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Twitter has the power to increase antisemitism, but how will Musk handle his new kingdom?

Like the printing press 500 years ago, mass communication can be dangerous for Jews

November 3, 2022 17:03
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Tesla CEO Elon Musk looks up as he addresses guests at the Offshore Northern Seas 2022 (ONS) meeting in Stavanger, Norway on August 29, 2022. - The meeting, held in Stavanger from August 29 to September 1, 2022, presents the latest developments in Norway and internationally related to the energy, oil and gas sector. - Norway OUT (Photo by Carina Johansen / NTB / AFP) / Norway OUT (Photo by CARINA JOHANSEN/NTB/AFP via Getty Images)
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Elon Musk is a risk-taker who changed the car industry against the odds, and the indications are that he will also try to change Twitter’s business model. He claims he wants to make it a platform for ‘free speech’ and that too many opinions have been restrained. 

More opinions means more advertising revenue and the concern is that relaxing rules in this digital wild west will mean even more hate speech. Musk had to reassure advertisers by saying he wanted Twitter to be ‘welcoming’ and not a ‘free-for-all hellscape.’ His mixed messages have caused speculation. 

Like traditional media, social media is a channel that can transport useful ideas or deadly ones. Given the antisemitic heritage of western culture, it is unsurprising that new tech for creating content led to antisemitic material pouring out. 

Over 500 years ago the new tech of the printing press was introduced and created the roadmap to the Holocaust. Protestant reformer Martin Luther’s popular 1543 pamphlet  ‘On Jews and their lies’ inspired Kristallnacht. Left-wing journalist Georges Dairnvaell’s 1846 Rothschild conspiracy pamphlet helped create Nazi propaganda, and the Russian Tsarist ‘Protocols of the Elders of Zion’ in 1903 helped define Nazi ideology.