Re: Following article
Excellent and thoroughly researched essay about the  Left and  
anti-Semitism.
Unfortunately not many people will read it. The reason is that  Americans,
when they see the word "Marxism," reflexively think to  themselves:  "What
does Marxism have to do with me?"  For most Americans the answer  is
"nothing," or very little. Not directly, at any rate, and besides, the  
Soviet Union
is dead and gone, Marxism has no meaning in today's foreign  relations,
So, why bother?
 
This kind of outlook, needless to say, reflects American naivete about  the
nature of Marxism in the contemporary world. The article does, in fact,  
deal
with this issue although not until about halfway into the text. But it is  
there,
in full glory. Although we still need to connect some dots.
 
For starters, the Democratic Party  -on just about all social  issues-  is a
cultural Marxist party. About the subject of cultural Marxism, since few 
Americans have any clue about what it really is, some remedial education 
is necessary so that they can grasp exactly what has been happening
in our society  -all of it empowered by American ignorance of  nearly
all forms of Marxism.
 
Hence we get Howard Zinn's textbook, widely used in American public  
schools,
A People’s History of the United States, which is based on Marxist  premises
throughout, regarded widely as simply a case of modern day legitimate  
social
criticism. But this is only one example of how, exactly, latter-day  Marxism
penetrates popular consciousness, especially on the Left, where there  is
a legitimate tradition of hard-hitting social criticism. But that tradition 
 is being
taken much further than it otherwise would, and the driver for this  
increased
"radicalization" (for want of a better word) is cultural Marxism.
 
But no-one calls themselves a cultural Marxist?  Duh, of course not. 
Why should anyone do so?  That would blow their cover.
 
The fact is, nonetheless, that the entire social program of the Democratic  
Party
of today   -as opposed to the social program of the Democratic  Party in
the JFK-LBJ era-   follows from cultural Marxist values. And a  huge gusher
of those values was opened in the 1960s and early 1970s, which pretty
much saturated the opinion leaders of  the Democratic Party.
 
Admittedly, precisely because a major percentage of the party is still  
working class
and not at all Marxist, there is unevenness in this political stew, but  you
don't need to look far to find the Marxist element, which is major,  and
which shows up in gender feminist politics (men are the oppressors,  etc),
race politics (whites are the oppressors) and growing Leftist  
anti-Semitism.
 
Regrettably the Right is hopelessly uninformed about any of this and so  we
get weak (half-assed) political criticisms that are easy for  sophisticates
to laugh off, and we get the usual Right wing pap about the need  to
return to our American roots and be good citizens:   Which is a nice
sentiment but accomplishes absolutely nothing and does not address
the issue of infiltration of cultural Marxism into our society.
 
There also is a neat subterfuge pulled off by the Left that plays to the  
huge
weakness of the Right, viz  Libertarian nonsense about how all issues  that
matter are concerns about "freedom" and economics. In other words,
forget social issues, they are all "wedge issues" of no importance,  and
what "really matters" is money  -and freedom to stand on a soap  box.
 
And so our culture  -now including major parts of our  religions-
is being subverted massively. All the while as Democrats, in pure
ignorance, think this is all normal and "good." You know, "all that
matters is the economy, social issues are a side show." Which is
precisely the viewpoint that cultural Marxists have sought to  popularize
ever since the years following WWII.
 
But you aren't interested in social issues?  You aren't interested in  
religion?
You aren't interested in entertainment  -movies, TV, music, etc  ?
Maybe not, but all that this says is that you are uniformed and any  
opinions
you express on these issues are worthless.
 
The thrust of the article concerns how all of this has enabled  Left-wing
anti-Semitism to grow and now thrive in various circles. And it is  
everywhere
-all the while as many Jews themselves continue to be in denial
and cannot fathom that the party they vote for is increasingly
anti-Semitic. Which is not to say that refuge in the Republican Party
is much of a remedy. It isn't. The point is that the Democratic Party
is making itself into the enemy of not only  Christians, which has  been
the case since some time in the 1980s, despite residual left-over
spiritual sounding rhetoric now and then, but also of Jews.
In the process it has also become increasingly pro-Muslim,
electing the most pro-Islam president in US history.
 
The article is flawed in one respect. The author is opposed Arthur  Koestler
’s 
theory that  "Ashkenazi Jews sprang from Khazars who converted in 
the 10th century."  Maybe Koestler's hypothesis  needs some work, 
clearly is too simple, but denying it all validity is ridiculous.  After 
all, what
did happen to all of the Khazar Jews?  After the fall of their  empire
they didn't simply vanish from the face of the Earth. And isn't it a 
coincidence that apparently out of nowhere eastern Europe
found itself with large populations of Jews?
 
Setting this aside, the essay deals with the too often neglected subject  of
anti-Semitism. Speaking personally, I cannot think of a more stupid  
prejudice
to harbor. Of all the biases one might have this makes the least  sense
of any. And yet it won't go away. Except, most ironically, it has
largely gone away as far as the religious Right is concerned,
Evangelicals, most Catholics, Greek Orthodox, plus Orthodox  Jews,
exactly the people that Democrats most hate.
 
So that this is crystal clear, I am not an advocate for the Republican  
Party.
I am a political Independent; I think both major parties have  fundamental 
flaws.
But I must say that the lesser of two evils counts and since that is the  
best
choice we often end up with, that choice sure in hell is not with the  
Democrats.
In all cases where it makes any sense at all I vote for third party  
candidates.
I try to find some Democrat or other to vote for, who isn't a cultural  
Marxist.
Otherwise, I feel anguished, I hold my nose, and.....
 
 
highly recommended article
Billy R.
 
 
===========================
 
 
Commentary
 
Judeophobia and Marxism 
 
12.01.14 - 12:00 AM | _by Robert S.  Wistrich_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/pods-author/robert-wistrich)  


 
In 1893, the German labor leader August Bebel breezily dismissed  
anti-Semitism as the “socialism of fools.” From then to the present day, the  
Western left has been disturbingly complacent about Judeophobia. Communists and 
 
socialists of various stripes have persistently underestimated the impact,  
distinctiveness, and longevity of anti-Semitism. Even today, significant 
strains  of the American and even the Israeli left are far less exercised about 
global  anti-Semitism than the supposed transgressions of the Jewish state. 
A review of  the hard left’s various answers to the “Jewish Question” makes 
clear that  equivocation on anti-Semitism and antipathy toward Israel are 
enduring,  complementary elements in Marxism’s wrongheaded materialist 
interpretation of  world affairs. 
Few Marxists have attempted to address Judeophobes’ fundamentally demonic  
view of the world or the mythical power of anti-Semitic archetypes of “the 
Jew,”  such as Judas, Satan, and the Antichrist. Similarly, few have tried to 
decipher  the phantasmagoric conspiracy theories at the heart of so many 
anti-Semitic  beliefs. This failure contributed to how the Western left viewed 
the rising  anti-Semitism of the Nazis in the 1930s. Very few socialists, 
anarchists, or  Communists (apart from isolated mavericks such as Wilhelm 
Reich) showed much  grasp of the psychology of fascism, let alone addressed 
seriously the Manichean  worldview of anti-Semites before the Holocaust. 
Let us begin with the German Social Democratic Party (SPD). After the Nazi  
seizure of power in 1933, the SPD deliberately played down anti-Semitism 
and  generally avoided any direct attacks on it. The SPD’s paralysis went 
beyond the  fear of challenging the popular prejudices of German workers inside 
the Third  Reich. It was a fundamental failure of the imagination. Both 
German socialists  and Communists grossly underestimated the integrative power 
of irrational  thinking and the centrality of racial anti-Semitism in Nazi 
ideology. They  didn’t see the great qualitative difference between 
traditional Jew-hatred and  Nazi anti-Semitism, which they reduced to a mere 
political 
instrument of  “reactionary” forces to bring down the Weimar Republic. 
After 1933, they still  regarded Jew-hatred primarily as a tool for 
consolidating Hitler’s  dictatorship. 
For the German left, the essence of Nazism was not the destruction of the  
Jews but the crushing of the working class. They saw Kristallnacht as little 
 more than a trial balloon for more repressive measures against German 
society as  a whole—not as a massive offensive against the Jews. Many left-wing 
German  intellectuals in exile believed that Jews suffered no more than 
others, and they  argued that overemphasizing anti-Semitism would only weaken 
the anti-Nazi  campaign. Writing from postwar Germany in the summer of 1945, 
Klaus Mann (son of  Thomas Mann), who had served as a staff sergeant in the 
5th U.S. Army, was still  treating the fate of the Jews as a secondary issue; 
he dismissed the Jews as a  “dreary” subject, and the Holocaust as neither 
special nor significant. 
Even Franz L. Neumann, the leading expert on Nazism among Marxist analysts 
in  the Frankfurt School, failed to grasp the genocidal intent of Nazi 
anti-Semitism  during the war years. In 1942, writing from his American exile 
while the mass  murder of European Jews was already well under way, Neumann 
published his  classic work on National Socialism, Behemoth. He confidently 
asserted  that the Nazis would “never allow a complete extermination of the 
Jews.” Neumann  reasoned that anti-Semitism was essentially a means to other 
political ends,  such as the destruction of free and democratic institutions. 
For Neumann, like  so many academic analysts, it was simply inconceivable 
that the Jewish Question  could be anything but marginal in the Nazis’ overall 
project. Hannah Arendt, it  should be noted, was one of the few 
German-Jewish exiles in the United States to  challenge this conventional 
wisdom. 
Beginning in the 1930s, leftists sought to downplay Nazism itself and the  
uniqueness of the fate Jews suffered during the Holocaust. They found 
answers to  comfort themselves by concentrating on the economic roots of 
fascism 
in  Germany’s decaying liberal-capitalism and by drawing parallels between 
the Nazis  and other fascist regimes. For many leftists, then and now, the 
Holocaust was a  mere epiphenomenon of capitalism—almost incidental to the 
fascism that,  reputedly, becomes so appealing whenever capitalist economies 
fall into  crisis.

 
 
Among leftist intellectuals right after the Second World War, a partial  
understanding of anti-Semitism’s uniqueness was often the best one could hope  
for. Nobody could accuse the French existentialist Marxist Jean-Paul Sartre—
a  novelist, playwright, and philosopher—of lacking imagination. His 
Réflexions  sur la Question Juive (1946) was a courageous and perceptive essay. 
And yet  not even his combative opposition to anti-Semitism was without racial 
 stereotypes. Almost incredibly, he could still believe after the Holocaust 
that  a socialist revolution would “solve” the “Jewish Question.” At the 
time, Sartre  was a Communist fellow traveler. In a society without classes, 
he unwisely  predicted, anti-Semitism would be cut off at the roots. It 
was, he thought, a  “petty bourgeois” and “poor white” phenomenon that did 
not resonate among the  working class. 
Sartre’s closest collaborator, Simone de Beauvoir, was more clearheaded. 
She  was relatively free of such illusions and more committed to Israel than 
was her  long-term companion-in-arms. Born into an upper-middle-class 
provincial Catholic  family in which conventional anti-Semitism was almost 
“normal,”
 Beauvoir had  been shocked by the Holocaust and moved by Israel’s postwar 
struggle for  national rebirth against an increasingly obstructive British 
colonialism. Her  pioneering feminist engagement made her especially 
sensitive to the humiliating  situation of European Jews, subjected as they 
were, to 
continual anti-Semitic  insult and exclusion even after the Shoah. She saw 
Israel’s battle for survival  as a heroic drive for liberation. By their 
ceaseless labor, creativity, courage,  and attachment to the land, Zionist Jews 
had, in her eyes, earned their  indisputable right to an independent state. 
Although not uncritical of Israel’s  policies, Beauvoir sharply disagreed 
with the anti-Zionist positions of her more  militant French comrades. As 
early as 1973, she expressed her consternation at a  growing strand of 
anti-Semitism masked as “anti-Zionism” that was taking hold on  the French 
left. 
She was also fiercely critical of Arab efforts to annihilate  Israel and of 
the support these efforts received from the Soviet Union. For  Beauvoir, the 
justness of the Israeli cause was a matter of personal conviction  that 
transcended the divide between right and left. 
Other “old left” intellectuals, such as Claude Lanzmann, Max Horkheimer, 
and  Herbert Marcuse, also resisted the crude post-1967 efforts to link 
Israel with  “imperialist” interests and the Arab states with peace-loving 
socialism. For  this school of thinkers, it was self-evident that Israel was 
the 
only democratic  nation in the Middle East and that its neighbors constantly 
threatened its very  existence. In 1967, Marcuse—then the premier guru of 
Western radicals—recalled,  in a discussion with left-wing German students, 
that Jews had for centuries  “belonged to the persecuted and oppressed” 
peoples; that “not too long ago six  million of them were annihilated”; and 
that Israel was a refuge where Jews would  no longer need to fear persecution. 
And Sartre emphasized Israel’s vulnerability  as well as its legitimacy. 
While publicly neutral, Sartre nonetheless regarded  the 1973 Yom Kippur War as 
a clear-cut case of “criminal” Arab aggression. 
Both Sartre and Beauvoir unequivocally opposed the totalitarian  “
anti-Zionism” that had emerged in the Soviet bloc after the Six-Day War and  
that 
would become a central element in Soviet foreign policy in the Arab world.  
Anti-Semitic “anti-Zionism” in the USSR appealed to xenophobic, ethnocentric,  
and populist sentiments against Jews in the lower classes and to the 
resentment  of prominent “Muscovite” (pro-Soviet) Jews during the early postwar 
years. After  1967, it also served as an agent against liberalization and 
dissent. For  example, in order to discredit the Solidarity resistance movement 
in Poland in  1981, its activities were blamed on the alleged machinations 
of “Zionists,”  Freemasons, and cosmopolitan liberals in the West. 
Some of the left’s anti-Israel sentiment stemmed from an older tradition of 
 Marxist anti-Zionism that was not informed by Jew-hatred. Militants such 
as the  young Belgian Trotskyist Abram Leon (martyred in Auschwitz at the age 
of 26)  were fierce opponents of anti-Semitism while adamantly opposing 
Zionism as  “petty bourgeois” utopianism. Like most Trotskyists of Jewish 
origin, Leon  blamed the cataclysmic Jewish tragedy of the 20th century almost 
solely on the  “decay of world capitalism,” which, he naively predicted, 
would also doom the  “puerile dreams of Zionism.” Thinkers like Leon assumed 
that any retention of  Jewish cultural uniqueness was deleterious. 
The “assimilationist” school of Marxism even repudiated non-Zionist forms 
of  Jewish nationalism (like the Bundists, who favored cultural-national 
autonomy in  the diaspora). Indeed, there was never a possibility that orthodox 
Marxists  would recognize a diasporic Jewish nation any more than one 
rooted in the soil  of Zion. The handful of Jewish radicals in the West who had 
ever argued the  Jewish autonomist case (as the French anarchist Bernard 
Lazare did in the 1890s)  were isolated among their comrades. Well before 1914, 
the likes of Lenin,  Trotsky, and Rosa Luxemburg had told the Bundists that 
they would have to  obliterate their Jewish identity if they sought to be 
fully emancipated. And  they were denounced by Lenin and Trotsky as “
separatists,” “chauvinists,” and  “isolationists” for simply raising the 
question 
of an autonomous Jewish  proletarian culture. Georgii Plekhanov (the father 
of Russian Marxism) mocked  the Bundists as “Zionists afraid of sea-sickness.”
 Convinced that the  emancipation of the Jews meant the dissolution of any 
Jewish peoplehood, early  Marxists were unable to imagine that Israel might 
actually emerge as a Jewish  nation-state. Its creation and survival have 
been a slap in the face for Marxist  theory. 
And what of Great Britain, given the fact that it was the English who first 
 formally recognized Jewish national aspirations (in the Balfour 
Declaration) and  given Britain’s role in fighting and defeating the Nazis? The 
Jewish 
Question  took a somewhat different course on the English left. As late as 
the 1970s, some  older Labour members of Parliament, such as Prime Minister 
Harold Wilson, Ian  Mikardo, Sydney Silverman, and Richard Crossman, 
retained a marked sympathy for  Israel—though this was less visible among 
left-wing 
English academics and  intellectuals. Just to take one example: The 
historian Eric Hobsbawm, the  veteran icon of the British left, considered Jews 
at 
best a phantom people whose  contemptible nation-state illustrated the 
proto-fascist features of all  reactionary nationalisms.
 
 
In the early 1980s, however, the British Labour left came under the spell 
of  ideologically driven anti-Zionist positions that were far removed from 
reformist  Labour politics and much closer to Trotskyism. Indeed, despite the 
pro-Israel  instincts of New Labour prime ministers such as Tony Blair and 
Gordon Brown, the  “anti-racist” anti-Zionism of the present-day British 
left flirts openly with  anti-Semitism. As is the case elsewhere in the West, 
British leftists vehemently  deny holding any prejudice while they pillory 
Israel for provoking Arab hatred  and anti-Semitism. 
Similarly, in the United States, there are leftist intellectuals (not a few 
 of them Jewish) who depict the “new” anti-Semitism as a straightforward 
and  understandable response to Israeli occupation. In their view, the Jews  
themselves are to blame for the aggression they face. This is a classic  
anti-Semitic proposition. 
The distinctive trajectory of American leftist radicalism has shaped its  
approach to anti-Semitism and Israel. In the economically depressed 1930s 
(the  heyday of the Soviet utopian myth), American academics, intellectuals, 
and  artists were drawn to Communism in significant numbers. During Stalin’s 
mass  liquidations and purges, many American Communists continued to defend 
the Soviet  Union. Even the Nazi-Soviet pact found some left-wing apologists 
in the United  States. Only after 1945 did the star of American Communism 
gradually begin to  fall. 
In the 1960s, the Communists were replaced by a generation of leftist  
radicals who were more overtly anti-American than their forebears. The Vietnam  
War, nuclear disarmament, civil rights, free speech, drugs, and the student  
rebellion assumed center stage. A sweeping anti-American agenda found 
purchase,  and the United States was relentlessly denounced from within as an “
imperialist”  predator seeking hegemony over Third World nations. At the same 
time, Communist  crimes were systematically whitewashed. Prominent in these 
anti-anti-Communist  campaigns were a number of Jewish academics, among them 
Noam Chomsky and Richard  Falk. They strongly supported the Vietnamese 
Communists against the United  States, whose military actions they vilified as “
genocide.” 
It was only a matter of time before similar hyperbolic charges were leveled 
 at a triumphant, American-allied Israel. In the spirit of the new Third  
Worldism, American left-wing academics came to identity with the Palestinian  
cause. Falk, in fact, proved to be so pro-Hamas that the Palestinian 
Authority  voiced its displeasure at Falk’s 2001 appointment as special 
rapporteur 
to the  UN on Palestinian human rights. 
Falk has found, moreover, no evidence of religious, ethnic, or gender  
intolerance in the Islamic Republic of Iran. He has gone so far as to suggest  
that the Islamic Revolution has much to offer to Third World nations as “an  
example of non-authoritarian governance.” Falk has, however, proclaimed that 
 America and Israel continue to practice “genocidal geopolitics.” In 
February  2009, Falk, who is a Jew, said that Israel’s three-week incursion 
into 
the Gaza  Strip had evoked “the worst kind of international memories of the 
Warsaw  Ghetto.” This mendacious comparison of the war between Israel and 
the terrorist  Hamas regime to Nazi Germany’s deliberate starvation and murder 
of Warsaw’s Jews  in 1942 has become increasingly popular in the Western 
left. 
Equally revealing is the case of the late Howard Zinn, Boston University  
historian and author of the bestselling A People’s History of the United  
States. Zinn, a Marxist and admirer of Mao Tse-Tung and Fidel Castro, never  
disguised his view of America as a repressive, racist, and imperialist nation  
guilty of repeated genocide. His opinion of Israel was scarcely more 
balanced,  though he had been brought up in a working-class Jewish home in 
Brooklyn and  served as a bombardier in World War II. Zinn acknowledged that 
until 
1967 Israel  did not loom large in his consciousness (this was the case for 
many other  American Jews). But by the 1982 Lebanon War, he had become “
ashamed” of the  Jewish state and convinced that its establishment was “a 
mistake,” indeed “the  worst thing that the Jews could have done.” Israel, like 
the United States, was  violent, bigoted, and driven by nationalistic 
frenzy. It had turned its back on  what was best in the Jewish tradition: 
internationalism, creativity, and  emphasis on cultural achievement. Israel’s 
existence and actions, for Zinn, had  become the main source of anti-Semitism 
in 
the world. Zinn, like many left-wing  Jewish anti-Zionists, described the 
subjugation of the Palestinians mythically,  as a form of “ethnic cleansing.” 
He ignored, of course, the real “ethnic  cleansing” of Jews from Arab lands 
after 1945. Zinn’s work shows not the  slightest recognition of the 
jingoistic, racist nature of Arab nationalism or  the genocidal threat posed by 
radical Islam. 
Such perverse inversions of reality speak to a disturbing Manichean 
dualism.  Hatred for America, the West, and Israel thrives beneath the cloak of 
human  rights and social justice. This fanciful branding has not prevented the 
cause of  the “oppressed” from being represented by dictators such as 
Joseph Stalin, Mao  Tse-Tung, Ho Chi Minh, Fidel Castro, the Ayatollah 
Khomeini, 
Saddam Hussein, and  Yasir Arafat. These tyrants have often been worshipped 
by Western radicals as  defenders of “Third World peoples” against U.S. 
imperialism and Zionism.  International solidarity with the Palestinians has 
given a counterfeit halo of  respectability to the world’s most despicable 
characters. The Islamists are only  the latest in a long line of manipulative 
exploiters of Palestinian or Third  World misfortunes. All have indulged in 
the demonization of Israel as a  “genocidal state” engaged in “ethnic 
cleansing from the day of its birth.” 
This analysis is now peddled by a growing numbers of leftist, anti-Zionist  
academics within Israel as well. Such rhetoric, divorced from historical 
truth  and geopolitical reality, negates any possibility of reform or redress  
concerning genuine grievances. Shlomo Sand, a historian at Tel Aviv 
University,  represents one particularly virulent strain of such “negationism” 
with his claim  that both the concept of “Jewish People” and of Eretz Israel (“
the land of  Israel”) are mere fictions or Zionist inventions. This former 
Israeli Trotskyist  militant, trained in France (where his pseudoscientific 
delegitimization of  Israel has enjoyed great popularity) has revived 
long-discredited theories—such  as Arthur Koestler’s deranged notion that 
Ashkenazi Jews sprang from Khazars who  converted in the 10th century C.E.—to 
sever 
the Jews from their biblical  ancestors. Wholly irreligious himself, Sand 
insists that Jews are linked by  religion alone; he categorically rejects the 
Jewish identity of Israel and has  announced to the world that he no longer 
considers himself a Jew. For Sand,  Zionism can be understood only as the 
distillation of racism itself. 
Small wonder that the worst enemies of the Jewish state regard Sand’s work 
as  invaluable. What could be better than an Israeli intellectual 
undermining the  very roots of Jewish history, religion, cultural memory, and 
national 
identity  in the land of Zion? Did not Yasir Arafat deny to President Bill 
Clinton at Camp  David that the Jews had ever built or worshipped in the 
First and Second Temples  in Jerusalem? Is it not commonplace in Palestinian 
Authority media to deny any  connection between the Western Wall in the Holy 
City and the Jewish past? Has  there not been a systematic Arab effort, led 
by the Palestinian Waqf, to destroy  any material trace of the ancient Jewish 
presence in Jerusalem dating back more  than 3,000 years? 
In the “post-Zionist” narratives of Israeli historians such as Ilan Pappé  
(formerly an active member of the Israeli Communist Party, Hadash), the 
entire  Jewish national project is a nightmarish tale of occupation, expulsion, 
 discrimination, and institutional racism perpetrated by alien and demonic  
Zionist invaders. In such accounts, the Palestinians are the permanent 
victims;  Israelis are forever the “brutal colonizers.” According to Pappé, the 
“Zionist”  ethnic cleansing of Palestine was already in full swing in 
1948. It was a  long-premeditated crime that has been escalating ever since. We 
increasingly  find Jewish anti-Zionists presenting their certificates of 
divorce from the  Jewish state, issuing petitions against Israel’s “apartheid 
wall” (the security  fence to defend against Palestinian suicide bombers), 
and denouncing Israel’s  allegedly racist oppression of local Arabs. At the 
same time, “progressive” Jews  seem indifferent to the suffering of Israeli 
civilians—the innocent victims of  so many savage Palestinian atrocities—
including the recent murders of three  Israeli teenagers near Hebron. The “
progressives” shed tears for Palestinian  children, but they invariably turn 
their heads from the dead of their own  people, the Jews. This is a perverse 
form of humanism in which the systematic  denigration of Israel coexists with 
a wholly romanticized and abstract  “Palestinophilism” devoid of any 
critical thought or normal human  solidarity. 
Contemporary Marxists and Islamists share a curiously similar apocalyptic  
agenda of earthly redemption that aspires to the installment of absolute “
social  justice” through violent means. For both parties, Palestinian 
martyrdom has  become a glowing symbol of “resistance” not only to Israel but 
also 
to  globalization and the “corrupt” West. At the heart of such radical 
utopianism,  there is the quasi-religious belief that the world will only be “
liberated” by  the downfall of America and the defeat of the Jews. This 
chiliastic fantasy has  today emerged as a notable point of fusion between the 
radical anti-Zionist left  in the West and the global jihad. Meanwhile, in the 
real world, the  transnational jihadi warriors are in the process of 
conquering large swathes of  northern Syria and Iraq and establishing a new 
base 
for their Islamic caliphate.  In dealing with these and related challenges 
involving the porous borders of an  imploding Arab Middle East, a bankrupt 
Marxism has nothing to offer. Indeed, its  de facto alliance with the Islamists 
is perhaps the final stage of its slow  death.

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