The sociologist Stanley Cohen, who articulated the first theory of âmoral panicsâ in the late 1960s, summarized their main elements in the introduction to the 2002 third edition of Folk Devils and Moral Panics:
"They are new (lying dormant perhaps, but hard to recognize; deceptively ordinary and routine, but invisibly creeping up the moral horizon)âbut also old (camouflaged versions of traditional and well-known evils). They are damaging in themselvesâbut also merely warning signs of the real, much deeper and more prevalent condition. They are transparent (anyone can see whatâs happening)âbut also opaque: accredited experts must explain the perils hidden behind the superficially harmless (decode a rock songâs lyrics to see how they led to a school massacre)."
The discourse around the ânew antisemitismâ shares this three-part structure. First, the theoryâs proponents acknowledge that antisemitism has a long history as a mode of hatred and discrimination. Yet there is an explicit attempt to present it as new, modifying its meaning so it can be specifically marshaled to support the Israeli state. Secondly, this ânew antisemitism,â the argument goes, is bad in itself, but it is also a warning sign of other social illsâmost of all, of the dangerous radicalization of the left, and of the impending rise of other forms of hate. And, finally, the rise of antisemitism is posited as self-evident, clear for anyone to understand; yet the source of antisemitism is presented as opaque, such that expert analysts of the ânew antisemitismâ are required to reveal the purported threats of left-wing movements.
This script recurs again and again in moments when Israel faces increased international criticism for its violence against Palestinian people. Like other moral panics, this one is a sign of a crisisâin this case, the crisis of Zionism, but also US imperialism more broadly.
United States (US)
Anatomy of a Moral Panic
in Jewish CurrentsTexas GOP platform calls for ban on same-sex parenting because being gay is âabnormalâ
in LGBTQ NationThis is straight out of the Project 2025 template.
A completed draft Texas Republican Party platform refers to homosexuality as âan abnormal lifestyle choice,â gender-affirming care as âchild abuse,â and Drag Queen Story Hour as âpredatory sexual behavior.â The platform has been voted on by state party delegates and will be formally adopted on Wednesday after a final vote count.
The list of state party priorities calls for an end to legal same-sex marriages, same-sex parenting, all LGBTQ+ anti-discrimination laws, all transgender rights â including gender-affirming care for children and adults â a ban on LGBTQ+ content in schools and libraries, the defunding of all diversity-equity-inclusion (DEI) initiatives, and legal protections for anyone who discriminates against queer people based on âreligious or moral beliefs.â
Furthermore, the Texas GOP platform calls for a complete end to all of the following: pornography, federal welfare programs, minimum wage laws, mandatory sick or family leave policies, net neutrality, removal of Confederate monuments, pro-immigrant sanctuary cities, public education of undocumented children, no-fault divorce, non-abstinence sex education, abortion, birthright citizenship, professorial tenure in colleges and universities, cannabis legalization, anti-climate change legislation, contact tracing for the tracking of communicable diseases, federal regulations ensuring safe farm food production, and U.S. participation in the United Nations and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Nikki Haley Writes âFinish Them!â on Israeli Bomb After Refugee Massacre
in Rolling StoneDays after dozens of Palestinians were killed by Israeli air strikes against displacement camps in Southern Gaza, former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley wrote âFinish them!â on Israeli artillery shells.
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Alongside her chilling note, Haley wrote âAmerica loves Israel!â and autographed the bomb.
Anti-LGBTQ+ Policies and Rhetoric Are Harming LGBTQ+ Lives
for Data for ProgressThis year alone, nearly 500 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced in state legislatures nationwide. Last year, more than 75 anti-LGBTQ+ bills were signed into law, prompting the Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest LGBTQ+ civil rights organization, to declare a state of emergency for LGBTQ+ people in the United States.
Previous Data for Progress polling of the LGBTQ+ community has found that many LGBTQ+ Americans feel unsafe in their communities and that a majority of transgender adults report a low sense of belonging in U.S. society, while less than half feel comfortable expressing themselves in their local community.
In this new report, Data for Progress surveyed 873 LGBTQ+ adults, including an oversample of transgender adults, nationally using web panel respondents. The findings emphasize the negative impacts of recent anti-LGBTQ+ policies and rhetoric on LGBTQ+ peopleâs lives, including a worse quality of life and mental health, experiences of discrimination and harassment, and difficulties accessing health care. Additionally, the findings point to the importance of having access to LGBTQ+ representation in media and LGBTQ+-affirming online spaces and resources, particularly for young people.
Saying "Hamas Just Needs To Surrender" Is Saying "We'll Kill Kids Until We Get What We Want"
I mean, imagine if Russia did that. Imagine if Putin started raining military explosives on parts of Ukraine known to be densely packed with children, and then saying the mass-scale child-killing will continue until Ukraine surrenders and that all of the child deaths are actually the fault of the Ukrainians because they still havenât given Putin everything he wants.
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Theyâre not just doing this with airstrikes and bulletsâââtheyâre doing it with food as well. Aaron MatĂ© has a new article out titled âThe Biden doctrine in Gaza: bomb, starve, deceiveâ which picks apart statements from White House officials about the temporary pier this administration is planning to build on Gazaâs coast over the next several weeks, ostensibly to allow for the arrival of more aid into the enclave.
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MatĂ© explains that Vice President Kamala Harris recently gave a speech in which she said Hamas needs to agree to a hostage deal in order to âget a significant amount of aid in,â which is the same as saying Israel and its allies will help starve Gazan civilians until Hamas capitulates to their demands.
The hottest trend in U.S. cities? Changing zoning rules to allow more housing
in NPRTo ramp up supply, cities are taking a fresh look at their zoning rules that spell out what can be built where and what can't. And many are finding that their old rules are too rigid, making it too hard and too expensive to build many new homes.
So these cities, as well as some states, are undertaking a process called zoning reform. They're crafting new rules that do things like allow multifamily homes in more neighborhoods, encourage more density near transit and streamline permitting processes for those trying to build.
One city has been at the forefront of these conversations: Minneapolis.
That's because Minneapolis was ahead of the pack as it made a series of changes to its zoning rules in recent years: allowing more density downtown and along transit corridors, getting rid of parking requirements, permitting construction of accessory dwelling units (ADUs), which are secondary dwellings on the same lot.
And one change in particular made national news: The city ended single-family zoning, allowing two- and three-unit homes to be built in every neighborhood.
Researchers at The Pew Charitable Trusts examined the effects of the changes between 2017 and 2022, as many of the city's most significant zoning reforms came into effect.
They found what they call a "blueprint for housing affordability."
Joe Biden Is Shipping Weapons to Israel Every 36 Hours
in JacobinIn the one hundred fifty days after October 7, Israel killed thirty-one thousand Palestinians, injured seventy-two thousand, displaced 1.7 million, and razed or damaged more than half of Gazaâs buildings. Joe Biden sent over one hundred weapons shipments to Israel during the same stretch. In a recent classified briefing, US officials told members of Congress that the Biden administration approved and delivered more than one hundred separate weapons sales to Israel in the one hundred fifty days after October 7, âamounting to thousands of precision-guided munitions, small diameter bombs, bunker busters, small arms and other lethal aid,â the Washington Post reported on Wednesday. That works out to one new arms deal every thirty-six hours, on average.
These transfers are classified as sales, but very few of them meet that definition in the conventional sense. The vast majority are funded through State Department grants. Biden made just two of these publicly funded sales to Israel public, and the only reason he did is because he had to. Section 36 of the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) requires the president to notify Congress when a proposed arms sale exceeds a certain value. The notification threshold depends on the type of matĂ©riel (for âsignificant military equipmentâ itâs $14 million; for other military articles and services, $50 million; for military construction services, $200 million), but also the recipient. For NATO countries and South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Israel, the notification thresholds for these three categories are considerably higher ($25 million, $100 million, and $300 million, respectively).
While Biden is loud and proud about arming Ukraine, he prefers to arm Israel in secret. The quantity of sales since October 7 is case in point. By spreading his military support for Israel across more than one hundred sales, Biden kept pretty much all of them âunder thresholdâ per the AECA, thereby avoiding congressional and public scrutiny.
The Four Horsemen of Gazaâs Apocalypse
Joe Bidenâs inner circle of strategists for the Middle East â Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan and Brett McGurk â have little understanding of the Muslim world and a deep animus towards Islamic resistance movements. They see Europe, the United States and Israel as involved in a clash of civilizations between the enlightened West and a barbaric Middle East. They believe that violence can bend Palestinians and other Arabs to their will. They champion the overwhelming firepower of the U.S. and Israeli military as the key to regional stability â an illusion that fuels the flames of regional war and perpetuates the genocide in Gaza.
In short, these four men are grossly incompetent. They join the club of other clueless leaders, such as those who waltzed into the suicidal slaughter of World War One, waded into the quagmire of Vietnam or who orchestrated the series of recent military debacles in Iraq, Libya, Syria and Ukraine. They are endowed with the presumptive power vested in the Executive Branch to bypass Congress, to provide weapons to Israel and carry out military strikes in Yemen and Iraq. This inner circle of true believers dismiss the more nuanced and informed counsels in the State Department and the intelligence communities, who view the refusal of the Biden administration to pressure Israel to halt the ongoing genocide as ill-advised and dangerous.
Biden Has Started Another US War
The Washington Post has an article out titled âAs Houthis vow to fight on, U.S. prepares for sustained campaign,â with âsustained campaignâ being empire-speak for a new American war.
âThe Biden administration is crafting plans for a sustained military campaign targeting the Houthis in Yemen after 10 days of strikes failed to halt the groupâs attacks on maritime commerce, stoking concern among some officials that an open-ended operation could derail the war-ravaged countryâs fragile peace and pull Washington into another unpredictable Middle Eastern conflict,â the Post reports.
The Post acknowledges that âsustained military campaignâ means âwarâ in the ninth paragraph of the article, saying the anonymous US officials cited in the report âdonât expect that the operation will stretch on for years like previous U.S. wars in Iraq, Afghanistan or Syria.â Which is about as reassuring as a pyromaniac saying he doesnât expect heâll be burning down any more houses like all those other houses heâs burned down.
The Outing of Bubba Copeland
in SlateIn America today, so much has changed that it might seem ludicrous to say that I fear a return to an environment like the 1950s and â60s moral panic over homosexuality, with its climate of secrecy and fear, and the central role of the press in driving harassment, humiliation, firings, and sometimes suicides. In parts of the country where LGBTQ+ acceptance is firmly ensconced, thereâs likely not much conservatives can do to roll back the tolerant attitudes decades of activism have won. But in other places where extremists have taken over governance, LGBTQ+ life, particularly trans life, seems much more precarious than we might have thought. For example, in Florida, trans teachers are already facing laws restricting what pronouns they can be called at work, and perhaps whether they can teach at all. If such laws drive more and more trans people into the closet, lower public visibility may lead to less social understanding and acceptance, driving a vicious cycle where the consequences of outing grow more dire as time goes on.
âI would think that trans people now, clearly, have the closest experience to what gay people had in the 1960s, in terms of the fear your existence activates in the population, and the cynicism of the right wing in exploiting that,â Kaiser said.
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The practice of press outlets terrorizing gender-nonconforming people over their private lives should have stayed in the past. That it could not only happen in 2023, but even end in suicide, should be a wake-up call for where the far right hopes their attacks on the trans community will go. Copeland hailed from the sort of small Southern town where attitudes about the LGBTQ+ community have changed the least, but attitudes arenât static. Escalating attacks on the trans community, combined with laws designed to humiliate and stigmatize trans people by taking away the ability to change legal documents, barring trans people from using public restrooms, banning positive depictions of LGBTQ+ people in school libraries, forcing trans teachers to misgender themselves in classâall of these measures seek to drive trans people out of public life in these places. Several Republican candidates for president in 2024 have made these their implicit or explicit nationwide plans, if elected.
When people canât exist openly in public, their true selves fight to be expressed in private, which leads to double lives marred by shame and fear of being exposed. Those are the toxic conditions some now seek: conditions in which outing can serve as the ultimate punishment for queer existence, threatening peopleâs social acceptance, their livelihoods, and even their very lives