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The Palestinian claim has evolved from denying the existence of a Jewish kingdom (as Arafat did at Camp David) to a new theory that modern Jews descend from Khazar converts. Roy Altman notes this shift and argues the latter claim has been thoroughly disproven by extensive genetic studies.

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The historical establishment of Israel is presented as a playbook for political conquest through demographics. A group can immigrate into a region, grow its numbers until it becomes a dominant political class, and eventually assume control, a strategy potentially being replicated by other groups in modern nations.

The Roman emperor Hadrian renamed the province of Judea to 'Palestina' after the Philistines, an ancient enemy of the Israelites. This was a deliberate act to sever the connection between the Jewish people and their land following a failed rebellion, an ancient example of political rebranding with modern implications.

Unlike other forms of bigotry focused on exclusion, antisemitism often includes a belief in a global conspiracy by Jewish people, which is then used to justify violence against them as a necessary counter-action.

Unlike the fringe figures of the past, today's antisemitism is being amplified by articulate, well-produced media personalities like Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens. Their ability to reach a global audience via sophisticated platforms presents a fundamentally new and more dangerous threat.

Author Roy Altman applies a legal principle to historical debates: evidence, like an ancient stele mentioning 'Israel,' is more reliable if it was created thousands of years before the modern Zionist dispute arose, removing any incentive for fabrication.

DNA studies reveal that Iraqi and Iranian Jewish populations are the most genetically distant from other global Jewish communities. This divergence dates back approximately 2,500 years, aligning perfectly with the historical and archaeological records of the Babylonian Exile, when a portion of the Jewish population remained in Persia.

While claims of indigeneity are debated, the Jewish people in Israel use the same language, religion, and naming conventions, and inhabit the same land as their ancestors 3,000 years ago. Altman argues this provides a more continuous and holistic claim to indigeneity than that of European descendants in North America.

Coined in 1879, "anti-Semitism" was not just a new word for old hatred. It was a modern political tool framing Jews as a foreign race ("Semites") to specifically oppose their emancipation and the Enlightenment values that enabled it.

A key element of settler colonialism is extracting resources for a home empire. Judge Roy Altman argues this framework is inapplicable to Israel, as there is no metropole benefiting from its existence. The Jewish people, as Golda Meir quipped, have nowhere else to go.

Unlike other forms of bigotry focused on discrimination against customs or lifestyles, antisemitism is framed as a response to a perceived global conspiracy. This dangerous distinction is used to legitimize and create cloud cover for offensive violence against Jewish people worldwide, not just sequestration.

Anti-Zionist Arguments Shifted from Historical Denial to Debunked Genetic Theories | RiffOn