LOM: 'Jews are a culture'?

No.

There are many Jewish communities and viewpoints in the UK (something Jonathan Friedland refuses to acknowledge) - not a single one, and of course many cultural differences amongst those communities. How can there be a single culture across secular, religious, orthodox, reform, socialist, conservative, mixed relationships, closed relationships.... and on and on.

The old Jewish saying about putting two Jewish people in a room together and coming out with three opinions!

I get the impression from your many comments on the subject that you have not read the EHRC report. You have clearly read a selection of commentaries - almost all distorting the report findings in one way or another - but it might be worth your time reading the original. I have read it twice - and it is clearly a critical document with a number of key recommendations for Labour (some of which Starmer and his media allies are happy to ignore - like LOTO 'political interference'). But it could certainly have been 'more damning' - and some of the criticism was levelled at the treatment of people accused of 'anti-semitism' (which often turned out to be code for support for Palestinian rights and anti-Zionism).

Labour fence-sitting on Brexit was electoral suicide - I agree with you about that. But 'fence sitting' is not a culture. Labour may have been caught between what you have previously described as a 'red wall' culture and a 'London/metropolitan' culture and translated that into an incoherent Brexit policy - but your use of the word culture to describe that process is baffling. Corbyn was not strong enough in his personality, willingness to challenge his opponents, or in the PLP arithmetic, to position Labour in a more sensible place and must take responsibility for that. Brexit killed Labour in 2019. The anti-semitism crisis (with some real cases, but in my opinion mostly manufactured for political reasons - and that includes your favourite right-wing Labour MPs and The Guardian) didn't help and may have contributed a bit to the result, but Brexit was the biggy.