Kansas man who killed Indian worker shouted 'go back to your country'
Attacks on foreigners have greatly increased since Trump was elected. They do not usually lead to death, sometimes they are of a violent nature. Sometimes they are just verbal abuse, I know of one case personally, never made the papers.
I don't think the attacks on Jewish cemetaries and synagogues are particular to the Trump-era, they have happened all throughout the 20th century in the USA, although there does seem to be an increase lately, likely a by-product of the various neo-Nazi groups which support Trump. Although they also get a bit a love back from Drumpf, for example when he doesn't mention Jews in relation to the Holocaust, even though his focus is not on hating Jews.
On the other hand, the anti-immigrant doctrine is a key part of Trumpism.
I call bullshit on the claim that attacks have increased.
I call bullshit on increases in attacks on Jewish cemeteries.
Your claim that neo nazies support Trump is unsupported, and they are an irrelevant fringe.
This attack is unlikely to connected to Trump anymore than Hinckley was connected to JOdi Foster.
******* little nazi liar aren't you.
American Jews Confront a Wave of Bomb Threats
The Nashville Jewish Community Center has now gotten so many telephone bomb threats that the dates run together, said Leslie Sax, the executive director. The first call came on January 9, when Nashville was one of the first 15 JCCs to get threats. The next call was January 18, accompanying yet another national wave. The latest was just this weekend, on Presidents’ Day, when 11 JCCs around the country were threatened, according to a spokesperson for the national organization. The Nashville facility, more full than usual with people exercising on the holiday weekend, was evacuated before security gave the all-clear.
“Most people just feel sadness—they’re sad that this is happening,” Sax said. “Everyone keeps saying they’re disheartened and frustrated.” But even though people are upset, they don’t seem to be scared. “I haven’t heard fear,” she said.

The Jewish Struggle to Understand Trump's Election
Across the United States, Jewish communities are struggling to deal with this new wave of threats. While none of the bomb threats have led to violence, Monday’s calls came around the same time as another attack: Roughly 170 Jewish graves in a Missouri cemetery were
desecrated over the weekend, according to
The Washington Post. The calls may be a novel form of intimidation, but the context around them is not. American Jews are victims of more reported hate crimes than any other group in the United States, and have been subject to the majority of religiously motivated offenses every year since 1995, when the FBI first started reporting these statistics. The phone calls may not result in violence, but they contribute to an atmosphere of anti-Semitism already well-established in the United States.
In total, the national JCC has tallied calls to 53 JCCs in 26 states in the last two months. On Monday, the calls came in to a wide range of locations: Albuquerque, Birmingham, two locations in Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, Milwaukee, Nashville, St. Paul, Tampa, and Tulsa, according to a list compiled by a national JCC spokesperson. “We are concerned about the anti-Semitism behind these threats, and the repetition of threats intended to interfere with day-to-day life,” said David Posner, the director of strategic performance at the JCC Association of North America, in an emailed statement.