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Thursday, November 12, 2009

Anti-Defamation League tells GOP to knock off the Holocaust imagery

This is the letter the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) sent to Minority Leader John Boehner. Rightardia had pointed out in prior articles that the GOP has more in common with the Nazis than the Democratic Party.

When the US was fighting the Nazis in Europe, the US had FDR as president. Many Republicans had an isolationist policy and did not want to fight the Nazis. Some conservative US companies even traded with the Nazis during World War 2.

Traditionally, Republicans were "Isolationists" who generally opposed foreign wars. Abraham Lincoln opposed the Mexican War, but waged the Civil War to "save" the Union. The Spanish-American War was largely opposed by right-wingers, but it was justified by the Republican president on the grounds that it was in response to a Spanish attack on an American ship (which we now know didn't happen) and that it served American interests. 

Republicans opposed World War I and the League of Nations and loathed Woodrow Wilson, the first Neo-"Conservative" president. During the Era of Normalcy, the Republicans embraced the idea of America First. 

When FDR began the push to war, the right-wing led the largest anti-war movement in American history, the America First Committee (although the Right had a diversity of views on what to do during that time; many were "Isolationist," but others sought to stop Communism or Fascism).

Rightardia agrees with the ADL. The use of Holocaust imagery is inappropriate in the health care debate. 





 
November 10, 2009


The Honorable John A. Boehner
Minority Leader
House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515


Dear Minority Leader Boehner:

We write to urge you to condemn forcefully the invocation of Holocaust imagery such as photos of Nazi concentration camp victims in the current health care debate. We were appalled that such images were held up by protesters at a press conference called and organized by Republicans at the United States Capitol last week, and deeply disappointed at the failure of the Republican leadership to speak out against such comparisons.

As the world’s leading organization fighting anti-Semitism and all forms of bigotry, the Anti-Defamation League is non-partisan and has no position on the issues underlying the health care debate. However, we believe that the use Nazi symbols and pictures of Nazi victims to advance a political agenda under any circumstance is inappropriate and profoundly offensive. It cheapens the suffering of survivors and causes keen and unnecessary pain to the families and friends of those murdered by the millions at Nazi concentration camps. Such imagery is also deeply upsetting to the Jewish community, and to people of good will across this nation who understand the profound evil that Nazism represented.

Reasonable people can and do differ about health care reform. However, as divided as our nation may be on the best way to effectuate such reform, there should be absolutely no division when it comes to condemning the use of the Holocaust and Holocaust imagery for domestic political purposes.

ADL has consistently objected to the use of the Holocaust in this way, no matter who is invoking it, and no matter for what political purpose it is being invoked. We cannot and will not in good conscience stand by and allow the enormity of the Holocaust — the death of six million — to be invoked in a way that trivializes the memory of those who perished.

We urge you to use your stature and platform as a national political leader to reject and condemn the use of Holocaust imagery for political purposes, and to urge your supporters to find other ways to communicate their views.

Sincerely,


Abraham H. Foxman
National Director
Anti-Defamation League

source: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091031181222AATPrsX

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