Anti-Semitism is not new. It never has been.
For centuries, Jews have been the most convenient minority to blame when governments failed, economies collapsed, or movements needed a villain. When corrupt or incompetent leaders failed to deliver results, Jews became the distraction. When institutions rotted, Jews became the excuse. That well-documented pattern is old, ugly, and increasingly alive today.
What is new is the speed, volume, and confidence with which anti-Semitism is now expressed in Western societies that once claimed to have learned this lesson. So why is it surging again?
The answer is uncomfortable—but unavoidable.
Imported Hatreds In A Globalized World
Western nations made a deliberate choice to import millions of people from regions where anti-Jewish propaganda has been normalized for generations. In many of those societies, anti-Semitic narratives were not fringe ideas but state-endorsed messaging, repeated in media, education, and religious rhetoric.
This is not a claim about all immigrants or all Muslims. It is a fact about ideologies that were allowed to cross borders without challenge or expectation of integration into liberal democratic norms. When a Western society imports people without demanding adherence to its core values, free inquiry, pluralism, and individual rights, it also imports unresolved conflicts and ancient resentments.
Pretending otherwise is intellectual dishonesty. Hatred doesn’t evaporate at customs.
The Cowardly Weaponization Of Labels
Even more corrosive than imported extremism is the way Western elites have chosen to respond: by silencing criticism.
Today, questioning anti-Semitic ideas, cultural practices, or political movements is often met not with debate but with character assassination. You are branded a racist, a bigot, a xenophobe, or an Islamophobe for daring to point out realities that clash with progressive narratives.
This labeling is not about protecting minorities. It is about protecting ideologies from scrutiny. It’s about shutting down those who would openly defend our way of life and highlight evildoers in our midst.
When legitimate criticism is declared off-limits, extremists gain cover. When fear of social punishment replaces honest conversation, antisemitism thrives in the shadows—until it doesn’t bother hiding anymore.
Israel As The Ultimate Trigger
Then there is Israel, the single Jewish state on Earth, surrounded by hostile actors, and unwilling to apologize for surviving.
Israel’s existence shatters a narrative that Jews are weak, passive, and dependent. It proves that Jews can defend themselves, ignore international pressure, and prioritize their own survival. That reality enrages those who believe Jews should be perpetual victims—or disappear entirely.
The irony is staggering: Israel is the only country in the Middle East that offers full religious freedom to Muslims, Christians, and Jews alike. Yet it is singled out, demonized, and held to standards no other nation is expected to meet.
Anti-Zionism, in practice, has become the most socially acceptable mask for antisemitism.
Institutional Failure And Moral Rot
Universities, media outlets, corporations, and political leaders have failed catastrophically. They excuse antisemitism when it comes wrapped in fashionable causes. They downplay violence against Jews while amplifying every other grievance. They enforce double standards and call it justice.
This selective outrage teaches one lesson clearly: Jews are fair game again.
History shows where that road leads.
Bottom Line
Anti-Semitism is rising because Western societies have lost the courage to defend their values. They imported ideologies hostile to pluralism, silenced criticism through moral intimidation, and tolerated hatred as long as it targeted the “right” people.
This is not progress. It is a regression with better branding.
And if it continues unchecked, Jews won’t be the last ones targeted—they’ll just be the first. Want proof? Just ask Christians and those Muslims who disagree with the reigning power.
We are so screwed.
— Steve