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The overwhelming majority of Jews in elite positions are Zionists. Most may identify as liberal Zionists - if one can be a "liberal ethno-nationalist" - but they are Zionists. These JVP types are fringe elements. It's a fact that many Jews in the US preach liberal ideology to the goyim while heavily supporting an ethno-nationalist creed for Israel.
In a sense, this is a higher-IQ version of German Turks who vote for the left in the Germany but support Erdogan when voting from abroad. In my view, the true underlying values of a community can only be revealed when they are in the majority. There are too many ethnic self-interest incentives when you're a minority.
Yes, in the same way that a lot of influential Boston "irish" were pro-IRA, completely independently from (and often with little knowledge of) the actual conditions on the ground in Ulster. Or in the way that it took Ghandi and the scattering of subcontinental elites across the British empire to really create the modern idea of a pan-regional, pan-linguistic, and pan-religious "Indian" nation-state. Or the way it took American "blacks" who'd been in the U.S. for generations to invent "Pan-Africanism".
The politics of a diaspora community are very different from, and motivated by very different concerns than, the politics of the "mother country."
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In Israel, most secular Ashkenazim from the same background as American Jewry vote for progressive parties whose plan for government is a coalition with the Arab parties. There are very few hardcore religious Zionists in the US because almost definitionally ethnats seek to move to their ethnic homeland.
The overwhelming majority of liberal Jews poll as liking Israel and consider it important to ‘Jewishness’ in a vague way. They have no particular opinion on Israeli immigration policy, no particular opinion on the Israeli government (although many poll as being hostile to ethnats like Bibi) and no opinion on what percentage of the Israeli population Jews should make up. Most have no idea what the demographics of Israel even are. Most American Jews have never been to Israel. In 2021, Pew Found only 25% of American Jews polled as “very attached” to Israel. (A further 30% polled as “somewhat” attached). Surveys of Irish Americans say 50-70% consider themselves to have a strong connection to Ireland and Irish culture, for reference.
The idea that most American Jews, including and especially ‘liberal elite’ Jews, consciously support Jewish ethnonationalism - ie. the specific attempt to ensure Israel retains a Jewish ethnic supermajority - simply isn’t borne out by the facts. That many American Jews care about Israel is obvious. Most Irish Americans care about Ireland, indeed former House speaker Paul Ryan was such an Irish ethnonationalist that he spent years lobbying for massively increased visas (with such a high cap that there would have essentially been an open border) for Irish people to come to the US and President Biden openly taunts the British government with his ethnic loyalty to what he considers his ethnic homeland.
But it doesn’t follow that most American Jews are staunch Israeli ethnonationalists, or have ever given much thought to Israel’s demography.
There are many non-Jewish Zionists in the U.S, interestingly enough. Most dispensational evangelicals are to some extent, as they think theologically that there will be a restoration of Israel before the end of the world, and tend to think that the formation of the state of Israel is a step towards that.
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