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Sunday, June 15, 2025
Read your damn book
The Forward reports on attorney Steven Ludwig's loud resignation from the board of Philadelphia's ADL chapter to protest the direction that Jonathan Greenblatt has taken the organization. The letter quotes from Greenblatt's 2022 book It Could Happen Here, then argues that the things Greenblatt warned against--infringements on voting rights, infringements on the rule of law, censorship, and attacks on immigrants) are happening under Trump 2.0. But the ADL has not stood up or spoken out because none deals directly with antisemitism and, in fact, the administration is doing many of these things in the name of stopping antisemitism (and anti-Zionism as antisemitism).
Here is the ending of the letter:
At this rate, the ADL will invariably give an award to Trump for being the GREATEST fighter against antisemitism and for doing more for American Jews than anyone ever? (After all, Trump did more for Blacks with the possible exception of President Lincoln.)
Before it is too late, please fulfill ADL’s historic mission to fight for civil rights and to stand up for what’s right while there is still time.
Read your damn book.
The ADL downplayed the resignation, stating that it loses 1-2% of its 800 members across 23 regional boards each year. Still, this is a well-done argument, showing Greenblatt's mistakes, without having to reach for low-hanging fruit, such as Elon Musk's Nazi salutes.
The Forward story also said that Greenblatt walked back his support for Trump administration attacks on universities in a note to leadership, promising to "make a point to continue to call out to the administration the need and constitutional right for due process.” This highlights one of my criticisms of Greenblatt--he does not seem to object to deporting people or punishing colleges and students over protected speech that he deems antisemitic (e.g., Rumeysa Ozturk's op-ed), so long as they receive due process. That cannot be the limits of civil rights.
Posted by Howard Wasserman on June 15, 2025 at 01:08 PM in Howard Wasserman, Law and Politics, Religion | Permalink
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