New York – CNN’s Fareed Zakaria Says Muslims Should Be ‘Thoughtful’ When Speaking About Israel

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    FILE -  Fareed Zakaria is seen with Israeli PM New York – Fareed Zakaria, a prominent CNN host, wrote in an op-ed that Muslims should be “particularly thoughtful” when speaking about the Jewish state and people.

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    Writing Friday in the Washington Post, Zakaria said he was responding to the debate about recent statements by Rep. Ilhan Omar, D.-Minn., about the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which have widely been denounced as anti-Semitic.

    “I don’t know what is in the hearts of the two representatives,” Zakaria, who is Muslim, wrote about Omar and Rep. Rashida Tlaib, who has also made controversial statement about Israel. “But I believe that Muslims should be particularly thoughtful when speaking about these issues because anti-Semitism has spread through the Islamic world like a cancer.”

    Anti-Semitism, he added, “is now routine discourse in Muslim populations in the Middle East and also far beyond.”

    Omar, who is Muslim, suggested inaccurately that AIPAC was paying American politicians to support Israel. After critics said the charge echoed anti-Semitic ideas about Jews and money, she apologized for her remark.

    Tlaib last month accused members of Congress of having forgotten “what country they represent,” referring to their support of legislation targeting the boycott Israel movement. Although the lawmakers weren’t themselves Jewish, critics said was perpetuating anti-Semitic tropes about “dual loyalty.”

    Zakaria said Israel was guilty of bigoted policies towards Palestinians and that AIPAC exerts considerable political influence over elected officials.

    “These are legitimate issues to vigorously debate and discuss in the United States, just as in Israel,” he wrote. “Unfortunately, by phrasing the issue as the two new representatives sometimes have, they have squandered an opportunity to further that important debate.”


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    4 Comments
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    Vvvvv
    Vvvvv
    5 years ago

    Thoughtful? Doesn’t he mean, cover up your rabid Jew hating views?

    ralph1527
    ralph1527
    5 years ago

    Something is wrong.

    5 years ago

    I’m glad that AIPAC has the political influence that it has; seventy five years ago, we could have used such influence, from our so-called Jewish organizations, at that time. Prior to Rosh Hashanah, in 1943, numerous frum Rabbis came to the White Hosue, from NYC, to implore FDR to save the doomed Jews of Europe. FDR refused to meet with them, and left the White House, through a back door. At that time, the Jewish community in the USA, had very little political influence. It is a good thing for our people, that times have changed. If the Arabs, and other goyim, don’t like that, then that is just too bad. Incidentally, when George W. Bush was President (#43), and he visited Auschwitz, he asked his advisors, why the USA didn’t do something militarily about that death camp. He didn’t understand why the bureaucrats at that time, could have cared less what happened to the doomed Jews of Europe, during the 1940’s.

    lazy-boy
    Active Member
    lazy-boy
    5 years ago

    We should not forget that USA was trying to be neutral during the war, meaning not to get involved to save Jews, but Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the US had no choice but to enter on the side of the Allies….

    Roosevelt had no love for the Jews and did NOTHING to help those who were murdered in concentration camps….