I admit to not knowing all of the coded messaging developed by the right wing to obfuscate racial bias in order to appeal to the southern Democrats after the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, but having worked with a preacherly right-winger from Kentucky I learned a lot of it, and the remnants are still used today.
That made me take exception to the following proclamation: (emphasis added)
Quote
Rep. Steve Stivers (R-OH), the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, defended on Sunday the GOP campaign arms ads targeting billionaire George Soros, who is Jewish, in light of the mass shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh. “Our independent expenditure arm is independent. But that ad is factual. And it also has nothing to do with calling for violence. That ad is a factual ad,” Stivers said on NBC’s Meet the Press, responding to a television advertisement paid by the NRCC that targets a Democratic candidate in Minnesota by tying him to Soros and Wall Street bankers.
Here is an explanation of the coded message of the ad tying Soros to
Wall Street Bankers by decoding a similar message from Rush Limbaugh: (emphasis added for clarity)
Quote
Take a look at a statement made by Rush Limbaugh last year, in which he explained that Jews who voted for Obama may now have “buyer’s remorse” because Obama was supposedly going after Wall Street:
"There are a lot of people, when you say banker, people think Jewish. People who have, uh, prejudice, people who have—um, uh, you know—what’s the best way to say—a little, little prejudice about them. To some people, bankers is code word for Jewish. And guess who Obama’s assaulting? He’s assaulting bankers! He’s assaulting money people! And a lot of those people on Wall Street are Jewish. So I wonder if there’s starting to be some buyer’s remorse there."
Let’s parse this statement:
“To some people, bankers is code word for Jewish. And guess who Obama’s assaulting? He’s assaulting bankers! He’s assaulting money people!”
Here Limbaugh plays a rhetorical trick. He evokes a premise, but—recognizing the premise would get him into trouble—credits the premise to “a lot of people” and “some people.” He even says that the premise carries “a little prejudice.” Yet after attributing this idea of “bankers = Jews” to people other than himself, Limbaugh proceeds to draw a conclusion on the basis that the premise is correct:
"So I wonder if there’s starting to be some buyer’s remorse there."
You can only “wonder” this if you accept the premise that “bankers” and “money people” are synonymous with “Jews,” and that Jewish public opinion sways with the temperament of Wall Street.
Moreover, his conclusion is preceded with the following:
"And a lot of those people on Wall Street are Jewish."
He states this as a fact. The fact by itself is meaningless: there may or may not be a lot of Jews on Wall Street, and their representation may be proportionately higher or lower compared to wider demographics, but what is the purpose of making such an assertion? In Limbaugh’s context, it establishes a correlation between Jews and the gears of capital, which supports his conclusion that Jews may be experiencing “buyer’s remorse” from Obama’s supposed attack on the Jewish institution known as Wall Street.
So we have a classic anti-Semitic statement, only slightly veiled, of the sort that we are told is popular at Zucotti Park.
I find it ironic that the group that most rails against political correctness has its own politically correct code. And then its use is publicly defended on national tv.