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Behind the Aegis

(54,853 posts)
Wed Oct 6, 2021, 01:41 PM Oct 2021

(Jewish Group) Stop comparing everything you hate to the Holocaust

A flier circulating in my home state this week depicts a Jewish politician seated at a table stacked high with gold coins.

This incident is the third time in two months that candidates for the Virginia State Legislature have exploited antisemitic imagery for political purposes. In the first case, the candidate compared being a teacher with conservative views to declaring “I’m Jewish” in Nazi Germany. In the second, a different candidate tweeted about a Jewish delegate from the other party’s nose.

During this same time, 4,000 miles to the Northwest, the mayor of Anchorage defended anti-mask activists (with whom he disagreed) who wore yellow six-pointed stars, calling their action a tribute to victims of the Holocaust.

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It is not that they did not apologize (some did so more convincingly than others). But every one of them expressed some combination of, “I didn’t mean it” and “I am sorry… if I offended anyone.”

People who seek public trust have a responsibility to be deliberate about their words, educated about their values and responsible for the consequences of their actions. Anything less than, “I was wrong, and I am sorry” is not an apology — it is an excuse.

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(Jewish Group) Stop comparing everything you hate to the Holocaust (Original Post) Behind the Aegis Oct 2021 OP
This is the bottom line in messaging everywhere. Thanks. Budi Oct 2021 #1
 

Budi

(15,325 posts)
1. This is the bottom line in messaging everywhere. Thanks.
Wed Oct 6, 2021, 01:44 PM
Oct 2021
People who seek public trust have a responsibility to be deliberate about their words, educated about their values and responsible for the consequences of their actions. Anything less than, “I was wrong, and I am sorry” is not an apology — it is an excuse.
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