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Senior Member
Roseanne Barr Blames Liberal Jews
Who would of thought Roseanne Barr could make sense. She has had an obvious change over the years
I am glad she is challenging liberal Jews
http://www.charismanews.com/politics...resident-obama
she wrote: "nazis enacted anti jewish laws on the eve of jewish holidays-exactly as @POTUS has done on eve of Hanukkah. Don't light candles 2night, BHO!"
A few minutes after her first tweet, Barr posted this: "Liberal US Jews just helped Obama condemn the Jewish State to worldwide #BDS and Terrorism.
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FresnoJoe (09-05-2018), Valiant Woman (12-28-2016)
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Senior Member
I've often wondered why Jewish celebrities like Barbera Streisand and others would support anti-semitic candidates?
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flower planter
Originally Posted by
Valiant Woman
I've often wondered why Jewish celebrities like Barbera Streisand and others would support anti-semitic candidates?
I know...I can't understand that either.
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Valiant Woman (12-28-2016)
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by
krystian
I know...I can't understand that either.
It's curious as to why, after the following (from Wikipedia), that Spielberg would remain a Democrat?
"Spielberg grew up in a Jewish household, including having a bar mitzvah ceremony in Phoenix when he turned 13. He grew away from Judaism after his family moved to various cities during his high school years, where they became the only Jews in the neighborhood.[139]:29 Before those years, his family was involved in the synagogue and had many Jewish friends and nearby relatives.
He remembers his grandparents telling him about their life in Russia, where they were subjected to religious persecution, causing them to eventually flee to the United States. He was made aware of the Holocaust by his parents, who he says "talked about it all the time, and so it was always on my mind."[139]:30 His father had lost between sixteen and twenty relatives during the Holocaust.[4]:21
Spielberg "rediscovered the honor of being a Jew," he says, before he made Schindler's List, when he married Kate Capshaw.[139]:25 Until then, having become a filmmaker, he only felt his connection to Judaism when he visited his parents. He says he made the film partly to create "something that would confirm my Judaism to my family and myself."[140]
Kate is Protestant and she insisted on converting to Judaism. She spent a year studying, did the "mikveh," the whole thing. She chose to do a full conversion before we were married in 1991, and she married me after becoming a Jew. I think that, more than anything else, brought me back to Judaism.[139]:25
He credits her with fueling his family's current level of observance and for keeping the "momentum flowing" in their lives, as they now observe Jewish holidays, light candles on Friday nights, and give their children Bar and Bat Mitzvahs.[139]:26 "This shiksa goddess has made me a better Jew than my own parents."[139]:27
Producing Schindler's List in 1993 also renewed his faith, Spielberg says, but "it really was the fact that my wife took a profound interest in Judaism."[139]:25 He waited ten years after being given the story in 1982 to make the film, as he did not yet feel "mature" enough.[139]:32 He first wanted to have a family, "to figure out what my place was in the world. . . . When my first son, [Max] was born, it greatly affected me. . . . A spirit began to ignite in me, and I became a Jewish dad. . ."[4]:21
He said that making the film became a "natural experience" for him, adding, "I had to tell the story. I've lived on its outer edges."[4] The film, writes biographer Joseph McBride, thereby became the "culmination" of Spielberg's long personal struggle with his Jewish identity.[141]:18 Some claim the film has made Spielberg "the one true heir to the great Jewish moguls who created Hollywood," most of whom had actively avoided depicting Jews or the Holocaust in their films."
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