It’s not that the news was wrong. It’s that it wasn’t quite right either. And because it wasn’t quite right, lots of liberals and Democrats (and even some leftists) are not really hearing what the president is saying.
That’s too bad, because what he’s saying is what they want him to say . Joe Biden gave brief remarks at a ceremony commemorating victims of the Holocaust. The AP’s lede is representative of coverage elsewhere: President Joe Biden on Tuesday decried a 'ferocious surge' in antisemitism on college campuses and around the globe in the months since Hamas attacked Israel and triggered a war in Gaza, using a ceremony to remember victims of the Holocaust to also denounce new waves of violence and hateful rhetoric toward Jews.
That’s right. But it’s wrong, too. It’s right in that’s what the president said.
It’s also right in that’s the immediate context for understanding his remarks. In recent weeks, there have been scores of demonstrations on college campuses protesting Israel’s killing of about 35,000 Palestinians. Some of the protesters have expressed what looks like – or, in fact, is – antisemitism.
Protests have emerged amid a rise in antisemitism worldwide, though they play a tiny part in the global phenomenon. But it’s wrong, too, in that the context is larger than that. It’s wrong in that Biden himself outlined that larger context.
He was very clear that hatreds, all hatreds, are bad for everyone , and that if they are allowed .
