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Reply to "Fear of Antisemitism"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Anecdotally my jewish friends in the US are by far more successful, connected, happy, fulfilled, living their best lives compared to almost all of my non jewish friends. Not only do they have the unconditional support, connections and networking opportunities from their synagogues and other jewish friends, but many have inherited wealth that most could only dream of. None of my non jewish friends attend church, they have no community whatsoever, minimal, if any inheritance and zero connections. Perhaps I only associate with the exceptions but these jewish individuals are not hurting or suffering from anything other than jet lag from their last international holiday. They have a vast network of support that many others lack due to not belonging to a particular religion or group. [/quote] I wonder why? Ever wonder how that happens? I mean , we all would love to have a vast network of opportunities and connections and wealth coming from a group we are part of....Hmmmmmm.[/quote] This is silly. Yes, Jews as an ethnicity are relatively successful. But we don’t know each other - the heads of business / entertainment happen to be Jewish, but they didn’t get any boost from a network or conspiracy or whatever. It’s just a bunch of individuals. Maybe they have similar values, but that’s it. All the successful Jews are not connected. [/quote] All religions and cults provide connection and networking opportunities for members. Some groups are more lucrative and beneficial for members than others. It’s a choice to be an active member of any group.[/quote] Judaism is a religion, but it is also an ethnicity. Lots of Jews are not active in a temple, don’t live in Jewish communities or go where there are lots of Jews. They are simply successful, or whatever they are, in their own right. [/quote] Do you mean cultural Jews? Because yes, there are cultural Jews, just like there are cultural Catholics, cultural Muslims, cultural Hindus... where people retain some aspect of religious enculturation but are not practicing or don't believe in it. But there are Asian Jews, Black Jews, White Jews, convert Jews. How are they "ethnic" Jews, too? [/quote] It is hard if you are applying chattel-slavery definitions of race to an ancient ethno-religious people. You would have to look to older civilalization examples, Armenia is a good example. Armenians are native to historic Armenia which was settler-colonialized througout its history by Arabs, Turks, Europeans, etc.. Modern day Armenia is a sliver of historic Armenia - there's a large educated Armenian disapora throughout the world. Most Armenians are Apostolic Christians - and that's the state religion of modern-day Armenia. But you can marry into the Church, and the Armenians in exile intermarried with other Orthodox Christians. Because Judea was settler-colonialized, there is a large Jewish disapora around the world, but modern-day Israel is the homeland of Jews, like Armenia is the homeland of Armenians, or Kurdistan is the homeland of Kurds, or Italy is the homeland of Italians for that matter. The Jewish diaspora, the Armenian diasporia, the Chaldean diaspora, the Assyrian diaspora, etc. are all ethno-religious peoples orginating in the Levant (or straddling the Levant). [/quote]
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