Author Topic: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"  (Read 1250 times)

Monkeyleg

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Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« on: January 15, 2011, 12:00:49 AM »
I thought it was interesting that nobody else has been excoriated for using the term "blood libel" except Sarah Palin. Below are some recent examples of the term's use by people on both ends of the political spectrum, courtesy of Jim Geraghty in his column Term "Blood Libel" More Common Than You Think at the National Review.

Some examples:

Andrew Sullivan, October 10, 2008:

A couple of obvious thoughts. Paladino speaks of “perverts who target our children and seek to destroy their lives.” This is the gay equivalent of the medieval (and Islamist) blood-libel against Jews.

Ann Coulter’s column, October 30, 2008:

His expert pontificator on race was The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson, who said the Pittsburgh hoax was “the blood libel against black men concerning the defilement of the flower of Caucasian womanhood. It’s been with us for hundreds of years and, apparently, is still with us.”

From the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, September 30, 2009:

Almost immediately following the aftermath of the shooting, the Military Religious Freedom Foundation was the unlikely voice that called for the safeguard of Muslims in the armed forces.

Within hours of the news breaking, MRFF founder and president Mikey Weinstein called upon President Barack Obama to “immediately issue a statement as Commander-in-Chief making it clear that there would be a zero-tolerance policy against any member of the U.S. military inflicting harassments, retribution or reprisal against an Islamic member of the U.S. military.” . . .

He criticized former Alaska Governor and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin for saying that she was “all for” profiling against Muslims.

“We’re not painting all Jews as thieves for Madoff’s economic crimes,” said Weinstein, comparing Palin’s comments to a “blood libel.”


During the recount in 2000:

Florida Democrat Peter Deutsch last night on Crossfire:

Let me just talk a little bit about the whole, I guess, spin from the Republicans about — which has been to me the absolute most — the worst statements I have ever heard probably in my life about anything. I mean, almost a blood libel by the Republicans towards Al Gore, saying that he was trying to stop men and women in uniform that are serving this country from voting. That is the most absurd thing and absolutely has no basis in fact at all.


Jed Babbin, September 8, 2004:

When, in April 1971, John Kerry testified to a Senate committee that “. . . war crimes committed in Southeast Asia [were] not isolated incidents but crimes committed on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command,” he said that the average American soldier who fought in Vietnam was a war criminal. Kerry’s statement was false, a blood libel that hangs in the air to this day.

Michael Barone, November 15, 2004:

And the argument against Michael Dukakis, which he never effectively countered because there is no effective counter, is that giving furlough to people who have life without parole is a position that Dukakis defended over 11 years as governor of Massachusetts or governor candidate, is a crazy law, and he supported it over 11 years. You don’t have to be a racist to want a murderer, whatever his race, to stay in jail and not be allowed outside on the weekend. To say that the American people were racist and they just want black people in, is blood libel on the American people.

John Hood, September 23, 2003: “A ‘Blood Libel’ Against the News & Observer.”

ANOTHER UPDATE: Either Joel Roberts or Andrew Cohen of CBS News (both names are listed), February 9, 2005:

Ward Churchill still doesn’t get it. Even though he has tried to clarify and backtrack upon the worst of his intemperate remarks about the victims of the terror attacks on America, he persists in hanging a blood libel on thousands of victims and, by clear implication, you and me.


Andrew Cohen of CBS News, May 7, 2008:

So-called “judicial activism” occurs, in other words, when it’s your side that lost the case and it is nothing short of a blood libel against judges to accuse them of operating by fiat.

Alex Beam in the Boston Globe, January 14, 2005, discussing the accusation that an official had used the “n-word” in meetings overseas:

My two anonymous sources were making charges that amounted to ‘blood libel’ against former colleagues; that raised the bar for ethical publication.

John Derbyshire, April 28, 2008: “A Blood Libel on Our Civilization.”

AP, July 28, 2008:

Just before Obama spoke, Newsday editor Les Payne had called “blood libel” the argument that African-American journalists could not objectively cover Obama’s candidacy.


Frank Rich, New York Times columnist, October 15, 2006:

The moment Mr. Foley’s e-mails became known, we saw that brand of fearmongering and bigotry at full tilt: Bush administration allies exploited the former Congressman’s predatory history to spread the grotesque canard that homosexuality is a direct path to pedophilia. It’s the kind of blood libel that in another era was spread about Jews.


Where was the outrage? Where were the headlines?

« Last Edit: January 15, 2011, 12:04:50 AM by Monkeyleg »

Perd Hapley

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Re: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2011, 01:09:47 PM »
Ann Coulter’s column, October 30, 2008:

His expert pontificator on race was The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson, who said the Pittsburgh hoax was “the blood libel against black men concerning the defilement of the flower of Caucasian womanhood. It’s been with us for hundreds of years and, apparently, is still with us.”


And Eugene Robinson is apparently unaware that "Caucasian" arises from discredited, white-supremacist theories about race.
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MillCreek

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Re: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2011, 01:54:45 PM »

And Eugene Robinson is apparently unaware that "Caucasian" arises from discredited, white-supremacist theories about race.

I honest to God do not know this: is 'Caucasian' now a politically-incorrect term?  Have I been referring to myself incorrectly all these years?
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Quote from: Angel Eyes on August 09, 2018, 01:56:15 AM
You are one lousy risk manager.

Monkeyleg

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Re: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2011, 06:03:47 PM »
Quote
I honest to God do not know this: is 'Caucasian' now a politically-incorrect term?  Have I been referring to myself incorrectly all these years?

Yes. The term "caucasian" has been replaced with "racist". Make a note of it for further reference.

Perd Hapley

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Re: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« Reply #4 on: January 15, 2011, 06:09:13 PM »
I honest to God do not know this: is 'Caucasian' now a politically-incorrect term?  Have I been referring to myself incorrectly all these years?

Few people take offense to it, but there is certainly reason to do so. Similar to the way "mulatto" should be considered offensive, but doesn't seem to offend anyone, so far as I can tell.

http://www.english.upenn.edu/Projects/knarf/People/blumen.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caucasian_race#Origin_of_the_concept
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1911_Encyclop%C3%A6dia_Britannica/mulatto
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MillCreek

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Re: Recent uses of the term "blood libel"
« Reply #5 on: January 15, 2011, 06:15:41 PM »
Yes. The term "caucasian" has been replaced with "racist". Make a note of it for further reference.

I just about snorted a very nice IPA all over the screen!
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Quote from: Angel Eyes on August 09, 2018, 01:56:15 AM
You are one lousy risk manager.