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Conspiracy theories involving the Jews are as old as the pyramids and as recent as this past weekend's Republican convention in Rochester.
The Bible recounts "there came a Pharaoh who knew not Joseph." Egyptian royalty feared the ancient Hebrews in their midst would treacherously side with their enemies. Accordingly, they enslaved our ancestors.
Seemingly, in every generation since, a variant of this original conspiracy theory about the Jewish people emerges with severe and often fatal consequences to both Jews and rationality.
At the start of World War II — at the height of our nation's existential debate over interventionism vs. isolationism and at a time when Nazi Germany's domination of Europe threatened the world and Hitler was in the process of murdering six million Jews — aviator Charles Lindbergh accused the British, the Roosevelt administration and American Jews of leading the United States to war.
Lindbergh doubled down in his infamous Sept. 11, 1941, speech on national radio by asserting this was possible through Jewish manipulation of the press and Hollywood. Lindbergh's rhetoric appalled many Americans. Two days later the St. Paul Pioneer Press called Lindbergh an "imitator of Hitler."
Today, our political rhetoric is poisoned again with implicit and explicit anti-Semitic conspiracy theories from across the political spectrum.