ADVERTISEMENT

Just another Nothing Burger? Taken totally out of context? Just BAU? Pepsi?

TheCainer

HR Legend
Sep 23, 2003
26,720
24,406
113

Trump Campaign Email Sparks Nazi Comparisons​


Donald Trump is facing criticism over alleged antisemitic propaganda in recent campaign materials—following a long history of incidents in which he has been accused of emulating or, in some cases, replicating imagery deployed by Nazis in the 1930s and '40s.

In a fundraising email sent to supporters Wednesday, the Trump campaign depicted President Joe Biden as being controlled by a puppet master portrayed as Democratic megadonor George Soros, a Jewish philanthropist and a frequent bogeyman of the right for his support of liberal causes and candidates. In addition, he has regularly been the subject of political opponents' conspiracy theories.

While Soros has long been criticized by conservatives for his policy positions, portrayals of him in conservative media and by politicians who oppose him have often evoked images of a sort of string puller behind the scenes who is orchestrating a liberal takeover of American society.


Donald Trump pictured in Nevada

President Donald Trump attends UFC 290 on July 8 in Las Vegas. In a new fundraising email, the Trump campaign depicts President Joe Biden as being controlled by Democratic megadonor George Soros.STEVE MARCUS/GETTY IMAGES
SUBSCRIBE NOW FROM JUST $1 >
Those depictions also evoke conspiracy theories on the right that blame a Jewish cabal for orchestrating machinations in the political, financial and media sectors. Such tropes date back to antisemitic literature published in the early 20th century and proved influential in the rise of Germany's Nazi regime.



Some on social media said the Trump campaign's email closely resembled Nazi propaganda distributed throughout Europe, from its imagery to its caption saying that Soros was "a secret shadow president behind the curtain pulling the strings."


"Criticising Soros isn't antisemitic, but this is because he is represented in antisemitic terms," Alex Hearn, a writer for several Jewish publications, tweeted in response to the imagery. "It is the fantasy of the evil Jew secretly running the world by undermining countries. That is why it looks so similar to Nazi propaganda."


"Same Nazi symbolism, different time," Elad Nehorai, another writer, wrote on Twitter.


Newsweek has reached out to the Trump campaign via email for comment.

The recent fundraising email is not the first example of a Trump political campaign being accused of using antisemitic or Nazi tropes. In 2020, Facebook removed a targeted advertisement from the Trump campaign that included a red triangle once used to designate political prisoners in concentration camps. That same year, the Trump campaign used the "puppet master" trope in an advertisement featuring Senator Bernie Sanders, who is Jewish, controlling Joe Biden.

And in July that year, Trump's campaign drew widespread controversy over a T-shirt, which was available on his website, that closely resembled Nazi iconography—a comparison a campaign official at the time dismissed as "moronic."


More recently, the Trump campaign gained national attention after a group purporting to be representatives of the antisemitic National Justice Party distributed flyers at a recent Trump campaign rally in South Carolina. The flyers called for a "2 percent ceiling on Jewish representation." (Newsweek could not independently verify the authenticity of the flyers.)


Wednesday's incident, critics said, was just another example of the Trump campaign perpetuating another harmful stereotype. It is the same iconography, the critics said, that helped fuel a surge in the number of reported antisemitic incidents in the later years of the Trump administration.

"We continue to see fundraising emails from the Trump campaign that feature language & imagery of George Soros controlling puppet strings and secret globalist cabals," the Anti-Defamation League told Newsweek in a statement on Thursday.


"This isn't just disturbing, it's indisputably dangerous and reprehensible," the statement continued. "Let's be clear, these are antisemitic tropes about Jewish power and are a gateway into hardcore antisemitic conspiracy theories."





https://www.newsweek.com/trump-campaign-email-sparks-nazi-comparisons-1812847
 
Do you think the people this ad is aimed at draw a distinction on religion?
I think most of them probably hate Soros simply because he donates a lot of money to Democrats. I just think that if something is going to be labeled antisemitic then it kind of matters whether or not the subject of the cricitism is a Jew.
 
I think most of them probably hate Soros simply because he donates a lot of money to Democrats. I just think that if something is going to be labeled antisemitic then it kind of matters whether or not the subject of the cricitism is a Jew.
What about the people who view Jews as a race?
 
Trump sux.

It's ok to criticize Soros even though he's Jewish....auto linking it as antisemitism is gas lighting IMO.

He's a major D donor and is fair game just as the Koch brothers are...
What about when you aren’t actually criticizing any position, or making a statement against big money donors, but are using centuries old tropes about manipulative Jews?
 
What about when you aren’t actually criticizing any position, or making a statement against big money donors, but are using centuries old tropes about manipulative Jews?
What if the trope is true? Soros, after all, is most definitely a political manipulator.
 
What about when you aren’t actually criticizing any position, or making a statement against big money donors, but are using centuries old tropes about manipulative Jews?
Kind of like how the D's have portrayed the Koch brothers...




We'll just have to disagree on this...
 
Last edited:
  • Haha
Reactions: BelemNole

Trump Campaign Email Sparks Nazi Comparisons​


Donald Trump is facing criticism over alleged antisemitic propaganda in recent campaign materials—following a long history of incidents in which he has been accused of emulating or, in some cases, replicating imagery deployed by Nazis in the 1930s and '40s.

In a fundraising email sent to supporters Wednesday, the Trump campaign depicted President Joe Biden as being controlled by a puppet master portrayed as Democratic megadonor George Soros, a Jewish philanthropist and a frequent bogeyman of the right for his support of liberal causes and candidates. In addition, he has regularly been the subject of political opponents' conspiracy theories.

While Soros has long been criticized by conservatives for his policy positions, portrayals of him in conservative media and by politicians who oppose him have often evoked images of a sort of string puller behind the scenes who is orchestrating a liberal takeover of American society.


Donald Trump pictured in Nevada

President Donald Trump attends UFC 290 on July 8 in Las Vegas. In a new fundraising email, the Trump campaign depicts President Joe Biden as being controlled by Democratic megadonor George Soros.STEVE MARCUS/GETTY IMAGES
SUBSCRIBE NOW FROM JUST $1 >
Those depictions also evoke conspiracy theories on the right that blame a Jewish cabal for orchestrating machinations in the political, financial and media sectors. Such tropes date back to antisemitic literature published in the early 20th century and proved influential in the rise of Germany's Nazi regime.



Some on social media said the Trump campaign's email closely resembled Nazi propaganda distributed throughout Europe, from its imagery to its caption saying that Soros was "a secret shadow president behind the curtain pulling the strings."


"Criticising Soros isn't antisemitic, but this is because he is represented in antisemitic terms," Alex Hearn, a writer for several Jewish publications, tweeted in response to the imagery. "It is the fantasy of the evil Jew secretly running the world by undermining countries. That is why it looks so similar to Nazi propaganda."


"Same Nazi symbolism, different time," Elad Nehorai, another writer, wrote on Twitter.


Newsweek has reached out to the Trump campaign via email for comment.

The recent fundraising email is not the first example of a Trump political campaign being accused of using antisemitic or Nazi tropes. In 2020, Facebook removed a targeted advertisement from the Trump campaign that included a red triangle once used to designate political prisoners in concentration camps. That same year, the Trump campaign used the "puppet master" trope in an advertisement featuring Senator Bernie Sanders, who is Jewish, controlling Joe Biden.

And in July that year, Trump's campaign drew widespread controversy over a T-shirt, which was available on his website, that closely resembled Nazi iconography—a comparison a campaign official at the time dismissed as "moronic."


More recently, the Trump campaign gained national attention after a group purporting to be representatives of the antisemitic National Justice Party distributed flyers at a recent Trump campaign rally in South Carolina. The flyers called for a "2 percent ceiling on Jewish representation." (Newsweek could not independently verify the authenticity of the flyers.)


Wednesday's incident, critics said, was just another example of the Trump campaign perpetuating another harmful stereotype. It is the same iconography, the critics said, that helped fuel a surge in the number of reported antisemitic incidents in the later years of the Trump administration.

"We continue to see fundraising emails from the Trump campaign that feature language & imagery of George Soros controlling puppet strings and secret globalist cabals," the Anti-Defamation League told Newsweek in a statement on Thursday.


"This isn't just disturbing, it's indisputably dangerous and reprehensible," the statement continued. "Let's be clear, these are antisemitic tropes about Jewish power and are a gateway into hardcore antisemitic conspiracy theories."





https://www.newsweek.com/trump-campaign-email-sparks-nazi-comparisons-1812847
You're a nazi if you complain about someone who happens to be Jewish? Or it's your fault if someone else as a warped mind and puts these two elements together?
 
  • Haha
Reactions: BelemNole
And Thiel, the Koch Brothers, the Mercers and so on to infinity?

Soros is referenced a disproportionate amount.
I wouldn’t say it’s disproportionate. Soros gets mentioned a lot by the right because he’s the most prominent financier of liberal causes. There was a time not so long ago when the Koch brothers were villified on an almost daily basis on this board by Dems for their support of conservative causes. Lately it seems Elon has assumed that role.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SWIowahawks
I wouldn’t say it’s disproportionate. Soros gets mentioned a lot by the right because he’s the most prominent financier of liberal causes. There was a time not so long ago when the Koch brothers were villified on an almost daily basis on this board by Dems for their support of conservative causes. Lately it seems Elon has assumed that role.
Vilified, criticized, or identified with age old tropes designed to dehumanize?
 
  • Like
Reactions: BelemNole
Kind of like how the D's have portrayed the Koch brothers...




We'll just have to disagree on this...
Two of those articles do not support your claim, and one is behind a paywall.
Link to any notable Dems using tropes that identify any Rightwingers as scheming, manipulative Jews? If you find one I’ll tell you in advance that it’s wrong. It’s just that easy, but if it were easy and anti-Semitism wasn’t so effective it would have been discarded by the GQP.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BelemNole
Two of those articles do not support your claim, and one is behind a paywall.
Link to any notable Dems using tropes that identify any Rightwingers as scheming, manipulative Jews? If you find one I’ll tell you in advance that it’s wrong. It’s just that easy, but if it were easy and anti-Semitism wasn’t so effective it would have been discarded by the GQP.
Link to a notable R labeling Soros a "scheming, manipulative Jew"

Also....
Democratic sources tell CNN it’s a carefully crafted strategy to make the Koch brothers the 2014 election villains – the personification of the rich manipulating the political system – bankrolling a GOP agenda to get richer
“The Koch brothers seem to believe in an America where the system is rigged to benefit the very wealthy,” Reid says as part of his regular anti-Koch rant.

Democrats are also trying to goad Republicans into publicly defending them as a way to attack GOP candidate as being in the Kochs’ pockets.


 
Last edited:
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT