- 26 Apr 2024 22:53
#15313577
This is because the definition of "anti-semitic" just changed recently. Dictionaries are very flexible in times of crisis, apparently.
So now that it means "critical of Israel's actions."
This means that it is "a sin" to criticize Israel's politics, including its ongoing genocide of the indigenous Palestinians.
What should one call *the sin* of criticizing New Zealand's foreign policy? What about the forbidden act of criticizing the foreign policy of Burkina Faso? The mortal sin of criticizing the actions of Guatemala's government?
Are these all some kind of forbidden sin by now? Or are we, like domestic dogs, expected to recoil from criticizing our master?
"I am not allowed to bark while the sountrack is playing...."
"Their economy produces things cheaper than ours, so we need to send them some manufactured viruses to level the playing field." - Freedom and Democracy Inc.
Pants-of-dog wrote:At this point, @wat0n could call Hitler an antisemite and no one would pay attention.
This is because the definition of "anti-semitic" just changed recently. Dictionaries are very flexible in times of crisis, apparently.
So now that it means "critical of Israel's actions."
This means that it is "a sin" to criticize Israel's politics, including its ongoing genocide of the indigenous Palestinians.
What should one call *the sin* of criticizing New Zealand's foreign policy? What about the forbidden act of criticizing the foreign policy of Burkina Faso? The mortal sin of criticizing the actions of Guatemala's government?
Are these all some kind of forbidden sin by now? Or are we, like domestic dogs, expected to recoil from criticizing our master?
"I am not allowed to bark while the sountrack is playing...."
"Their economy produces things cheaper than ours, so we need to send them some manufactured viruses to level the playing field." - Freedom and Democracy Inc.