The gods of intersectionality must be beaming down upon America right now. As if by clockwork, the Mexican flags – the most potent symbols of the anti-ICE protests now convulsing the nation – have been joined by…what else?….Palestinian flags and other totems of Gazan liberation. It’s an almost inevitable co-branding of arch-Left ideologies.
The encroachment of pro-Palestinian elements into the anti-anti-migrant riots parallels a nascent – yet similar – alignment between pro-Palestine movement and the #blacklivesmatter.
While actual #BLM flags have yet to join their Mexican and Palestinian counterparts on America’s chaotic city streets, the protestors are clearly taking their cues from #BLM’s summer of rage following the death of George Floyd five years ago. As the New York Post reported this week, one key supporter of the current anti-ICE protests, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, has also backed #BLM protests.
For the moment, at least, the melding of migrants and the Palestinian cause appears to be the most worrisome. Kaffiyeh-clad rioters, faces covered in masks and carrying various Palestinian-related paraphernalia, have attacked police cars and hurled Molotov cocktails in both Los Angeles and New Orleans this past week. This is the globalising of the intifada. Thousands of anti-Israel protesters have long demanded it – except it’s now taking place right here in America.
According to Israel-based media watchdog group Honest Reporting: “in the pages of major newspapers and the broadcasts of primetime news….mentions of the Palestinian flag are fleeting. The presence of anti-Israel groups is buried or ignored entirely.”
The media is unlikely to maintain this ignorance for much longer. Honest Reporting has identified that leading anti-Zionist groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine and Within Our Lifetime have urged their members to support, if not directly join, the anti-Trump protests. This could fundamentally shift the tenor of the anti-Trump movement from ad-hoc to something multi-national and truly terrifying.
No protest movement in American history has been as well-coordinated and spectacularly violent as the last 19 months of pro-Gaza protests. If we combine this with the LA riots – thousands of illegal migrants facing deportation and with nothing to lose – summer 2025 could make BLM’s weeks of chaos five years ago seem like an Easter Parade.
Of course there’s nothing necessarily organic between marauding for Gaza and rioting for migrant rights. But that’s where #intersectionality conveniently kicks in. The false belief that alignment with one identity-based cause demands alignment with all identity-based causes explains why gay groups and feminists bafflingly champion Hamas, despite the fact it is a misogynistic and homophobic terror group.
With their focus on ethnic minorities and Trump militarism, the current riots were almost purpose built for intersectional co-option. The blueprints are certainly in place. Long before the death of George Floyd ignited BLM’s summer of fury in 2020, the group enshrined anti-Zionism into its foundational manifesto. Along with advocating for boycott and divestment from Israel, BLM accused Israeli authorities of training US police forces. Those forces, BLM continued, were then unleashed upon America’s ethnic minorities.
The truth, of course, is more nuanced. US police officers do train in Israel, as part of a joint intelligence, education and community outreach program established after the September 11 attacks. US police officers also train in other foreign nations; Police Scotland, for instance, hosted a contingent of American police to help with de-escalation training back in 2022. But, as many frustrated pro-Israel advocates now routinely sigh: “No-Jews/No-News”. Only Israel’s shared police programs make headlines.
Back in January, intersectional activists worked overtime to connect the wildfires devastating Los Angeles with Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza. Now they’re doing the same thing with the anti-ICE riots. Ultra-odious broadcaster Mehdi Hasan described the LA riots and Gaza crisis as “movements of mutual aid and solidarity.”
Notorious anti-Zionist site Mondoweiss was even more intellectually-elastic when it described the LA protests and Greta Thunberg’s recent failed “relief mission” as “represent[ing] the same imperial logic: any challenge to injustice will be met with state violence.”
Most worrisome, widely-read social media accounts are busily “connecting the dots between Los Angeles and Palestine,” laying out the same accusations of police training scheme touted by BLM. The posts go on to describe other supposed strategic similarities: Israel’s arrest of Palestinian terrorists, for instance, is akin to the US arresting illegal migrants. “Shared abuse: abduction and family separation” is how they spuriously describe it. You get the idea.
Such libels are indeed bloody and – considering the recent violent anti-Semitic attacks in Colorado and Washington, DC – easily have the power to become far more so. With Trump showing no signs of backing down in his mission to rid America of illegal migrants, intersectional rhetoric is almost certain to ratchet up far louder. And as always, Israel and Jews will continue to serve as the most convenient targets.
The gods of intersectionality must be beaming down upon America right now. As if by clockwork, the Mexican flags – the most potent symbols of the anti-ICE protests now convulsing the nation – have been joined by…what else?….Palestinian flags and other totems of Gazan liberation. It’s an almost inevitable co-branding of arch-Left ideologies.
The encroachment of pro-Palestinian elements into the anti-anti-migrant riots parallels a nascent – yet similar – alignment between pro-Palestine movement and the #blacklivesmatter.
While actual #BLM flags have yet to join their Mexican and Palestinian counterparts on America’s chaotic city streets, the protestors are clearly taking their cues from #BLM’s summer of rage following the death of George Floyd five years ago. As the New York Post reported this week, one key supporter of the current anti-ICE protests, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, has also backed #BLM protests.
For the moment, at least, the melding of migrants and the Palestinian cause appears to be the most worrisome. Kaffiyeh-clad rioters, faces covered in masks and carrying various Palestinian-related paraphernalia, have attacked police cars and hurled Molotov cocktails in both Los Angeles and New Orleans this past week. This is the globalising of the intifada. Thousands of anti-Israel protesters have long demanded it – except it’s now taking place right here in America.
According to Israel-based media watchdog group Honest Reporting: “in the pages of major newspapers and the broadcasts of primetime news….mentions of the Palestinian flag are fleeting. The presence of anti-Israel groups is buried or ignored entirely.”
The media is unlikely to maintain this ignorance for much longer. Honest Reporting has identified that leading anti-Zionist groups such as Students for Justice in Palestine and Within Our Lifetime have urged their members to support, if not directly join, the anti-Trump protests. This could fundamentally shift the tenor of the anti-Trump movement from ad-hoc to something multi-national and truly terrifying.
No protest movement in American history has been as well-coordinated and spectacularly violent as the last 19 months of pro-Gaza protests. If we combine this with the LA riots – thousands of illegal migrants facing deportation and with nothing to lose – summer 2025 could make BLM’s weeks of chaos five years ago seem like an Easter Parade.
Of course there’s nothing necessarily organic between marauding for Gaza and rioting for migrant rights. But that’s where #intersectionality conveniently kicks in. The false belief that alignment with one identity-based cause demands alignment with all identity-based causes explains why gay groups and feminists bafflingly champion Hamas, despite the fact it is a misogynistic and homophobic terror group.
With their focus on ethnic minorities and Trump militarism, the current riots were almost purpose built for intersectional co-option. The blueprints are certainly in place. Long before the death of George Floyd ignited BLM’s summer of fury in 2020, the group enshrined anti-Zionism into its foundational manifesto. Along with advocating for boycott and divestment from Israel, BLM accused Israeli authorities of training US police forces. Those forces, BLM continued, were then unleashed upon America’s ethnic minorities.
The truth, of course, is more nuanced. US police officers do train in Israel, as part of a joint intelligence, education and community outreach program established after the September 11 attacks. US police officers also train in other foreign nations; Police Scotland, for instance, hosted a contingent of American police to help with de-escalation training back in 2022. But, as many frustrated pro-Israel advocates now routinely sigh: “No-Jews/No-News”. Only Israel’s shared police programs make headlines.
Back in January, intersectional activists worked overtime to connect the wildfires devastating Los Angeles with Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza. Now they’re doing the same thing with the anti-ICE riots. Ultra-odious broadcaster Mehdi Hasan described the LA riots and Gaza crisis as “movements of mutual aid and solidarity.”
Notorious anti-Zionist site Mondoweiss was even more intellectually-elastic when it described the LA protests and Greta Thunberg’s recent failed “relief mission” as “represent[ing] the same imperial logic: any challenge to injustice will be met with state violence.”
Most worrisome, widely-read social media accounts are busily “connecting the dots between Los Angeles and Palestine,” laying out the same accusations of police training scheme touted by BLM. The posts go on to describe other supposed strategic similarities: Israel’s arrest of Palestinian terrorists, for instance, is akin to the US arresting illegal migrants. “Shared abuse: abduction and family separation” is how they spuriously describe it. You get the idea.
Such libels are indeed bloody and – considering the recent violent anti-Semitic attacks in Colorado and Washington, DC – easily have the power to become far more so. With Trump showing no signs of backing down in his mission to rid America of illegal migrants, intersectional rhetoric is almost certain to ratchet up far louder. And as always, Israel and Jews will continue to serve as the most convenient targets.