Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the National Rifle Association, addressing the Conservative Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md., Feb. 22, 2018. (Photo/JTA-Tom Williams-CQ Roll Call)
Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the National Rifle Association, addressing the Conservative Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md., Feb. 22, 2018. (Photo/JTA-Tom Williams-CQ Roll Call)

I don’t know if Wayne LaPierre is anti-Semitic. In many ways, I don’t care if Wayne LaPierre is anti-Semitic. But the executive vice president of the NRA gave a speech this week that was heard as anti-Semitic by two kinds of people: left-leaning Jews and hard-right anti-Semites. Let’s agree that’s troubling.

Speaking at CPAC, the annual arch-conservative gathering, LaPierre accused proponents of gun control of promoting “socialism” in the guise of public health and safety. Behind this “social engineering,” he said, are the billions of dollars donated by “people like George Soros, Michael Bloomberg, Tom Steyer and more.”

The fact that he singled out three Jews — and later, the late community organizer Saul Alinsky, also a Jew — was alarming to many on Twitter and to two columnists for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. Bradley Burston wrote that LaPierre’s defense of gun rights “included expressions of dog-whistle anti-Semitism reminiscent of the ‘Protocols of the Elders of Zion,’ with descriptions of a powerful plot to destroy America’s freedom by ‘European-style Socialists’ who he said had taken over the Democratic Party.”

Rabbi Avraham Bronstein of Long Island’s Hampton Synagogue wrote that LaPierre “delivered a Christian nationalist call to arms that should be chilling to us all” and that the “association of Jews with shadowy foreign threats is not new in this political moment.”

The anti-Semitic fringe heard the same things in LaPierre’s speech.

“The NRA Representing White People Against the Jews” blared a headline in the Daily Stormer, the neo-Nazi website. LaPierre “knows it’s Jews coming for our guns,” wrote Andrew Anglin, the site’s founder. Another neo-Nazi website, Infostormer, declared, “There is no denying the Jewish role in pushing for gun control and it is good to see that the NRA is now indirectly exposing this fact.”

Neo-Nazis hear what they want to hear — the obscene flip side of Jews who are too quick to cry anti-Semitism. Neither are completely reliable judges of what is and isn’t anti-Semitism.

There were Jews who found the accusations of dog-whistling far-fetched. Jonathan Tobin of the Jewish News Syndicate noted that Soros is “arguably the nation’s leading funder of liberal causes” and that Bloomberg has put his money behind an organization, Everytown for Gun Safety, that decries the National Rifle Association’s influence.

“If you were amassing a list of prominent opponents of the NRA, such as the one LaPierre spouted about,” Tobin wrote, “it would be impossible to do so without naming many Jews primarily or even solely known for their politics.”

That seems fair and accurate, and it would exonerate LaPierre if his speech were a reasoned, careful consideration of the challenges to the NRA’s agenda. But because LaPierre’s address was an emotional defense of the Second Amendment, as opposed to one that was legal or intellectual, it’s fair to explore the emotional impact of the words he chose. Soros and Bloomberg? Naming either or both is a surefire way of riling up a conservative crowd — but is that solely because of the causes they back or because they represent an insidious archetype? Perhaps most CPAC members can identify Alinsky, who died in 1972 — or does the name itself signify something alien and ethnic?

Neo-Nazis hear what they want to hear.

Beyond the name checks, LaPierre also delivered an anti-socialist manifesto combined with a religious sermon about providential destiny. The constitutional right to bear arms “is not bestowed by man, but granted by God to all Americans as our American birthright,” said LaPierre, channeling a largely Christian theology that merges Americanism and religion.

Some Jews might agree, although the more typical Jewish approach is to acknowledge that while rights derive from the obligation of all humans to God, government is instituted among mortals to interpret and secure those rights. Regardless, the notion that something so peculiar to the American experience as gun rights is God-given is something you’d rarely hear outside of an NRA rally. I assume LaPierre believes all Americans have the right to bear arms, but this argument appeals almost exclusively to a religious minority (and a minority of a minority at that: A Pew study says evangelicals are as likely to back stricter gun laws as most other Americans).

Which is to say, words matter, and LaPierre chose words meant to appeal to a particular audience — one that quakes at the notion of a socialist takeover of America and shivers at the idea of godless billionaires who would take away our rights. I wouldn’t call that anti-Semitism, but it is certainly a gambit that comes straight out of an anti-Semitic playbook. At the very least it echoes the paranoid-style populism that has almost always defined Jews as Other.

LaPierre’s speech reminded me of the office debate we had as the 2016 presidential campaign drew to a close. That’s when Donald Trump gave a speech in Florida warning that Hillary Clinton “meets in secret with international banks to plot the destruction of U.S. sovereignty in order to enrich these global financial powers….” When that speech was turned into a campaign ad, “these global financial powers” were identified as Soros, Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs and Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen — all Jews. My colleagues and I debated whether it was OK for a Jewish news service like ours to say that the speech echoed a number of ominous anti-Semitic tropes.

In the end Ron Kampeas, JTA’s Washington bureau chief, wrote just that — always carefully noting that neither Trump nor the ad had specifically spoken about Jews. After speaking with various Jewish observers, Ron wrote that the Trump campaign “entered what many saw as a territory, real and ideological, where hostility to Jews perpetuates and thrives even in their absence.”

In thinking about anti-Semitism, I am always drawn back to what former Harvard President Lawrence Summers said about the connection between harsh anti-Israelism and old-fashioned Jew hatred.

“[P]rofoundly anti-Israel views are increasingly finding support in progressive intellectual communities,” he said. “Serious and thoughtful people are advocating and taking actions that are anti-Semitic in their effect if not their intent.”

I would hesitate before calling anyone — a campus BDS activist or the leader of the NRA — an anti-Semite. I can’t judge their intent. But I can note the effect of their words and actions. And if they do edge too close to classic anti-Semitic tropes — that territory where hostility to Jews thrives — I think it is fair and necessary to point it out.

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Andrew Silow-Carroll is Editor at Large of the New York Jewish Week and Managing Editor for Ideas for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

5 replies on “Why Wayne LaPierre freaks out Jews and heartens anti-Semites”

  1. Here’s my question….in the be progressive Jewish era where jewishness is less and less expressed as religious and cultural thought and deed but as political and social activity with a distinctly liberal bent aren’t “progressive” Jews putting all Jews on the firing line?

    Whereas maybe fifty years ago when there was a a majority if Jews that had some sort of religious or honest to goodness apolitical cultural attachment to Judaism perhaps the old antisemitic tirades against Jews being political agitators was off base….but is it really off base today?

    I read the j on a regular basis and the j has an agenda. Its the same agenda as jta and the rest of the Jewish media. Its expressing political thought as an ethnic characteristic. You’re essentially confirming racist stereotypes and extending the views and political positions if the Jews you agree with across the entire population of Jews.

    Including me.

    And I disagree with about everything you publish. As do maybe a quarter to a third if American Jews and the overwhelming majority of Jews outside the United States.

    Why can’t you express your views as American progressive views? What’s the win by labeling yourselves as Jewish progressives? Why do you have to drag our ethnicity into your politics?

    I get it. In the us right now you feel safe and secure in that no one is trying to kill you. Today you have a stable society and civil rights. But history has shown that all that dißapoears for Jews in an instant in a world crisis. Its a historical certainty vouched for by endless persecutions and pogroms over the last two thousand years. It will happen again.

    Have you guys ever considered what you could be setting us up for the next time it happens?

    Be involved. Be progressive.

    But maybe think twice before you get all cocky about waving red flags with a star of David in front of people.

  2. If we’re going to take antisemitism seriously, then we should recognize false or frivolous accusations of antisemitism as serious libels. This article is a libel of that sort.

    If I didn’t know Tom Steier was Jewish, Wayne Lapierre surely didn’t. In fact I don’t think it’s common knowledge that George Soros is Jewish. (Does George Soros himself even consider himself Jewish?) Conservatives know him as a rich guy who butts into other countries’ business, but that’s most of it.

    You want to find real antisemitism? Then take off your rose-colored glasses when you think of Barack Obama and ask yourself why he attended Jeremiah Wright’s sermons for twenty years, and supported him too, to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. And what Obama was doing in that picture next to Louis Farrakhan, looking so chummy with him:
    http://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Obama-2-768×621.jpg

  3. Mr. Silow-Carroll does not know if Mr. LaPierre is an anti-Semite. Fair enough. How about Mr. Farrakhan who is an epitome of anti-Semitism? Is Mr. Silow-Carroll freaking out over Mr. Farrakhan’s best friends Keith Ellison, Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters, leaders of Women’s March and many more? is he?

  4. Lapierre speaks for Christians as much as ISIS speaks for Muslims: which is to say not at all!
    There’s nothing Christian about it, yet one more shroud to help lend creedence to nefarious vigilantes while children are in the basements of America, desensitizating with violent games until a defiant enough teen decides it’s time to wreak havoc, while emulating their favorite sci-fi Warriors.
    The informed know a good many have been high on cheap designer drugs made in a garage somewhere but most definitely proudly and loudly Godless!
    Thank you.

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