Bad Medicine
A wave of open Jew-hatred by medical professionals, medical
schools, and professional associations in the wake of the Hamas slaughter
suggests that a field entrusted with healing is becoming a licensed purveyor of
hatred BY IAN KINGSBURY AND JAY P. GREENE NOVEMBER 21, 2023
Activists from Doctors Against Genocide, American
Palestinian Women's Association, and CODEPINK hold a demonstration calling for
an immediate cease-fire in Gaza at the Hart Senate Office Building in
Washington, D.C., Nov. 16, 2023
On Oct. 7, Hamas unleashed a barbaric terrorist attack
against Israel, killing more than 1,200 people, including more than 30
Americans. The event was unprecedented in its scale and cruelty in a country
that is no stranger to terrorism. Still, it was not met with universal
condemnation. Rather, a nontrivial number of Americans either justified or even
celebrated the attacks. Such responses were especially prevalent within the
elite universities that popular imagination historically upholds as a bulwark against
religious and ethnic bigotry, and mostly occurred with impunity. Medicine has
eagerly adopted the same type of identity politics that have come to define the
policies, sensibilities, and ideologies of Ivy League universities, where
diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) officials have essentially served as a
political commissariat, articulating and enforcing identity politics orthodoxy.
Indeed, medical
training and practice is fertile ground for antisemitism to flourish. Looking
at explicit acts of antisemitism from health care providers in the wake of the
Oct. 7 attack, we observe that doctors are among those who have engaged in some
of the most egregious displays of antisemitism, and that they are not regularly
punished for their conduct. Second, we examined the responses of professional
medical associations and medical schools to Hamas’ attack against Israel
compared to their response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Leading medical institutions treat the world’s only Jewish
state differently from other U.S. allies even though Americans overall have
warmer feelings toward Israel than Ukraine. If we want to understand why
medical professionals are drawn to acts of antisemitism despite their advanced
levels of education, we need to look at what their medical associations and
schools are teaching them.
Those institutions not only advance an ideology that
facilitates Jew hatred, they demonstrate by the example of their public
statements that they hold Jews and the Jewish state to a different standard.
Assuredly, the great majority of medical practitioners have made no public
statements or made benign remarks that did not warrant news coverage.
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