Monday, June 08, 2026

  • Monday, June 08, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
I thought that my Jewish Question series was complete - but it turns out that there is more that was needed to be said. The parallels between the antisemitism of the 19th century and today are much sharper and clearer than we had already established. The speech against antisemitism by Mark Carney made last week is a perfect example of how The Jewish Question in Europe looked at Jews.


We have traced the superficial polite framework that operated against Jews from the 1840s onward, through the “enlightened” tier that treated Jewish presence as a serious topic, through the institutional architecture that the UN inherited in the 1970s, and through the contemporary anti-Zionist consensus that experiences itself as the moderate, responsible voice. The argument has been that the polite tier is not the alternative to crude antisemitism but the educated articulation of containment, and that the framework's operators experience themselves as bigotry's opposite because the framework defines itself that way.

But what was  this polite Jewish Question framework actually committed to? The question of “what should we do about our Jews?” is not remotely the same as “how do we protect our minority populations?” 

In  fact, theJewish Question framework was not committed to Jews; it was committed to civilizational order. The Enlightenment West that produced the Jewish Question hated violence, not anti-Jewish bigotry. The bigotry was acceptable in respectable vocabulary, but the violence was not, because the violence embarrassed civilization's claim to be civilized. The framework's response to anti-Jewish violence on Western soil was always to defend Jews from the immediate violence while continuing to share the underlying assumptions that produced. The framework did not have any language to oppose the ideology that produced pogroms. As we have seen, the Jewish Question articulated that same ideology in respectable form, that of course Jews must be treated differently than normal citizens. 

That idea is baked into European thought even in modern times: after the Rue Copernic synagogue bombing in Paris on October 3, 1980 that killed four passersby,  French Prime Minister Raymond Barre said, "This odious attack was aimed at the Jewish community, but it is finally innocent French citizens who were mostly the victims." 

The Jews aren’t innocent and aren’t real citizens, but killing anyone is bad.

We need to examine the difference between polite antisemitism and violent antisemitism.

The two interlocking frameworks

The Jewish Question and antisemitism were not the same framework. They were two related but distinct frameworks operating in coordination. The older underlying antisemitism was the Christian-European tradition of anti-Jewish hatred that had operated through religious teaching, mob violence, expulsions, and legal disability for centuries. The Jewish Question was the polite framework that emerged in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century as the Enlightenment West's response to that older hatred.

Enlightenment Europe was committed to suppressing violence in civic life. Pogroms and mob attacks on Jews violated that commitment. The Jewish Question articulated the educated tier's solution to the problem of anti-Jewish violence: manage Jewish presence carefully enough that the violence would have no occasion to erupt. The framework offered Jews a respectable form of containment — tolerance and even integration, on terms that diminished Jewish corporate distinctiveness, restrained Jewish economic and political influence, and required Jews to demonstrate fitness for civic membership through visible diminishment of Jewish particularity. The framework didn’t solve the bigotry; that remained acceptable and respectable. What the framework was solving was the civilizational embarrassment of the hatred's open violent expression.

The two frameworks coexisted across the nineteenth century in this division of labor. The polite framework operated in respectable journals, parliamentary debates, civic associations, and the developing European universities. The older antisemitism operated in religious teaching, peasant culture, conservative politics, and the streets. The polite framework experienced itself as the alternative to the older antisemitism. The framework's operators understood themselves to be civilized people offering a reasonable accommodation between Jewish presence and Christian-European civic order. The older antisemitism was, in the polite framework's self-understanding, the past that the framework was helping Europe move beyond.

The polite tier articulated the underlying assumption — Jewish presence as a problem requiring management — in vocabulary the educated could accept. The older antisemitism articulated the same assumption in vocabulary the mob could act on. The two registers shared the assumption. The framework's role was to keep the mob's articulation from embarrassing civilization while continuing to validate the assumption through the polite tier's respectable articulation.

The pivot of 1879

The polite framework's political-organizational arm emerged in 1879. In Berlin, a German journalist named Wilhelm Marr founded the Antisemiten-Liga — the League of Antisemites. Marr coined the term Antisemitismus to name what he was building. He chose the word specifically to distinguish his new political movement from older religious anti-Jewish prejudices. The new movement would be scientific rather than theological — based on the racial science that European universities had been developing across the nineteenth century. It would have a program, dues, publications, electoral candidates. It would mobilize mass political activity around the proposition that Jews were the problem and Jewish influence required organized opposition.

Religious antisemitism had treated Jewish difference as something Jews could modify through their own behavior. A Jew who converted to Christianity ceased, in religious antisemitism's terms, to be the problem. Baptism dissolved the religious objection. The polite Jewish Question framework had operated within an implicit version of this assumption — Jews could in theory become acceptable Europeans through sufficient assimilation, religious conversion, or visible diminishment of Jewish particularity. The framework's promise of integration was structurally available because the framework treated Jewish difference as modifiable.

The racial-scientific framework Marr articulated declared that promise void. Jews were a "Semitic race" with hereditary characteristics that could not be modified by religious conversion, cultural assimilation, professional achievement, or civic loyalty. A baptized Jew was still a Jew. A Jew who had married a Christian and produced Christian children remained, biologically, a Jew. The Mendelssohn family that had performed the diminishment program across five generations and produced devout Lutheran descendants was, in the racial framework, still Jewish. The polite framework's bargain — integration through diminishment — was declared ineffective by the new science. Jews had been diminishing themselves for a century, and the result was not their acceptance but, in the racial framework's diagnosis, their growing penetration of European institutions. The polite framework had operated on a false premise. Jewish difference was not modifiable. Therefore Jewish difference required containment by other means.

The polite Jewish Question framework had no coherent response to this  formal antisemitism movement. It wasn’t the old crude religious-based hate; it was based on the latest scientific theories. If Jews really are racially inferior, then treating them as equals is a category error. 

Marr also accomplished a phase transition in social cost. Before 1879, anti-Jewish positions in respectable European discourse had to be hedged or qualified. Marr collapsed that requirement.  He made bigotry acceptable and even righteous. He invited Germans to be proud antisemites. By the mid-1880s, "antisemite" had become a positive self-description in some European political circles. By Lueger's 1897 election as mayor of Vienna, openly antisemitic political identity was a path to political success. The polite tier did not disappear, it would not condone violence based on the new Antisemitismus, but it had no counter-narrative.  The framework's underlying assumption — that Jewish presence required management — remained unchanged. The polite tier's respectability was preserved by the framework's adoption of the era's scholarly idiom.

The organized antisemitic movements spread across central Europe within a decade. Adolf Stoecker reoriented his Christian Social Workers' Party around antisemitic politics. Georg von Schönerer's Pan-German League in Austria adopted antisemitism as a central pillar. The First International Anti-Jewish Congress convened at Dresden in September 1882 to coordinate political strategy across Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Hungary, producing the "Manifesto to the Governments and Peoples of the Christian Nations of the World Threatened by Judaism" — the international template that would shape organized antisemitism for the following six decades. Hermann Ahlwardt was elected to the Reichstag in 1892 on an explicitly antisemitic platform. Édouard Drumont's La France juive of 1886 sold 100,000 copies in its first year and led to the founding of the Ligue antisémitique de France in 1889.

Marr's pamphlet did not merely diagnose the Jewish problem. It proposed the solution. Remove Jewish influence from German life and there would be no more Jewish problem. The pogroms would stop because the cause of the pogroms would be eliminated. The framework was being offered the deal: support our program of managing Jews into political nonexistence, and we will deliver the civilizational order you want.

The first parallel: the antisemites' bargain and the framework's acceptance

On March 1, 1881, Tsar Alexander II was assassinated in St. Petersburg by members of Narodnaya Volya. One conspirator, Hesia Helfman, was Jewish, although the assassination itself was carried out by Russian Christians. The Russian conservative press blamed the Jews within days. Pogroms began in late April 1881 in Yelisavetgrad and spread across more than two hundred Russian communities through the summer. Jewish homes were destroyed, businesses looted, synagogues burned, women raped, at least forty Jews killed in the initial wave. The Russian state's response was the May Laws of 1882, formalizing legal disability against Jews: restricted residence outside the Pale of Settlement, exclusions from professions and education, formal discrimination at state level.

Germany was not spared from anti-Jewish violence in the same period. The Pomeranian Civil War of summer 1881 — anti-Jewish riots that broke out across Pomerania and West Prussia following the burning of the Neustettin synagogue in February 1881 and an inflammatory speech by Ernst Henrici. Anti-Jewish riots in Konitz in 1900. The German police restored order when riots erupted. The German government took no action against the antisemitic political parties that had agitated for the violence. Henrici faced no political consequence for his pre-Neustettin speech. Stoecker continued his career. Marr's Antisemiten-Liga continued to operate.

The educated European response to the Russian pogroms was predictable. The Mansion House meeting at the Lord Mayor of London's residence on February 1, 1882, condemned Russian barbarism. Cardinal Manning, Lord Shaftesbury, the Bishop of London spoke. Similar meetings followed across British cities. A parallel meeting in France brought together Victor Hugo and Baron Alphonse de Rothschild. By mid-February the Mansion House Committee had raised £50,000 in relief funds. The Mansion House Committee funded Jewish emigration from Russia and refused to send refugees back to where they were in danger. They went through the motions of saving Jews from violence. 

The educated European response did not produce any diplomatic consequence for Russia. No European power broke off relations or imposed sanctions over the pogroms. No European government formally pressured the Russian state to stop the violence or to remove the May Laws. The polite framework's response was sympathy, relief funds, and support for emigration. The framework's response was not to combat the ideology that had produced the pogroms or to compel the Russian state to do so. And by the 1890s, the British Conservative response to the wave of Jewish refugees the pogroms had produced was political pressure for legislation restricting Jewish immigration. The 1905 Aliens Act eventually formalized that restriction. The framework's response to anti-Jewish violence had moved from sympathy for refugees to restriction on Jewish escape from the violence within a quarter-century.

This is the framework's diagnostic. The civilized sector expressed official horror at the violence because the violence embarrassed civilization. It provided defense and relief for the Jews immediately in front of the framework because abandoning them would also embarrass civilization. It produced no diplomatic, political, or ideological consequence for the perpetrators or for the system producing them, because combating the ideology would require a different ideology that regarded Jews as equal to other people, and European civilization did not have that ability. And when the response to the violence produced too many Jews seeking the framework's protection, the framework moved toward restricting Jewish movement, because the framework's commitment was to civilizational order rather than to Jews.

The framework was, in effect, accepting the antisemites' bargain. The pogroms had produced violence that embarrassed civilization. The framework responded by tightening containment of Jewish presence — through the May Laws in Russia, through restrictions on Jewish refuge in Britain, through the continued operation of antisemitic political movements across Europe without political consequence. The framework was demonstrating that it would manage Jews more rather than combat the ideology. The antisemites were getting what they wanted: the framework's institutional acceptance that Jewish presence was the variable to be adjusted in response to the violence directed at Jews.

The same bargain operated against Jews in Palestine across three cycles of British policy between 1922 and 1939. The Balfour Declaration of 1917 had committed Britain to facilitating "the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people." Arab violence against Jewish immigrants began almost immediately and intensified with each wave of Jewish arrivals from Europe. The British response to that violence was, at every cycle, to restrict Jewish immigration rather than to combat the ideology producing the violence.

The 1921 Jaffa riots killed nearly one hundred Jews. The British government appointed the Haycraft Commission, which concluded that Arab violence was caused by Jewish immigration and that calming the violence required restricting it. The 1922 Churchill White Paper articulated the response: Jewish immigration would continue but only to the extent of the country's "economic absorptive capacity," a formulation that gave the British administration discretion to limit Jewish arrivals in response to Arab pressure. The 1929 Palestine riots, including the Hebron massacre that killed sixty-seven Jews, produced the Passfield White Paper of 1930, which limited Jewish immigration more severely and was openly anti-Zionist in tone. The Arab Revolt of 1936-1939, sustained Arab political and paramilitary violence against the Jewish presence in Palestine, produced the MacDonald White Paper of May 1939, which capped Jewish immigration at 75,000 over five years and then required Arab consent for any further Jewish entry to Palestine.

When you cannot articulate a reason for Jews to be treated like other humans, you cannot combat the antisemites. The results were catastrophic. 

The 1939 White Paper closed off Palestine to European Jews as the Nazi regime was beginning the systematic destruction of European Jewry. The framework's response to Arab violence against Jews in Palestine had been the same response it had given to Russian violence against Jews in 1881 and to German violence against Jews in the 1880s: official horror at the violence, no political consequence for the perpetrators, and restriction on Jewish movement to remove what the framework treated as the cause of the violence. By 1939 the framework had restricted Jewish refuge in Britain through the Aliens Act, restricted Jewish refuge in Palestine through the three White Papers, and even the  comparatively liberal United States restricted Jewish immigration, turning away the St. Louis and similar refugee ships. The framework's commitment to managing Jewish presence had become global. There was nowhere left for European Jews to escape to.

The Holocaust didn’t change the underlying logic that the Europeans used in dealing with Jews. The Western response to Palestinian terror in the 1960s and 1970s shows this clearly.. In September 1972, Palestinian terrorists from Black September murdered eleven Israeli athletes and coaches at the Munich Olympics. A wave of airliner hijackings ran from 1968 through the mid-1970s. The Lod Airport massacre struck in May 1972, the Ma'alot school massacre in May 1974, the Kiryat Shmona massacre in April 1974. The Sabena flight hijacking and the El Al hijacking to Entebbe in 1976 followed the same pattern. Each was organized political violence directed at Jews and at Jewish-state representatives.

The Western response operated the framework's pattern. Official horror at the violence was paired with sympathy for Israeli victims and increased security at Jewish institutions and airports across Europe, alongside no diplomatic, political, or ideological consequence for the system producing the violence. The 1973 oil shock produced a European pivot toward Arab alignment. European governments cut covert deals with terrorist organizations to protect European territory from further attacks — French intelligence reached understandings with Palestinian groups, German officials agreed to release captured terrorists in exchange for hostages, and Italian arrangements allowed Palestinian operatives passage through Italian territory in exchange for promises not to operate against Italian targets. The 1974 Resolution 3236 articulated the Question of Palestine and named the Palestinian people's "inalienable rights" without naming the violence committed in those rights' name. The 1975 Resolution 3379 declared Zionism racism. The 1975 Resolution 3376 established the permanent UN architecture for advancing the Question of Palestine.

1975 is the structural equivalent of 1882. The framework's response to anti-Jewish violence was to formally institutionalize containment of Jewish national legitimacy rather than to defend Jews against the violence. The May Laws contained Jewish presence in Russia after the pogroms. The 1975 resolutions contained Jewish national presence in the international system after Palestinian terror. Both responses framed the victims as having responsibility for the violence. Both used the political moment of violence against Jews to enact what the framework's underlying assumptions had been pursuing all along. The framework was accepting the antisemites' contemporary bargain in updated form: manage Israeli national distinctiveness, and we will deliver the civilizational order you want.

The Jewish recognition

The Jewish recognition came immediately after the 1881 pogroms. Leon Pinsker had been an assimilationist Russian Jewish physician who believed in emancipation through integration. The pogroms changed his view. In 1882, Pinsker published Auto-Emancipation, anonymously in German, arguing that the antisemitism Jews faced was not a transitional prejudice that would dissolve through Jewish good behavior. It was an irrational social pathology that would only intensify as Jews tried harder to assimilate. The only response was Jewish national self-determination.

The same year in Vienna, a nineteen-year-old law student named Nathan Birnbaum founded Kadimah — the first Jewish nationalist student association in Austria. Birnbaum was responding to organized antisemitism operating on Austrian campuses through Schönerer's Pan-German movement and the antisemitic student societies that excluded Jews. In 1885 Birnbaum founded the journal Selbst-Emancipation, taking its name from Pinsker's pamphlet. Between 1885 and 1894, in the journal's pages, Birnbaum coined the terms "Zionist" and "Zionism." Theodor Herzl reached the same conclusion through observation of the Dreyfus trial. Der Judenstaat in 1896 articulated what Pinsker had reached in 1882 and Birnbaum had been refining since: Jewish life in Europe under the framework's terms was impossible because the framework's underlying commitments were not to Jews.

The recognition was structural. The polite framework would defend Jews from immediate violence because the violence embarrassed civilization. The framework would not combat the ideology producing the violence because the framework's polite tier articulated that ideology. The framework would accept the antisemites' bargain repeatedly because the framework's commitment to civic order would always be served by managing Jewish presence more rather than by combating the hatred. The Jewish answer to a framework that refused Jewish equality was Jewish sovereignty in a Jewish state. Jews could not be safe within the framework's terms because the framework's terms were not committed to Jewish equality. Jewish safety required Jewish national-political existence outside the framework's reach.

The contemporary Jewish recognition is reaching the same conclusion through the events of the past two and a half years. The polite anti-Zionist framework's response to the October 7 attack has been the structural equivalent of the polite framework's response to the Russian pogroms. Sympathy in the immediate hours, expression of official horror, increased security at Jewish institutions in Western countries, and then pivot to containment of Israeli response, inversion of victim and perpetrator, and drift toward justifying the violence. The Jewish recognition that this is what the framework structurally does has been accumulating since October 7, in the same way the recognition that produced Zionism accumulated after 1879. The framework cannot be relied upon to protect Jews. 

The second parallel: Dreyfus and Durban

The polite framework's distinction from openly antisemitic political activity was tested again in France in 1894. Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a French Jewish military officer, was wrongly convicted of treason on the basis of forged evidence. The conviction was supported by Drumont's La Libre Parole and the openly antisemitic press. The polite French educated tier, asked whether it would defend a wrongly framed Jewish officer or accept the conviction as evidence that Jewish presence required management, divided. A substantial portion of the polite tier accepted the framing. The defense was led by Émile Zola, who wrote J'accuse in January 1898, and a small coalition of Jewish and non-Jewish dissenters who were treated as outside the educated mainstream for taking the position. Dreyfus was eventually exonerated in 1906, twelve years after the original conviction. The polite framework's distinction from openly antisemitic legal action had been visibly tested and visibly weakened.

This was Herzl's recognition. He covered the trial as a journalist for the Neue Freie Presse. He saw the educated tier of supposedly emancipated France default to the side of the framing rather than the side of the framed Jewish officer. He recognized that the polite framework's commitment to opposing antisemitism was conditional on the antisemitism remaining at distance. When the antisemitism became operational against a specific Jew in the form of legal action, the polite framework participated.

Durban 2001 is the structural equivalent. The UN World Conference Against Racism convened in Durban, South Africa in late August and early September 2001. The official conference's NGO Forum, attended by approximately seven thousand activists representing some three thousand organizations, was the international gathering where organized anti-Zionist activists coordinated political strategy. The NGO Forum produced a declaration calling Israel an "apartheid state" engaged in "racist crimes against humanity including ethnic cleansing, acts of genocide." It called for "the elimination of the Jewish racist state." Antisemitic pamphlets including the Protocols of the Elders of Zion were distributed at the conference. Jewish delegates were harassed. The Israeli and American delegations walked out.

The polite anti-Zionist framework did not pull back from Durban. The world’s most respected human rights organizations signed the NGO Forum’s final statement, with the pretense that they don’t agree with the most extreme bigotry but not lifting a finger to force the issue. The "Durban Strategy" — delegitimize Israel through international institutions, establish the apartheid analogy as the framework's primary contemporary vocabulary, coordinate civil-society organizations across continents — became the framework's program. Human Rights Watch declared Israel an "apartheid state" in 2021. Amnesty International issued the same declaration in 2022. In both cases they, like Marr, invoked the most modern tools of research and law to come to their conclusions, which are no less bigoted than Marr’s. The framework's polite tier had absorbed the language that organized activists had introduced at Durban. The framework's distinction from openly anti-Jewish political activity had been tested at Durban and had visibly weakened. Just like with Marr, Jews were considered less than human and therefore not worthy of the protection of human rights organizations like Amnesty and HRW.

This was the contemporary Herzl moment in compressed form. Jews who watched what happened at Durban and watched the polite framework's subsequent absorption of the Durban program reached the same recognition that Herzl reached through Dreyfus. The polite framework's commitment to opposing antisemitism was conditional. When the anti-Zionism became operational in the form of openly eliminationist political programs, the polite framework didn’t protest - it participated.

The third parallel: October 7 as entire play compressed

What Dreyfus and Durban each took years to demonstrate has run in the eighteen months from  October 7, 2023. The polite framework's complete response cycle to anti-Jewish violence has played out in compressed time, visible to anyone who watched.

Stage one was the immediate response on October 7 and 8, 2023. Some of the polite framework expressed official horror at the Hamas atrocities. Editorials condemned the violence. Government officials offered sympathy to Israel. Universities issued statements deploring the loss of life. The polite framework performed the standard educated-tier response to violence against Jews: official horror, ritual condemnation, professional sympathy. This was the Mansion House meeting compressed to seventy-two hours.

Stage two emerged within days. The same framework that had performed official horror on October 7 began, by October 9 and 10, to question whether Israel's right of self-defense extended to the operations that would be required to prevent another such attack. By October 12, major Western media outlets were running prominent coverage of Palestinian suffering in Gaza before Israel had begun any major ground operations. By late October, the framework's vocabulary had shifted from condemning Hamas to demanding Israeli "proportionality" and "restraint." Within three weeks of the worst single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, the framework was treating Israeli military response as the primary concern requiring international management. This was the pivot from sympathy to containment that took the polite framework decades to perform in the nineteenth century.

Stage three operated through 2024. The polite framework's discourse moved from "Israel has the right to defend itself but must be proportionate" to "Israel is committing genocide in Gaza." Major human rights organizations adopted the genocide framing. The International Court of Justice entertained the case. South Africa, with backing from major Western progressive constituencies, formally accused Israel of genocide. The framework had completed the inversion: the Jews who had been the recipients of unambiguous genocidal violence on October 7 were now characterized in the framework's most respectable institutional vocabulary as the perpetrators of genocide.

Stage four is operating now. The framework is increasingly characterizing October 7 itself as legitimate resistance, justified response to Israeli policy, or simply not as bad as the original framing suggested. Academic articles defend the attacks as legitimate decolonial action. University students celebrate the attacks at protests. The "Globalize the Intifada" chant operates at scale. Some progressive voices have moved from condemning Hamas to questioning whether Hamas committed the atrocities at all. In some circles, Hamas is now more respected than Jews are - just as Marr’s antisemitic movement was respected more than Jews were in 1880s Europe, which led to actual violence that the polite framework had few tools to combat. . The October 7 framework has shed its initial fiction of being against the violence and moved toward justifying it, just as we’d seen in the 19th century and in British Mandate Palestine. 

The “cycle of violence”

The contemporary framework has refined the antisemites' bargain into its most ingenious form. The bargain offered in the 1880s was crude: get rid of the Jews and the violence stops. The bargain Marr offered required the framework to accept its own anti-Jewish character openly, which the framework's polite tier could not do without losing its respectability. The contemporary bargain solves this problem through the formulation "cycle of violence."

The framework is still officially committed to suppressing violence. Anti-Jewish violence violates that commitment and embarrasses civilization. Jewish self-defense against that violence also produces violence, in the form of Israeli military operations against the organizations producing the anti-Jewish violence. The framework treats both as "violence" within a single category. Both violate the framework's commitment to civic order. Both must be suppressed.

This formulation does important work the older bargain could not do. The older bargain required the framework to choose between civilizational order and the elimination of Jewish presence. The framework took the bargain repeatedly but had to disclaim it in respectable vocabulary. The "cycle of violence" formulation eliminates the disclaiming requirement. The framework can now oppose Jewish self-defense in the same vocabulary it opposes anti-Jewish violence. Both are violence. Both must end. The framework's commitment to civic order applies uniformly to both. One party being the attacker and the other party being attacked is not relevant. 

What the formulation conceals is that the cycle has a specific variable that the framework can act against. The anti-Jewish violence is treated by the framework as a fact of history or as a response to Israeli actions or as the product of conditions that cannot be addressed directly. The Jewish response to that violence is treated as the choice that can be changed. The framework therefore positions Jewish self-defense as the actionable element of the cycle. If Jews stopped defending themselves — if Israel ceased to exist as a Jewish state and the Jewish national-political existence that requires defense ended — the cycle would end. This is the antisemites' bargain in updated form. Manage Jewish national distinctiveness into political nonexistence, and the violence the framework opposes will stop.

The framework's polite tier does not say "get rid of the Jews." The framework's polite tier says "end the cycle of violence." But the two formulations have the same content because the framework defines the cycle in a way that makes Jewish self-defense the variable to be eliminated. The framework's commitment to civilizational order has not changed. The framework's mechanism for serving that commitment has been updated to be sayable in respectable progressive vocabulary.

There is no space in this framework for Jews to live as anyone else lives. Other peoples are entitled to political existence, national sovereignty, and self-defense. The framework recognizes those rights as ordinary features of civic life. Jews are not granted those rights because granting them would require the framework to actually defend Jews against the hatred directed at them, and that would require the framework to combat the polite tier's own articulation of that hatred. The framework cannot do that without destroying itself. So the framework manages Jews into a category that does not have the rights other peoples have. Jews can be tolerated, but only as a people whose distinctiveness must be diminished. Jews can be defended, but only as individuals whose national-political existence must be contained. The framework's commitment to civic equality stops at the point where Jewish equality would require the framework to oppose its own polite tier.

Defense without combating: the framework's true position

The framework's response to anti-Jewish violence inside Western countries has followed the same pattern as the 1880s response to the Russian pogroms. Western governments have funded increased security at synagogues, Jewish schools, and Jewish community centers. They have established councils to study and measure antisemitism. They have issued statements expressing concern about rising antisemitism in their countries. What they have declined to do is combat the ideology producing the violence.

Let’s revisit the 1980 the Rue Copernic synagogue bombing. A motorcycle bomb had exploded outside the synagogue during Shabbat services as approximately 320 worshippers celebrated five Bar Mitzvahs that weekend. Four people outside the synagogue  were killed and forty-six wounded. The attack, the first deadly attack on Jews in France since the Second World War, was eventually attributed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Prime Minister Raymond Barre, in a television interview the morning after the bombing, described what had happened as "a bomb aimed at Jews worshipping in a synagogue, but struck four innocent Frenchmen who crossed the Rue Copernic." The Jews inside the synagogue had been the bomb's target, but they were a different category of victim — neither "innocent" in the framework's sense nor "Frenchmen" in the framework's sense. The four passersby who happened to die were the framework's actual victims, the ones whose deaths embarrassed civilization. The Jews inside were just Jews who are not the "innocent Frenchmen" whose loss was a bigger tragedy than if the victims would have been the Jewish target. 

The framework's solution was articulated even more clearly to the synagogue's rabbi when he visited the wounded in hospital. He was told to "build your synagogues on the Paris outskirts where they will not endanger innocent Frenchmen." The structural logic was the antisemites' bargain in compressed form. Move the Jews way from where the full citizens live, so that the antisemitic violence will not affect those Frenchmen whose deaths are catastrophic. The framework was not asking for the violence to be combated. The framework was asking the Jews to relocate so that the violence would not affect the true Frenchmen.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's speech at a Toronto synagogue on June 2, 2026, is the contemporary articulation of the same structural position. Carney named the antisemitic incidents — bullets at Jewish schools, firebombs at synagogues, harassment in hospitals, students chased off campus. He provided more security funding for Jewish institutions. He established a council to study and measure antisemitism. He did not name Hamas. He did not name October 7. He did not name anti-Zionism. He did not name a single perpetrator. He treated antisemitism as if it had arrived like weather and the government's role was to distribute umbrellas. The fertile ground that produced the bullets and firebombs went unaddressed because the framework cannot address the fertile ground without recognizing that the framework itself watered it.

The structural articulation of Carney's position was his civic principle that "no Canadian going about their daily life should be held responsible for the actions of any government, wherever they may be." The sentence implicitly accepts the libels against Israel as truth and asks only that Canadian Jews be spared its local consequences. It defends Jews from being held responsible while leaving intact the framework that produces the holding-responsible. The framework's position has not shifted from 1882. Carney is officially horrified at violence, willing to fund relief and defense, but unwilling to combat the ideology that produces the violence because the framework's polite tier shares the ideology's underlying premise that Jewish national presence is the problem requiring management.

The recognition that comes belatedly

The work of recognition is the work of stepping outside frameworks that the era considers serious. The reader of 2026 looks at the 1882 educated tier and sees what the educated tier could not see about itself. The reader of 2076 will look at the 2026 educated tier and see what the 2026 educated tier cannot see about itself.

The recognition is always belated. The polite framework's operators do not recognize themselves while the framework is operating. The recognition comes after the framework's full sequence has run, when the violence has produced the catastrophe the polite framework's underlying assumptions prepared, when the historical record is unambiguous because the catastrophe has occurred. By then the recognition is not preventive but commemorative.

Fifty years from now, the recognition that today's anti-Zionism is antisemitism will be as obvious to educated readers as the recognition that nineteenth-century elite-tier discourse about the Jewish Question was antisemitism is obvious to educated readers now. The framework's polite tier will be visible as the polite face of segregation, no matter how sincerely its participants understood themselves to be the moderate alternative to crude bigotry. The Carney speech of June 2026 will be read the way the Mansion House meeting of February 1882 is read now: as the documentary record of a framework that defended Jews superficially while refusing to combat the ideology producing the violence, and that did so because the framework's own polite tier articulated the same underlying assumptions in its respectable register.

We shouldn’t have to wait fifty or a hundred years to realize that the patterns we are seeing today map to those that animated the Jewish Question in Europe. The recognition does not have to be belated. The historical pattern is documented. The contemporary parallel is documented in compressed time. The reader who has followed this series through five previous essays has been given the analytical apparatus to recognize the framework while it is operating. The polite framework's response to October 7 has run the entire historical pattern in two and a half years. 

Believe the framework. It has been telling you what it is for two hundred years. It is ostensibly against violence but it’s underlying logic is the same today as it was then: Jews are not like us and they must be managed to protect us from being in the crossfire of those who want to kill them.  The underlying belief systems, whether Marxism or settler colonialism or decolonial studies or identity politics or intersectionality or “pro-Palestinian” activism, all either tolerate or encourage antisemitism at a philosophical level, and as long as that is true, no amount of politeness can protect the Jewish people.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

"West Bank" Is a Colonial Imposition
Names matter. Several state legislatures have passed resolutions affirming the use of "Judea and Samaria" and rejecting "West Bank," a modern political term.

After crushing the Bar Kokhba Jewish revolt in the year 135, the Roman Emperor Hadrian renamed Judea and Samaria as the province Syria Palaestina, invoking the Philistines, enemies of Israel, to erase Jewish identification with the land. The name stuck. My Jewish grandfather, born in Palestine, was considered Palestinian. Before 1948, "Palestinian" referred to the Jewish community as well as Arab people. After the Palestine Liberation Organization was established in 1964, "Palestinian" became associated with Arab nationalism.

Rabbi Pinchas Allouche of Scottsdale told the Arizona Legislature: "Language matters, because when you erase names, you erase history; when you erase history, you erase truth; when you erase truth, you delegitimize people; and when you delegitimize people, peace becomes impossible."

In 2024, Toronto adopted indigenous names for new public spaces. Ireland continues to restore traditional Irish names via a 2024 government initiative, the Placenames Committee. Rhodesia became Zimbabwe in 1980, and Swaziland Eswatini in 2018. So, too, should Judea and Samaria be restored. These original names reconnect the land to the history of an indigenous people, including the battle David and Goliath fought in Judea. Erasing Jewish names from Jewish history is a tactic as old as Rome. It didn't work then, and doesn't work now.
The Rise of the UnJews
The long-run future of the diaspora may increasingly replicate the European experience. Before World War II, Europe was home to over half of world Jewry and many of its most creative, dynamic communities; today, it barely contains 10 percent of Jews. At the end of World War II in 1945, there were 3.8 million Jews left on the continent. More than 80 years later, just 1.4 million reside there.

As is the case in the United States, anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism in Europe draw heavily from the educated classes. One study found that 60 percent of German anti-Semitic messages came from well-educated people. As far back as 2018, only a narrow majority (54 percent) of Europeans thought Israel had the right to exist, according to a CNN poll. Public support for Israel in Western Europe has declined rapidly in the years since, with only around one-fifth holding a favorable opinion of the country recently.

Given the wealth and size of the U.S. Jewish community, notably in New York, California, and various urban areas, it may take decades for American Jews to follow the same trajectory as Europe. But as secular, younger Jews rapidly assimilate, French sociologist Georges Friedmann’s half-century-old prophecy of a disappearing diaspora could prove correct. The main exceptions may be the socially self-segregated orthodox. Already, almost two-thirds of Jewish children in New York City are Orthodox.

It’s increasingly likely that, even in New York and Los Angeles--the two main centers of diaspora life--Jewish identity will become essentially Israeli. As early as 2035, according to a report by the U.K.-based Institute for Jewish Policy Research, Israel will become the home to a majority of all Jews, for the first time since early antiquity.

The diminishment of the diaspora—and with it, the extraordinary journey of a dispersed people—could be the lasting legacy of today’s unJews. (h/t KEN J BROWNSHER)
Andrew Fox: Haaretz: information warfare, not journalism
There’s a running joke among Gaza War veterans that people who’ve never been to Gaza read Haaretz to learn what’s going on there; those who’ve been there read Haaretz when they’re in the mood for some escapist fiction. For those of us who’ve fought in Gaza, the pattern of Haaretz war stories has become familiar: the author typically takes a kernel of truth, removes essential details and highlights unimportant ones, painting a fuzzy, incoherent picture whose only coherent thread is that the IDF is barbaric. Haaretz’s latest hit about IDF veterans’ ‘Moral Injuries’ is a case in point.

The very term is controversial. In fact, the article itself admits that the term doesn’t exist in the American Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Illness, nor is it recognized by the Israeli Defense Ministry. But the author made sure to bury that inconvenient fact deep in the article and, just to play it safe, he turns that weakness into a strength by quoting an unnamed source who insinuates that the IDF does not recognize the term because that would effectively involve a public admission that the IDF is not nearly as moral as advertised. That’s right. Haaretz published a piece on a mental illness that may or may not exist and used the very dubiousness of that illness’ existence as proof that the IDF is wicked.

The reason the author insists on using that dubious term is that it sounds so bad. The term ‘moral injury’ conjures an image of a guilt-ridden soldier who is crippled by the knowledge of the atrocities he has committed. The article’s opening story reinforces that image by describing a man who is so horrified by his own wickedness he can’t even bear to look himself in the mirror and then goes on to describe an ex-sniper who wet his bed because of nightmares. It carefully avoids delving into the psychology behind that sense of guilt, leaving the reader to assume that those veterans feel evil because they are evil.

However, the reality about guilt is much more complicated, especially in the context of trauma. The broader context is that a sense of guilt is a natural reaction to trauma. It is perfectly natural to rehash terrible events that have happened to us and to think how we could have handled them differently, both to learn and to regain a sense of control – a feeling that “I’ll be ready for it next time.” And once people start focusing on what they could have or should have done, it is easy to feel guilty for not having chosen that supposedly correct course of action in real time. That is one reason sexual abuse survivors often feel guilty about being abused. I felt guilty when a platoon mate of mine got injured in Gaza, even though I knew I had done everything I could for him. A Nova survivor told me he felt a similar sense of guilt about his surviving while so many of his friends did not. In other words, a sense of guilt does not necessarily imply moral guilt. But casual readers don’t make that distinction. And the author weaponizes that.

Sunday, June 07, 2026

  • Sunday, June 07, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Palestinian terrorists attack families going about their lives. They blow up young people heading out to dance. They detonate a roadside bomb at 7:30 in the morning beside a bus carrying schoolchildren, killing a teacher and a maintenance worker and maiming children badly enough to cost them their legs.

The killings shock the world. Before Israel has launched a single major operation in response, the world's leading human rights organizations endorse a declaration branding guilty of "apartheid" and of of "acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing," and demanding the restoration of the UN resolution equating Zionism with racism.

2023? No, 2001.

The final declaration at the NGO Forum of the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance in Durban, released on September 3, 2001, accused Israel of "acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing" as well as "apartheid and other racist crimes against humanity." 

The Second Intifada had begun only a year earlier. In the months before Durban, the attacks increased in pace and deadliness. A suicide bomber killed twenty-one people and wounded one hundred and twenty outside Tel Aviv's Dolphinarium discotheque in June 2001, most of them teenagers waiting to get in.

The Sbarro massacre occurred a mere three weeks before Durban: a Hamas bomber walked into a pizzeria packed with families on a school-holiday afternoon at the corner of King George Street and Jaffa Road and detonated a charge studded with nails and bolts, killing sixteen people, seven of them children, and wounding about a hundred and thirty.

Sbarro was the visible peak of a sustained campaign rather than an isolated horror. It came at the end of a two-week effort to concentrate terror in Jerusalem, and within days a suicide bombing at the Wall Street Café in Kiryat Motzkin wounded twenty-one while a car bomb near the Russian Compound in downtown Jerusalem carried a second, larger device that had to be dismantled before it could kill. The bombs were built to maximize the slaughter of civilians, packed with hardware whose only function is to tear through human bodies.

It wasn't as if the world's media ignored the terror spree. Full page stories described the horror of the attacks. The NGO Forum decided that the very moment when Jews were being targeted for death for being Jews was a good time to accuse Israel of genocide. 

Even though blatant antisemitism was prevalent in Durban, including the poster shown here, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch had both signed the Durban document and both had distanced themselves from its worst language at the time, with Amnesty noting it did not condone the wording while accepting the declaration as "a largely positive document." By any definition, Hamas and the other terror groups were guilty of genocide— but this didn't bother the two leading human rights organizations, who claimed they didn't agree with every sentence in the final declaration but decided its blatant antisemitism was not enough to decline signing it. 

Israel had not even begun a campaign to go after the terror groups at this time. The idea that Israel was guilty of these crimes in September 2001 while its citizens were being ripped apart by bombs aimed at children is a bizarre joke. 

But Durban wasn't a joke. It was a blueprint.

The drafting and the trial were separated by twenty years of patient construction. Israeli Apartheid Week began on a single Canadian campus in 2005, reached forty cities by 2009, and passed two hundred by 2013, carrying the apartheid charge into progressive spaces as settled vocabulary rather than contested claim. The activist fringe supplied the repetition, and "apartheid," "genocide," and "settler colonialism" migrated from the mock walls on university quads into the working language of the institutions that had once kept their distance. What began as a slogan students chanted became a premise educated people no longer thought to question.

Amnesty and HRW read the genocide charge in 2001, flagged it, and signed anyway. Then they spent two decades methodically arriving at it. Human Rights Watch in 2021 and Amnesty in 2022 issued reports declaring Israel guilty of apartheid, the very term the 2001 declaration had assigned. After October 2023, Amnesty completed the sequence: its December 2024 report named the verdict in its title — "Israel's Genocide Against Palestinians in Gaza" — and reached it, by the account of Amnesty's own Israel branch, as a "predetermined" conclusion, written by the international office without the Israeli branch's involvement and resting on a looser definition of genocidal intent than the International Court of Justice has ever accepted. The conclusion came first, and the evidence was gathered to fit it.

The cynicism of accusing Israel of genocide while it was a victim of weekly genocidal acts was only surpassed in October 2023, when it took a mere hours after the horrors of October 7 for the same Israel haters and antisemites to accuse Israel of what it had just been a victim of. It is herd to escape the conclusion that the charges are deliberately intended to remove any possibility that the world would be sympathetic to Jews for being brutally murdered. The bodies were not yet counted before the massacre was reframed as resistance and the retaliation pre-labeled genocide.

 Durban built the frame in 2001, and October 2023 supplied the hook it had been waiting for. The function of the genocide charge was never to describe what Israel does. It was to establish, in advance, that whatever is done to Israelis, they had it coming.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Sunday, June 07, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
In my Substack, I have been serializing a series on How to Think. The first three chapters were posted fully, starting with this one the full chapter is behind a paywall for my Substack subscribers. If you are an EoZ subscriber through PayPal or Patreon, I can give you access to my full Substack articles, let me know. 


Recognizing Frames

Chapter 4 of How to Think




In late 1976, New York City residents grew increasingly concerned over a crime wave against the elderly. Three daily newspapers and five local television stations reported a surge of violence — muggings, robberies, assaults — targeting senior citizens. The coverage ran for approximately seven weeks, eventually reaching national outlets. Advocacy organizations mobilized to deal with the problem. Legislators discussed how to protect the elderly.

There was only one problem. The crime wave did not exist.

A sociologist named Mark Fishman, who was studying newsrooms at the time, noticed that while every story reported was accurate, there was no increase in crimes against seniors at all.  He compared the coverage to the actual NYPD statistics and found that the numbers did not support the claimed surge. Some categories of crime against elderly victims were the same as in previous year, and others were actually decreasing. The spike was in the coverage, not in the crime.

Here’s what happened: One station ran a story on an elderly victim. Because it performed well, editors at competing outlets looked for similar incidents — and found them, because there will always be crimes against the elderly (and every other demographic) every day in a city of eight million people. As more stations and papers picked up the theme, the theme became self-reinforcing: an incident that would previously have been a brief item on an inside page became front-page news because it fit the established wave. Each individual story was accurate but the pattern was a fiction. The distortion was a byproduct of incentive structures and competitive news dynamics in the days before algorithms.The fiction was constructed entirely from true facts, selected and arranged inside a frame. 

The frame was the story, not the individual incidents.But it is difficult to notice the frame. 

This is the story of how frames work. In this case, it was not deliberate. But fifty years later, framing stories has become an industry in itself, and nowadays it is deliberate. Framing with an agenda is much more serious. 


The Frame Is Always There

The frame is the invisible architecture of the argument. By the time you are evaluating claim a frame has already limited how you are to think about it. The frame helps determine what question you think you are answering, what comparisons feel natural, who the sympathetic parties are, and what a reasonable response would look like. Most people spend their analytical energy evaluating what sits inside the frame. This chapter is about the frame itself.

In the summer of 2020, there were many protests for racial justice after the George Floyd incident.Imagine two news outlets covering a (real) study on the protests:

About 93% of racial justice protests in the US have been peaceful, a new report finds

Report: Over 15 violent riots erupt every week in the US

Both those headlines are true (the first is actually how CNN reported on the study.) The report counted 10,200 protests of which 220 were violent - gunfire, arson, vandalism, clashes with police. Each news story could be completely accurate, and the only difference is the frame. And in each case, the frame is what is manipulating you, not the story itself. 

This is not a trick reserved for propagandists. Every journalist frames every story, consciously or not. Every witness frames their account, usually without noticing. The frame is not an impurity in the argument — it is the water the argument swims in. The question is not whether you are receiving information inside a frame. You always are. The question is whether you can recognize the frame to begin with.


Manufactured Frames: The Word Engineers

There is an entire profession devoted to manufacturing frames, and it operates in the open.

Frank Luntz is its most candid practitioner. A Republican political consultant, Luntz built his career on a single insight: the same policy, described in different language, produces measurably different public responses — and the difference is large enough to change election outcomes and legislative votes. He ran focus groups, tested language, and handed politicians the words that would win.

His most famous contribution is the renaming of the estate tax as the "death tax." The estate tax, as it existed in the 1990s, applied to roughly the wealthiest two percent of Americans at death — not a constituency that generates populist sympathy. "Estate" sounds like old money; it implies something rarefied and distant. "Death" is universal. Everyone dies. Nobody wants to be taxed at death. Luntz's own focus groups demonstrated something remarkable: people would simultaneously oppose a "death tax" and support an "estate tax," unaware they were describing the same thing.Luntz didn’t change the policy, just the frame. Within years, legislation had significantly reduced what had been known as the estate tax and temporarily eliminated it entirely — driven in no small part by polling data showing overwhelming opposition to the “death tax” among people who would never pay it.

Luntz applied the same method everywhere he could. He promoted the terminology "climate change" instead of "global warming" — the former sounds gradual and natural, the latter carries connotations of crisis and urgency. He used "government takeover" instead of "health care reform." 

Luntz also would choose either "Illegal alien" or "undocumented immigrant," depending on which side of the immigration debate one were paying Luntz to help. He worked both sides of the immigration terminology war at different times. He was engineering emotional responses, and he would engineer them in whichever direction the client required. Framing was the game, not impartiality.

Let’s look closer at the different examples of immigration terminology.  "Illegal alien" is the statutory term — it appears in federal law and Supreme Court opinions. Its advocates argue it is precise: the person has violated immigration law, the word "illegal" names that fact, the word "alien" is the legal designation. Its opponents argue that calling a person "illegal" defines their entire existence by a legal status, rather than naming the act, and that "alien" is dehumanizing. They prefer "undocumented immigrant," which centers the administrative circumstance rather than the legal violation. "Undocumented" is accurate in one sense — many people in this category do lack documentation — but it omits that the absence of documentation is itself the consequence of an illegal act, which is why critics call it a euphemism. Both camps chose their terms to produce a particular emotional response in listeners and to preload the policy conclusion. The person who has absorbed "illegal alien" is already being asked to think about law enforcement and border security. The person who has absorbed "undocumented immigrant" is already being asked to think about bureaucratic obstacles and human vulnerability. By the time either person reaches the policy question, the frame has done substantial work.

Abortion terminology does the same thing with even greater efficiency. "Pro-life" and "pro-choice" are both names chosen by their movements that hold those positions, and both are examples of pure frame engineering. Nobody is "anti-life." Nobody is "anti-choice." Each label claims the universally desirable value and assigns it to one side, making the other side's position implicitly the negation of something good. The underlying disagreement — about when personhood begins, how to weigh competing rights, what the law should say — is real and serious. The label names for it were engineered to avoid engaging any of that, and to win the framing contest before the argument starts. Opinion polling on abortion shifts measurably depending on whether survey questions use "pro-life," "anti-abortion," "pro-choice," or "pro-abortion-rights" as the descriptor. The substance of the question is identical. The frame moves the answers.

"Right to work" is an older and more instructive example because the engineering is so transparent in retrospect. The term was coined in 1941 by a Dallas newspaper editorial writer and weaponized by a political organizer named Vance Muse, who wanted to weaken labor unions in the South. Laws prohibiting mandatory union membership — which is what "right to work" actually describes — sound, under that name, like a protection of individual liberty. A worker has the right to work without being forced to join an organization. Martin Luther King Jr. understood what the frame was doing and named it: the law's actual purpose was to destroy collective bargaining by allowing workers to receive union benefits without paying union dues, undermining the financial base of unions without formally outlawing them. "Right to work," as King put it, was "a law to rob us of our civil rights and job rights." The frame had converted a policy designed to weaken workers' collective power into a protection of individual freedom — and it worked, passing in fourteen states within six years of the term's invention.

The military euphemism factory operates on the same principle but with higher stakes. "Collateral damage" entered American military vocabulary during the Gulf War as the standard term for civilian casualties. "Enhanced interrogation techniques" was the Bush administration's term for what the relevant law defines as torture. "Extraordinary rendition" was the term for kidnapping terror suspects and delivering them to other countries for interrogation. "Kinetic military action" was the Obama administration's term for a military campaign in Libya, used specifically to avoid the legal and political implications of calling it a war. Each of these phrases describes something real in language chosen to prevent the listener from forming a mental picture of what is actually happening. Civilian deaths, torture, kidnapping, and war are things people have visceral reactions to. Yet people can process "collateral damage," "enhanced interrogation," "extraordinary rendition," and "kinetic military action" without such a reaction. The engineering is deliberate, documented in government communications, and directed not at enemies but at the home population whose support the government needed to maintain.

George Orwell named this project in 1946: "Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind." He was writing about totalitarianism, but the technique has proven equally useful in democracies, where maintaining public support requires managing what the public will think about.

A website called Communicating Palestine, published by a pro-Palestinian advocacy organization and aimed at journalists, academics, activists, and policymakers, describes its framing process explicitly. Most framing guides of this kind circulate internally; this one is public and even highlights the phrase “Framing Palestine” which makes it a rare opportunity to examine the mechanism without having to infer it.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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