• @FMT99
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    131 year ago

    I mean 9-11 didn’t make people anti-American. But the crazy invasion of Iraq did. And yes of course there were those that hated America before any of that happened as well.

    • Zoolander
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      51 year ago

      No, but anti-Arabic sentiments and Islamophobia blew up in the US after 9/11…

  • @mlg
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    131 year ago

    The new research, released by the UK-based Institute for Strategic Dialogue

    afaik ISD is a pretty valid and neutral analysis group, and this is obviously something expected.

    That being said, @[email protected] has been spamming posts here with secondary sources ranging from mediocre to twitter copypasta garbage pretending to be news.

    Not asking for a ban because he’s posted some barely passable articles that have some additional info, especially on the Israeli side, but OP you really need to not spam with propaganda garbage. Quantity is not quality.

    • Annoyed_🦀
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      -21 year ago

      Antisemitism include the hate of israel, the country.

      Imagine Saudi use Islamophobia as a defence when people criticise them. That would be fun.

      • @ghostdoggtv
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        21 year ago

        Imagine

        That’s the thing… with Israeli fascism, you don’t need to imagine

  • @ilmagico
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    41 year ago

    Antisemite and anti-Israel aren’t the same thing: one can dislike what Israel is doing without necessarily hating all Jews, whether they reside in Israel or not.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    31 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    New research by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue found that in the days after Hamas’ attack antisemitic comments on conflict-related YouTube videos increased by 4963%.

    Antisemitic remarks have soared online since Hamas’ surprise attack on Israel on 7 October, with YouTube totalling 15,720 hateful comments against Jewish people in the following week, according to a recent report.

    Part of this surge can be explained by an increase in the number of videos focusing on Israel and Gaza published on the platform.

    Comments contained dehumanising language, including comparisons between Israelis and Nazis, conspiracy theories - ranging from the idea that Jewish people control the media, as well as political and financial institutions, to the claim that the Hamas attack was a ‘false flag’ planted by Israel - and direct threats to Jewish figures and officials.

    The 15,720 anti-semitic comments it found on YouTube videos represented a nearly 51-fold increase in the absolute volume of such remarks.

    The British think tank also analysed fringe and alternative social media platforms like 4chan, Gab, and Telegram, finding that antisemitism has significantly increased there too, with 4chan reporting the highest volume of such remarks.


    The original article contains 599 words, the summary contains 189 words. Saved 68%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!