Why Did the
Clintons Share a Stage with Farrakhan?
By Alan Dershowitz September 18, 2018 , 7:00 am
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Imagine President Trump being invited to speak at the
funeral of a white singer whom he admired (say Ted Nugent, if he were to pass),
and he saw that David Duke was on stage in a place of honor. Imagine the
reaction of the media if Trump actually gave a speech in the presence of David
Duke. Well, former president Clinton gave a speech in the presence of Louis
Farrakhan. (Hillary Clinton was sitting off to the right but did not speak.)
Why would Bill Clinton, a good man and a friend of the
Jewish people, do this? There are several possible answers:
1) He was taken by surprise at Farrakhan’s presence and
didn’t want to do anything that would disrupt the service. But the
shoe-on-the-other-foot question remains: Would he have acted similarly if it
had been Duke rather than Farrakhan?
2) Clinton doesn’t believe that refusing to sit alongside
a bigot is the proper response to bigotry. Again, the shoe-on-the-other-foot
question: Would he sit alongside Duke?
3) Clinton doesn’t regard Farrakhan as comparable to
Duke. But that is simply wrong – Farrakhan is a blatant antisemite with an
enormous following.
(4) Farrakhan’s antisemitism is not as serious a problem
as Duke’s white supremacy. But without getting into comparative assessments of
bigotry, antisemitism is surely a serious and growing problem.
Farrakhan is at least as bigoted as Duke. This is a man
who only last year called Jews members of the “Synagogue of Satan” and claimed
that Jesus called the Jews “the children of the devil.” Farrakhan is also a
homophobe who claimed that “Jews [are] responsible for all of this filth and
degenerate behavior that Hollywood is putting out turning men into women and
women into men.” In the past, Farrakhan delivered similar remarks, claiming,
“When you want something in this world, the Jew holds the door” and calling
Hitler “a very great mean.” He’s also a racist, claiming, “White people deserve
to die.”
Many younger people on the Left may not know the extent
of Farrakhan’s bigotry, or they may condone it by claiming that he did a
service to black communities.
FOR EXAMPLE, Tamika Mallory, co-founder of the Women’s
March, called Farrakhan “GOAT (greatest of all time).” And Democratic National
Committee deputy chair Keith Ellison once called him “a role model for Black
youth.”
Earlier this year a picture of Barack Obama smiling with
Farrakhan emerged. (Although I supported Obama both in 2008 and 2012, I would
not have campaigned as enthusiastically for him had I known about this
suppressed photograph then.) Keith Ellison, who may become Minnesota’s next
attorney-general, later distanced himself from Farrakhan but, like Mallory,
claimed that Farrakhan’s contribution to black empowerment is “complex.” Would
we accept this kind of complexity and nuance if a white singer’s family had
invited David Duke?
Liberals need to make unequivocally clear that the
Democratic Party tent will never be big enough for antisemites and
anti-Americans like Farrakhan (just like Republicans need to do the same with
sympathizers of the so-called alt-right.) There are not “good people” on the
side of antisemitism any more than there are “good people” on the side of white
supremacy.
There is no place for a double standard when it comes to
antisemitism. Black antisemitism should not get a pass account of the
oppression suffered by so many black people. Neither should “progressive”
tolerance of antisemitism of the kind shown by Bernie Sanders’s support for
Jeremy Corbyn, the antisemite who heads the British Labour Party and may well
become the next prime minister of America’s closest ally.
Just contrast the Aretha Franklin memorial service with
the current controversy surrounding the decision of The New Yorker to invite
Stephen Bannon for what promised to be a critical conversation with the
journalist David Remnick. After many prominent liberals, such as Judd Apatow,
Jim Carrey, and Patton Oswalt announced that they would not attend lest they
“normalize hatred,” Bannon was disinvited. Chelsea Clinton tweeted, “For anyone
who wonders what normalization of bigotry looks like, please look no further
than Steve Bannon being invited by both @TheEconomist & @NewYorker to their
respective events in #NYC a few weeks apart.”
To that I would add, look no further than the Clintons
sharing the stage with Farrakhan. I hope they will take this occasion to
distance themselves from, and strongly condemn Farrakhan’s antisemitism.
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