Maybe that is why I am not getting the point?
@Yehuda57
Let's say Jewish people get upset about Kanye, there is often a call by some to get equally outraged about another injustice to another community. How can you condemn one form of bigotry and not the other? You have to be against all hate, otherwise it invalidates your claim!
What's worse, what Kanye says or what happened to Tyre Nichols? Obviously Nichols! So why does it seem like people are more mad about Kanye than Nichols?
Because when a Jewish person is mad about Kanye, it's not because of some moral cause that they're fighting, but because they just got slapped in the face, so to speak. They're fighting back and trying to ensure that doesn't happen again.
You can't force someone to care just as much as when someone else gets punched as when they get punched themselves.
Does that mean they don't care about the other person getting punched? Not at all. They very much do! Yet they aren't necessarily going to join a march for them even if they do genuinely care.
And for people to expect them to care about others getting punched as much as they care about getting punched in the face themselves otherwise their complaints aren't valid is highly unjust.
This applies to all groups. So when Jewish people get mad at some black celebrity for not speaking out about black antisemitism when they are outspoken about anti black racism, that's equally unfair and harmful.
I'm not saying you are guilty of it, but you are often the lone voice on here, and I just wanted to give a little perspective on why it seems some of the reactions to various events are lopsided.