At points in the past half-century, many U.S. antisemitism experts thought this country could be aging out of it, that hostility and prejudice against Jews were fading in part because younger Americans held more accepting views than did older ones.
But a survey released Thursday shows how widely held such beliefs are in the United States today, including among younger Americans. The research by the Anti-Defamation League includes rare detail about the particular nature of antisemitism, how it centers on tropes of Jews as clannish, conspiratorial and holders of power.
The survey shows “antisemitism in its classical fascist form is emerging again in American society, where Jews are too secretive and powerful, working against interests of others, not sharing values, exploiting — the classic conspiratorial tropes,” Matt Williams, vice president of the ADL’s year-old Center for Antisemitism Research, told The Washington Post.
The study uses a new version of surveys the ADL has been doing in America since the 1960s in order to get at the specific nature of antisemitism, and what makes it […]
The same has also been said about other groups whether cultural or religious…
I.e. the Mormons….
I do not believe this graph is actually factual. I know a number of Jewish people who do not hold ANY of these views at all. A real study of Jewish sntiment would prove that I am correct and this survey is incompetant, if not just plain NOT TRUE.
P.S.: I do hold that other religions have even more of a representation which apply to this survey; like the Protestants and the other Christian viewpoints, which all seem to merge into one big Christofascist dogma.