Far-right Covid conspiracy theories fuelling antisemitism, warn UK (((experts)))

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Far-right Covid conspiracy theories fuelling antisemitism, warn UK (((experts)))

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According to The Guardian, opposing the jewish Genocine makes you an "anti-semite" and a "Nazi"

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/ ... uk-experts

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A surge in Covid-19 conspiracy theories risks boosting antisemitism, hate crime campaigners have warned after the opening of an exhibition shedding light on interwar British fascism and its parallels today.

The Wiener Holocaust Library in London is staging the exhibition – focusing on the motivations and propaganda of British fascists and their European peers in the 1920s and 30s – out of concern about the recent growth of far-right ideas and populism in the UK and abroad.

Rare photographs including one of a woman on the streets of London wielding a union flag with a swastika at its heart are featured in the exhibition.

“We want – want quite consciously – to get people thinking about the parallels between the past and the present, as well as the differences,” said Dr Barbara Warnock, co-curator of the exhibition.

She said a copy of Action, the newspaper of Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists (BUF), carrying the headline The Return of Manhood, had similarities to the misogyny increasingly weaponised by the far right today. The newspaper’s front page also carries the Britain First motto – a fascist slogan that is also the name of a far-right group that last month had its application to register as political party approved by the Electoral Commission.

Parallels can also be drawn between antisemitic conspiracy theories about Covid-19 and the development of vaccines, and pamphlets blaming “Jewish financiers” for the first world war or suggesting they would gain from the second world war.

David Rich, the director of policy at the Community Security Trust (CST), a charity providing security for the Jewish community, said the pandemic had resulted in people with antisemitic views taking central roles in the campaign against Covid vaccines and public health measures.

“We’ve increasingly been seeing people not really attached to one particular ideology but who are part of this amorphous mass fuelled by conspiracy theories. An entry point to that has come with the pandemic and the anti-vaccination movement where the language is not explicitly anti-Jewish. It means that a lot of people are at risk of getting sucked in,” said Rich, who will be among speakers at events taking place as part of the exhibition.

Others will include Joe Mulhall, the head of research at Hope not Hate , who said the anti-racism group was concerned that individuals had become radicalised inside organisations that were now getting smaller but more extreme as the pandemic waned and would become more fixated on antisemitic beliefs.

“There is an unbroken lineage within the British far right which goes all the way back to the 20s and 30s, which is explored in this exhibition. In some ways those prejudices and hatreds have remained unchanged, but what has evolved is the way they’re distributed, and that’s the internet,” he said.

“Electorally, the far right has collapsed since 2010 and there’s now a very splintered scene all over the country, but a lot of their politics has become normalised and part of the mainstream.”

The exhibition, This Fascist Life: Radical Right Movements in Interwar Europe, draws on items from the library’s own archives and the Searchlight Archives at the University of Northampton.
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Re: Far-right Covid conspiracy theories fuelling antisemitism, warn UK (((experts)))

Post by shewhomustbeobeyed »

Is the author of this article, Ben Quinn, a jew, too? Leave it to those cocksucking jewish bastards. Only they could turn an issue of health, into "Antisemitism".
theguardian - https://archive.is/NvYym - https://web.archive.org/web/20211012104 ... uk-experts
i.guim.co.uk - https://archive.is/u68pq - https://web.archive.org/web/20211012104 ... 96aa3d9f36

E: pressrush - https://archive.is/JpjWV - https://web.archive.org/web/20211013174 ... ar-284.jpg
theguardian - https://archive.is/H3VRS - https://web.archive.org/web/20211012231 ... eport-says
Last edited by shewhomustbeobeyed on Wed Oct 13, 2021 5:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Far-right Covid conspiracy theories fuelling antisemitism, warn UK (((experts)))

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shewhomustbeobeyed wrote: Wed Oct 13, 2021 5:09 pm Is the author of this article, Ben Quinn, a jew, too? Leave it to those cocksucking jewish bastards. Only they could turn an issue of health, into "Antisemitism".
theguardian - https://archive.is/NvYym - https://web.archive.org/web/20211012104 ... uk-experts
i.guim.co.uk - https://archive.is/u68pq - https://web.archive.org/web/20211012104 ... 96aa3d9f36
Image

Not sure, but going through his history of articles he seem completely obsessed by "anti-semitism". This is his freshest one which was published today.

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/ ... eport-says
Social media ‘bringing antisemitic ideas to new generation’

A new generation of users of “younger” social media platforms such as TikTok are being introduced to antisemitic ideas they would be unlikely to encounter elsewhere, a report says.

The research comes amid warnings that those drawn into conspiracy theories around Covid-19 are at risk of adopting antisemitic views.

It found that Google searches in the UK for “New World Order”, a conspiracy theory rooted in antisemitic tropes, which suggests that a secret global elite is controlling world events, reached their highest level for 15 years in March last year.

The analysis by the campaign group Hope Not Hate and other organisations also revealed the prevalence of antisemitic messages and memes on Instagram, where almost 70% of global users are aged between 13 and 34, and TikTok, where 69% of users are between 16 and 24.

Millions of results on Instagram for hashtags relating to the New World Order and the Illuminati were recorded, the majority of which promoted conspiracy theories, while hashtags leading more directly to antisemitic content, such as #JewWorldOrder, continued to be active.

Joe Mulhall, the head of research at Hope Not Hate, said: “The reality is that a lack of action from technology platforms has not only introduced people to hate speech but has now created online spaces where antisemitism is allowed to flourish with tragic and long-lasting effects, leaving Jewish communities exposed to the risk of terrorism.”

The research, entitled Antisemitism in the Digital Age: Online Antisemitic Hate, Holocaust Denial, Conspiracy Ideologies and Terrorism in Europe, was compiled by Hope Not Hate alongside two other anti-racism groups, the Expo Foundation and the Amadeu Antonio Foundation.
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Re: Far-right Covid conspiracy theories fuelling antisemitism, warn UK (((experts)))

Post by shewhomustbeobeyed »

Welp, I guess that answers my question.
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