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The ADL! A World of Sameness, Sameness,
Sameness
By George Brewer
The Anti-Defamation League is anything but
lazy. Every month or so they come up with some new
campaign to show that they are on the side of the oppressed, the
insulted, the injured. Of course, when the ADL was first
formed in 1913, after the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire and lynching
of Leo Frank, there was need for a watchdog organization for
Jews in America. Today, however, like the other ethnic
cohorts, the Jews have done pretty well for themselves in the
USA and are fairly well assimilated. So new categories of
oppression have to be found.
The most relentless campaign calls
itself "A World of Difference" and features cute photos of kids
who appear to be African, Asian, Native American, you name it.
All of this, as far as it goes, is just fine. Let's all
love each other and sit in a circle and eat jellybeans.
But if you stop to think about the ADL's other activities, one
starts to suspect that the ADL's tolerance of difference is only
skin deep.
One wonders what kind of "world of
difference" the ADL would endorse if each of the racial or
ethnic groups pictured had attitudes and opinions-- in other
words, meaningful differences-- that conflicted with ADL
interference in everything from comic books to children's
television. Would they celebrate "difference" then?
One wonders. The ADL has
played a major role in the suppression of opinions they don't
like-- witness their role in the campaign against the
publication of A Nation on Trial [ed. by Norman Finkelstein] and several
other books. Witness their frequent assaults on Holocaust
revisionism, witness also their attempts to sell software that
effectively censors revisionist sites, as well as their even
more frequent identification of "haters" as anyone who disagrees
with their received opinions.

The ADL was outraged by this
children's Pokemon card. Note the red swastika over the
yellow background near the top-left of the picture.
In fact, as we go to press, the ADL
has now taken on Pokemon: the cute animal "pocket monsters" of
cards, TV, and film. It seems that someone imported
trading cards meant for Asian consumption emblazoned with
swastikas: a sacred symbol of hope in the Shinto and Buddhist
religions. The ADL issued a press release, asking Nintendo
to "talk to" the creators of the cards.
At times like this one can only
shake one's head at the arrogance of those who two-facedly harp
about "diversity" -- the swastika is thousands of years old,
arguably older than the mogen david, and it is a sacred symbol
to at least two prominent world religions. The ADL's
conduct here comes ever so close to crossing the line of
outright religious bigotry.
Certainly, we should recognize
attempts to conjure the imagery of Nazi Germany: it would fool
no one if a group of neo-Nazis suddenly converted to Shintoism
so they could conduct a march through Skokie, Illinois bearing
"politically correct" swastikas. But what's at issue here
is the need, not to reflexively reject this ancient and
venerable symbol, but to educate people about the difference--
as in "a world of difference."
The ADL is an important
organization; it's an important part of our cultural mix,
especially for Jewish Americans. But the ADL's celebration
of difference rings a little hollow when one sees how they will
use their voice to stifle the only kinds of difference that
really matters.
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