Well! I learned something new today. Not sure it would apply to me.

FreeInChrist

Active Member
A question for @jeremiah1five , @armylngst , @koverbd , and even including @synergy here.

YES THIS IS THE RIGHT FORUM FOR IT IS AN ARTICLE ON JD VANCE.

I ran across this statement in the article....

Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

My question... before I post the article.... is, Would that apply to anyone such as a Gentile and Jew mixing it up or only on the Jewish side of things.?

Here is what brought this us.


Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust​

Picture of Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz

Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz​


Opinion

January 28, 2026​

6 min read​


Home » Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust
Selection_on_the_ramp_at_Auschwitz-Birkenau_1944_Auschwitz_Album_1b-scaled.jpg
Jews arriving at Auschwitz II in German-occupied Poland, May 1944. Most were selected for execution in gas chambers. By Bernhard Walter via WIkipedia

opinion



US Vice President JD Vance was slammed online for a tweet he posted about International Holocaust Memorial Day.


“Today we remember the millions of lives lost during the Holocaust, the millions of stories of individual bravery and heroism, and one of the enduring lessons of one of the darkest chapters in human history: that while humans create beautiful things and are full of compassion, we’re also capable of unspeakable brutality. And we promise never again to go down the darkest path,” Vance tweeted.


Tablet, a right-leaning American Jewish publication, reposted the VP’s tweet, responding snarkily, “Thank you Mr. Vice President for this unique commemoration of the Holocaust that manages to avoid mentioning Jews or condemning Nazis.”

The omission was grievous. While the Holocaust and, indeed, all of World War Two were global tragedies, Holocaust Memorial Day emphasizes the significance for Jews. The German efforts at the “Final Solution” resulted in the murder of six million Jews, the genocide of two-thirds of the European Jewish population, reducing the global population from 16.6 million to less than 11 million by 1945. As of 2025–2026, the global Jewish population is still lower than it was in 1939. By comparison, there are about 14.8 million Jews alive today, according to the Pew Research Center.


The Jewish population in Europe has not and likely will never fully recover from the Holocaust.“During this time, the rest of the world’s population grew about twice as quickly,” Pew noted.

Before the Holocaust in 1939, the global Jewish population was approximately 16.6 million, representing about 0.8% to 0.83% of the total world population of roughly 2 billion. This population was concentrated in Europe, where Jews made up 1.7% of the continent’s population before the Nazis came to power. Jews currently account for a tiny 0.2% of the global population.

As devastating as World War Two was for the world, the Holocaust nearly succeeded in erasing the Jews from the planet. For that reason, UN General Assembly Resolution 60/7, an initiative of the State of Israel, was adopted by the General Assembly on 1 November 2005, establishing 27 January as International Holocaust Remembrance Day to honor the memory of six million Jews.


Yes, the Holocaust was a tragedy specifically for the Jews, and a Holocaust memorial should mention this.

Vance’s omission could have been written off as a benign oversight if it weren’t for past criticisms accusing him of antisemitism and anti-Zionism. The Jewish Democratic Council, a left-wing organization, dedicated a page of its website to Vance’s supposed anti-Jewish stance.

Vance was not alone in forgetting to emphasize the Jewish element of the day. David Coller, an award-winning investigative journalist, caught the BBC in the same sin. “Apparently “six million PEOPLE” were murdered,” Collier tweeted. “people”? Were they just randomly chosen? Have they no shame at all?”

The BBC apologized on Tuesday, describing the omission as “hurtful, disrespectful, and wrong.”


Ironically, the BBC criticized Canadian PM Justin Trudeau when he opened the National Holocaust Monument in the capital, Ottawa, in 2017.


JD’s failure to mention the Jews at a Holocaust memorial is understandable. The term ‘Holocaust’ is synonymous with the Nazi effort to genocide the Jews. It does not necessarily indicate an attempt at Holocaust denial.

But Vance has a history of sins of omission regarding antisemitism and anti-Zionism. While he has stated that “antisemitism and all forms of ethnic hatred have no place in the conservative movement,” his silence on specific figures and actions has led to allegations of political expediency and complicity. Critics have highlighted Vance’s failure to condemn figures like Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist and Holocaust denier, and have criticized his close association with Tucker Carlson, who has been accused of spreading anti-Israel sentiment.

In difficult times, silence and ambiguity in the face of evil is evil. When Vance had the opportunity to call attention to a great evil perpetrated against the Jewish people, he sidestepped and remained silent. Calling attention to the Holocaust underscores the need for a Jewish state.

When he should have reminded the world of this, Vance chose silence.

While the Vice President failed to emphasize the Jewish aspect of the Holocaust, his omission provides me an opportunity to fulfill a Biblical commandment. Leviticus 19:17 commands Israel to rebuke their fellow man.


“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart; thou shalt surely rebuke thy neighbour, and not bear sin because of him.”

This is immediately followed by the commandment to love our neighbor.

“Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD.”

F251022OFPOOL10-1024x683.jpg
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance at the President residence in Jerusalem, October 22, 2025. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/POOL
Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

So if JD Vance is reading this, he should know that I am giving him tochacha (rebuke) out of absolute love. As a Torah-observant Jew living in the Golan, I am sure in my heart that JD Vance loves Israel and the Jews. I would like to instruct him that in the future, he should be more careful in his speech because unintended words and omissions will be jumped upon by the haters of Israel in an attempt to take down what is undoubtedly the most pro-Israel administration in US history. Criticism of Vance’s Holocaust Day gaffe is nothing more than cynical politicization of the issue, a form of Holocaust denial in itself.


Which brings me to my final point. The same people who are criticizing Vance for failing to note the Jewish nature of Holocaust Memorial Day are, for the most part, the same people who accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza.

Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza cannot be classified as a genocide. In 1948, the Arab population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 80,000 to 100,000 people. When Israel captured Gaza in 1967, UNRWA reported an Arab population of 356,000. In 2005, just before Israel’s disengagement from Gaza, the Arab (Palestinian) population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 1.4 million people according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS). Before the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported the population of Gaza as 2.3 million. In July 2023, the UN “adjusted” this estimate, reducing it to 2.1 million for “humanitarian planning purposes”.

Even by Hamas’ estimates, less than 3% of the Gaza population has been killed in this “genocide”. And the numbers provided by Hamas are notoriously unreliable, unsubstantiated, frequently revised, and defy all logic.

Accusations against Israel originated with a claim made by South Africa in December 2023 before the International Court of Justice. And while many use this as a basis to accuse Israel of committing genocide, the ICJ did not conclude that genocide had occurred—only that the claims warranted further examination—and it did not impose an immediate cessation of military operations.

It should be noted that the word “genocide” was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born jurist who served as an adviser to the U.S. Department of War during World War II, in the wake of the Holocaust. Perhaps most telling is that the Lemkin family, along with Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, filed a formal complaint with Pennsylvania authorities demanding that the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention stop using his name because of the Institute’s repeated genocide accusations against Israel. They argue that these statements, combined with the use of Lemkin’s name, serve to advance a political agenda disconnected from his original legacy.


I am convinced that the reason so many want to falsely accuse Israel of genocide is in order to absolve themselves of the Holocaust. While there is no question that Russia invaded Ukraine, there are no protests outside Russian Orthodox churches, no vandalism, no calls to ‘gas the Russians.’ The genocide accusation has erased the line that separates anti-Zionism from Jew-hatred. Anti-Zionism is no longer a political statement. It is outright racism, preparing the way for worse, perhaps for another attempt to wipe out the Jews. Perhaps that is why these folks support Hamas, an organization that has openly declared its intention to kill every Jew on the planet. And the solution for Gaza being carried out right now is leaving Hamas in place and armed.

So it seems that accusing Israel of genocide is a form of the truly heinous sin of Holocaust denial to a degree that is far more egregious than JD Vance’s omission, which came while he was commemorating the Holocaust. But Vance is choosing to play it safe, remain silent in the face of evil, so that his political future remains strong.

While he may not be actively antisemitic, as a leader, Vance should not be silent. Vance must step up and be unequivocal in these times when antisemites are growing bolder. He must declare, ‘Never again will we be silent when Jews are being murdered.’ Vance must loudly denounce Jew-haters like Fuentes and Carlson and not remain silent while their ranks grow,
 
A question for @jeremiah1five , @armylngst , @koverbd , and even including @synergy here.

YES THIS IS THE RIGHT FORUM FOR IT IS AN ARTICLE ON JD VANCE.

I ran across this statement in the article....

Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

My question... before I post the article.... is, Would that apply to anyone such as a Gentile and Jew mixing it up or only on the Jewish side of things.?

Here is what brought this us.


Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust​

Picture of Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz

Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz


Opinion

January 28, 2026​

6 min read​


Home » Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust
Selection_on_the_ramp_at_Auschwitz-Birkenau_1944_Auschwitz_Album_1b-scaled.jpg
Jews arriving at Auschwitz II in German-occupied Poland, May 1944. Most were selected for execution in gas chambers. By Bernhard Walter via WIkipedia

opinion



US Vice President JD Vance was slammed online for a tweet he posted about International Holocaust Memorial Day.


“Today we remember the millions of lives lost during the Holocaust, the millions of stories of individual bravery and heroism, and one of the enduring lessons of one of the darkest chapters in human history: that while humans create beautiful things and are full of compassion, we’re also capable of unspeakable brutality. And we promise never again to go down the darkest path,” Vance tweeted.


Tablet, a right-leaning American Jewish publication, reposted the VP’s tweet, responding snarkily, “Thank you Mr. Vice President for this unique commemoration of the Holocaust that manages to avoid mentioning Jews or condemning Nazis.”

The omission was grievous. While the Holocaust and, indeed, all of World War Two were global tragedies, Holocaust Memorial Day emphasizes the significance for Jews. The German efforts at the “Final Solution” resulted in the murder of six million Jews, the genocide of two-thirds of the European Jewish population, reducing the global population from 16.6 million to less than 11 million by 1945. As of 2025–2026, the global Jewish population is still lower than it was in 1939. By comparison, there are about 14.8 million Jews alive today, according to the Pew Research Center.


The Jewish population in Europe has not and likely will never fully recover from the Holocaust.“During this time, the rest of the world’s population grew about twice as quickly,” Pew noted.

Before the Holocaust in 1939, the global Jewish population was approximately 16.6 million, representing about 0.8% to 0.83% of the total world population of roughly 2 billion. This population was concentrated in Europe, where Jews made up 1.7% of the continent’s population before the Nazis came to power. Jews currently account for a tiny 0.2% of the global population.

As devastating as World War Two was for the world, the Holocaust nearly succeeded in erasing the Jews from the planet. For that reason, UN General Assembly Resolution 60/7, an initiative of the State of Israel, was adopted by the General Assembly on 1 November 2005, establishing 27 January as International Holocaust Remembrance Day to honor the memory of six million Jews.


Yes, the Holocaust was a tragedy specifically for the Jews, and a Holocaust memorial should mention this.

Vance’s omission could have been written off as a benign oversight if it weren’t for past criticisms accusing him of antisemitism and anti-Zionism. The Jewish Democratic Council, a left-wing organization, dedicated a page of its website to Vance’s supposed anti-Jewish stance.

Vance was not alone in forgetting to emphasize the Jewish element of the day. David Coller, an award-winning investigative journalist, caught the BBC in the same sin. “Apparently “six million PEOPLE” were murdered,” Collier tweeted. “people”? Were they just randomly chosen? Have they no shame at all?”

The BBC apologized on Tuesday, describing the omission as “hurtful, disrespectful, and wrong.”


Ironically, the BBC criticized Canadian PM Justin Trudeau when he opened the National Holocaust Monument in the capital, Ottawa, in 2017.


JD’s failure to mention the Jews at a Holocaust memorial is understandable. The term ‘Holocaust’ is synonymous with the Nazi effort to genocide the Jews. It does not necessarily indicate an attempt at Holocaust denial.

But Vance has a history of sins of omission regarding antisemitism and anti-Zionism. While he has stated that “antisemitism and all forms of ethnic hatred have no place in the conservative movement,” his silence on specific figures and actions has led to allegations of political expediency and complicity. Critics have highlighted Vance’s failure to condemn figures like Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist and Holocaust denier, and have criticized his close association with Tucker Carlson, who has been accused of spreading anti-Israel sentiment.

In difficult times, silence and ambiguity in the face of evil is evil. When Vance had the opportunity to call attention to a great evil perpetrated against the Jewish people, he sidestepped and remained silent. Calling attention to the Holocaust underscores the need for a Jewish state.

When he should have reminded the world of this, Vance chose silence.

While the Vice President failed to emphasize the Jewish aspect of the Holocaust, his omission provides me an opportunity to fulfill a Biblical commandment. Leviticus 19:17 commands Israel to rebuke their fellow man.


“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart; thou shalt surely rebuke thy neighbour, and not bear sin because of him.”

This is immediately followed by the commandment to love our neighbor.

“Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD.”

F251022OFPOOL10-1024x683.jpg
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance at the President residence in Jerusalem, October 22, 2025. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/POOL
Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

So if JD Vance is reading this, he should know that I am giving him tochacha (rebuke) out of absolute love. As a Torah-observant Jew living in the Golan, I am sure in my heart that JD Vance loves Israel and the Jews. I would like to instruct him that in the future, he should be more careful in his speech because unintended words and omissions will be jumped upon by the haters of Israel in an attempt to take down what is undoubtedly the most pro-Israel administration in US history. Criticism of Vance’s Holocaust Day gaffe is nothing more than cynical politicization of the issue, a form of Holocaust denial in itself.


Which brings me to my final point. The same people who are criticizing Vance for failing to note the Jewish nature of Holocaust Memorial Day are, for the most part, the same people who accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza.

Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza cannot be classified as a genocide. In 1948, the Arab population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 80,000 to 100,000 people. When Israel captured Gaza in 1967, UNRWA reported an Arab population of 356,000. In 2005, just before Israel’s disengagement from Gaza, the Arab (Palestinian) population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 1.4 million people according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS). Before the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported the population of Gaza as 2.3 million. In July 2023, the UN “adjusted” this estimate, reducing it to 2.1 million for “humanitarian planning purposes”.

Even by Hamas’ estimates, less than 3% of the Gaza population has been killed in this “genocide”. And the numbers provided by Hamas are notoriously unreliable, unsubstantiated, frequently revised, and defy all logic.

Accusations against Israel originated with a claim made by South Africa in December 2023 before the International Court of Justice. And while many use this as a basis to accuse Israel of committing genocide, the ICJ did not conclude that genocide had occurred—only that the claims warranted further examination—and it did not impose an immediate cessation of military operations.

It should be noted that the word “genocide” was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born jurist who served as an adviser to the U.S. Department of War during World War II, in the wake of the Holocaust. Perhaps most telling is that the Lemkin family, along with Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, filed a formal complaint with Pennsylvania authorities demanding that the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention stop using his name because of the Institute’s repeated genocide accusations against Israel. They argue that these statements, combined with the use of Lemkin’s name, serve to advance a political agenda disconnected from his original legacy.


I am convinced that the reason so many want to falsely accuse Israel of genocide is in order to absolve themselves of the Holocaust. While there is no question that Russia invaded Ukraine, there are no protests outside Russian Orthodox churches, no vandalism, no calls to ‘gas the Russians.’ The genocide accusation has erased the line that separates anti-Zionism from Jew-hatred. Anti-Zionism is no longer a political statement. It is outright racism, preparing the way for worse, perhaps for another attempt to wipe out the Jews. Perhaps that is why these folks support Hamas, an organization that has openly declared its intention to kill every Jew on the planet. And the solution for Gaza being carried out right now is leaving Hamas in place and armed.

So it seems that accusing Israel of genocide is a form of the truly heinous sin of Holocaust denial to a degree that is far more egregious than JD Vance’s omission, which came while he was commemorating the Holocaust. But Vance is choosing to play it safe, remain silent in the face of evil, so that his political future remains strong.

While he may not be actively antisemitic, as a leader, Vance should not be silent. Vance must step up and be unequivocal in these times when antisemites are growing bolder. He must declare, ‘Never again will we be silent when Jews are being murdered.’ Vance must loudly denounce Jew-haters like Fuentes and Carlson and not remain silent while their ranks grow,
All Genocides around the world should be remembered and condemned, with the name of the victims explicitly mentioned.

The Armenian Genocide is officially remembered each year on April 24. This date marks the anniversary of the 1915 arrest of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople, widely seen as the beginning of the genocide in which approximately 1.5 million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths by the authorities of the late Ottoman Empire. April 24 is observed by Armenia, the Armenian diaspora, and numerous countries around the world as the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.

The White House also acknowledges it by issuing statements on April 24 each year, recognizing the Armenian Genocide, aka the Armenian Remembrance Day.

Here are key excerpts and themes from Biden’s remarks over recent years:

1. Biden has emphasized pausing each year to “remember the lives lost during the Meds Yeghern—the Armenian genocide—and renew our pledge to never forget.”

2. He has noted that Armenian intellectuals and community leaders were arrested on April 24, 1915, triggering a campaign in which one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths.

3. His statements honor the resilience and resolve of the Armenian people, many of whom survived, rebuilt their communities, preserved their culture, and contributed significantly in countries around the world, including the U.S.

4. Biden’s messages reaffirm the U.S. commitment to standing up for human rights, speaking out against intolerance, and preventing future atrocities.

In 2021, Biden’s statement explicitly acknowledged the killings as a Genocide, marking a notable change from prior U.S. presidential practice.

By the way, I'm not Armenian. I have many Armenian friends.
 
A question for @jeremiah1five , @armylngst , @koverbd , and even including @synergy here.

YES THIS IS THE RIGHT FORUM FOR IT IS AN ARTICLE ON JD VANCE.

I ran across this statement in the article....

Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

My question... before I post the article.... is, Would that apply to anyone such as a Gentile and Jew mixing it up or only on the Jewish side of things.?

Here is what brought this us.


Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust​

Picture of Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz

Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz


Opinion

January 28, 2026​

6 min read​


Home » Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust
Selection_on_the_ramp_at_Auschwitz-Birkenau_1944_Auschwitz_Album_1b-scaled.jpg
Jews arriving at Auschwitz II in German-occupied Poland, May 1944. Most were selected for execution in gas chambers. By Bernhard Walter via WIkipedia

opinion



US Vice President JD Vance was slammed online for a tweet he posted about International Holocaust Memorial Day.


“Today we remember the millions of lives lost during the Holocaust, the millions of stories of individual bravery and heroism, and one of the enduring lessons of one of the darkest chapters in human history: that while humans create beautiful things and are full of compassion, we’re also capable of unspeakable brutality. And we promise never again to go down the darkest path,” Vance tweeted.


Tablet, a right-leaning American Jewish publication, reposted the VP’s tweet, responding snarkily, “Thank you Mr. Vice President for this unique commemoration of the Holocaust that manages to avoid mentioning Jews or condemning Nazis.”

The omission was grievous. While the Holocaust and, indeed, all of World War Two were global tragedies, Holocaust Memorial Day emphasizes the significance for Jews. The German efforts at the “Final Solution” resulted in the murder of six million Jews, the genocide of two-thirds of the European Jewish population, reducing the global population from 16.6 million to less than 11 million by 1945. As of 2025–2026, the global Jewish population is still lower than it was in 1939. By comparison, there are about 14.8 million Jews alive today, according to the Pew Research Center.


The Jewish population in Europe has not and likely will never fully recover from the Holocaust.“During this time, the rest of the world’s population grew about twice as quickly,” Pew noted.

Before the Holocaust in 1939, the global Jewish population was approximately 16.6 million, representing about 0.8% to 0.83% of the total world population of roughly 2 billion. This population was concentrated in Europe, where Jews made up 1.7% of the continent’s population before the Nazis came to power. Jews currently account for a tiny 0.2% of the global population.

As devastating as World War Two was for the world, the Holocaust nearly succeeded in erasing the Jews from the planet. For that reason, UN General Assembly Resolution 60/7, an initiative of the State of Israel, was adopted by the General Assembly on 1 November 2005, establishing 27 January as International Holocaust Remembrance Day to honor the memory of six million Jews.


Yes, the Holocaust was a tragedy specifically for the Jews, and a Holocaust memorial should mention this.

Vance’s omission could have been written off as a benign oversight if it weren’t for past criticisms accusing him of antisemitism and anti-Zionism. The Jewish Democratic Council, a left-wing organization, dedicated a page of its website to Vance’s supposed anti-Jewish stance.

Vance was not alone in forgetting to emphasize the Jewish element of the day. David Coller, an award-winning investigative journalist, caught the BBC in the same sin. “Apparently “six million PEOPLE” were murdered,” Collier tweeted. “people”? Were they just randomly chosen? Have they no shame at all?”

The BBC apologized on Tuesday, describing the omission as “hurtful, disrespectful, and wrong.”


Ironically, the BBC criticized Canadian PM Justin Trudeau when he opened the National Holocaust Monument in the capital, Ottawa, in 2017.


JD’s failure to mention the Jews at a Holocaust memorial is understandable. The term ‘Holocaust’ is synonymous with the Nazi effort to genocide the Jews. It does not necessarily indicate an attempt at Holocaust denial.

But Vance has a history of sins of omission regarding antisemitism and anti-Zionism. While he has stated that “antisemitism and all forms of ethnic hatred have no place in the conservative movement,” his silence on specific figures and actions has led to allegations of political expediency and complicity. Critics have highlighted Vance’s failure to condemn figures like Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist and Holocaust denier, and have criticized his close association with Tucker Carlson, who has been accused of spreading anti-Israel sentiment.

In difficult times, silence and ambiguity in the face of evil is evil. When Vance had the opportunity to call attention to a great evil perpetrated against the Jewish people, he sidestepped and remained silent. Calling attention to the Holocaust underscores the need for a Jewish state.

When he should have reminded the world of this, Vance chose silence.

While the Vice President failed to emphasize the Jewish aspect of the Holocaust, his omission provides me an opportunity to fulfill a Biblical commandment. Leviticus 19:17 commands Israel to rebuke their fellow man.


“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart; thou shalt surely rebuke thy neighbour, and not bear sin because of him.”

This is immediately followed by the commandment to love our neighbor.

“Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD.”

F251022OFPOOL10-1024x683.jpg
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance at the President residence in Jerusalem, October 22, 2025. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/POOL
Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

So if JD Vance is reading this, he should know that I am giving him tochacha (rebuke) out of absolute love. As a Torah-observant Jew living in the Golan, I am sure in my heart that JD Vance loves Israel and the Jews. I would like to instruct him that in the future, he should be more careful in his speech because unintended words and omissions will be jumped upon by the haters of Israel in an attempt to take down what is undoubtedly the most pro-Israel administration in US history. Criticism of Vance’s Holocaust Day gaffe is nothing more than cynical politicization of the issue, a form of Holocaust denial in itself.


Which brings me to my final point. The same people who are criticizing Vance for failing to note the Jewish nature of Holocaust Memorial Day are, for the most part, the same people who accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza.

Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza cannot be classified as a genocide. In 1948, the Arab population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 80,000 to 100,000 people. When Israel captured Gaza in 1967, UNRWA reported an Arab population of 356,000. In 2005, just before Israel’s disengagement from Gaza, the Arab (Palestinian) population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 1.4 million people according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS). Before the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported the population of Gaza as 2.3 million. In July 2023, the UN “adjusted” this estimate, reducing it to 2.1 million for “humanitarian planning purposes”.

Even by Hamas’ estimates, less than 3% of the Gaza population has been killed in this “genocide”. And the numbers provided by Hamas are notoriously unreliable, unsubstantiated, frequently revised, and defy all logic.

Accusations against Israel originated with a claim made by South Africa in December 2023 before the International Court of Justice. And while many use this as a basis to accuse Israel of committing genocide, the ICJ did not conclude that genocide had occurred—only that the claims warranted further examination—and it did not impose an immediate cessation of military operations.

It should be noted that the word “genocide” was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born jurist who served as an adviser to the U.S. Department of War during World War II, in the wake of the Holocaust. Perhaps most telling is that the Lemkin family, along with Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, filed a formal complaint with Pennsylvania authorities demanding that the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention stop using his name because of the Institute’s repeated genocide accusations against Israel. They argue that these statements, combined with the use of Lemkin’s name, serve to advance a political agenda disconnected from his original legacy.


I am convinced that the reason so many want to falsely accuse Israel of genocide is in order to absolve themselves of the Holocaust. While there is no question that Russia invaded Ukraine, there are no protests outside Russian Orthodox churches, no vandalism, no calls to ‘gas the Russians.’ The genocide accusation has erased the line that separates anti-Zionism from Jew-hatred. Anti-Zionism is no longer a political statement. It is outright racism, preparing the way for worse, perhaps for another attempt to wipe out the Jews. Perhaps that is why these folks support Hamas, an organization that has openly declared its intention to kill every Jew on the planet. And the solution for Gaza being carried out right now is leaving Hamas in place and armed.

So it seems that accusing Israel of genocide is a form of the truly heinous sin of Holocaust denial to a degree that is far more egregious than JD Vance’s omission, which came while he was commemorating the Holocaust. But Vance is choosing to play it safe, remain silent in the face of evil, so that his political future remains strong.

While he may not be actively antisemitic, as a leader, Vance should not be silent. Vance must step up and be unequivocal in these times when antisemites are growing bolder. He must declare, ‘Never again will we be silent when Jews are being murdered.’ Vance must loudly denounce Jew-haters like Fuentes and Carlson and not remain silent while their ranks grow,
The obligation to rebuke, but not shame, a person who is behaving wrongly (Leviticus 19:17): Do not hate your brother in
your heart, but rebuke your neighbor frankly, so you won't carry sin because of him. This is the 239th law in the Torah out
of the 613 listed. This law pertained in my opinion was for the Hebrew nation. We can investigate a verse in the New
Covenant in Matthew 18:15-18 Moreover, if your brother commits a sin against you, go and show him his fault---but
privately, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won back your brother. If he doesn't listen, take
one or two others with you so that every accusation can be supported by the testimony of two or three witnesses.
("Two or three witnesses." Such witnesses establish a fact in Jewish court, a beit-din (Deut. 19:15). In my opinion this
passage refers to the rebuking of a believer in Yeshua by another believer.
In the Jewish Didache which is the teachings of the twelve Jewish Messianic Apostles to the Gentiles it states in
Chapter 15:3 Do not rebuke one another in anger but rather in peace, just as you have been taught in the
Good News. And if anyone was wronged another person, let no one speak to him nor let him hear from you
until he repents. In Jewish law, there are three degrees of excommunication, although none is common today.
The lightest, n'zifah ("rebuke"), could be declared by one person and normally lasts for seven days. the next,
niddui ("casting out, rejection"), usually required three people to declare and lasted thirty days, and people
were required to stay 4 cubits (six feet) from him. The most severe, cherem, was a ban of indefinite duration;
a person under cherem was treated like one dead, (In the Talmud see Mo'ed Katan 16a-17a, N'darim 7b, Pesachim 52a)
For Messianic Jews today social ostracism by family and/or the Jewish community---that is, be treated as if
under a cherem---can be a cost to be counted when committing one's life to Yeshua.

Shalom
 
Last edited:
All Genocides around the world should be remembered and condemned, with the name of the victims explicitly mentioned.

The Armenian Genocide is officially remembered each year on April 24. This date marks the anniversary of the 1915 arrest of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople, widely seen as the beginning of the genocide in which approximately 1.5 million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths by the authorities of the late Ottoman Empire. April 24 is observed by Armenia, the Armenian diaspora, and numerous countries around the world as the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day.

The White House also acknowledges it by issuing statements on April 24 each year, recognizing the Armenian Genocide, aka the Armenian Remembrance Day.

Here are key excerpts and themes from Biden’s remarks over recent years:

1. Biden has emphasized pausing each year to “remember the lives lost during the Meds Yeghern—the Armenian genocide—and renew our pledge to never forget.”

2. He has noted that Armenian intellectuals and community leaders were arrested on April 24, 1915, triggering a campaign in which one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths.

3. His statements honor the resilience and resolve of the Armenian people, many of whom survived, rebuilt their communities, preserved their culture, and contributed significantly in countries around the world, including the U.S.

4. Biden’s messages reaffirm the U.S. commitment to standing up for human rights, speaking out against intolerance, and preventing future atrocities.

In 2021, Biden’s statement explicitly acknowledged the killings as a Genocide, marking a notable change from prior U.S. presidential practice.

By the way, I'm not Armenian. I have many Armenian friends.
Nice! Crooked and sleepy Joe Biden, too bad he didn't do anything about it. Empty words with no action.
Shalom
 
Nice! Crooked and sleepy Joe Biden, too bad he didn't do anything about it. Empty words with no action.
Shalom
What can he do about it since 99% of all Armenians have left Turkey anyways. It's not like they're still fighting for their homes that they were thrown out of by the Turks. They've found peace in the West, not so much in Armenia.
 
What can he do about it since 99% of all Armenians have left Turkey anyways. It's not like they're still fighting for their homes that they were thrown out of by the Turks. They've found peace in the West, not so much in Armenia.
Hope they have green cards! You know there is a bounty in Mississippi and Missouri for illegals.
Shalom
 
Hope they have green cards! You know there is a bounty in Mississippi and Missouri for illegals.
Shalom
They are American citizens and have been for decades, not that does any good seeing how ICE is allowed to gun down American citizens. So you need to watch out if you're anywhere in or around Minnesota.

Anyways, it's thanks to Israel that Azerbaijan was supplied with Israeli drones that massacred Armenians a few years ago. Thank you Israel for combining your weapons with Turkish weapons to massacre Armenians once more. The Israeli self-centered hypocrisy continues on and on and on .....
 
The obligation to rebuke, but not shame, a person who is behaving wrongly (Leviticus 19:17): Do not hate your brother in
your heart, but rebuke your neighbor frankly, so you won't carry sin because of him. This is the 239th law in the Torah out
of the 613 listed. This law pertained in my opinion was for the Hebrew nation. We can investigate a verse in the New
Covenant in Matthew 18:15-18 Moreover, if your brother commits a sin against you, go and show him his fault---but
privately, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won back your brother. If he doesn't listen, take
one or two others with you so that every accusation can be supported by the testimony of two or three witnesses.
("Two or three witnesses." Such witnesses establish a fact in Jewish court, a beit-din (Deut. 19:15). In my opinion this
passage refers to the rebuking of a believer in Yeshua by another believer.
In the Jewish Didache which is the teachings of the twelve Jewish Messianic Apostles to the Gentiles it states in
Chapter 15:3 Do not rebuke one another in anger but rather in peace, just as you have been taught in the
Good News. And if anyone was wronged another person, let no one speak to him nor let him hear from you
until he repents. In Jewish law, there are three degrees of excommunication, although none is common today.
The lightest, n'zifah ("rebuke"), could be declared by one person and normally lasts for seven days. the next,
niddui ("casting out, rejection"), usually required three people to declare and lasted thirty days, and people
were required to stay 4 cubits (six feet) from him. The most severe, cherem, was a ban of indefinite duration;
a person under cherem was treated like one dead, (In the Talmud see Mo'ed Katan 16a-17a, N'darim 7b, Pesachim 52a)
For Messianic Jews today social ostracism by family and/or the Jewish community---that is, be treated as if
under a cherem---can be a cost to be counted when committing one's life to Yeshua.

Shalom
Thank you.
 
They are American citizens and have been for decades, not that does any good seeing how ICE is allowed to gun down American citizens. So you need to watch out if you're anywhere in or around Minnesota.

Anyways, it's thanks to Israel that Azerbaijan was supplied with Israeli drones that massacred Armenians a few years ago. Thank you Israel for combining your weapons with Turkish weapons to massacre Armenians once more. The Israeli self-centered hypocrisy continues on and on and on .....
If you don't like our great country, then leave. We don't need leftist pinheads tearing our great country down. ICE is doing a great
job removing these illegals that are here breaking the law and putting our citizens at risk. Two groups of people you
don't want a confrontation with is an ICE and an IRS agent. They can seize property and kill, injure criminals without due process. Armenia will be soundly defeated with their alliance with the Russian confederacy when they attack Israel in Ezekiel 38 and 39.
Shalom
 
If you don't like our great country, then leave.
This country is built on Greek Democracy. Why should I ever leave? Your logic is warped, as usual.

You're the one who has badmouthed the West which is built on Greek ideas so it's you that doesn't like our great country, or are you being deceptively hypocritical again?
We don't need leftist pinheads tearing our great country down. ICE is doing a great
job removing these illegals that are here breaking the law and putting our citizens at risk. Two groups of people you
don't want a confrontation with is an ICE and an IRS agent. They can seize property and kill, injure criminals without due process. Armenia will be soundly defeated with their alliance with the Russian confederacy when they attack Israel in Ezekiel 38 and 39.
Shalom
The Jewish self-centered hypocrisy continues on and on. It's ok for you if people like Armenians are massacred because of Israeli drones with no accountability expressed by Israel. What hypocrisy! Carry on with your self-centered hypocrisy.
 
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This country is built on Greek Democracy. Why should I ever leave? Your logic is warped, as usual.

You're the one who has badmouthed the West which is built on Greek Democracy so it's you that doesn't like our great country, or are you being deceptively hypocritical again?

The Jewish self-centered hypocrisy continues on and on. It's ok for you if people like Armenians are massacred because of Israeli drones with no accountability expressed by Israel. What hypocrisy! Carry on with your self-centered hypocrisy.
I will always support the Jewish State. The Jewish State is God's timepiece and their people are the apple of God's
eye. You are so wrong and brainwashed. Our country was built on Judeo-Christian principals. Our country was
never built on Greek Democracy. We are a child of our mother country England, not Greece. You and your Greek
pagan gods were never a part of this country. Greece is a tiny bankrupt country of no significance to the world.
If the world needs an enemia, Greece is where they put the tube.
Shalom
 
I will always support the Jewish State. The Jewish State is God's timepiece and their people are the apple of God's
eye.
Your claims are a mixture of political slogans and misinterpretations, as usual. Saying you will “always support the Jewish State” because it is “God’s timepiece” is a warped personal position, not a universal biblical mandate. Even the phrase “apple of His eye” in Scripture refers to God’s covenant care for His people (Jews and Greeks), not a blanket political endorsement of any modern nation-state.

(Rom 10:12) For there is no difference both of Jew and of Greek, for the same Lord over all is rich to all who call on Him.
You are so wrong and brainwashed. Our country was built on Judeo-Christian principals. Our country was
never built on Greek Democracy. We are a child of our mother country England, not Greece. You and your Greek
pagan gods were never a part of this country. Greece is a tiny bankrupt country of no significance to the world.
If the world needs an enemia, Greece is where they put the tube.
Shalom
Well, the USA broke away from British Monarchical rule and embraced Greek Democracy. It is therefore simply insane to claim America was never influenced by Greek or classical political thought. The Founding Fathers explicitly studied and drew from Greek and Roman models of republicanism, checks and balances, and civic virtue when shaping the Constitution.

May you and your Royal Monarchy be happy with each other. :ROFLMAO:
 
Your claims are a mixture of political slogans and misinterpretations, as usual. Saying you will “always support the Jewish State” because it is “God’s timepiece” is a warped personal position, not a universal biblical mandate. Even the phrase “apple of His eye” in Scripture refers to God’s covenant care for His people (Jews and Greeks), not a blanket political endorsement of any modern nation-state.

(Rom 10:12) For there is no difference both of Jew and of Greek, for the same Lord over all is rich to all who call on Him.

Well, the USA broke away from British Monarchical rule and embraced Greek Democracy. It is therefore simply insane to claim America was never influenced by Greek or classical political thought. The Founding Fathers explicitly studied and drew from Greek and Roman models of republicanism, checks and balances, and civic virtue when shaping the Constitution.

May you and your Royal Monarchy be happy with each other. :ROFLMAO:
The Apple of God's eye is always and only the Jewish people. NOT Greeks or Geeks!!
Take your heresy indoctrination to your next ICE protest or an LGBTQ parade.
Shalom
 
The Apple of God's eye is always and only the Jewish people. NOT Greeks or Geeks!!
Take your heresy indoctrination to your next ICE protest or an LGBTQ parade.
Shalom
Your resorting to ad hominems clearly shows that your Judaizing and Pharisaic campaign has crashed and burned. 🔥🔥🔥

Also, people who make false LGBTQ claims against others are the apple of God's eye? You need a sanity check, my friend.
 
Touchy aren't we. Your resorting to ad hominems clearly shows that your Judaizing and Pharisaic campaign has crashed and burned.

Also, people who make false LGBTQ claims against others are the apple of God's eye? You need a sanity check, my friend.
I'm never touchy unless I see or hear antisemitism. Your the one that has crashed and burned. Who says its a false claim?
My Jewish ✡️ class is protected in America, unfortunately yours is not for obvious reasons.
Shalom
 
I'm never touchy unless I see or hear antisemitism. Your the one that has crashed and burned. Who says its a false claim?
My Jewish ✡️ class is protected in America, unfortunately yours is not for obvious reasons.
Shalom
You're not protected against Judaizing, Pharisaic, Hypocritical, and false claims. We can all see right through you.
 
You're not protected against Judaizing, Pharisaic, Hypocritical, and false claims. We can all see right through you.
Who is we? You have a mouse in your pocket? Your the heretic that tries to sell your fake doctrines and biases. You are also an antisemitic. Wow a Jew hater! That doesn't surprise me. I seen your kind come and go.
Do America a favor and go back to Armenia where you belong. Maybe Tom Holman can make that a reality for you.
Shalom
 
Who is we? You have a mouse in your pocket? Your the heretic that tries to sell your fake doctrines and biases. You are also an antisemitic. Wow a Jew hater! That doesn't surprise me. I seen your kind come and go.
The Apostles were NOT Jew haters nor are they anti-semitic! Paul spotted Judaizers a mile away and called them out in no uncertain terms. I'm just following Paul's example who would put a spotlight on Judaizing Pharisees like you and called them out because of their hypocrisies and false statements.
Do America a favor and go back to Armenia where you belong. Maybe Tom Holman can make that a reality for you.
Shalom
Another false statement from you. I don't belong to Amenia because I'm not an Armenian, as I told you before. The West was built on the GrecoRoman civilization. The sooner you realize that the sooner you will break out of your Judaizing Pharisaic hypocrisies and false statements.
 
A question for @jeremiah1five , @armylngst , @koverbd , and even including @synergy here.

YES THIS IS THE RIGHT FORUM FOR IT IS AN ARTICLE ON JD VANCE.

I ran across this statement in the article....

Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

My question... before I post the article.... is, Would that apply to anyone such as a Gentile and Jew mixing it up or only on the Jewish side of things.?

Here is what brought this us.


Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust​

Picture of Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz

Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz


Opinion

January 28, 2026​

6 min read​


Home » Mr. VP, I love you, but you were wrong about the Holocaust
Selection_on_the_ramp_at_Auschwitz-Birkenau_1944_Auschwitz_Album_1b-scaled.jpg
Jews arriving at Auschwitz II in German-occupied Poland, May 1944. Most were selected for execution in gas chambers. By Bernhard Walter via WIkipedia

opinion



US Vice President JD Vance was slammed online for a tweet he posted about International Holocaust Memorial Day.


“Today we remember the millions of lives lost during the Holocaust, the millions of stories of individual bravery and heroism, and one of the enduring lessons of one of the darkest chapters in human history: that while humans create beautiful things and are full of compassion, we’re also capable of unspeakable brutality. And we promise never again to go down the darkest path,” Vance tweeted.


Tablet, a right-leaning American Jewish publication, reposted the VP’s tweet, responding snarkily, “Thank you Mr. Vice President for this unique commemoration of the Holocaust that manages to avoid mentioning Jews or condemning Nazis.”

The omission was grievous. While the Holocaust and, indeed, all of World War Two were global tragedies, Holocaust Memorial Day emphasizes the significance for Jews. The German efforts at the “Final Solution” resulted in the murder of six million Jews, the genocide of two-thirds of the European Jewish population, reducing the global population from 16.6 million to less than 11 million by 1945. As of 2025–2026, the global Jewish population is still lower than it was in 1939. By comparison, there are about 14.8 million Jews alive today, according to the Pew Research Center.


The Jewish population in Europe has not and likely will never fully recover from the Holocaust.“During this time, the rest of the world’s population grew about twice as quickly,” Pew noted.

Before the Holocaust in 1939, the global Jewish population was approximately 16.6 million, representing about 0.8% to 0.83% of the total world population of roughly 2 billion. This population was concentrated in Europe, where Jews made up 1.7% of the continent’s population before the Nazis came to power. Jews currently account for a tiny 0.2% of the global population.

As devastating as World War Two was for the world, the Holocaust nearly succeeded in erasing the Jews from the planet. For that reason, UN General Assembly Resolution 60/7, an initiative of the State of Israel, was adopted by the General Assembly on 1 November 2005, establishing 27 January as International Holocaust Remembrance Day to honor the memory of six million Jews.


Yes, the Holocaust was a tragedy specifically for the Jews, and a Holocaust memorial should mention this.

Vance’s omission could have been written off as a benign oversight if it weren’t for past criticisms accusing him of antisemitism and anti-Zionism. The Jewish Democratic Council, a left-wing organization, dedicated a page of its website to Vance’s supposed anti-Jewish stance.

Vance was not alone in forgetting to emphasize the Jewish element of the day. David Coller, an award-winning investigative journalist, caught the BBC in the same sin. “Apparently “six million PEOPLE” were murdered,” Collier tweeted. “people”? Were they just randomly chosen? Have they no shame at all?”

The BBC apologized on Tuesday, describing the omission as “hurtful, disrespectful, and wrong.”


Ironically, the BBC criticized Canadian PM Justin Trudeau when he opened the National Holocaust Monument in the capital, Ottawa, in 2017.


JD’s failure to mention the Jews at a Holocaust memorial is understandable. The term ‘Holocaust’ is synonymous with the Nazi effort to genocide the Jews. It does not necessarily indicate an attempt at Holocaust denial.

But Vance has a history of sins of omission regarding antisemitism and anti-Zionism. While he has stated that “antisemitism and all forms of ethnic hatred have no place in the conservative movement,” his silence on specific figures and actions has led to allegations of political expediency and complicity. Critics have highlighted Vance’s failure to condemn figures like Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist and Holocaust denier, and have criticized his close association with Tucker Carlson, who has been accused of spreading anti-Israel sentiment.

In difficult times, silence and ambiguity in the face of evil is evil. When Vance had the opportunity to call attention to a great evil perpetrated against the Jewish people, he sidestepped and remained silent. Calling attention to the Holocaust underscores the need for a Jewish state.

When he should have reminded the world of this, Vance chose silence.

While the Vice President failed to emphasize the Jewish aspect of the Holocaust, his omission provides me an opportunity to fulfill a Biblical commandment. Leviticus 19:17 commands Israel to rebuke their fellow man.


“Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart; thou shalt surely rebuke thy neighbour, and not bear sin because of him.”

This is immediately followed by the commandment to love our neighbor.

“Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the LORD.”

F251022OFPOOL10-1024x683.jpg
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance at the President residence in Jerusalem, October 22, 2025. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/POOL
Halacha (Jewish law) forbids rebuking anyone unless you absolutely love them.

So if JD Vance is reading this, he should know that I am giving him tochacha (rebuke) out of absolute love. As a Torah-observant Jew living in the Golan, I am sure in my heart that JD Vance loves Israel and the Jews. I would like to instruct him that in the future, he should be more careful in his speech because unintended words and omissions will be jumped upon by the haters of Israel in an attempt to take down what is undoubtedly the most pro-Israel administration in US history. Criticism of Vance’s Holocaust Day gaffe is nothing more than cynical politicization of the issue, a form of Holocaust denial in itself.


Which brings me to my final point. The same people who are criticizing Vance for failing to note the Jewish nature of Holocaust Memorial Day are, for the most part, the same people who accuse Israel of genocide in Gaza.

Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza cannot be classified as a genocide. In 1948, the Arab population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 80,000 to 100,000 people. When Israel captured Gaza in 1967, UNRWA reported an Arab population of 356,000. In 2005, just before Israel’s disengagement from Gaza, the Arab (Palestinian) population of the Gaza Strip was approximately 1.4 million people according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS). Before the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported the population of Gaza as 2.3 million. In July 2023, the UN “adjusted” this estimate, reducing it to 2.1 million for “humanitarian planning purposes”.

Even by Hamas’ estimates, less than 3% of the Gaza population has been killed in this “genocide”. And the numbers provided by Hamas are notoriously unreliable, unsubstantiated, frequently revised, and defy all logic.

Accusations against Israel originated with a claim made by South Africa in December 2023 before the International Court of Justice. And while many use this as a basis to accuse Israel of committing genocide, the ICJ did not conclude that genocide had occurred—only that the claims warranted further examination—and it did not impose an immediate cessation of military operations.

It should be noted that the word “genocide” was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born jurist who served as an adviser to the U.S. Department of War during World War II, in the wake of the Holocaust. Perhaps most telling is that the Lemkin family, along with Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, filed a formal complaint with Pennsylvania authorities demanding that the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention stop using his name because of the Institute’s repeated genocide accusations against Israel. They argue that these statements, combined with the use of Lemkin’s name, serve to advance a political agenda disconnected from his original legacy.


I am convinced that the reason so many want to falsely accuse Israel of genocide is in order to absolve themselves of the Holocaust. While there is no question that Russia invaded Ukraine, there are no protests outside Russian Orthodox churches, no vandalism, no calls to ‘gas the Russians.’ The genocide accusation has erased the line that separates anti-Zionism from Jew-hatred. Anti-Zionism is no longer a political statement. It is outright racism, preparing the way for worse, perhaps for another attempt to wipe out the Jews. Perhaps that is why these folks support Hamas, an organization that has openly declared its intention to kill every Jew on the planet. And the solution for Gaza being carried out right now is leaving Hamas in place and armed.

So it seems that accusing Israel of genocide is a form of the truly heinous sin of Holocaust denial to a degree that is far more egregious than JD Vance’s omission, which came while he was commemorating the Holocaust. But Vance is choosing to play it safe, remain silent in the face of evil, so that his political future remains strong.

While he may not be actively antisemitic, as a leader, Vance should not be silent. Vance must step up and be unequivocal in these times when antisemites are growing bolder. He must declare, ‘Never again will we be silent when Jews are being murdered.’ Vance must loudly denounce Jew-haters like Fuentes and Carlson and not remain silent while their ranks grow,
I'll be honest. I am not sure what to say. I have just started going more in depth for a Jewish view of the world. (So far, mainly the gospels, so the law comes up in talking about what Jesus did, and what the religious leaders thought or did.)

I would say that because it is a part of the 613 laws, it is for Israel. We (Gentiles) can learn from that, because Israel was supposed to be the example for the whole world, but it is still part of the law given to Israel. I agree with the above that presents what Jesus had to say of discipline. Go to your friend solo, to remove perceived or actual sin from between you and your friend. IF only perceived, such discussion may clear up the situation. Hence it best to go alone. If there is no actual problem, then there is no reason for something that does not exist to become public and destroy a friendship. If they don't listen, take someone else, because that might get them to open up, and you can still salvage the relationship/friendship, and keep any "sin" from standing between you. It also is to keep it out of the public eye. If he doesn't listen, then take it to the assembly/church, by which they could finally decide to take care of the problem, or if not doing so, it is no longer your concern, but the concern of the whole assembly and that person. [My completely paraphrased take on it.]

One thing said about John MacArthur, was he never aired grievances unless/until they were public. If it was private, he didn't say anything except, if at all, in private to the person. It's when a problem was public that he made statements.
 
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