some of it is that we Jews, as a people, are too nice. We try to help the blacks and other non-majority folk, and get spit in the face. Then the guilt complex comes into play.
As a Jew I can say that the Torah-based or Zionist life has been trashed and replaced by the “Justice for everybody else and all the Grunions in the Sea” over the rights of my own people.
As a Jew assimilates he/she becomes more concerned with the rights of the LGTBHGEQWXBLPIYTBBBN community or PLO rights over the survival of his/her people...just sayin’.
That touches on an important part of the history of Jewish-Black relations in the United States. At one point in the early to mid-twentieth century, Jews and blacks frequently intermingled peacefully in urban areas. Jews, out of a sense of empathy, were very prominent in the black civil rights movement of the 1950s and early 1960s. Then, as the civil rights movement became more radical and even violent, and as riots broke out in cities, it was frequently Jewish-owned small businesses, because of their tendency to be located in black neighborhoods (neighborhoods that had recently been heavily Jewish), that were targets of rioting black activists and black antisemitism reared its ugly head. The general anti-white bigotry of these black radicals became targeted at Jews who were most proximal to them and led to the rise of black antisemitism.