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Search resuls for: "Ted Deutch"


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“No president has spoken more forcefully about combating antisemitism than this president,” she said. Since then, Mr. Biden has left it to aides to speak for him, trying to balance the free speech rights of protesters with rejection of violence and antisemitic statements. “Americans have the right to peacefully protest as long as it’s within the law and it’s peaceful,” Ms. Jean-Pierre said. “Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful. “I hope the president speaks as boldly and as forcefully as this moment requires,” Mr. Deutch told Julie Mason on her Sirius/XM radio show.
Persons: Jean, Pierre, Mr, Biden, , , Ms, Pierre said, Ted Deutch, Deutch, Julie Mason, Donald J, Trump, Adolf Hitler Organizations: Columbia University, American Jewish Committee, Mr, Sirius, XM, Republicans, Jewish Locations: Florida
Nearly two-thirds of American Jews feel less secure in the U.S. than they did a year ago, according to a new national survey. The American Jewish Committee, a prominent advocacy organization, conducted the survey last fall just as the Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7. The number of American Jews who say they feel less secure in the U.S. jumped 22% from last year’s survey. The survey released Tuesday found one quarter of American Jews said they have been the target of antisemitism in the past year. Levin, who is not affiliated with the AJC survey, said anti-Jewish hate crimes hit a record high last year in several major cities.
Persons: Ted Deutch, , ” Deutch, Brian Levin, eliminationist, Levin, , SSRS, Israel, it’s, Holly Huffnagle, ” Huffnagle, Biden Organizations: American Jewish Committee, Hamas, U.S, AJC, Associated Press, Center, California State University, San, Democratic, Lilly Endowment Inc, AP Locations: U.S, Israel, San Bernardino, , Pittsburgh
CNN —At least 63% of American Jews said their place in American society is less secure than a year ago, according to a new report released Tuesday by the American Jewish Committee. The share of American Jews who said the status of Jews in the United States has become less secure increased 22 percentage points when compared to last year’s survey. The American Jewish Committee has commissioned a survey on the state of antisemitism in the US annually since 2019. Nearly half of American Jews said they think antisemitism is taken less seriously than other forms of hate and bigotry, according to the survey. That’s compared to 38% of American Jews in 2022, according to the advocacy organization.
Persons: Ted Deutch, , Organizations: CNN, American Jewish Committee, Antisemitism, American Jewish, Defamation League Locations: , America, United States, Israel
By Kanishka SinghWASHINGTON (Reuters) - About two-thirds of Jewish Americans felt less secure in late 2023 than they did a year earlier, according to a survey mostly conducted after the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7 and released on Tuesday. The American Jewish Committee, an advocacy group, said the survey was based on telephone and online interviews from Oct. 5 to Nov. 21. BY THE NUMBERSAbout 63% of Jewish Americans said U.S. Jews were less secure than a year earlier. About 34% said security was the same as in 2022 and 3% felt U.S. Jews were more secure. The survey had 1,528 participants, Jews aged 18 or older, the group said.
Persons: Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, Ted Deutch, Kanishka Singh, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: American Jewish Committee, Palestinian, Americans, The Education Department, Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania Locations: Israel, Gaza, U.S, Washington
CNN —Elon Musk, who spends much of his time on futuristic endeavors, took a step into history on Monday. Like in other entities where an upsurge in antisemitic activity started making headlines, Musk was taking performative action at Auschwitz. It was an effort to appear to be taking action while doing nothing. After his visit to the death camp, Musk appeared at a conference on antisemitism in nearby Krakow, Poland. President Claudine Gay was asked in Congress if calls for genocide against Jews violate Harvard rules against bullying and harassment.
Persons: Frida Ghitis, CNN — Elon Musk, Musk, “ Hitler, , ” Musk, dumbest, George Soros “, Ted Deutch, Elders of Zion, X, , Tucker Carlson, Claudine Gay, Israel “, Israel, he’s “, Alan Garber, Garber, Derek Penslar, Penslar, Larry Summers Organizations: CNN, Washington Post, Politics, Frida Ghitis CNN, Center, Twitter, Defamation, American Jewish Committee, Elders of, Media Matters, Apple, Disney, IBM, Media, Harvard University, Harvard, Jewish, Harvard’s, Jewish Studies Locations: Auschwitz, Israel, Gaza, United States, Krakow, Poland
Insider spoke to family members of those believed to be kidnapped to understand what happens now. He added that the American Jewish Committee's offices in Jerusalem and the US were actively "responding when we receive calls from family members" about missing loved ones. "We started getting WhatsApp messages from family members that Hamas was in the kibbutz," Onn said. But, as for those who were taken, Onn said the family has to hold on to hope during an excruciating time. A plea from loved onesInformation about missing loved ones has been hard to come by, people in Israel told Insider on Sunday and Monday.
Persons: , Jonathan Conricus, Nir Oz, Abbey, Onn, That's, it's, Ted Deutch, Benjamin Netanyahu's, Kenneth Quinn, who's, Quinn, Nahar, Adrienne Neta, Biden, Neta, Rubi Chen, Itay, Chen, Lester Holt, John Kirby, Kirby, Shelly Shem Tov, Omer, Jake Tapper, Shem Tov, Tapper, she'd, Reed Alexander Organizations: Service, Hamas, Israel Defense Forces, US State Department, Israel Defence Forces, American Jewish Committee, Democratic, Jewish, Israel, Reuters, State Department, NBC News, National Security Council, White, United, CNN Locations: Gaza, Israel, American, Herzliya, Tel Aviv, Florida, Jerusalem, Hamas, Washington, United States, Israeli
The head of the Anti-Defamation League said in a post on X on Thursday that he was in touch with Adidas CEO Bjorn Gulden who apologized for his remarks about Kanye West and reiterated the sportswear company's fight to end antisemitism. “I think Kanye West is one of the most creative people in the world,” Gulden said in an episode released Sept. 12. “Very unfortunate, because I don’t think he meant what he said and I don’t think he’s a bad person. In a statement emailed to The Associated Press on Thursday, Adidas confirmed that the company had been in touch with ADL. Almost a year ago, Adidas ended a major partnership with Ye over his statements, discontinued Ye’s line of Yeezy shoes and moved up the planned departure of its CEO.
Persons: Bjorn Gulden, Kanye, Jonathan Greenblatt's, Gulden's, Ye, , Gulden, Greenblatt, , Ted Deutch, David Hamilton Organizations: Defamation League, Adidas, Associated Press, ” Adidas, Jewish, AP Locations: , San Francisco
Elon Musk told the BBC in April that "almost all advertisers have come back to Twitter." Ad revenue from April 1 to the first week of May was down 59% from a year earlier, NYT reported. Brands and agencies continue to limit spending on the platform over misleading and hateful content. While Elon Musk claims that "almost all advertisers have come back to Twitter," some still don't want anything to do with the company's CEO. He has deployed an array of bizarre tweets, from antisemitic conspiracy theories to anti-transgender content and anti-vaccine misinformation.
Persons: Elon Musk, Jason Kint, Musk, Nina Chen, AJ Brown, Chen, Brown, George Soros, Ted Deutch, Twitter Organizations: BBC, Twitter, Brands, Elon, New York Times, Digital, Times, Engineering, Brand, American Jewish Committee
Joe Rogan faced accusations of antisemitism after his latest podcast episode. The CEO of the American Jewish Committee said that Rogan's comments invoked age-old antisemitic tropes. In the latest Spotify show, The Joe Rogan Experience, Rogan defended Democrat Rep. Ilhan Omar. He said in a tweet, "the notion that interest in money is uniquely Jewish is antisemitic garbage." The Joe Rogan Experience podcast was the most listened to on Spotify in 2022, with an average audience of approximately 11 million.
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