LAT: Violent crime in California rose 10% in 2015, state attorney general says

Los Angeles Times: After two years of decline, the number of violent crimes in California rose by 10% in 2015, although the overall crime rate remained among the lowest in decades.

The numbers were up in all major categories of violent crime compared with those of 2014, according to reports released Friday by the state attorney general’s office.

Homicides increased 9.7%, and robbery and aggravated assault climbed by more than 8%.

Hate crimes followed the same trend, with a 10.4% jump. The vast majority of the uptick involved religious bias. Anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish incidents were up, as were those targeting Latinos…

Statewide, 1,861 people were slain in 2015, compared with more than 4,000 in 1993…

The vast majority – nearly 83% – of the victims were male. About 47% of all victims were killed by friends and acquaintances; 31% by a stranger and nearly 15% by their spouse, parent or child. Women were more likely than men to be slain by their spouse.

At 43%, the largest proportion of homicide victims was Latino, followed by 28.4% black and 21.3% white. Nearly 29% of homicides were gang-related…

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Steve Sailer: NYT on Austria Vote Count Scandal: Don’t Mention the Scandal. Do Mention the Nazis.

Comments at Steve Sailer:

* The decision is good news. The bad news is that there was widespread fraud in the presidential elections of a First World European country with a seven-decade-old (OK, make it six-decade-old) stable democracy. What’s worse, nobody in the media and press thinks this stolen election is the scandal it is.

Milosevic was thrown out in a violent revolution after he lost popularity and had to resort to electoral fraud. And the stolen election was a leading foreign news story for several days in major international news outlets. Supposed irregularities in the Russian elections were dealt with in the international media, there was even a major opinion piece about Viktor Orbán’s gerrymandering, FFS, but a respected EU-member has a stolen presidential election, and… crickets.

A healthy democracy is one with no stolen elections. A less healthy, yet still functioning democracy has court rulings like this.

* I’m surprised that last paragraph didn’t go something like this:

It was the first time Austria had ordered a rerun of a national election since 1945, when the Nazis, who were led by Adolf Hitler, who was born in Austria, were defeated. Hitler was bad. Coincidentally, Donald Trump was born less than a year later, in June 1946. He is of German ancestry, Germany being right next to Austria, especially when it was Nazi Germany and led by Hitler, which was bad. Donald Trump is running for president of the United States, which is really really bad and horrifyingly Nazi-like.

* I don’t see how a party that won about half the votes in a national election can be described as “far-right.” Seems an abuse of the word “far.”

* I’ve noticed the same issue with language to describe Trump. That prompted a thought: do news sites use words like “far” or “extreme” to describe the right more often than the left. I did a few simple google queries to count references to “far right” and “extreme right” vs. “far left” and “extreme left.” He are the percentages of references to far and extreme that are used to describe the political right:

Time 93%
Huffington Post 93%
Google news 91%
LA Times 89%
USA today 82%
New York Times 79%
Yahoo 79%
NPR 79%
CNN 70%
Fox 34%

By this simple metric, Fox tilts right, but is the closest to the middle (50%). The LA Times sees about 9 times more right extremism than left, which says volumes about where the editors themselves are.

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Meet the One Jewish Group that Can Attack Donald Trump

Nathan Guttman writes June 9, 2016:

Donald Trump poses a particular challenge to most Jewish organizations. His message stands in stark contrast to their groups’s positions on immigration, race or welfare, but the organizations can’t call him out on it due to federal tax rules limiting not-for-profits’s political speech.
Bend the Arc has the answer. Join the anti-Trump mobilization its operating through its political action committee and enjoy the legal cover provided by its unique tax status.
“We’re welcoming people to join us, no matter where they are today, so they can express their views about Trump,” said the group’s CEO Stosh Cotler in a June 6 interview as Bend the Arc activists gathered in Washington for their first national conference. “Many, many Jewish organizations share grave concerns about this, but only few of them have the 501(c)(4) status that can allow them to talk freely about it,” she added.
This tax status is one of several provided by the IRS to not-for-profit organizations. But while most Jewish groups, including this newspaper, are defined as 501(c)(3) under the tax code, a status that allows them to collect tax deductible donations but prohibits the group from actively endorsing candidates, Bend the Arc Jewish Action is among the few that are set up as 501(c)(4) and are allowed to engage directly in election politics, though under limitations.
Cotler’s invitation comes as the group launches its biggest effort to date aimed at defeating the Republican presumptive nominee. Under the slogan “We’ve seen this before” the group is organizing mass vigils on June 21, where activists will carry traditional Jewish yahrzeit candles in four major cities and will be joined by others online. The date chosen is the day commemorating the 1964 murder of three civil rights activists in Mississippi: Andrew Goodman and Mickey Schwerner, who were Jewish, and their fellow black Christian activist James Chaney.
Many Jewish communal leaders have been grappling with how to handle Trump and his campaign ever since the New York billionaire entered the political scene last year.
Some, like the Anti-Defamation League, have chosen to push the envelope and actively speak out repeatedly against Trump’s message when it came to Islamophobia, xenophobia, or about the support he received from anti-Semitic groups and individuals. Given the ADL’s clear mission statement regarding the need to fight these expressions, the group has felt it is on safe legal ground when criticizing a political candidate despite its tax status.
Others chose to walk around the limitations, by confining their comments to very specific statements made by Trump or by seeking a positive course of action, such as influencing the party’s platform language on issues of tolerance, or setting up educational events on immigration and race, instead of taking on the candidate directly.
Bend the Arc has now emerged as the leading Jewish PAC dedicating itself to protesting Trump’s candidacy and actively working to deter voters from supporting him.
In its conference held in Washington June 5-7, activists focused on the group’s main priorities such as criminal justice reform, women’s rights and LGBT equality, while at the same time spending time stressing how a Trump presidency would undermine all these priorities. The group brought some 500 activists from across the country to its first annual conference. At the conclusion of their three-day meeting, the energized medley of students, young progressives and retired hippies, took to Capitol Hill to lobby their representatives on legislative issues that could advance the progressive domestic agenda.

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Whenever I hear the term “Jewish groups,” I reach for my Torah.

I just put “Jewish groups” into Google News and got these results:

* British Jewish groups condemn hate crimes in wake of Brexit vote
The Jewish Standard-Jun 29, 2016
Jewish groups in Britain condemned the uptick in racist harassment and other hate crimes in the wake of the country’s vote to leave the …

* Anti-Terror Grants That Benefit Jewish Groups Rise by 55%
Forward-Jun 30, 2016
(JTA) — In a program that has benefited Jewish institutions, the Department of Homeland Security has awarded $20 million in security …

* US Jewish Groups Praise Supreme Court’s Repeal of Texas …
Haaretz-Jun 28, 2016
‘Jewish tradition teaches the importance of a woman’s ability to make her own healthcare decisions,’ rabbi says after court slams HB2 law as …
Jewish Groups Applaud Pro-Choice Supreme Court Ruling
International-The Jewish Week-Jun 27, 2016

* Supreme Court Immigration Ruling Leaves Millions in Limbo, Some …
Forward-Jun 25, 2016
Not all Jewish groups support the president’s actions, however. Though Morton Klein, the national president of the Zionist Organization of …

* Bay Area Jewish groups push for gun control measures
Jweekly.com-Jun 23, 2016
In the wake of the Senate this week failing to advance four bipartisan gun control measures, Bay Area-based Jewish groups are decrying …

* Jewish Groups Hail Passage of Massachusetts Bill Protecting Transgender Rights
Controversial measure, approved Wednesday by a vote of 116-32, allows people to use facilities such as restrooms and locker rooms that match their gender identity.

* Jewish groups react to UK’s ‘divisive’ Brexit vote to leave EU
JNS.org-Jun 24, 2016
(JNS.org) Jewish groups and leaders in the United Kingdom swiftly reacted to voters’ decision to leave the European Union in the Brexit …
Jewish groups and Israeli leaders hail David Cameron – who …
European Jewish Press-Jun 25, 2016

* Jewish groups gear up for San Francisco Pride parade
Jweekly.com-Jun 9, 2016
Several Jewish organizations will send contingents to the annual Pride Parade on June 26 in San Francisco. The JCC of San Francisco, …

* Orlando Jewish groups respond to shooting with sadness, calls to …
Heritage Florida Jewish News-Jun 17, 2016
Jewish groups in Orlando responded to the mass shooting attack at the Pulse nightclub with messages of sadness and sympathy, and calls to …

* The occupation that killed Hallel Yaffa Ariel
Jewish Journal-Jul 1, 2016
Jewish groups who crave peace must call for an end to the occupation of Palestinian hearts and minds with vicious, genocidal, demonizing …

* Donald Trump deletes tweet showing Hillary Clinton and star of …
Jewish Telegraphic Agency-3 hours ago
Jewish groups, however, have been critical of what they say is the campaign’s slow response in disavowing followers, including former Ku Klux …

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Attacked by Trump, Mexicans look to Jewish groups for help

I don’t get it. Why don’t Mexicans look to their own sophisticated history of public relations and political influence?

Jewish groups are happy to help the Mexicans because the Torah commands them to do so. Jews aren’t thinking about their own welfare in a multicultural society.

Most Jews I know feel a deep sense of kinship with Mexicans. The two groups have so much in common. After all, the average Ashkenazi IQ is about 110 and the average hispanic-American has a 90 IQ. Lots of room for fruitful dialogue there. Well, maybe not, but the coalition of the fringe can always join forces to attack America’s white core.

What Jew shouldn’t love living in a brown America? What’s not to love about America becoming more like Mexico?

Whenever I hear the term “Jewish groups,” I reach for my Torah.

Comment: “Jewish activism is effective because Jews are smart, rich, energetic and intense (or some combination of the four, at least). Mexicans are none of those things.”

Politico: The Republican’s insults inspire a PR strategy to update Mexico’s image, modeled on Jewish activism.

Donald Trump and his racially charged rhetoric may be divisive on many levels. But the Republican presidential candidate has been a catalyst for uniting two, seemingly disparate groups: Mexicans and Jews.
U.S. residents of Mexican descent, feeling besieged by Trump’s attacks on their culture and ancestral homeland, are ramping up ties to American Jewish networks and emulating Jewish models of political activism, including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. And many Jewish activists are eager to help.
Story Continued Below
Trump on Saturday was widely criticized for tweeting an image of Hillary Clinton next to a pile of cash and a Star of David shape emblazoned with the words “Most corrupt candidate ever.”
The growing bond comes as Mexico’s government pursues a public relations campaign designed to update the image of Mexicans and convince Americans that Mexico is more than just a country that happens to share a border with the U.S.
“The same way that Israel is a very strategic partner of the United States, Mexico is, too — that is what we are emphasizing,” Mexico’s newly appointed ambassador to the United States, Carlos Sada, told POLITICO. “Of course, there is a kind of wake up call when somebody attacks you.”
The American Jewish Committee, a major advocacy organization, has been a key partner in the Mexican diaspora’s surging interest in political activism.
The AJC houses the Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Institute for Latino and Latin American Affairs, which builds political alliances between Latinos and Jews. Although it has been around for more than a decade, the 2016 presidential campaign — in which Trump has called undocumented Mexican immigrants “rapists,” promised to build a massive border wall, and questioned the loyalties of a Mexican-American judge — has intensified interest in the institute’s work.
Dina Siegel Vann, the institute’s director, said the Jewish community, although smaller in number than the Mexican-American community, offered a model that, among other things, emphasizes the importance of coalition building. (There are roughly 6 million Jews in the U.S., and at least 33 million people of Mexican heritage. There also are 40,000 Jews in Mexico, and between 100,000 to 200,000 Latino Jews in the U.S., according to various studies.)
The Mexican community needs to polish its image to the point that “there has to be some sort of cost if you attack Mexico or Mexican Americans,” added Siegel Vann, who is Mexican-American and Jewish. “The moment that there’s attacks, that Mexicans are called rapists, there has to be some sort of national outrage.”
The institute hosts workshops to train Mexican Americans and other Latinos in political advocacy work — there’s one scheduled for July 10 in Washington, followed by a reception featuring Sada. The sessions, which train 35 to 40 people at a time, include discussions of case studies, such as how the push for comprehensive immigration reform fell apart, and tips for how to engage members of Congress — including when you have only two minutes on an elevator.
Mexico’s foreign secretary, Claudia Ruiz Massieu, delivered a keynote address at the AJC’s Global Forum last month. Without mentioning Trump by name, she slammed the “stench of bigotry” and “climate of intolerance” in the U.S.
“Those who want to make a political profit stigmatizing these people, be [they] Mexican, Jews, Muslims, people of color, Asians are wrong for this country was founded on the very principle, the self-evident truth that all men and women are endowed with the same unalienable rights: life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” she said.
Ruiz Massieu said that Mexico was ready to take its relationship with the AJC “to the next level.” As evidence, she pointed to the fact that also attending the forum were the leaders of all of Mexico’s 50 consulates in the United States as well as dozens of Mexican-American leaders eager to network with the Jewish group. The Mexican contingent attended seminars and other gatherings at the forum, including sessions on advocacy training.
In a response to the Trump phenomenon, the Mexican government earlier this year shook up its diplomatic corps in the U.S., including appointing Sada as ambassador. It also has reached out to business groups and expanded its cultural outreach in the U.S.
Mexican officials say the goal isn’t merely to shore up their country’s image — it’s to update it. Mexico is America’s third-largest trading partner, and millions of jobs in the U.S. rely on the relationship with the Latin American country, which has made many economic and educational advances in recent decades. But many Americans still see Mexico through the crude stereotypes of impoverished day laborers and drug gangs.

Private citizens in the U.S. Mexican diaspora, too, have upped their activism. In March, a group of business leaders set up the American Mexico Public Affairs Committee to lobby lawmakers and educate U.S. voters about the two countries’ relationship. The group is modeling itself after the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC — “That’s even the reason why we named it the way it’s named,” said Antonio Maldonado, AMxPAC’s president.
American Jews have a long history of political activism, especially on civil liberties, and Jewish organizations have been at the forefront of condemning Trump for his many comments about Mexicans, Muslims and other minorities.
The admonitions have had little effect.

Posted in America, Jews, Mexicans, Mexico | Comments Off on Attacked by Trump, Mexicans look to Jewish groups for help