camp uniforms in this $1,840 ensemble from @loewesWilliam De Morgan capsule, a collection meant to capture a freedom of imagination, read Diet Pradas caption. But with the particular stripe proportions and layout, uniform-style garments, and prominent chest patches, theres not actually much left to the imagination when the resulting look is so uncannily disturbing.

Yahoo Lifestyle could not immediately reach a Loewes representative for comment.

In the same post, Diet Prada pointed out slip-ups by Urban Outfitters, which sold a white-and-gray tapestry that the Anti-Defamation League called deeply offensive in 2015, and Zara,which in 2014, pulled a childrens shirtwith yellow-and-blue stripes and a yellow star after equal criticism.

Related: Clothing Companys Ad Depicting a Hog-Tied President Trump Criticized

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Luxury fashion brand apologizes for outfit compared to concentration camp uniforms: 'Uncannily disturbing' - Yahoo Lifestyle

How the new alt-right is using Israel and anti-Semitism to rattle conservative America – Haaretz

Posted By on November 25, 2019

A new far-right group stepped out in the United States this fall and its driving pro-Trump right-wingers crazy. The groypers are potential successors to the alt-right, but their aim is not to bolster Trumpism so much as to replace it with an even more radical and openly anti-Semitic form of white nationalism.

Turning Point USA, a popular student group headed by Charlie Kirk that supports U.S. President Donald Trump, came under attack this fall as Kirks Culture War college tour was treated to a series of high-profile disruptions by the groypers.

Led by 21-year-old YouTuber Nicholas Fuentes, an associate of infamous white nationalist (and self-described racial identitarian) Richard Spencer, the groypers made national headlines this month for heckling Donald Trump Jr. at an event at UCLA. That resulted in Trump Jr. and former Fox News personality Kimberly Guilfoyle leaving the stage after attempting to shout down the crowd.

Weeks before the event, the Zionist Organization of America called on Twitter to ban Fuentes for using the analogy of Cookie Monster baking batches of cookies to attempt to deny the horrific murder of 6 million innocent Jews during the Holocaust during a podcast he hosts.

Fuentes group, apparently named for a cartoon frog similar to alt-right symbol Pepe the Frog, has harassed pro-Trump speakers from popular conservative commentator and Daily Wire Editor-in-Chief Ben Shapiro to Texas Congressman Dan Crenshaw to David Rubin, a host for the conservative pay television network BlazeTV.

At the events they disrupt, the groypers ask speakers leading questions about Israel, gay rights and immigration to force them to defend universal rights thereby revealing them as fake conservatives.

Kirk, like Crenshaw and other speakers targeted by the groypers, are staunch defenders of Trump and often push the same kind of rhetoric as the president. Crenshaw and Kirk both regularly attack the so-called deep state and the impeachment hoax, but they dont flirt with white nationalism.

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Voxs Jane Coaston, one of the preeminent journalists covering the American right today, notes that thegroyper army is simply the alt-right of 2016 and 2017, warmed over, reenergized and using new terminology aimed at disassociating itself from the optics problem of the deadly August 2017 Charlottesville Unite the Right Rally which, not coincidentally, Fuentes attended.

The alt-right a far-right, white nationalist movement in the United States that grabbed attention early in Trumps presidency has lost steam in recent years as many of its leaders have been largely discredited and exiled from the American right wing. From Spencer to Milo Yiannopoulos to Gavin McInnes of the men-only, misogynist organization Proud Boys, the movements most vocal proponents are now rarely given media platforms.

The size and scope of the groyper army is not well documented, nor is its online reach. However, it has disrupted events from Tennessee to Los Angeles and appears to be gaining steam ahead of the 2020 presidential election campaign.

The groypers also ask questions using a variety of anti-Israel, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories to illicit reactions from the speakers they target. These questions include asking about Israeli domestic surveillance equipment at the White House and the dancing Israelis conspiracy theory, which claims that Israel was behind the 9/11 attacks as evidenced by five Israeli nationals dancing in celebration as the Twin Towers burned.

Another common question asked by group members is about the USS Liberty, a U.S. spy ship that Israel sank in the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967 after it misidentified it as an Egyptian vessel, killing 34 American sailors. The incident has become an anti-Semitic dog whistle used by the groypers to ask how support for Israel puts America First and to raise doubt over the U.S.-Israel alliance. When a groyper posed this question to Kirk when he was onstage with Trump Jr. and Guilfoyle at UCLA, Kirk denounced the conspiracy theory which alleges Israel deliberately targeted the U.S. vessel and ended up launching into a vehement defense of Israel.

VoxsCoaston quotes the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer websiteas urging the groypers: When you get pulled out [by security], yell GOOGLE THE USS LIBERTY or GOOGLE DANCING ISRAELIS or AMERICA FIRST NOT ISRAEL FIRST or just NICK FUENTES.

While still very much on the fringe of the American right, Fuentes has found some mainstream support in well-known conservative pundit Michelle Malkin.

Malkin spent a decade churning out New York Times best-sellers, had a nationally syndicated newspaper column and is a regular on cable news. Shewas fired from the Young America's Foundation last week for supporting the groyper leader.

Her former employer is a conservative youth group whose events were also targeted by the groypers.

After YAF issued a statement upon her termination, saying that There is no room in mainstream conservatism or at YAF for Holocaust deniers, white nationalists, street brawlers, or racists, Malkin who has praised Fuentes as a New Right leader doubled down on Twitter in response to YAF. The Keepers of the Gate have spoken. #AmericaFirst is not mainstream. My defense of unjustly prosecuted Proud Boys, patriotic young nationalists/groypers & demographic truth-tellers must not be tolerated. SPLC is cheering, she wrote, referring to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Malkins tweet echoes the groypers sentiment that they and not the mainstream are the true voice of Trumps America First agenda.

In mid-November, the groyper army targeted TPUSA events featuringrising GOP star Crenshaw at Arizona State and the University of Texas at Austin. The latter event saw groypers being escorted out of the auditorium after Crenshaw declared that he sections off any anger about anti-whiteness and was shouted down by an audience member who said: We are mad because Israel, its prime minister, said 9/11 was good for Israel.

Crenshaw has since slammed the groypers, repeatedly calling them the alt-right 2.0.

After conservative Daily Wire writer Matt Walsh tussled with a groyper at LA'S California State University in early November, Crenshaw came to his defense. The groyper had asked Walsh how he justified working for a non-Christian meaning Shapiro, the Daily Wires editor-in-chief. Wait, youre telling me that my Jewish boss doesnt believe that Jesus is the son of God? Walsh asked sarcastically. My god, Im scandalized by this! I had no idea.

In response to the incident, Crenshaw tweeted: Matt is correct. They use slogans like America first to get conservatives to sympathize with them. But after personally dealing with them, its pretty obvious they are vehement racists, anti-semites & ethnic-nationalists. Conservatives need to know the difference. Malkin then blocked Crenshaw on Twitter.

Walsh had responded to Malkin in a tweet, writing, Hi @michellemalkin. Fuentes called me a race traitor and f*ggot because I work for Jews. He also said that black people who complained about segregation needed to grow up. How do you feel about these statements? And in what way are they America First?

Many of the conservative speakers the groypers have targeted are Jewish including Shapiro, Rubin and Jonah Goldberg, a former editor for the National Review. Fuentes had previously personally targeted Rubin on his YouTube channel: You want to talk to Jewy Jewstein? Fuentes said. Im David Rubin and this is the gay Jewish show. Today weve got a Jew.

At a speech at Stanford University last week, Shapiro ripped into Fuentes, calling him a garbage human being and obviously white supremacist garbage.

Some call themselves America First to hijack President Trumps slogans to give themselves a patina of credibility youre seeing them adopt the beliefs of some of these other movements in order to find cover for their own vile belief system, Shapiro said.

While Shapiro has been a vocal critic of this new movement and of the alt-right, he has also given credence to many of the arguments that bolster the far right in the United States. Shapiro recently argued in response to an Atlantic cover story on how to avoid another American Civil War that Democrats are using demographic change to force an ideological change in the United States a notion similar to the white genocide conspiracy popular with the far right.

One thing the groypers and the alt-right movement have in common is that both have made Shapiro their worst enemy. A study by the Anti-Defamation League found that Shapiro was the number one target of the alt-right in 2016 and it seems he will be for the groypers in 2020.

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How the new alt-right is using Israel and anti-Semitism to rattle conservative America - Haaretz

Pompeo, AIPAC and American Jewish Priorities – Breaking Israel News

Posted By on November 25, 2019

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made two brief, basic points in his declaration Monday on Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria. He said that those communities are not illegal. And he said that far from facilitating peace, delegitimization of those communities has harmed prospects for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

Israelis were all but unanimous in their praise for Pompeo for speaking these simple truths. From Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to opposition leader Benny Gantz there was an immediate consensus supporting the Trump administrations bold move to reject Barack Obamas truth-impaired, hostile position on those communities and the EUs concomitant absurd and bigoted legal double standard for the Jewish state and its citizens.

Although the Palestinians responded with predictable fury to Pompeos statement, theirs wasnt the angriest reaction. The angriest responses came from the two parties the EU and the Democrats whose anti-Israel and factually baseless positions Pompeos statement repudiated.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini issued a condemnatory press release. She and her French, Belgian and German colleagues tried to get a consensual condemnation from all EU member states, but pro-Israel Hungary blocked them.

Democratic presidential candidates lined up to condemn Pompeos remarks, together with their radical counterparts in Congress. Elizabeth Warren promised to revoke Pompeos position if elected president.

The reason they were angry is because with his simple, brief statement, Pompeo took away their favorite fig leaf for hiding their hatred for Israel.

For the Europeans and the American Left, the term settlement does not connote an Israeli town on the map. For them, settlement is a password that opens Pandoras Box of anti-Semitism. When they say settlement, they mean, Zionism is racism, or Israel is an Apartheid state, or BDS.

The term settlement serves for them as a green light for rejecting Israels right to exist, for denying self-determination to the Jewish people, for embracing anti-Semitism.

With his statement on Monday, Pompeo took their buzzword away.

Now they cant say that they arent anti-Israel, they simply believe in the importance of upholding international law because the position of the U.S. government is that settlements do not violate international law.

They can no longer say that they arent anti-Israel, they are pro-peace and the settlements are an obstacle to peace. The U.S. position is the opposite opposition to settlements is an obstacle to peace.

In short, those most directly harmed by Pompeos statement are those that use the term settlements as the key justification for their anti-Semitic campaigns in the West, and particularly in America.

In light of this, the people most harmed by these anti-Semitic forces, that, is, American Jews, could have been expected to be the greatest supporters of Pompeos statement.

But that isnt what happened. While Israelis across the political spectrum cheered Pompeo for his declaration, the American Jewish community as represented by its major organizations had three main responses to what Pompeo said.

The first came from the anti-Zionist or post-Zionist Jewish left. This group is led most notably J Street and the Union of Reform Judaism. Both viciously condemned Pompeos statement.

The Reform movement stunned Israelis when its leader Rabbi Rick Jacobs called on President Donald Trump to rescind Pompeos statement and reinstate the Obama administrations policy of viewing Israeli communities in Judea and Samaria as the great obstacle to peace.

On the other side of the spectrum, groups with traditional Zionist positions were deeply supportive of Pompeos statement. The Zionist Organization of America, (ZOA) was ecstatic. It specifically noted the that the Trump administrations move, strikes a blow at the hateful, anti-Israel BDS, (boycott, divestment and sanctions) movement, which relies on false claims that Jews are illegal occupiers of the Jewish homeland.

The ZOA also condemned the Reform movement for calling for the administration to rescind the policy.

The Orthodox Union and several smaller groups also greeted Pompeos remarks with gratitude and support.

Likewise, Christians United for Israel, (CUFI) and other leading Christian Zionist groups and national leaders were thrilled by Pompeos statement. One evangelical leader enthused that with the move, Trump secured 100 percent of his evangelical Christian base.

Between the post-Zionists and the Zionists are the bulk of what are normally viewed as mainstream Jewish American groups. These include the American Jewish Committee, (AJC), the Anti-Defamation League, (ADL), the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, (AIPAC), the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and the Jewish Federations of North America. Until a decade or so ago, all of these groups could have been expected to respond as the ZOA and CUFI did. But alas, much has changed in the past ten years.

The reactions of these organizations were disappointing, to say the least. The Conference of Presidents refused to release any statement in response to Pompeos declaration. The Jewish Federations of North America were similarly silent.

Statements by the AJC and the ADL ignored the substance of Pompeos declaration. They failed to mention fact that he repudiated the Obama administrations obsessive and false claim that Israeli communities are an obstacle to peace, despite the fact that this claim has fueled the work of anti-Semites as they spread their hatred of Jews on college campuses across America. The AJC and ADL also didnt thank Pompeo for saying what he said.

[wpipa id=94167]

Instead, their statements effectively embraced Obamas discriminatory and false position on these Israeli communities. The ADL said (irrelevantly) that it supports the establishment of a Palestinian state. The AJC said it opposes construction in settlements located beyond the large settlement blocs as if this were at all relevant to Pompeos statement.

In other words, both groups pretended that what he was saying was directed at Israeli policy, rather than the campaigns by the EU and the American left to demonize and delegitimize Israel and its Jewish supporters in the West.

AIPACs response to Pompeos statement was arguably even more shocking. Pompeos statement rejected fifty years of anti-Israel rhetoric that cultivated and accelerated the rise of anti-Semitism on the American left and gave the EU a fig leaf to excuse its anti-Semitic policies. As the pro-Israel lobby in Washington, AIPAC should have been the first to thank Pompeo, particularly in light of the wall to wall support his statement elicited in Israel.

But AIPAC did not thank Pompeo.

AIPACs only response to the most significant shift in U.S. Israel policy in since the Six Day War was a post on its twitter feed which read, AIPAC does not take a position on settlements. We believe settlements should be an issue for direct negotiations between the parties, not something determined by international bodies. The Palestinians must stop their boycott of US and Israeli officials and return to direct talks.

Aside from ignoring Pompeos statement, and so erasing the context of its remark, the most bizarre aspect of AIPACs tweet is the position it expressed.

The war against settlements is the means through which Israels detractors seek to delegitimize Israels very existence and demonize AIPAC and its members as disloyal to America for their crime of caring about Israel.

And AIPAC doesnt have a position on the issue? Can it really not choose a side in the battle between the Israeli consensus and IfNotNow?

What purpose does no-position-on-settlements-AIPAC serve today? What is it there to do?

How are we to understand the tepid-to-non-existent responses of these major Jewish groups to the most supportive statement made by a sitting Secretary of State in history? What stands behind their refusal to respond positively to a statement that undermines the basis for the most politically powerful and fastest growing form of anti-Jewish bigotry in America?

It would seem that there is one explanation. It is called the Democratic Party, circa 2019.

Like most of their members, the leaders of these Jewish organizations groups lean Democrat. Their decision to remain in a party that becomes more hostile to Israel and Jewish interests with every passing week carries certain obligations. Quite simply, there is little room in the Democratic party today for fulsome support for Israel and rejection of leftist anti-Semitism. The party they wont leave would in all likelihood leave them if these Jewish groups were to thank Pompeo for rejecting the delegitimization of settlements again, the buzzword used by the likes of John Kerry, Rashida Tlaib, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden and Alexandra Ocasio Cortez to attack Israel and its supporters.

Then there is the issue of the identity of the man who made the statement on Monday.

Pompeo is not merely a Republican. He is President Trumps Secretary of State. And President Trump happens to be the most pro-Israel president in U.S. history. But in todays poisonous political climate, no Democrat can say anything positive about Trump and his administration.

And so, AIPACs statement never mentioned his name. The AJC and ADL wouldnt say anything positive about Pompeo or his extraordinary statement. And all three of them together with the silent Conference of Presidents and Jewish Federations of North America ignored the fact that that the consensus view of Israelis is that Pompeos statement was a great act of friendship towards Israel and the Jewish people.

For Israel, the lesson from all of this is a sad one. Mainstream American Jewish groups and their leaders are no longer dependable allies and partners. Until ten years ago, these groups and leaders recognized that their freedom and civil rights as Jewish Americans was tied to American support for Israel. Now, as that support for Israel in their political home is collapsing, they wont stand up for their rights in opposition to their party and so they are unable to stand up for Israel or respect the consensus opinion of Israelis.

To date, regardless of the party in power, Israels governments have gone out of their way to support for these major Jewish organizations. Prime ministers and cabinet ministers have made a point of flying to Washington to participate in the annual AIPAC conference, for instance.

The time has come to end this tradition.

Rather than support groups that are unwilling to stick their necks out to defend either Israel or their own community, the government should support the groups that are willing to do so. Israel should support the Jewish and non-Jewish groups that support Israel in meaningful ways. Those that are willing to stand up to the forces using the term settlements to demonize Israel and its American supporters are the ones who Israel should focus its energies on supporting.

Israel should help smaller Zionist groups grow and help larger organizations expand their reach. To this end, Israel would be better served if the Prime Minister skips the AIPAC conference in favor of the CUFI conference in the coming years.

Old habits die hard. But the cold responses these major Jewish groups issued in the face of the most significant pro-Israel position the Trump administration has adopted to date show that they have already changed their old habits. Israel needs to recognize what they have done and act accordingly.

Reprinted with authors permission from Caroline Glick

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Pompeo, AIPAC and American Jewish Priorities - Breaking Israel News

A new study has revealed a majority of Australians want political advertising on social media to be banned outright – Business Insider Australia

Posted By on November 25, 2019

As we hurtle closer and closer to the US election in 2020, theres no surprise as to why theres increasing debate around the thorny issue of political advertising on social media. But Australians are thinking about it too and theyre perhaps even more concerned than their American counterparts.

A new study from progressive think tank The Australia Institute has found a majority of Australians support tighter regulation of political advertising on social media, with 73% supporting a requirement that political advertising be truthful, and 60% supporting an outright ban.

The poll, conducted by Essential Research on behalf of The Australia Institute, also found that two thirds of Australians support measures to prevent micro-targeting political messages to particular groups of voters.

When it came to the requirement for truth in political advertising on social media, there was majority support across all voting intentions, with Coalition and Greens voters most likely to support such a requirement.

The report argues a lack of a solid regulatory framework and the preponderance of so-called dark ads hyper-targeted social media ads viewable only by their narrow audiences has created a system which lacks accountability and may have a distortionary effect on the democratic process.

In its official election postmortem, the Australian Labor Party dedicated significant space to claims which circulated on social media suggesting the party would reintroduce inheritance tax or a death tax. By Labors account, they never had a policy which could accurately be described as a death tax.

The 2019 election marked the arrival of online disinformation as a decisive factor in Australias democratic processes, the report read.

The speed with which the death tax deception spread on Facebook and Messenger, the rebound effect of Labors attempted rebuttals, and the ease with which the Liberal Party took advantage of and fed that disinformation, are warning signs for everyone in the Australian political system.

But efforts to regulate paid political ads wouldnt have done much in this case, seeing as the death tax allegation often spread organically through Facebook groups and Messenger. A report by The Guardian after the election found many posts about the death tax were shared by fringe Facebook pages and personal accounts.

On the flip side of the coin, Labor also faced scrutiny during the 2016 election for its Mediscare campaign, with some alleging they misled voters by suggesting the Coalition intended to privatise Medicare.

The Australian government has turned its steely gaze on the conduct of social media giants more intensely in recent months though not specifically in the arena of political advertising.

Last week, Attorney-General Christian Porter flagged his intention to make companies like Facebook and Twitter liable for defamatory content published by their users, reducing what he calls a completely uneven balance between the responsibilities of platforms and the responsibilities of individual publishers.

Much of the discussion about paid political ads on social media recently is largely a result of Facebooks commitment to continue running them and its refusal to fact check the claims made.

In an incendiary address to the Anti-Defamation League last week, actor and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen described Facebook as the greatest propaganda machine in history over its policy on political ads.

If you pay them, Facebook will run any political ad you want, even if its a lie, he said.

For its part, Facebook has been largely unrepentant about its role.

We dont fact-check political ads, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a speech at Georgetown University in mid-October, setting off a firestorm of criticism.

We dont do this to help politicians, but because we think people should be able to see for themselves what politicians are saying. And if content is newsworthy, we also wont take it down even if it would otherwise conflict with many of our standards.

Facebook insists political advertising isnt a significant revenue driver less than 1% of the company total, according to COO Sheryl Sandberg and that its decision not to fact check is rooted in a commitment to the democratic process.

In a democracy, I dont think its right for private companies to censor politicians or the news, Zuckerberg said in Facebooks Q3 conference call.

And although Ive considered whether we should not carry these ads in the past, and Ill continue to do so, on balance so far Ive thought we should continue.

The latter comment followed Twitters announcement in late October that it would ban political advertising outright, in an obvious jab at Facebook.

This isnt about free expression, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey tweeted at the time. This is about paying for reach. And paying to increase the reach of political speech has significant ramifications that todays democratic infrastructure may not be prepared to handle.

Since the initial announcement, Twitter has further clarified its new policy, which includes some exemptions for news publishers and certain cause-based ads. Any ads mentioning political candidates, however, are banned.

Last week, Google stuck its head into the debate by announcing it was changing its own political advertising policy by limiting advertisers from targeting users based on their political leanings.

Regardless of how it proceeds, it seems as if Australians arent particularly keen on the current state of affairs.

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A new study has revealed a majority of Australians want political advertising on social media to be banned outright - Business Insider Australia

In Pursuit Of Truth – The Boca Raton Observer

Posted By on November 25, 2019

Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari, whose imprisonment was chronicled in the feature film Rosewater, will be the keynote speaker. In his career as a journalist and filmmaker, he has exhibited exceptional courage in bringing the truth of the Holocaust to Iran and throughout the Middle East and has been a powerful voice against anti-Semitism.

A fierce advocate for historical truth and securing the dignity and freedom of all people, Bahari is also the founder of IranWire, a leading news platform that, in partnership with the museum, disseminates articles and videos to the Iranian people to teach Holocaust history and fight anti-Semitism.

We are thrilled to introduce Maziar Bahari and his noble pursuit of justice, especially his commitment to refute Holocaust denial in the Middle East, to our South Florida supporters, says Robert Tanen, director of the museums Southeast region. Maziar has been an integral partner for us and will receive the Museums 2020 Elie Wiesel Award, the museums highest honor, during the Days of Remembrance this coming April.

Chaired by Stephanie and David Newman and vice-chaired by Renee and Kenny Blatt, the dinner supports the museums $1 billion comprehensive campaign, Never Again: What You Do Matters. The Boca Raton Observer is the events exclusive magazine sponsor. O

For more information, call 561-995-6773 or email southeast@ushmm.org.

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In Pursuit Of Truth - The Boca Raton Observer

White nationalists are openly operating on Facebook. The company won’t act – The Guardian

Posted By on November 25, 2019

On 7 November, Lana Lokteff, an American white nationalist, introduced a thought criminal and political prisoner and friend as a featured guest on her internet talk show, Red Ice TV.

For about 90 minutes, Lokteff and her guest Greg Johnson, a prominent white nationalist and editor-in-chief of the white nationalist publisher Counter-Currents discussed Johnsons recent arrest in Norway amid authorities concerns about his past expression of respect for the far-right mass murderer Anders Breivik. In 2012, Johnson wrote that he was angered by Breiviks crimes because he feared they would harm the cause of white nationalism but had discovered a strange new respect for him during his trial; Breiviks murder of 77 people has been cited as an inspiration by the suspected Christchurch killer, the man who murdered the British MP Jo Cox, and a US coast guard officer accused of plotting a white nationalist terror attack.

Just a few weeks earlier, Red Ice TV had suffered a serious setback when it was permanently banned from YouTube for repeated violations of its policy against hate speech. But Red Ice TV still had a home on Facebook, allowing the channels 90,000 followers to stream the discussion on Facebook Watch the platform Mark Zuckerberg launched as a place to share an experience and bring people together who care about the same things.

The conversation wasnt a unique occurrence. Facebook promised to ban white nationalist content from its platform in March 2019, reversing a years-long policy to tolerate the ideology. But Red Ice TV is just one of several white nationalist outlets that remain active on the platform today.

A Guardian analysis found longstanding Facebook pages for VDare, a white nationalist website focused on opposition to immigration; the Affirmative Right, a rebranding of Richard Spencers blog Alternative Right, which helped launch the alt-right movement; and American Free Press, a newsletter founded by the white supremacist Willis Carto, in addition to multiple pages associated with Red Ice TV. Also operating openly on the platform are two Holocaust denial organizations, the Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust and the Institute for Historical Review.

Theres no question that every single one of these groups is a white nationalist group, said Heidi Beirich, the director of the Southern Poverty Law Centers (SPLC) Intelligence Project, after reviewing the Guardians findings. Its not even up for debate. Theres really no excuse for not removing this material.

White nationalists support the establishment of whites-only nation states, both by excluding new non-white immigrants and, in some cases, by expelling or killing non-white citizens and residents. Many contemporary proponents of white nationalism fixate on conspiracy theories about demographic change and consider racial or ethnic diversity to be acts of genocide against the white race.

Facebook declined to take action against any of the pages identified by the Guardian. A company spokesperson said: We are investigating to determine whether any of these groups violate our policies against organized hate. We regularly review organizations against our policy and any that violate will be banned permanently.

The spokesperson also said that Facebook does not ban Holocaust denial, but does work to reduce the spread of such content by limiting the distribution of posts and preventing Holocaust-denying groups and pages from appearing in algorithmic recommendations. Such limitations are being applied to the two Holocaust denial groups identified by the Guardian, the spokesperson said.

The Guardian undertook a review of white nationalist outlets on Facebook amid a debate over the companys decision to include Breitbart News in Facebook News, a new section of its mobile app dedicated to high quality journalism. Facebook has faced significant pressure to reduce the distribution of misinformation on its platform. Critics of Breitbart News object to its inclusion in what Zuckerberg has described as a trusted source of information on two fronts: its repeated publication of partisan misinformation and conspiracy theories and its promotion of extreme rightwing views.

A growing body of evidence shows the influence of white nationalism on Breitbarts politics. Breitbarts former executive chairman Steve Bannon called the site the platform for the alt-right in 2016. In 2017, BuzzFeed News reported on emails and documents showing how a former Breitbart editor had worked directly with a white nationalist and a neo-Nazi to write and edit an article about the alt-right movement.

This month, the SPLC and numerous news organizations have reported on a cache of emails between the senior Trump adviser Stephen Miller and the former Breitbart writer Katie McHugh showing how Miller pushed for coverage and inclusion of white nationalist ideas in the publication. The emails show Miller directing McHugh to read links from VDare and another white nationalist publication, American Renaissance, among other sources. In one case, reported by NBC News, Breitbart ran an anti-immigration op-ed submitted by Miller under the byline Breitbart News.

A Breitbart spokeswoman, Elizabeth Moore, said that the outlet is not now nor has it ever been a platform for the alt-right. Moore also said McHugh was a troubled individual who had been fired for a number of reasons including lying.

Breitbart is the funnel through which VDares ideas get out to the public, said Beirich. Its basically a conduit of conspiracy theory and racism into the conservative movement We dont list them as a hate group, but to consider them a trusted news source is pandering at best.

Facebook executives have responded defensively to criticism of Breitbart Newss inclusion in the Facebook News tab, arguing that the company should not pick ideological sides.

Part of having this be a trusted source is that it needs to have a diversity of views in there, Zuckerberg said at an event in New York in response to a question about Breitbarts inclusion. Campbell Brown, Facebooks head of news partnerships, wrote in a lengthy Facebook post that she believed Facebook should include content from ideological publishers on both the left and the right. Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram and a longtime Facebook executive, questioned on Twitter whether the companys critics really want a platform of our scale to make decisions to exclude news organizations based on their ideology. In response to a question from the Guardian, Mosseri acknowledged that Facebook does ban the ideology of white nationalism, then added: The tricky bit is, and this is always the case, where exactly to draw the line.

One of the challenges for Facebook is that white nationalist and white supremacist groups adopt the trappings of news outlets or publications to disseminate their views, said Joan Donovan, the director of the Technology and Social Change Research Project at Harvard and an expert on media manipulation.

Red Ice TV is a group that styles themselves as a news organization when they are primarily a political organization, and the politics are staunchly white supremacist, Donovan said. We have seen this happen in the past where organizations like the KKK have produced their own newspapers It doesnt mean that it qualifies as news.

Many people argue that Breitbart is more of a political front than a news operation, she added. When Steve Bannon left Breitbart in order to work much more concretely with campaigns, you could see that Breitbart was a political organ before anything else. Really what they were trying to do was give white supremacist politics a veneer of objectivity.

Donovan said she expects platform companies will reassess their treatment of Breitbart following the release of the Miller emails. She also called for Facebook to take a more holistic approach to combating US domestic terrorism, as it does with foreign terrorist groups.

A Facebook spokesperson noted that Facebook News is still in a test phase and that Facebook is not paying Breitbart News for its inclusion in the program. The spokesperson said the company would continue to listen to feedback from news publishers.

Facebook has long asserted that hate speech has no space on Facebook, whether it comes from a news outlet or not.

But the $566bn company has consistently allowed a variety of hate groups to use its platform to spread their message, even when alerted to their presence by the media or advocacy groups. In July 2017, in response to queries from the Guardian, Facebook said that more than 160 pages and groups identified as hate groups by SPLC did not violate its community standards. Those groups included:

American Renaissance, a white supremacist website and magazine;

The Council of Conservative Citizens, a white nationalist organization referenced in the manifesto written by Dylann Roof before he murdered nine people in a black church;

The Occidental Observer, an online publication described by the Anti-Defamation League as the primary voice for antisemitism from far-right intellectuals;

the Traditionalist Worker party, a neo-Nazi group that had already been involved in multiple violent incidents; and

Counter-Currents, the white nationalist publishing imprint run by the white nationalist Greg Johnson, the recent guest on Red Ice TV.

Three weeks later, following the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Facebook announced a crackdown on violent threats and removed pages associated with the the Traditionalist Worker party, Counter-Currents, and the neo-Nazi organization Gallows Tree Wotansvolk. Many of the rest remained.

A year later, a Guardian review found that many of the groups and individuals involved in the Charlottesville event were back on Facebook, including the neo-Confederate League of the South, Patriot Front and Jason Kessler, who organized Unite the Right. Facebook took those pages down following inquiries from the Guardian, but declined to take action against the page of David Duke, the notorious white supremacist and former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

In May 2018, Vice Newss Motherboard reported on internal Facebook training documents that showed the company was distinguishing between white supremacy and white nationalism and explicitly allowing white nationalism.

In July 2018, Zuckerberg defended the motivations of people who engage in Holocaust denial during an interview, saying that he did not think that theyre intentionally getting it wrong. Following widespread criticism, he retracted his remarks.

It was not until March 2019 that Facebook acknowledged that white nationalism cannot be meaningfully separated from white supremacy and organized hate groups and banned it.

Beirich expressed deep frustration with Facebooks track record.

We have consulted with Facebook many, many times, Beirich added. We have sent them our list of hate groups. Its not like theyre not aware, and I always get the sense that there is good faith desire [to take action], and yet over and over again [hate groups] keep popping up. Its just not possible for civil rights groups like SPLC to play the role of flagging this stuff for Facebook. Its a company that makes $42bn a year and I have a staff of 45.

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White nationalists are openly operating on Facebook. The company won't act - The Guardian

Odd 13th-century Bulgarian worship hall may be country’s sole medieval synagogue – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 24, 2019

What may be the sole archaeological remains of Bulgarias medieval Jewish community are currently being uncovered in the countrys ancient capital of Tarnovgrad (todays Veliko Tarnovo). At a November 11 press conference in Sofia, archaeologist Dr. Mirko Robov proposed that a large, two-roomed 13th century structure he is excavating is not a church as originally thought, but rather a synagogue.

The proposed Jewish house of worship was discovered on the outskirts of a medieval fortress complex located on the citys Trapezitsa Hill. Although digging began there in 2014, so far only a quarter of the structure has been excavated, Robov told The Times of Israel this week in an email interview. It is a large building that was built during the 1240s and survived until the fall of Tarnovo during the Ottoman conquest in 1393 when the town was completely razed.

The northern Bulgarian city of Veliko Tarnovo is often referred to as the City of the Tsars in a nod to its historical place as a capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire. Located close to modern day Turkey, its position along the Yantra River is important both strategically and for trade routes. The old town is spread out on three hills, Tsarevets, Sveta Gora, and Trapezitsa, where the potential synagogue was found.

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One of the only European country to have more Jews in its borders after World War II than before, Bulgaria boasts a 2,000-year-old Jewish community, some of which has been documented to have lived in a Jewish quarter on the Trapezitsa Hill during the Middle Ages. Trapezitsa was the second most significant fort in Metropolitan Tarnovo. As a capital, Tarnovo was an ethnically diverse city. One of the ethnic groups we know of were the Jewish people, said Robov.

The Jewish Quarter of medieval Trapezitsa, Bulgaria, is noted by the number 1. (Mirko Robov, 1988)

If confirmed as a synagogue after further research, it would be the only one from Bulgaria during this era, and one of only a handful that have been discovered throughout the continent.

Of course, I need some additional data to be completely sure. I hope I will be able to collect it during the next season of archaeological excavations At this stage I believe Im on the right track, Robov said.

Bulgaria is home to a much earlier, third century CE synagogue which was unearthed in the city of Plovdiv. According to the Hebrew University of Jerusalems Center for Jewish Art, the Bulgarian Jewish community could even be traced back to the destruction of the First Temple, when a small group of Jews arrived in the Balkan Peninsula after passing through Asia Minor. Based on the discovery of coins from the Bar Kochba revolt found in the area, historians maintain that Jewish slaves arrived after the failure of the revolt in 132-5 CE.

The excavation site of what could be a 13th century synagogue, the sole remaining archaeological evidence of a medieval Jewish community in Bulgaria, at Tarnovo, Bulgaria on the Trapezitsa hill. (courtesy Dr. Mirko Robov)

There are also several examples of 19th-century structures still dotting the country. But while the existence of a medieval Jewish community is documented in several contemporary texts, there is a vacuum of archaeological evidence which this new structure may now fill.

This new-found building is not a church, because its characterized by a different planning and construction, said Robov. Its coated from the inside, but there are no wall-paintings. This is why I connect the building with the religious practices of a different ethnic group.

The proposed synagogue consists of two sections: An eastern part, which was coated with unadorned mortar and constructed using pillars, houses an apse on its eastern side, which Robov said differs from others in churches in the city. A second, impressively large room measuring 11.5 m X 14 m, is built of mud and stones, and was attached on the west side of the mortar structure. It has a western entrance, which was sealed with a single door, said Robov.

Bulgarian archaeologist Dr. Mirko Robov at the excavation site in medieval Tarnovo, Bulgaria. (courtesy)

Two types of buildings were formed with an apse in the west churches and dining rooms. This one is neither. Its planning and its constructional arrangement from the east signifies a specific cultural purpose, said Robov.

Robov explained that all of the known toponyms or place names that are connected with the citys Medieval Jewish population are found in areas on or around the Trapezitsa fort. These include a Jewish quarter, a Jewish graveyard in the northwestern foot of the hill, and an area in the southwestern foot of Trapezitsa Hill called Chifutluk.

This leads me to the hypothesis that this newfound religious building could be related to the Jewish people from Metropolitan Tarnovo, said Robov.

The discovery of a few artifacts adorned with a hexagram, or Star of David, also points to a Jewish connection, at least in modern perceptions of the symbol: Although found in very ancient Jewish buildings and texts, the six-pointed star was not used for purely Jewish purposes until later in history.

A bottom of a vessel decorated with a hexagram (Star of David), discovered in the possible 13th century synagogue in ancient Tarnovo, Bulgaria. (courtesy Dr. Mirko Robov)

That being said, the Star of David symbol is depicted on a few artifacts found in ancient Tarnova, said Robov, one from the Trapezitsa hill site and two from a medieval palace on the Tsarevets hill. Robov said the symbol is not commonly found on contemporary pottery there and therefore we can speak of a specific semantics of the hexagram.

According to Robov one of the possible origins of the hills name, Trapezitsa, could be connected to the Jewish merchants who once lived there. The word trapeza, he wrote, is a table used for exchange of money an activity attributed to the Jewish community.

According to the 2009 book, Segregation Integration Assimilation: Religious and Ethnic Groups in the Medieval Towns of Central and Eastern Europe, Jews held a relatively high status in 13th-century Tarnovo due to the Jewish origins of the second wife of Tsar Ivan Alexander, Sarah-Theodora. The book cites a contemporary text, The Life of Theodosius of Tarnovo, in which Theodosius writes of Jews bad behavior including insulting priests as a result of their self-confidence arising from their influence in the royal court.

Regardless of the communitys so-called influence, the Jewish neighborhood in Trapezitsa was isolated and outside the fortress walls. Though quite powerful and wealthy, the Jews in the medieval capital were spatially segregated from the rest of the citizens just as it was recommended by Archbishop Demetrios, write the authors.

A map of the possible 13th-century synagogue located within medieval Tarnovos Trapezitsa Hill fortified city in Bulgaria. (courtesy Dr. Mirko Robov)

Additionally, the authors cite the use of forced conversion to Christianity as a means of assimilation. And tellingly, there is the possibility that Bulgarian rulers followed a Byzantine tradition of forcing Jews to be their executors, as a token of humiliation.

The current archaeological excavations on the Trapezitsa Hill began in 2006, but for archaeologist Robov its been a start-stop exploration. It is unlikely researchers will be able to confirm whether the structure is indeed a synagogue until the building has been fully excavated.

If the Bulgarian Ministry of Culture doesnt refuse to finance my excavation site (the reason why I conduct the excavations with significant interruptions) in 2020 the entire building will be fully uncovered and researched, said Robov.

The excavation site of what could be a 13th century synagogue, the sole remaining archaeological evidence of a medieval Jewish community in Bulgaria, at Tarnovo, Bulgaria on the Trapezitsa hill fort. (courtesy Dr. Mirko Robov)

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Odd 13th-century Bulgarian worship hall may be country's sole medieval synagogue - The Times of Israel

DNA Testing: Expect the Unexpected – Psychology Today

Posted By on November 24, 2019

This is a post I never expected to write, mostly because I was never really interested in my family background. But my husband wanted to learn more about his ancestry, so last Christmas we swabbed and mailed in our DNA samples. And just like that, I learned that the man who raised me was not my biological father. Shortly thereafter, my friend and colleague Wendy told me shed just had a similar experience. Both of us were reeling from what we learned, but we were nonetheless intrigued and wondering about what this meant in our lives.

Lets start with Wendys experience, which she has allowed me to share here. Wendy is a licensed psychologist in her late-50s. Her long-term boyfriend is adopted, and she thought it would be fun if he knew his DNA. He agreed, and she decided they might as well test hers, too, even though she knew it would come back half-Hungarian, half-Latvian, because thats her family heritage. Then she learned shes 55 percent Ashkenazi Jew. Wendy says, It was shocking. Oh my God, is this my test? But then I experienced this deep knowing that yes, this is the truth.

After getting her results, Wendy got in touch with cousins on both sides of her family tree and asked them to also get tested. I really wanted to know. I had flow charts all over my wall trying to figure out if I was adopted, if my ancestors went into hiding during the war to protect themselves, if maybe there was an affair or even a sperm donor,because my parents really struggled to get pregnant. A cousin on Wendys mothers side took the test and found out they were indeed related, as expected, but there was no Ashkenazi Jew in the report. That meant that Wendys Jewish heritage came from her father. Then a cousin on her fathers side did the test and also found no Ashkenazi Jew. So I knew that it was either an affair or artificial insemination.

My own story is relatively similar. When my results came back, I learned that Im 97.6 percent Ashkenazi Jew. This was validating, despite my lack of religious practice, because to me being a Jew is a lot more than religious practice. Its who I am. Then I read the information about close relatives and noticed that my fathers name wasnt on there, nor were the names of any cousins on my fathers side of the family. At that point, I realized that some rumors Id heard when I was very young, maybe 5 or 6 years old, were true. The man who raised me was not my biological father. In reality, I was the product of an affair my mother had with our family physician.

I had at times wondered, especially during adolescence, when I wanted to be part of any family but my own, if that was actually the case. But for the most part I didnt think much about it. I simply decided that my father was the man who raised me, and then I pushed it out of my mind. Until suddenly, at 58 years old, I had proof that he was not my biological father.

Needless to say, both Wendy and I were emotionally buffeted by this information. At the same time, however, both of us felt that our DNA results confirmed something wed always, on some level, felt and known about ourselves. Wendy says she was often mistaken, as both a child and an adult, as Jewish, so the results made a lot of sense. As for me, well, Id always felt that maybe Id been dropped off by aliens into a family where I didnt belong. So we both knew, even though we didnt know. Until we knew.

Wendy says that initially she was angry with her mother for never telling her the truth, even though she understands that her mother was of a generation that kept secrets to protect both themselves and their children. She says, The story was always that I got my eyes from my mom, my mouth from my dad, and so on. And now I know that a big part of that story is not true.

My initial response was to take down all the pictures I had of the man who raised me and give them to other family members. I just didnt want those pictures, which Id been looking at forever, around the house. I also found myself rethinking aspects of my entire childhood. To be fully honest, despite 27 years oftherapy, I dont have a clue about what to do with this information and how I feel about it. Im not sure I want to deal with it at all.

One thing I do find interesting, or maybe just ironic, is that my entire professional career has focused on helping menwith problematic romantic and sexual behaviors, including doctors, lawyers, and other professionals whove crossed sexual boundaries men like my biological father, a doctor who had an affair (likely for a decade or more, both before and after my birth) with my mother, his patient.

Despite the ongoing emotional confusion and challenges, both Wendy and I are glad we took the DNA tests, and we would both do it again. Wendy says, Im absolutely glad I know. It puts so many things into perspective. There was a deep knowing that was always there, and now its confirmed. I could easily make the same statement, adding the fact that this knowledge has caused me to appreciate and to invest more deeply than ever in the existing friendships and familyrelationships that I have.

If you have a DNA testing story, please share it in the comments section below. Wendy I and would both like to hear from others with similar experiences.

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DNA Testing: Expect the Unexpected - Psychology Today


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