Jewish
power dominates at 'Vanity Fair'By Nathan
Burstein
IT's a list of "the world's
most powerful people," 100 of the bankers and
media moguls, publishers and image makers who
shape the lives of billions. It's an exclusive,
insular club, one whose influence stretches
around the globe but is concentrated
strategically in the highest corridors of
power.
|  David
Irving comments: WE anticipated this
smug feature article by some weeks by
introducing our
AWPOW acronym -
Are We Powerful or What.Our parents
taught us half a century ago that Pride
comes before a Fall.
 We have been uttering
for some years now a warning that many
may still believe to be the
Unthinkable: the Jews in the United
States have now reached the position of
power and pre-eminence in the fields of
media, commerce, and finance which they
occupied in Weimar, i.e. pre-Nazi,
Germany.
 President
Franklin D Roosevelt himself told
the French general Nogues in
February 1943 that it was no surprise
that Nazi Germany had cracked down on
the Jews in such circumstances.
 Let them
therefore enjoy their good fortune
while they can. Their ancestors in
Germany did not hear the thunder of the
coming avalanche; I personally hope
that those in the United States do not
make the same mistake, although we are
sad to relate that the article
published here indicates that all the
signs are the other way.
 The Unthinkable will
become the Undeniable: a US Holocaust
within the next fifty years -- in
Germany it came that much quicker. And
the survivors will again weep, Why
us?
 | 
More than half its members, at least by one
count, are Jewish.It's a list, in other words, that would have
made earlier generations of Jews jump out of
their skins, calling attention, as it does, to
their disproportionate influence in finance and
the media. Making matters worse, in the eyes of
many, would no doubt be the identity of the
group behind the list - not a pack of fringe
anti-Semites but one of the most mainstream,
glamorous publications on the newsstands.
Yet the list doesn't appear to have generated
concern so far, instead drawing expressions of
satisfaction and pride from the lone Jewish
commentator who's responded in writing.
Published between ads for Chanel and Prada,
Dior and Yves Saint Laurent, it's the 2007
version of "The Vanity Fair 100," the glossy
American magazine's annual October ranking of
the planet's most important people. Populated by
a Cohen and a Rothschild, a
Bloomberg and a Perelman, the list
would seem to conform to all the traditional
stereotypes about areas of Jewish
overrepresentation.
Joseph Aaron, the editor of The
Chicago Jewish News, thinks it's a list his
readers should "feel very, very good about."
"Talk about us being accepted into this
society, talk about us having power in this
society," Aaron wrote this week, in apparent
reference to Jewish life in the United States.
"Talk about anti-Semitism being a thing of the
past, talk about Jews no longer needing to be
afraid to be visible and influential."
Printed over 15 pages before an interview
with Nicole Kidman, the rankings -
described on the magazine's cover as the
membership of "The New Establishment" - are less
than scientific, accompanied by a paragraph-long
introduction that neither defines power nor
describes the methodology behind the list.
Topping the rankings for the second year in a
row is gentile media mogul Rupert Murdoch
[Website
comment: whose mother was however the daughter
of a wealthy Jewish family, Elisabeth
Joy Greene ] who's
followed in second place by Steve Jobs,
the non-Jewish co-founder of Apple and
Pixar.
Highest
among the Jewish entries are Google co-founders
Sergey Brin and Larry Page,
co-listed at #3, down one from 2006. The article
reported that the 34-year-old Brin and his wife
"wore swimsuits as they stood under the huppa."
(Page, whose mother is Jewish, was described in
the spring 2006 edition of B'nai B'rith
Magazine as "raised more in the mold of his
father... whose religion was
technology.")
With Americans making up the vast majority of
the list, the Vanity Fair 100 is also
notable for some absences. Just nine of those
included are women, and only two - TV host
Oprah Winfrey and rapper Jay-Z -
are of African ancestry.
It's the magazine's readers, however, and not
Vanity Fair itself, who are keeping track
of New Establishment members' gender, race and
ethnicity. Though the writers often include
telling details about their subjects - such as
that the original last name of #89, comedian
Jon Stewart, was Leibowitz - it's up to
amateur demographers to track their origins.
The approach hasn't attracted much attention
this year, but set off a Hollywood firestorm in
1994 when a reporter for England's
Spectator used that year's New
Establishment as inspiration for his own
article, in which critics accused him of
perpetrating harmful stereotypes about Jewish
control of the movie industry. (The writer,
William Cash, argued that the piece was
partly meant to call attention to the contrast
between the traditional, white Protestant
"establishment," and the disproportionally
Jewish new version.) Considerations of
background don't figure in the Vanity
Fair "Establishment," but neither, it seems,
do traditional definitions of "power" as
political.
Besides New York Mayor Michael
Bloomberg at #9, up 25 places from a year
ago, just two elected officials - former US
president Bill Clinton and former vice
president Al Gore - appear on the list.
Ranked at #6 and #19, respectively, the latter
two are cited for their work after leaving
office, not for the power they exerted through
politics. [Website
comment: Gore is of course a well-heeled protege
of the FBI's one-time target Armand
Hammer].
The magazine's limited definition of power,
then, constitutes areas in which Jews have long
excelled, often by necessity, says Ruth
Wisse, a professor of Yiddish and
comparative literature at Harvard
University.
In her most recent book, Jews and
Power, Wisse accounts "for the achievement
of Jews through the centuries," describing it,
she says, "as a consequence of their having to
develop their powers of adaptation to an
extraordinary degree."
But while they've excelled disproportionately
in areas such as business and medicine, they've
often also limited themselves - or been limited
to - fields not connected to the public exercise
of power.
With the Vanity Fair rankings' focus
on leaders outside the public sphere, they may
coincidentally mirror traditional Jewish
patterns of achievement - and a traditional
Jewish aversion to political power.
For Aaron, the list shows how "vital" Jews
have become in American life. The Vanity
Fair rankings, he writes, "[tell]
you so much about the place of Jews in this
country, about the amazing people Jews
are."
Copyright 1995-
2007 The Jerusalem PostThis article can also be read at
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