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What we can learn from conspiracy theories

Please note that the posts on The Blogs are contributed by third parties. The opinions, facts and any media content in them are presented solely by the authors, and neither The Times of Israel nor its partners assume any responsibility for them. Please contact us in case of abuse. In case of abuse, David Reinert, a QAnon founder, holding a Q sign waits in line with others to enter a campaign rally with President Donald Trump and Republican US Senate candidate Rep. Lou Barletta, R-Pa., August 2, 2018, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania (AP Photo/ Matt Rourke) QAnon, the viral, discredited conspiracy theory whose believers were prominent in the assault on the Capitol, is recognizably anti-Semitic. The theory’s focus on a secret elite that sacrifices children, drinks their blood, and aims at world domination is a souped-up version of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Its attacks on “globalists” a venerable stand-in for Jews and on actual Jews, like the Rothschild family a

Blaming Jews for Everything — and the Big Lie About the Election | Jewish & Israel News Algemeiner com

Two-time Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled, a member of a designated terrorist group, is scheduled to speak on April 23 at. The US, it is said, almost never suffers from this complex because Americans have rarely lost wars and are less prone to antisemitism. This is not strictly true. According to “How the Jews Caused the American Civil War,” a hoary antisemitic indictment still quoted on white supremacist web sites, “The  War of 1812 was instigated by the Rothschilds to force the renewal of their Charter for the Bank of the United States. When this charter was vetoed by President Andrew Jackson in 1836, the Jews …  set up their plan to bring about the Civil War, [to] despoil the wealthy Christian families of the South.”

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