I am a Jewish woman, and if those in power are to be believed, my rights have never been more protected.
Never has the Republican Party so loudly undertaken what they say is a zealous defense of the fairer sex. President Donald Trump has signed executive orders claiming as their goal the preservation of women’s spaces, women’s rights and women’s opportunities. Meanwhile, the administration just as vigorously attacks the people they identify as the enemies of the Jews: graduate students, university professors and artists who have spoken out against Israel. Nothing, it seems — not laws, not morals, not the truth — will stand between the Trump administration and the protection of women and Jews from the shadowy forces that would destroy them.
Despite being a Jew and a woman, these initiatives will not protect me. Indeed, I am among their targets.
But despite being a Jew and a woman, these initiatives will not protect me. Indeed, I am among their targets, because I’m the wrong kind of Jew and the wrong kind of woman: My interpretation of Judaism demands justice for the slaughtered thousands in Gaza, and my assigned gender at birth was not “female.”
In fact, the regime has issued all these orders in part to unilaterally answer two largely unanswerable questions — “Who is a Jew?” and “What is a woman?” — in ways that serve their particular aims. And their particular aims include abuse and demonization of inconvenient Jews and inconvenient women, the ones who aren’t willing to have their identities be defined by gentiles or cisgender men.
This becomes clear when you look at whose interests this administration actually protects — and whom they attack.
Who are the Jews so beloved of Trump and his cabal? Only the most rabid of Israel supporters, the ones who actively endorse the carnage in Gaza, the ones who are fully in favor of Benjamin Netanyahu’s brutal policies in Israel and the occupied territories. Any criticism of Israel is considered suspect, to the point that Trump can even say of Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer, a longtime and ardent Zionist, “He’s not Jewish anymore; he’s a Palestinian.” Which means the Jews who actually do support and fight for Palestinian rights are classified as threats to their fellow Jews, as antisemites, as enemies of the state.
And women — what kind of woman does the administration envision protecting when it issues its ultimatums? The imagined cisgender, heterosexual white girl who can’t compete in sports because of burly men in dresses. That image helped win the election.
I am also a woman — so are Black women, fat women, disabled women, incarcerated women, and so on. But all such groups are seen as not the correct kind of woman. Rather than protecting my rights, which would strengthen the rights of all women, the Trump administration has defined trans people out of existence and started confiscating our passports.
How do these redefinitions serve the regime? In two ways.
For one, by creating approved versions of Jews and of women, the regime can play at being sympathetic to liberal values in a way that will confuse and divide at least some of the people who would otherwise oppose them.









