“You mean quoting a professor of Holocaust and genocide studies from the New York Times who did not say genocide was being committed?”
Do you mean actually believing what a college professor says and the NY times actually write?????
what kind of idiot takes that as a fact?
I can copy-paste-link to plenty of professors at the UC Berkeley school of gender studies, but i certainly ain’t stupid enough to believe it
Again, I’m here in Israel — not really sure what apartheid or genocide you are talking about (in reality of course—not NY times reality)
Do you mean actually believing what a college professor says and the NY times actually write?????what kind of idiot takes that as a fact?
an copy-paste-link to plenty of professors at the UC Berkeley school of gender studies, but i certainly ain’t stupid enough to believe it
You mean this:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/10/opinion/israel-gaza-genocide-war.htmlWhat I Believe as a Historian of Genocide
Nov. 10, 2023
By Omer Bartov
Mr. Bartov is a professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University.
[...]
A professor of Holocaust and genocide studies, not a professor of gender studies.
A professor at Brown University, an Ivy League university in Providence, Rhode Island; not UC Berkeley in California.
The Editor in Chief of the New York Times is Joseph Kahn, MOT.
https://history.brown.edu/people/omer-bartov
Omer Bartov
Samuel Pisar Professor of Holocaust and Genocide StudiesBIOGRAPHY
Born in Israel and educated at Tel Aviv University and St. Antony's College, Oxford, Omer Bartov's early research concerned the Nazi indoctrination of the Wehrmacht and the crimes it committed in World War II, analyzed in his books, The Eastern Front, 1941-1945, and Hitler's Army. He then turned to the links between total war and genocide, discussed in his books Murder in Our Midst, Mirrors of Destruction, and Germany's War and the Holocaust. Bartov's interest in representation also led to his study, The "Jew" in Cinema, which examines the recycling of antisemitic stereotypes in film. His more recent work has focused on interethnic relations in the borderlands of Eastern Europe. Recent publications include Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-Day Ukraine (2007), Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town Called Buczacz (2018), winner of the National Jewish Book Award, and Tales from the Borderlands: Making and Unmaking the Galician Past (2022). His many edited volumes include Shatterzone of Empires: Coexistence and Violence in the German, Habsburg, Russian, and Ottoman Borderlands (2013), Voices on War and Genocide: Three Accounts of the World Wars in a Galician Town (2020), and Israel-Palestine: Lands and Peoples (2021). Bartov’s novel, The Butterfly and the Axe, will be published in 2023.
I find Omer Bartov, Samuel Pisar Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Israeli born and graduate of Tel Aviv University, author of Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town Called Buczacz (2018), winner of the National Jewish Book Award, published by the Jewish Editor-in-Chief of the New York Times, to be more authoritative and influential than a clown on the internet.