This is a lot for even those who have
followed Carlson’s career arc over the last few years to process. But
what many people failed to see was that the far bigger news event of the
week confirmed that for all of their differences, Carlson and his pals
have a lot more in common with New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani
than they do with the overwhelming majority of Republicans and
conservatives.
That was confirmed when Carlson’s newsletter
greeted the election of a Democratic Socialist as the head of America’s
largest city by highlighting the fact that a minority of New York Jews
voted for Mamdani. From Tucker’s point of view, Mamdani isn’t so bad
because the new mayor of Gotham shares his loathing for Israel and a
willingness to tolerate Jews, only if they renounce a key part of Jewish
identity and Judaism that is bound to the land of Israel. That fits the
views of the minority of left-wing Jewish voters in deep-blue New York
who cast ballots for an antisemite because they likely see it as in
keeping with their universalist values and distaste for sectarian
elements of their heritage.
Not ‘America First’
The similarly minded American Conservative magazine published a piece
the same day, also excusing Mamdani because they considered his
obsession with destroying the Jewish state to be just fine. According to
its convoluted reasoning, Israel’s war against Islamists has nothing to
do with the threat to America from the same groups because the Jews
aren’t really part of the West and ought to be cut loose by Washington.
Like Carlson, the magazine is primarily interested in justifying
anything and anyone who will break up the U.S.-Israel relationship. For
them, America’s alliance with the only democracy in the Middle East is
peculiarly obnoxious in a way that ties with, for example, Tucker’s
Muslim Brotherhood-sponsoring friends from Qatar are not.
This fits in with a growing chorus of
defenders of Carlson on the far right that insist that the only reason
why the commentator is being criticized is because of his foreign-policy
views, rather than his comfort with or support for Jew-hatred.
The truth is that Carlson and others on
the far right aren’t really supporters of Trump’s “America First”
vision. Some characterize their views as “America Only,” though that is a
misnomer. It isn’t strictly speaking isolationist so much as it is just
obsessed with isolating Israel and the Jews. Tucker is perfectly happy
to embrace foreign nations like President Vladimir Putin’s Russia, Iran
or Qatar. It’s just Israel—and its Jewish and evangelical Christian
supporters—that get up his nose and cause him to label them “heretics”
suffering from a “brain virus.”
Others on the antisemitic right, like comedian/podcaster Dave Smith,
are blaming Israel and the Jews for the Republican setbacks on Election
Day, improbably theorizing that the GOP would have done better in blue
states like California, Virginia and New Jersey if only Trump hadn’t
bombed Iran or supported the Jewish state’s fight for survival against
genocidal Islamist terrorists. As always, Jews are the perfect
scapegoats for whatever upsets those who are obsessed with them.
In many ways, this worldview is a far cry
from that of Mamdani, who is a creature of the anti-American mindset of
his parents and other ideological mentors who see the world through the
prism of toxic left-wing ideas, such as critical race theory,
intersectionality and settler-colonialism.
Blaming the Jews
It also needs to be restated that the
crisis of antisemitism on the left is, at least at this point, far more
serious than on the right. Democratic officeholders like Mamdani and
congressional progressives, who appear to be the party’s future, are the
ones who have turned on Israel and stand ready to defend the open
Jew-hatred of the “globalize the intifada” mobs. Among conservatives,
there are some podcasters (however huge their audiences) and people
working at a think tank who embrace views that are anti-Israel and
increasingly antisemitic. But the overwhelming majority of Republican
officeholders remain ardent supporters of the Jewish state. As
journalist Batya Ungar-Sargon wrote in The Free Press,
the argument on the right is largely one between influencers who want
clicks on the internet and those who want votes for Republicans and, for
that reason, shun antisemites.
In yet another confirmation of the
horseshoe theory of politics, the far left and the far right share an
antipathy for Israel and the Jews. Both see them as the linchpin of
whatever they believe is the world’s greatest problem. For Mamdani,
eradicating the Jewish state is the key to achieving the dismantling of
worldwide imperialism and capitalism. For Carlson, isolating Israel and
anathematizing its Jewish and Christian supporters as being guilty of
“dual loyalty” will enable the United States to reach a Christian
nationalist nirvana where no “globalist” forces can spread their malign
influence. That is irrespective of the fact that it is the actual
globalist movement of the left that seeks to undermine American national
sovereignty and erase Israel in the name of woke values.
Such views ought to be relegated to the
fever swamps of the far left and far right, but in the last two years,
since the Hamas-led Palestinian-Arab attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023,
they have gone mainstream.
We already knew that bastions of the left, like elite universities or the newsroom of The New York Times,
had already embraced the falsehood that Israel was an illegitimate
“apartheid” state and mimicked blood libels about it committing
“genocide” because that was in line with woke ideology. What many of us
hadn’t realized until recently was the inroads the right-wing version of
these antisemitic myths had made in conservative circles.
Trouble among youth
Carlson’s cozy interview in which he
helped spread Fuentes’ toxic Jew-hatred and bizarre support for both
Hitler and Stalin was one thing. But as those who listened to the leaked
tape of the Heritage town hall or have seen videos of questions asked at Turning Point USA events asked at the University of Mississippi and Auburn University
of figures such as Vice President JD Vance, or Eric and Lara Trump, the
virus of Jew-hatred is spreading. It’s clear that some young people on
the right now believe that there is something deeply sinister about
American support for the survival of the one Jewish state on the planet.
What makes it even more worrisome is the
talking point being floated in such forums that the U.S.-Israel alliance
is somehow at odds with Christian faith. This makes no sense because
Jews and Christians, as well as supporters of Israel, have a common
cause in defending Judeo-Christian values. It is the woke, often
agnostic left that seeks to tear down the edifice built on the wisdom of
Jerusalem, Athens and Rome that is the foundation of Western
civilization.
This goes beyond the question of whether Vance—the
most likely successor to Trump in the GOP—is or isn’t someone who
shares these views. Rather, it is one about whether the effort to single
out Israel and the Jews as the source of the nation’s problems is
gaining traction among a generation that gets their information about
the world from TikTok and other social media. They have no real
knowledge of the facts about the Jewish state and the false claims
rooted in traditional tropes of Jew-hatred that its supporters are
manipulating Americans against their own interests.
What conservatives, young or old, need to
remember is that the Western values they purport to honor and seek to
defend against the left are as incompatible with the obsessions of
Carlson and the groypers about the Jews as they are with Mamdani’s
democratic socialism and woke opposition to Zionism as a manifestation
of “white” oppression.
Instead of defending right-wing Jew-hatred
masquerading as a defense of America, they should see it as no
different from the toxic myths of the left that also focus on Israel as
the font of the world’s troubles. If not, then both major U.S. political
parties may be heading toward a future in which they will share
unhealthy obsessions with both the Jews and those who hate America and
the West.
1 comment:
Tucker Carlson was never on my television watch list. The Daily Mail isn't on my to read list either.
Post a Comment