Jews Come to America to Tell Government Not to Worry About Jewish Supremacy

I’m happy we’re finally talking about Jewish supremacy.

However, I don’t care about Israel, and I want to talk about Jewish supremacy in America.

Axios:

During his visit to Washington earlier this week, Israeli President Isaac Herzog tried to ease the Biden administration’s concerns about the expected rise of the radical right in the upcoming elections and asked U.S. officials to wait until the government is formed before jumping to conclusions, five Israeli and U.S. officials told Axios.

Why it matters: The Biden administration is concerned that if opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu wins Tuesday’s elections, he will form a government with extreme right-wing parties and Jewish supremacists, including Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smortich, will be made senior ministers and be part of the security cabinet.

State of play: Netanyahu will need the support of Ben Gvir, who was convicted in 2007 of supporting a terror organization and inciting racism, and Smotrich, who has a history of making racist remarks about Arab citizens of Israel, in order to form a government if his right-wing bloc wins a 61-seat majority in the Knesset.

The last polls before the elections, published on Friday night, showed 60-60 tie between opposition leader Netanyahu’s right-wing bloc and Prime Minister Yair Lapid’s center-left bloc.

The “Religious Zionism” list, led by Ben Gvir and Smotrich, is expected to win 13 Knesset seats in the election, according to the latest polls. The list would become the third-largest party in the Israeli parliament.

It would also mark an unprecedented rise in power of the extreme right and could have a dramatic influence on the government if Netanyahu wins.

Behind the scenes: Israeli and U.S. officials said both Secretary of State Tony Blinken and White House National Security adviser Jake Sullivan in their meetings with Herzog this week raised the administration’s concerns about the potential inclusion of extreme right-wing politicians in a future Israeli government.

Apparently, this is now part of the narrative – that “Jew supremacy” in Israel is bad.

It doesn’t really matter if Jews in Israel believe in supremacy, however. That’s their own country. What matters is that the Jews in America believe in supremacy, and use it to rule over us.

Having the term in the public consciousness is an improvement, however.