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Rafael Behr

ByRafael Behr, Rafael Behr

Opinion

Social media is legitimising conspiracy theories

Millions are now certain that they know all about the supposed evil of “Jewish power”

November 30, 2023 14:46
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Social media on display with Conspiracy theories, hoax theory and fake news. Searching on tablet, pad, phone or smartphone screen in hand. Abstract concept of news titles 3d illustration.
3 min read

Watching the Covid inquiry, I felt something bleak, reassuring, grim and funny all at the same time. I doubt there is a word for it in English. Maybe Yiddish has it covered. Every witness testified to chaos during the pandemic. Inadequate planning combined with fatal prevarication, derelict leadership and toxic relations between advisors, ministers and civil servants. There was nothing to be cheerful about. But, I mused, at least if it can be proved that no-one was in control, it will be harder to blame the Jews.

It wasn’t a serious thought. But the fact that it occurred to me says something about conspiracy theories, antisemitism and the way they surge in turbulent times.

A truth about politics that gets clearer the closer you get to power is that no-one is organised enough to pull off the kind of elaborate schemes alleged by digital sleuths in the sweatier corners of the internet. The Covid inquiry lays bare how bad government is at planning anything, let alone anything as logistically convoluted as a “plandemic” – a fake viral outbreak, staged as pretext to inject the population with mind-controlling microchips hidden in vaccines.

That lurid fantasy suffers from the same flaw as all conspiracy theories, including the one about Jews as puppet-masters of a secret world government, which has a good claim to be the progenitor of the whole genre.