'The More I'm Around Young People, the More Panicked I Am' [View all]
(THIS IS THE JEWISH GROUP)
"The more Im around young people, the more panicked I am, Tim Miller told me recently. A prominent anti-Trump commentator, Miller hosts the popular Bulwark Podcast and regularly speaks to students on university campuses. Lately, he has begun to notice something disturbing.
I was literally arguing with a kid, like, three weeks ago, college kid, who was, like, you know, starting to think that the Jews killed Charlie Kirk, Miller recounted on his show, amid a discussion about rising anti-Semitism on the American right. The student, he noted, was a left kid.
Miller had good reason to be alarmed, because the problem he observed extends well beyond anecdotes. In late 2024, the Democratic data scientist David Shor surveyed nearly 130,000 voters at the behest of Kamala Harriss presidential campaign. He found that a quarter of those younger than 25with negligible differences among Trump and Harris supportersheld an unfavorable opinion of Jewish people. (Jewish peoplenot Israelis or Zionists.) By contrast, the older a person was, the less likely they were to express such sentiments.
One year later, an avalanche of data has confirmed what Shor glimpsed and researchers and reporters like myself have argued for years: American anti-Semitism is not primarily a partisan phenomenon, as it is often framed in popular discourse, but a generational one. Jews constitute just 2 percent of the American population, but theyve assumed much larger and more sinister proportions in the imagination of the countrys youth.
The Atlantic
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