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Cartoon Week in Review

Click here to view our Week in Review cartoon slideshow.

Debt, debt debt! This week’s news has been dominated by the inability of Obama and Republicans to agree on a deal that would allow the debt ceiling to be raised. We also had some guy named Murdoch dealing with a horrible phone-hacking scandal that led to the shuttering of one of England’s most popular newspapers, and continues to threaten the titan’s media empire. All while Atlantis circles the Earth and finishes its mission at the International Space Station, and prepares to bring an end to the 30-year space shuttle program.

Phew! Another busy news week. Check out our Week in Review cartoon slideshow to see the best political cartoons of the week.

Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com (click to view the Week in Review cartoon slideshow)

 

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Is Banning Circumcision Anti-Semitic?

My buddy, Israeli cartoonist Yaakov Kirschen, has written this column about a controversial November ballot measure in San Francisco that would ban circumcision for males under 18.

Yaakov Kirschen / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Kirschen)

A bill to ban circumcision of all males under the age of 18 will be on the ballot in San Francisco this November. This is alarming because circumcision of all males is the single most basic ritual of Judaism. Banning circumcision is a direct attack on the practice of Judaism, even if it is presented as having other motives. In fact, history shows us that viral anti-Semitism always comes to town in disguise, usually portraying its motives as a need to protect innocent victims from demonic Jews.

In the past, violent lynch mob pogrom attacks on Jews and Judaism were launched to protect the peasants and townsfolk from Jews who had “poisoned the wells.” The Nazis were just trying to protect racial purity. More recently, Jew-hatred has been packaged as an attempt to protect the “Palestinian” natives from the evil colonialist Jewish State, and now, in 21st century California, the attack on Judaism is being promoted as protecting Jewish babies from their demonic Jewish parents.

A second characteristic of the behavioral virus we call anti-Semitism is its compulsive use of cartoons in spreading its libels. Anti-Semitic movements from Nazism to Fascism to Stalinism to contemporary Islamism all share a surprisingly intensive use of anti-Semitic cartoons in their campaigns. And so it is with the framers of the anti-circumcision bill.

The bill was written by a private non-profit organization based in San Diego, California with chapters in sixteen states. It is led by someone named Matthew Hess. Their goal is a nation-wide ban on the practice of circumcision and, sure enough, Matthew just could not resist the compulsion to draw

Foreskinman features a blond-haired, Aryan-looking superhero that "rescues" a baby from a fiendish Rabbi named Monster Mohel (click to enlarge).

those standard Nazi blood-libel caricatures of fiendish Rabbis sacrificing innocent babies. Hess, to push his campaign for the anti-circumcision bill, wrote and edited a propagandizing comic book called “Foreskinman.” The work is incredibly rich in Nazi ideology and filled with vile anti-Semitic imagery. The shockingly blatant anti-Semitism of the piece was so obvious that, in response, the woman who had been a proponent of putting the same bill onto the ballot in Santa Monica has now withdrawn the measure from consideration.

The comic book stars a blond, Aryan-looking superhero that interrupts a circumcision ceremony, beats up the fiendish, grinning Rabbi (named Monster Mohel), thrashes the Rabbi’s machine gun-toting Jewish accomplices, and takes the Jewish baby from his Jewish father. The child’s father shouts “Give me back my son” but our Nordic hero flies the terrified baby off to safety.

The baby, now rescued from the Jews, is taken on a two-day trip to a group of beach-dwelling pagans… and given to them. As the pagan woman who has been given the stolen Jewish baby announces at the end of this touching saga, she is now free to “raise him as one of our own.”

The history of the attempts to destroy Judaism is punctuated with anti-circumcision laws. In 167 BC the Syrian Greek occupiers of the Land of Israel banned circumcision. A few hundred years after that the Romans occupiers of the Land of Israel banned circumcision in their attempt to destroy Judaism. The Nazis banned circumcision, as did the Stalinists. Banning circumcision is simply a synonym for banning Judaism.

And while we’re at it, here’s a question for you. Why does the Christian calendar start on Jan. 1? Shouldn’t the Christian calendar start on Dec. 25? … the day of Jesus’ birth? What made Jan.1 so important? It’s simple. Jan. 1 (when baby Jesus was 8 days old) was the day of his circumcision.

Yaakov Kirschen is a political cartoonist and columnist for Cagle Cartoons Inc. Read more of Kirschen’s columns here, and check out his cartoons here.

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Harry Potter Cartoons

As anticipation builds for these weekend’s premiere of Harry Potters and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2, I thought I’d go back into our archives and post some the best cartoons about those little magical troublemakers at Hogwarts.

I just read a column today at Poynter about how after 13 years of Harry Potter movies, reporters are all out of angles to cover. I find it funny that cartoonists don’t seem to have the same problem.

Here’s the cartoon I drew back in 2001 when the first Harry Potter movie was released. Not much has changed, other than Potter’s age and maybe a larger dollar sign…

David Fitzsimmons of the Arizona Daily Star suggests a whole new line of Harry Potter movies as star Daniel Radcliff gets older and older…

Randy Bish of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review comments on all the crybabies that will miss Harry Potter…

Joe Heller of the Green Bay Post-Gazette addresses the aging of the Harry Potter franchise from a different perspective…

Heller also re-imagines Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, changing the main character and replacing Lord Voldemort with a different type of evil…

Replace “Mideast Summit” with “Budget Negotiations” and this cartoon by Bob Englehart of the Hartford Courant still works…

Australian cartoonist Peter Lewis paints a nice picture of Harry Potter creator J.K. Rowling as she nears the end of her movie franchise…

Canadian Cartoonist Thomas Boldt (knows to most people as Tab) addresses Harry Potter’s hype and consumerism with these two funny cartoons…

Austrian cartoonist Petar Pismestrovic sees Harry Potter as a welcome diversion from everything going on in the world…

Patrick Corrigan of the Toronto Sun suggests a new title for Harry’s ongoing pursuits…

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News of the World and Murdoch

Last Sunday was the last issue of the popular British tabloid News of the World, closed by owner Rupert Murdoch after the 168-year-old newspaper was brought down in a phone-hacking scandal. Despite shuttering the newspaper, Murdoch continues to remain under fire as more details emerge, including former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown accusing Murdoch’s papers of snooping on him.

Here’s my take on the whole scandal:

What do our cartoonists think this means for the future of Murdoch’s empire, which includes the New York Post, the Wall Street Journal and Fox News? Check out our collection of News of the World Scandal cartoons to find out.

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Florida Cartoonist Looks Back at Shuttle Program

No cartoonist has been more on the front lines of the end of the Space Shuttle program that Jeff Parker, the cartoonist for the Space Coast newspaper Florida Today. Jeff has covered the space shuttle program for years, and we thought it was worth a look back at some of his more pivotal cartoons.

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A Look Back at the Space Shuttle

With Atlantis set to lift off for the space shuttle’s very last flight, NASA faces the harsh reality of layoffs and questions about America’s commitment to leadership in space.

A symbol of progress and achievement, cartoonists have covered the space shuttle program for the last 30 years. Join us as we take a look back at the space shuttle program through the eyes of the nation’s best political cartoonists.

Daryl Cagle / msnbc.com
David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star
Adam Zyglis, Buffalo News

Click here to view more cartoons about the Space Shuttle program.

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Final Space Shuttle Mission Cartoons

Over a million people are expected to watch the space shuttle Atlantis launch on Friday, the final mission of NASA’s 30-year space shuttle program. Everyone wonders what will come next, even as lawmakers voted today to kill off funding for the successor to the vastly successful Hubble telescope.

What do cartoonists think about the end of the Space Shuttle program? Check out our Final Space Shuttle Mission cartoon slideshow to see for yourself.

Nate Beeler / Washington Examiner (click to view slideshow)

 

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Casey Anthony Cartoons

People around the country are shocked that Casey Anthony was found not guilty after prosecutors failed to prove she killed her toddler daughter, Caylee Anthony. What do the nation’s cartoonists think about the trial, the verdict and the media’s obsession with the case?

Click here to view all our Casey Anthony cartoons. We’ll update it as new cartoons come in.

J.D. Crowe / Mobile Press-Register (click to view our Casey Anthony cartoons)

 

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American Flag Cartoons

Political cartoonists are a patriotic lot. You may not think it as they bash every politician that passes by and criticize nearly every aspect of the apparatus of our government, but their ultimate goal is to embarrass our current crop of Washington inhabitants into living up to the promise of our great country.

Cartoonists are all about symbols, and there is no more memorable symbol of our country, especially on Independence Day, then the stars and stripes.

Dave Granlund uses the layout of the flag as a way to remember those who fight and have made the ultimate sacrifice to protect our freedom…

Mike Keefe of the Denver Post uses the flag to put our debt, and debt holders, into context…

Florida Today cartoonist Jeff Parker gives us a quick reminder who provides us with the freedom our flag symbolizes…

Adam Zyglis of the Buffalo News worries about our growing prison population in his flag cartoon…

Costa Rican cartoonist Arcadio Esquivel reminds us about the origins of our country with his cartoon…

While Columbia Daily Tribune cartoonist John Darkow lets us know all American flags should come with an asterisk…

Arcadio also used the flag as a symbol to denounce America’s gun violence…

…a thought echoed by Mike Keefe…

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Cartoon Week in Review

As most of us have been waiting all week for the long weekend to come, the nation’s best cartoonists were hard at work opining about Gay Marriage in New York and infighting over the deficit, as well as drawing some great cartoons about Rod Blagojevich – they’re f’ing golden!

Click here to view our Week in Political Cartoons slideshow.

Mike Keefe / Denver Post (click to view slideshow)

 

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Independence Day Cartoons

Let freedom ring! What better way to celebrate the Fourth of July and our country’s independence that a cool cartoon collection by the nation’s best cartoonists?

Click here to view our Independence Day cartoon slideshow.

Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view cartoon collection)

 

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Blagojevich Cartoons

Former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, who famously tried to sell the Senate seat vacated by Barack Obama, was found guilty on 17 of 20 federal corruption charges, and faces up to 300 years behind bars. Interestingly, Blagojevich becomes the second straight Illinois governor convicted of corruption. His predecessor, George Ryan, is now serving 6 1/2 years in federal prison.

Check out what cartoonists think of Blago in our new Blagojevich Convicted cartoon slideshow

R.J. Matson / St. Louis Post-Dispatch (click to view slideshow)