Antisemitism 2.0: How Algorithms Accidentally Discovered They Hate Jews
The era where hatred doesn’t need a neat ideology, a theory book, or a drawn mustache.
A good algorithm, a little rage, and a lot of screen time are enough.
The era where hatred doesn’t need a neat ideology, a theory book, or a drawn mustache.
A good algorithm, a little rage, and a lot of screen time are enough.
The media today is not just a source of information – it is a national education system, only without supervision.
And it teaches us again and again: Don’t believe in yourself, don’t be proud of the IDF, don’t believe that you can win. That’s not “enlightened”
Somewhere between Metula and Rahat, among the dunes and basalt hills, there is a phenomenon that even Harvard has not yet been able to crack: the clothing habits of the average Israeli. The one who comes to a wedding in a white polo shirt, goes to a job interview in ripped jeans, and in winter (that is, one rainy February) wraps himself in a down jacket as if he were in Iceland.
This is a nation that rejected the necktie as part of a colonial conspiracy, adopted Crocs as a national symbol, and broadcasts to the world: “We don’t dress for you. We dress for the integration.”