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[personal profile] white_hart
I bought David Baddiel's Jews Don't Count because I thought I probably ought to educate myself about the issue of anti-Semitism in left-wing circles which has been regularly raised as a matter of concern over the last few years, and I liked Baddiel when he was in The Mary Whitehouse Experience and thought that made his book as good a place to start as any.

Baddiel describes Jews Don't Count as a polemic; it's short and readable, but is concentrated much more on making an argument from personal experience than analysing wider trends, and it doesn't really engage with ideas about intersectionality or structural oppression*. It's also rather stream-of-consciousness in format and I didn't always find it easy to follow the thread of Baddiel's argument, or to remember it afterwards. However, the accounts of both active and "passive" anti-Semitism he himself has encountered were certainly compelling evidence that there is an anti-Semitism problem in British society, and that this isn't confined to the right-wing; his main target is the tendency of progressives to omit anti-Semitism from the list of prejudices they are pledged to combat, and Jews from the list of minorities who deserve support, and the book has definitely opened my eyes to things I hadn't really registered before and made me think about who I am including and who I might be excluding without realising it.

* I was also a bit disconcerted by Baddiel's choice to contrast the left-wing reaction to Jeremy Corbyn's failure to address anti-Semitism in the Labour Party ("he's a decent man but he's got a real blind spot") and the general reaction to J.K. Rowling's transphobia as an example of how differently anti-Semitism is treated compared to other forms of prejudice and bigotry, which doesn't really work given that as far as I'm aware Jeremy Corbyn has not personally taken to Twitter to express anti-Semitic views.

Date: 2021-03-09 04:21 pm (UTC)
perennialanna: Plum Blossom (Default)
From: [personal profile] perennialanna
I am both a former Labour member (during Corbyn's leadership, of which I was publicly critical) and a trans person. Rowling's views and their ability to influence others have definitely had more impact on my day-to-day safety.

(Former member because I came to the conclusion that I was uncomfortable being a paid-up member of any political party and preferred being a floating Tory-hater. Also, I was having an ongoing financial crisis and couldn't really afford the subs any more).

Date: 2021-03-09 04:46 pm (UTC)
cmcmck: chiara (chiara)
From: [personal profile] cmcmck
I'm also a former Labour party member (the Iraq war and the 'Kelly Affair' finished me) and also a trans person with Jewish ancestry thrown in for good measure.

Rowling has done a lot of damage to a certain generation of trans people. Her's has been the worst sort of betrayal.

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