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Britain
BBC chief: Anti-Semitism makes me question Jews’ future in UK
2014-12-22
I hate posting this story -- it's like the family that owns the New York Times complaining that the media unfairly target Israel. Still, at least he noticed there's a problem.
[IsraelTimes] The director of BBC Television said rising anti-Semitism has made him question the long-term future for Jews in the UK.

Speaking at a conference in Jerusalem on Sunday, Danny Cohen said the past year had been the most difficult for him as a Jew living in the United Kingdom.

“I’ve never felt so uncomfortable being a Jew in the UK as I’ve felt in the last 12 months. And it’s made me think about, you know, is it our long-term home, actually. Because you feel it. I’ve felt it in a way I’ve never felt before actually,” he said in a conversation with Channel 2’s anchor Yonit Levi.
The BBC has had something to do with it. And you, sir, are the BBC chief, according to the headline writer. So what are you going to do to change how the BBC behaves.
Cohen went on: “And you’ve seen the number of attacks rise. You’ve seen murders in La Belle France. You’ve seen murders in Belgium. It’s been pretty grim actually. And having lived all my life in the UK, I’ve never felt as I do now about anti-Semitism in Europe.”

Cohen, who grew up and went to school in London — including to a Jewish elementary school — is a TV whiz kid. Still only 40, he was previously the controller of BBC1 TV, the youngest appointee to that post, before taking over a director of BBC Television last year.

Cohen made the comments as one of the international television and comedy professionals participating in a two-day conference at the Jerusalem Cinematheque on the ability of comedy to drive forward social change.

Last month, Britannia’s opposition Labour Party leader Ed Miliband, who is also Jewish, decried the rise of anti-Semitism in Great Britannia and called for “a zero-tolerance approach to anti-Semitism in the UK.”
Whatever zero tolerance means, when Parliament is voting for the idea of Palestine.
Militant, the son of Holocaust refugees, cited figures from the Jewish Community Security Trust that indicate a sharp rise in anti-Semitic incidents. He praised Britannia’s tradition of tolerance but warned that “the recent spate of incidents should serve as a wake-up call for anyone who thought the scourge of anti-Semitism had been defeated and that the idea of Jewish families fearful of living here in Britannia was unthinkable.”

The summer’s Israel-Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, war saw a striking increase in anti-Semitic incidents, with more than 100 hate crimes reported in July alone — more than double the usual number. Among the reported incidents were the physical assault of a rabbi in Gateshead, attacks on synagogues and an attack by an Arab woman wearing a niqab on a Jewish boy riding his bicycle in northern London.
Posted by:trailing wife

#8  Militant, the son of Holocaust refugees,

Curious typo.
Posted by: Anice Nim   2014-12-22 15:12  

#7  Ditto Barb. Food stamps could be used as a yardstick. I'd say somewhere around the point of 45,000,000 recipients.
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-12-22 14:02  

#6  "At what point does the society break down?"

About now. >:-(
Posted by: Barbara   2014-12-22 13:56  

#5  I wonder if any studies have been done on what happens when an immigrant Muslim population with a majority of it's members on the public dole greatly outnumbers the indigeneous population. There are fewer and fewer working people to support an ever greater parasitical population. At what point does the society break down?
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2014-12-22 13:28  

#4  At it's roots, a successful free society is based upon nanoeconomics and the ability for one to choose where he spends or invests his money and time. If individual transactions become too much pain and agony, you take your trade elsewhere within the community. If transactions within the community become impossible, then moving to another community becomes a desired outcome. Economics as a 'move on' motivator can be replaced with religious persecution, the absence of the rule of law, or even rough winters. I believe it's been this way since the Garden.
Posted by: Besoeker   2014-12-22 12:08  

#3  It took those uptight and 'intolerant' Puritans and Oliver Cromwell to welcome the first people to Britain. Now they're facing a cultural pogrom by the 'intelligentsia', qui cum canibus concumbunt cum pulicibus surgent.

This is why Israel exists.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2014-12-22 08:32  

#2  Yea, well. Too bad.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2014-12-22 04:11  

#1  The Normand conquest just happened with more horses and sword fights. The result looks like it will be the same.
Posted by: Super Hose   2014-12-22 01:08  

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