<p>President Joe Biden's emphatic condemnation of anti-Semitism on Friday was driven by an alarming normalisation of anti-Jewish tropes and hate speech by influential public figures and on social media, experts said.</p>.<p>One day after hip-hop and fashion mogul Kanye West voiced a "love" for Nazis and 10 days after ex-president Donald Trump dined with West and white supremacist Nick Fuentes, Biden blasted a message about open anti-Semitism on Twitter.</p>.<p>"Silence is complicity," Biden said.</p>.<p>"The Holocaust happened. Hitler was a demonic figure. And instead of giving it a platform, our political leaders should be calling out and rejecting anti-Semitism wherever it hides."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-disappointed-at-russia-scrapping-of-arms-talks-1168001.html" target="_blank">US 'disappointed' at Russia scrapping of arms talks</a></strong> </p>.<p>Experts said the most recent controversies underscore a difficult new-generation fight against bigoted memes and conspiracy theories about Jews entering the mainstream.</p>.<p>Some of the new anti-Semitism has been propelled through Trump's MAGA movement and the parallel QAnon conspiracy community.</p>.<p>Some has also been advanced through youth and African American communities by influential celebrities like West and basketball star Kyrie Irving, boosted by largely uncensored social media platforms.</p>.<p>West capped weeks of stoking anti-Semitic fires on Thursday when, in a podcast joined by Fuentes and extremist Alex Jones, he praised Hitler and then posted online a Nazi swastika interlaced with a Star of David.</p>.<p>Oren Segal of ADL, which fights anti-Semitism, said the trend has been building for some time, with more people, intentionally or unintentionally, spreading anti-Semitic ideas.</p>.<p>"When you have celebrities who are promoting classic anti-Semitism like <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/i-like-hitler-i-love-nazis-kanye-west-amid-backlash-over-anti-semitic-comments-1167666.html" target="_blank">Kanye West</a>, who has more followers on Twitter than there are Jews on the planet Earth, that is going to make that part of the public discussion," Segal told AFP.</p>.<p>Aside from Trump dining with West and Fuentes, Segal noted, several Republican elected officials readily attended a pro-Trump conference organized by Fuentes earlier this year.</p>.<p>"That normalisation is not something that just began when Kanye lost his mind. It's something that we have seen in the public, frankly, for a long time," Segal.</p>.<p>Trumpism is an important factor, he added.</p>.<p>"If Trumpism is understood as normalising disinformation and conspiracy theories, the normalisation of anti-Semitism is not far behind," he said.</p>.<p>That has real consequences, he said, pointing to the deadly extremist attacks on synagogues in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Poway, California in 2018 and 2019.</p>.<p>The fact that West and Irving are both Black raised concerns about a surge of anti-Semitism among African Americans and young minorities.</p>.<p>But Cheryl Greenberg, a professor at Trinity College, said they reflected general trends in their communities.</p>.<p>"What I think it is, is the trend of mainstreaming otherwise fringe ideas."</p>.<p>For example, she said, Irving highlighted an old video by the Black Hebrew Israelites, who are critical of Jews.</p>.<p>"They've been preaching the same stuff for decades," Greenberg said.</p>.<p>"What's unusual, I think, or what's new, is that they've managed to move from New York street corners and elsewhere into the mainstream."</p>.<p>A big reason for that is social media, which makes it easier to preserve and share anything, including hate.</p>.<p>Elon Musk's haphazard takeover of Twitter showed how fast objectionable material of any kind -- against Jews or others -- can return if a platform is not extremely diligent.</p>.<p>Segal said bigger problems are the "ecosystem" of algorithm-based video hosts like TikTok and mostly uncensored messaging and discussion boards like Telegram and Reddit, where virtual, global communities are built around anti-Semitism.</p>.<p>"It's just a toxic online environment, where the most vulnerable people are getting their worldview, where I think we're starting to see the consequences," said Segal.</p>.<p>Greenberg said another problem is that anti-Semitism's importance has dissipated among younger Americans who are less knowledgeable about the Holocaust and are focused on the issues of other marginalized or oppressed groups, whether ethnic minorities or LGBTQ.</p>.<p>"The ways the Jews have made anti-Semitism a primary issue has made it much more difficult to engage with the many groups," said Greenberg.</p>.<p>She said the 1950-60s alliance between African Americans and Jews for civil rights has mostly unraveled.</p>.<p>A younger generation of Blacks and other minorities today don't see Jews as "fellow sufferers," in part because they consider Jews as successful whites, Greenberg said.</p>.<p>"There are many groups out there, it is not just about Jews, it's about lots of people," she said.</p>.<p>Greenberg said the only answer is to work more closely with other groups -- even those critical of Israel -- to keep the issue of anti-Semitism in the mix.</p>.<p>"It's never-ending because as soon as people forget, we fall off the radar," she said.</p>
<p>President Joe Biden's emphatic condemnation of anti-Semitism on Friday was driven by an alarming normalisation of anti-Jewish tropes and hate speech by influential public figures and on social media, experts said.</p>.<p>One day after hip-hop and fashion mogul Kanye West voiced a "love" for Nazis and 10 days after ex-president Donald Trump dined with West and white supremacist Nick Fuentes, Biden blasted a message about open anti-Semitism on Twitter.</p>.<p>"Silence is complicity," Biden said.</p>.<p>"The Holocaust happened. Hitler was a demonic figure. And instead of giving it a platform, our political leaders should be calling out and rejecting anti-Semitism wherever it hides."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/us-disappointed-at-russia-scrapping-of-arms-talks-1168001.html" target="_blank">US 'disappointed' at Russia scrapping of arms talks</a></strong> </p>.<p>Experts said the most recent controversies underscore a difficult new-generation fight against bigoted memes and conspiracy theories about Jews entering the mainstream.</p>.<p>Some of the new anti-Semitism has been propelled through Trump's MAGA movement and the parallel QAnon conspiracy community.</p>.<p>Some has also been advanced through youth and African American communities by influential celebrities like West and basketball star Kyrie Irving, boosted by largely uncensored social media platforms.</p>.<p>West capped weeks of stoking anti-Semitic fires on Thursday when, in a podcast joined by Fuentes and extremist Alex Jones, he praised Hitler and then posted online a Nazi swastika interlaced with a Star of David.</p>.<p>Oren Segal of ADL, which fights anti-Semitism, said the trend has been building for some time, with more people, intentionally or unintentionally, spreading anti-Semitic ideas.</p>.<p>"When you have celebrities who are promoting classic anti-Semitism like <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/i-like-hitler-i-love-nazis-kanye-west-amid-backlash-over-anti-semitic-comments-1167666.html" target="_blank">Kanye West</a>, who has more followers on Twitter than there are Jews on the planet Earth, that is going to make that part of the public discussion," Segal told AFP.</p>.<p>Aside from Trump dining with West and Fuentes, Segal noted, several Republican elected officials readily attended a pro-Trump conference organized by Fuentes earlier this year.</p>.<p>"That normalisation is not something that just began when Kanye lost his mind. It's something that we have seen in the public, frankly, for a long time," Segal.</p>.<p>Trumpism is an important factor, he added.</p>.<p>"If Trumpism is understood as normalising disinformation and conspiracy theories, the normalisation of anti-Semitism is not far behind," he said.</p>.<p>That has real consequences, he said, pointing to the deadly extremist attacks on synagogues in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Poway, California in 2018 and 2019.</p>.<p>The fact that West and Irving are both Black raised concerns about a surge of anti-Semitism among African Americans and young minorities.</p>.<p>But Cheryl Greenberg, a professor at Trinity College, said they reflected general trends in their communities.</p>.<p>"What I think it is, is the trend of mainstreaming otherwise fringe ideas."</p>.<p>For example, she said, Irving highlighted an old video by the Black Hebrew Israelites, who are critical of Jews.</p>.<p>"They've been preaching the same stuff for decades," Greenberg said.</p>.<p>"What's unusual, I think, or what's new, is that they've managed to move from New York street corners and elsewhere into the mainstream."</p>.<p>A big reason for that is social media, which makes it easier to preserve and share anything, including hate.</p>.<p>Elon Musk's haphazard takeover of Twitter showed how fast objectionable material of any kind -- against Jews or others -- can return if a platform is not extremely diligent.</p>.<p>Segal said bigger problems are the "ecosystem" of algorithm-based video hosts like TikTok and mostly uncensored messaging and discussion boards like Telegram and Reddit, where virtual, global communities are built around anti-Semitism.</p>.<p>"It's just a toxic online environment, where the most vulnerable people are getting their worldview, where I think we're starting to see the consequences," said Segal.</p>.<p>Greenberg said another problem is that anti-Semitism's importance has dissipated among younger Americans who are less knowledgeable about the Holocaust and are focused on the issues of other marginalized or oppressed groups, whether ethnic minorities or LGBTQ.</p>.<p>"The ways the Jews have made anti-Semitism a primary issue has made it much more difficult to engage with the many groups," said Greenberg.</p>.<p>She said the 1950-60s alliance between African Americans and Jews for civil rights has mostly unraveled.</p>.<p>A younger generation of Blacks and other minorities today don't see Jews as "fellow sufferers," in part because they consider Jews as successful whites, Greenberg said.</p>.<p>"There are many groups out there, it is not just about Jews, it's about lots of people," she said.</p>.<p>Greenberg said the only answer is to work more closely with other groups -- even those critical of Israel -- to keep the issue of anti-Semitism in the mix.</p>.<p>"It's never-ending because as soon as people forget, we fall off the radar," she said.</p>