Right.
Here’s an excerpt from an article published ten days ago:
Maybe, for the first time in history, someone will dare tell the truth to the American people, absorbing scathing accusations of anti-Semitism, without bowing her head. The chances of this happening aren’t great; the savage engine of the Jewish lobby and of Israel’s “friends” is already doing everything it can to trample her.
Not only that, the writer continues:
What, after all, has Omar said? That pro-Israel activists demand “allegiance to a foreign country”; that U.S. politicians support Israel because of money they receive from the pro-Israel lobby group AIPAC, and that “Israel hypnotized the world.” What is incorrect in these statements? Why is describing reality considered anti-Semitic?
The article, written by noted anti-Semite Gideon Levy, was published in that noted anti-Semitic rag, Ha’aretz.
Now please tell us again how only your own brilliant assertions can have merit. (I say this in jest but, to be honest, I’m sure you’ll rise to the occasion.)