Indeed, the reason behind my suspicion (I cannot speak for OP who made the accusation) was that caricatures with unusually large noses representing Israel are often an antisemitic portrayal, regardless of whether the criticism holds true or not.
Criticism of Israel isn’t antisemitism, except for when an antisemitic Jewish caricature is used.
that character is voiced by Jonah Hill, who is Jewish. I’m not blaming you personally, but the image is extremely sus, people will go to such extreme lengths to excuse this shit ‘haha’
That’s a point I hadn’t considered, thank you for highlighting it. People who knowingly make and spread antisemitic and bigoted memes leverage ambiguity and plausible deniability to facilitate their reach; it’s necessary to be ever mindful of nuances in the memes we share if we don’t want to unwittingly spread harmful content.
This looks a lot like antisemitic wojack to me
It’s just some smug wojak. It’s one of the plethora of “thin beard + glasses” variants, and this one is based on Tighten.
You’re right, looks like it’s fine. The nose really seemed like an antisemitic caricature though
Some people just have big noses, that doesn’t make it antisemitic
Indeed, the reason behind my suspicion (I cannot speak for OP who made the accusation) was that caricatures with unusually large noses representing Israel are often an antisemitic portrayal, regardless of whether the criticism holds true or not.
Criticism of Israel isn’t antisemitism, except for when an antisemitic Jewish caricature is used.
that character is voiced by Jonah Hill, who is Jewish. I’m not blaming you personally, but the image is extremely sus.
*tighten
Thanks for mentioning it. I also saw the meme and was a bit hmm, and I’m glad to see OP clarify where the format is from.
that character is voiced by Jonah Hill, who is Jewish. I’m not blaming you personally, but the image is extremely sus, people will go to such extreme lengths to excuse this shit ‘haha’
That’s a point I hadn’t considered, thank you for highlighting it. People who knowingly make and spread antisemitic and bigoted memes leverage ambiguity and plausible deniability to facilitate their reach; it’s necessary to be ever mindful of nuances in the memes we share if we don’t want to unwittingly spread harmful content.