It's an interesting phenomenon.
Anti-Semitism in the classical sense has shifted over the years. When you're talking about the time of Nazi Germany, people could go through the streets and say, “we hate Jews”. In the modern sense, we simply don't see this anymore.
Across this country, on Canadian university campuses, many of which have become very uncomfortable for Jewish students, you don't typically hear the rhetoric, “I hate Jews”; you hear, “I hate Israel”. All of the classical attributes of anti-Semitism rather than being applied to the individual, as was done in the past—and at the time of Holocaust, there was no state of Israel—are being placed onto the state of Israel today. So they'll say, “I hate Zionists”. The feeling is that even if it is only a political expression, it is still obviously discrimination. The vast majority, everybody within mainstream Judaism, views themselves as Zionists. There's a historical connection. There's a religious connection. This is something that Jews pray for—Zion and Jerusalem—every day. It's an essential part. That's how things have sort of shifted over time. There have been Zionism resolutions at the United Nations. But that's essentially what has happened— that flip—so it's an attack on Israel. They'll say, “well, we have problems with Israel's policy”, but the lie to that is essentially that when they say, “well you're a Jew, so clearly you must be a supporter of Israel, so clearly I'm going to be discriminating against you because I'm inferring those views upon you”, that essentially speaks for itself and that's why it is essentially the same thing. It's anti-Semitism and it's Jew hatred. It's just a more polite expression of it in civil society today.