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| A German poster from the early 1940s about shadowy Jews conspiring to instigate war, and a modern meme about Jews controlling the pharmeceutical industry and conspiring to force vaccines on you. |
I never thought I would have to write a post like this. I
used to take an off-ramp that had a giant sign reminding people of the
Holocaust and warning us not to let it happen again. I always thought that was
overwrought. I mean, who is going to start casually spouting rhetoric that
eventually leads to something like the Holocaust?
Then Hamas waged a campaign of rape, torture, kidnapping,
and terror on October 7th. When Israel tried to fight the terror group hiding
behind its own women and children, and retrieve hostages being sexually abused,
tortured, and murdered, including a mother and her two toddlers who were beaten
to death, Israel was accused of uniquely monstrous war crimes simply for defending
itself. While every death in war is tragic, Israel was fighting what one Modern
War Institute scholar called the most restrained war in history in response
to a terror attack.
Even more sadly, Israel’s justified self-defense reignited
some very old antisemitic tropes. Jewish people experienced a 200-500
percent increase in hate crimes. And I now regularly encounter enough
Jew-hating nonsense that I’m forced to write a post about it.
Antisemitism is often cloaked in the camouflage of “criticizing
Israeli policy”. As a military analyst, I find genuinely informed
criticisms quite rare. More often, “criticizing Israel” or “criticizing Netanyahu”
is the bumper sticker used as a shield against valid charges of antisemitism.
That phrase then becomes a socially acceptable way to recycle ancient bigotry
with updated language.
The most basic rule of antisemitism is simple: if you
believe a shadowy group of powerful Jews is secretly behind your problems,
you’re antisemitic.
Modern buzzwords about bankers, media elites, globalists, or
pedophiles don’t make it any less conspiratorial and wrong. Conspiracy theories
thrive by misusing the inevitable gaps in human knowledge to create the
illusion of hidden insight. And it feels comforting to imagine yourself as one
of the enlightened few uncovering secret truths hidden from the masses. But go
back to rule number one: if your explanation for world events ultimately boils
down to secret powerful Jews, then you are trafficking in antisemitism.
Dual Loyalty Trope:
This trope claims that Americans who support Israel must be doing so because they are manipulated, bribed, or controlled by Israel or Jews. You can already see rule number one appearing again here, because the implication is that Benjamin Netanyahu, the leader of a country roughly the size of New Jersey and widely criticized internationally, somehow secretly controls world leaders and American foreign policy.
This is especially odd considering Trump himself publicly
styled himself the “daddy”
of NATO, and when Netanyahu violated a ceasefire Trump reportedly helped
broker, Trump openly said on camera,
“[Bibi] doesn’t know what the f-ck he’s doing.” Several times in the war with
Iran he has publicly rebuked
Netanyahu, which is a rather odd thing to do if Netanyahu was the public
facing leader of the cabal of powerful Jews pulling the strings. But antisemitism
often falls apart upon cursory thought because it relies on stoking powerful
emotions instead of calm and rational examination.
This trope comes closest to a potentially sincere foreign
policy disagreement. People can absolutely debate whether the United States
should support Israel to the extent it does. But the problem is how quickly legitimate
disagreement mutates into the insinuation that Jews are secretly controlling
governments, media, or finance from behind the curtain, and that they don’t
have a right to exist. Unfortunately, the line between valid, substantive
disagreed about US foreign policy consistently crosses into Jews controlling
the US, which is the fundamental feature of antisemitism.
“Money grubbing” Jews is an old stereotype that portrayed Jews as greedy,
manipulative, and obsessed with money. Historically, many Christians considered
lending money at interest to be sinful usury. Jewish communities often operated
under different legal and religious traditions regarding trade and finance, and,
like many middleman
minorities throughout history, some Jewish communities became economically
successful in certain sectors.
That success frequently became the object of resentment and jealousy. Combined with conspiracy thinking about secret Jewish power, it produced centuries of scapegoating, persecution, expulsions, and violence. The stereotype survives today anytime people reduce Jews to caricatures about money, banking, influence, or financial manipulation.
Blood Libel:
This is one of the oldest and ugliest antisemitic tropes. Historically, blood
libel referred to false accusations that Jews kidnapped and murdered Christian
children for ritual purposes. The accusation was completely fabricated, but it
spread throughout medieval Europe and helped justify massacres and persecution.
The modern versions usually revolve around claims of secret
Jewish depravity, hidden abuse networks, sexual perversion, or elaborate
conspiracies involving harm to children. It is the same basic structure
repeated across centuries: secretive Jews committing monstrous acts behind
closed doors.
A recent example was the New York
Times running a deeply irresponsible story implying Israeli handlers
trained dogs to sexually assault prisoners — published the same day detailed
reports were emerging documenting the mass sexual violence
committed against Jews on October 7th.
This post was difficult to write because the experience
reminds me of Ellis from Die Hard. For those who remember the movie,
Ellis was a sleazy 1980s corporate cokehead who suddenly started throwing
around ethnic slurs I had never even heard before. I had to look some of them
up afterward.
The sudden resurgence of antisemitism has felt similar. I
was generally familiar with Jew-hatred in the abstract, but I found myself
having to study the tropes more carefully just to identify, refute, and
ultimately shun antisemites when they surface in supposedly respectable
conversations.
The uncomfortable truth is that antisemitism rarely presents
itself honestly. It almost never announces itself as hatred of Jews outright.
Instead, it disguises itself as criticizing foreign policy, “anti-elite”
politics, anti-globalism, anti-Zionism, complaints about elite pedophiles, conspiracy
thinking, or moral outrage selectively applied only to Jews and the Jewish
state.
That is why people need to learn the patterns. Because once
you recognize the structure of the rhetoric, you start seeing the same old
poison recycled over and over again with slightly updated branding. Never again
is right now, and every decent person should call out antisemitism when they
see it.
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