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not everything feels like something else

@nachobsns

Pinned

intro post 2: electric boogaloo

it's been over a year(!!!) since i made my last pinned post and a lot about my blog has changed since then, so i figured it was time for a revamp. here's what i want people to know about me:

  • mo, 18, she/her. usamerican.
  • former "antizionist" (for more info, check my previous pinned linked here, in-depth linked here, or #deradicalization tag). current ally.
  • i don't use the term "zionist" to describe myself because i think that's a complex intracommunity conversation which i am not a part of, but i unequivocally support the right of israelis to exist in their ancestral homeland in peace and safety and i believe in the right of jews worldwide to exist without fear of harassment and if you don't hold the same values, we will not get along
  • in the same vein, i don't use the term "pro-palestine" to describe myself because i have watched (and, briefly, been a participant) as said movement descended into rabid antisemitism over the course of the past two years, but i unequivocally support the right of palestinians to safely exist in their homeland free of terroristic governance and i do not accept any form of anti-arab or anti-muslim bigotry and if you don't hold the same values, we will not get along
  • i do not have the energy to enforce a dni, nor do i care to individually "verify" all my followers, but antisemites, terfs, tankies, kahanists, magats, etc should know that this is not your space, you are not welcome here, and you will be immediately blocked if i see your hateful bullshit
  • i mostly reblog about antisemitism and social justice plus whatever else i find funny/interesting/cute with occasional personal posts scattered in between
  • i love bad 2000s tv. my current favorites are supernatural and house md. i think they are both deeply problematic but also so so interesting and i will gladly talk with u about them, critically or otherwise
  • interaction friendly!! feel free to comment or reblog any of my posts, send asks, etc. i love talking to people on the internet <3

banner cred: @/josephjoestarsass

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We Iranians are collectively going through a terribly painful and difficult time. I can't share all the videos here, they are so appalling and too horrific. My heart is forever broken, yet I refuse to not look staright into the eyes of pure evil incarnate.

We don't even know if our loved ones are still alive. I haven’t heard anything from my family. The last message I got from a dear friend on Monday was that her 20 year old cousin was shot. 💔

I have a small request: please don't believe and amplify the false narratives of the Islamic Regime such as "this is a movement orchestrated by Israel and all protesters are Mossad agents and terrorists etc" or

"they just want your oil." Don’t be a mouthpiece of the Ayatollah, most of these people are so intellectually lazy and have no idea about the Middle East.

Iranians are not dumb.

If you can't speak out, at least don't add to our pain.

i feel like history has obscured how funny breaking bad was bc people always look at me wrong when i say it's a dark comedy but like when jesse pinkman wasn't suffering more than the omelas kid he was also frequently the funniest character on tv

and just to be clear about the native land site. i’m not just bothered bc they’re literally engaging in erasure of jewish indigeneity, but also all the other indigenous MENA groups. where are the samaritans? the kurds? the yazidis? assyrians? druze? copts? if you can understand the fact that the americas and australia and africa have TONS of native groups but not southwestern asia then you might just be out of line to speak on it.

i feel like if youre running a website that maps native land and you put a tribe on there in the same shape of a modern country you maybe are not qualified to have anything to do with native studies at all.

Like uh. You want me to believe whatever colonisation occurred was contained EXACTLY to the shape that the indigenous people lived in and that they artificially constrained themselves to an impractical shape without there being bordering tribes? sure bud thats plausible maybe go back to your legos

So for some reason (either a glitch or an oversight) I have access to international internet now, and I don't know how long that will last so let me update you:

In the past week, at least 17000 people were murdered and shot in cold blood in the streets of Iran. These people were unarmed, most of them were teenagers. What was their crime? Protesting. Standing up against their oppressive dictator regime. Almost immediately from 8th of January they cut us off from internet. Complete blackout. We couldn't even text each other, we couldn't call each other. People couldn't call for an ambulance when they saw their friends and family getting shot. The IRG wouldn't let anyone help those that were dying. Now they've taken the bodies hostage, either demanding money before handing them back to their family or harassing the family to bury them at dawn so no one can gather. Thousands have lost their sight. Thousands are in custody and the regime does not need legal reasons for executing them.

The Islamic republic officials have made up different stories about this. First they said all those who protested were terrorists funded by America or Israel. Then they said thousands were killed by ISIS, not them. Now they blame every western power for everything that happened. Not one admits to what actually happened. They see themselves as God, whoever disagrees with them is not a human and must die. This is not an exaggeration.

It's been a week since the bloodbath. All the cities are in martial law. You're not allowed to go out at night, they will either shoot you, arrest you, or confiscate your phone.

Meanwhile the regime is trying it's fucking best to normalize everything. Don't let them.

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when I was like 14 I used to reblog these posts on here that were like "YOUR 20S ARE NOT AN IMAGINARY RACE YOURE DOING JUST FINE!!" just to be positive towards my older mutuals even though i didn't really get what they were about and I'd be in the tags like "#so true!! #everyone does things at their own pace!!" and now im 24 I'm thinking back to it and it's like Oh of course the imaginary race. Which im losing

three different stories from different people in different countries, but reflecting a disturbing and undeniable trend.

  • number one:
If antisemitism has long plagued France, dating back to the Middle Ages, it’s now metastasizing in new, alarming ways, according to a recently published book by French journalist Nora Bussigny.
Titled “Les Nouveaux Antisémites” (“The New Antisemites”), it exposes virulent Jew-hatred endemic to many far-left organizations in France, infiltrated by Bussigny as part of a lengthy undercover investigation. Using a false identity, Bussigny uncovered pervasive antisemitism and anti-Zionism, now a common denominator among diverse groups that often disagree on other matters.
“I saw with my own eyes to what degree Islamists, far-left so-called ‘progressive’ militants and feminist, LGBT and ecological activists are closely linked in their shared hatred of Jews and Israel,” Bussigny told The Times of Israel during a recent interview on Zoom.
“It’s ironic because historically, the extreme left was fragmented. Many radical groups never got along despite dreaming of a convergence of their struggles. Before October 7, [2023,] I was convinced they could only unify around a common hatred of the police and what it symbolizes for them. But I’ve now seen how their hate for Jews, or rather Zionists, to use their term, is more effective in bringing them together in common cause.”
The Hamas-led invasion on October 7, 2023, saw some 1,200 people in southern Israel slaughtered by thousands of marauding terrorists, and 251 abducted as hostages to the Gaza Strip. The massacre touched off the two-year war against Hamas in Gaza and an unprecedented spike in global antisemitism.
“Les Nouveaux Antisémites” — whose subtitle translates in English as “An Investigation by an Infiltrator within the Ranks of the Far Left” — opens with a dedication to Régine Skorka-Jacubert, a Holocaust survivor and member of the French Resistance.
“While writing the book, I was invited to the Mémorial de la Shoah in Paris,” said Bussigny, 30, speaking in French. “As part of its education program, they have a terminal which scans your face and attributes to you someone deported to a Nazi concentration camp. You’re then asked to commit yourself to help preserve the person’s memory and keep their story alive. I told myself I’d dedicate my book to Régine.”
In the book’s introduction, Busssigny explains her incognito endeavor, for which she risked her personal safety.
“During an entire year, I participated, with full discretion, in demonstrations, meetings, online discussions,” she writes. “I investigated university campuses. I applauded next to hysterical crowds glorifying terrorism. I took part in feminist protests and dialogued in municipal facilities with members of an organization [Samidoun] outlawed in many countries for its close, proven links to terrorism. I chanted against ‘genocide’ and for ‘Palestinian resistance’ — obviously armed ‘resistance’ — during demonstrations supposedly defending the rights of women and LGBT people, with no mention of homosexuals being tortured or murdered in the name of Sharia law in the Gaza Strip, governed by Hamas.”
At the outset, Bussigny faced a learning curve.
“At first, I went too quickly,” said Bussigny, whose mother is from Morocco, her father from France. “Participating in demonstrations, I made mistakes. For example, I’d say ‘Israel,’ which militants never say except for insults. They usually say ‘the Zionist entity,’ or if writing, they call it ‘Israhell.’ They also never say the IDF, but rather ‘the genocidal army.’ There were terms I had to learn to have the ‘right’ vocabulary.”
Bussigny also needed her best performance skills.
“Initially, some of the people looked at me with mistrust,” she added. “I had to really concentrate on how I spoke and acted when I was among them. They watch you to see if you’re chanting, if you’re happy to be there, if you’re filming. They’re suspicious. I made sure to look cheerful and excited to chant with everyone the glory of Hamas and Operation Al-Aqsa Flood [the terror group’s name for the October 7 atrocities]. I was so careful to play the part that it became almost schizophrenic for me.”
In the book, Bussigny shows how radical anti-Israel groups, including Urgence Palestine, Palestine Vaincra and Samidoun (designated a terrorist organization by several countries), receive political support in France, sometimes public funding and access to municipal facilities where they hold meetings and workshops seeking to radicalize young people.
Making “Les Nouveaux Antisémites” more noteworthy is that its author is not only not Jewish, but half Arab-Muslim, adding to the enmity she faces.
“Since the book came out [in late September], I’ve been the target of death threats, horrible insults and an enormous amount of hate, especially on social media,” said Bussigny, who requires special police protection when appearing at public events. “Part of this hostility is because I’m Franco-Moroccan, and some people treat me as a traitor to the Palestinian cause and an accomplice of Zionists. Those attacking me denounce me as complicit in ‘genocide,’ and some also make baseless accusations that I’m receiving money from Israel.”
The malice doesn’t stop there.
“Many bookstores in France have boycotted my book,” she added. “Some have even told customers who tried to order it that they don’t want to order this type of book.”
Despite this animus, much to the consolation of Bussigny, “Les Nouveaux Antisémites” has been widely acclaimed in the media, is on bestseller lists in France and received the 2025 Prix Edgar Faure award for best political book of the year.
“For all the negativity, there’s been lots of positive feedback,” said Bussigny, who writes regularly for French publications Le Point, Marianne and Franc-Tireur. “Given how well the book is selling, obviously, many non-Jews are reading it, which is important. I’ve received lots of support.”
Not surprisingly, some of that support has come from France’s Jewish community, the second largest outside Israel.
“I’m quite touched by the response from French Jews,” said Bussigny, who recently spoke at a Paris event hosted by CRIF, the representative body of Jewish institutions in France, which also featured Israel’s Ambassador to France, Joshua Zarka. “I’ve received so much gratitude. Many say my book has helped them see what’s behind much of the current antisemitism. They’re worried and grateful to better understand everything that’s at stake for them.”
“They’re happy I’m not Jewish,” said Bussigny, noting that part of the reaction surprised her.
“At first, I didn’t understand this. I was a bit embarrassed to be invited to speak about antisemitism because I’m not Jewish and I don’t experience antisemitism,” she said. “I’d ask them, isn’t it better to give the floor to someone who’s directly affected by it? And they’d say to me, ‘No, on the contrary.’”

Mixing with militants

For the book, Bussigny interviewed more than 100 people, Jewish and non-Jewish, from hardcore militants to university students and professors to elected officials. She also visited the Free University of Brussels and Columbia University in New York.
This is her fourth book and follows “Les Nouveaux Inquisiteurs,” published two years ago, just before October 7, for which she also went undercover, to investigate the [far left] movement.
“Before working on ‘Les Nouveaux Antisémites,’ I didn’t know many Jews,” said Bussigny, who’s hoping to visit Israel for the first time in the coming months for an event centered on her book. “I think if it wasn’t for my parents, I could’ve become antisemitic. I grew up in a Paris suburb where I didn’t meet any Jews and didn’t even realize what antisemitism was. When I was a teenager, I wanted to go to a performance of [antisemitic French comedian] Dieudonné. But my parents said, ‘No, that’s going too far.’ They alerted me and explained to me what antisemitism is.”
Citing many individuals by name in the book for their extreme antisemitism and anti-Zionism and their affiliation with nefarious groups, Bussigny devotes an entire chapter to one person in particular, Rima Hassan, a Palestinian, Syrian-born senior member of the left-wing antisemitic La France Insoumise party.
“Rima Hassan has the potential of becoming France’s [Zohran] Mamdani,” said Bussigny, referring to New York City’s anti-Israel mayor. “She’s succeeded in radicalizing much of [left-wing political party] La France Insoumise. As she’s the most-followed political figure in France on social media, along with Jordan Bardella [of the far-right Rassemblement National], she has tremendous influence. Hassan is obsessed with Jews and is the most dangerous politician connected to antisemitism and Islamism. Today in La France Insoumise, she’s more prominently featured by [party leader] Jean-Luc Mélanchon, who understands her ultra-radical discourse appeals to the young generation.”
This could have electoral consequences.
“I worry about what’s happening with Gen Z, those born after 1995, many of whom will be voting for the first time next year in the municipal elections, and then in 2027 in the presidential elections,” Bussigny said. “We could have several Mamdanis in France. He’s called the TikTok mayor for a reason. He was elected in large part thanks to Gen Z voters, and he used his anti-Zionism as a motor for his campaign. What does this mean for our upcoming elections?”
In media interviews and at conferences, Bussigny is outspoken in condemning antisemitism and its danger to French society. She’s met with government ministers and parliamentarians about her investigation and its sobering implications. In late October, she testified at length before the National Assembly’s commission of inquiry into Islamist movements in France supporting terrorism and promoting Islamist ideology, and their strategy of building relationships with national and local politicians.
Forgoing the option to speak behind closed doors, she told the commission of troubling developments and individuals whose names and actions she identified as threatening the future of France due to their anti-democratic agenda. She stressed that in her work, she distinguishes between support expressed for Palestinian civilians versus for armed groups and the glorification of terrorism.
“While undercover, I identified classic antisemitic stereotypes, reformulated by simply substituting the term ‘Zionist’ for ‘Jew,’” she told the hearing. “This rhetoric was flagrantly apparent during training by the Urgence Palestine organization in which I participated. The speakers spoke of a supposed ‘Zionist conspiracy’ in France in which ‘Zionists’ control the media and have infiltrated the government. These accusations are nothing but a faithful reworking of traditional antisemitic tropes, already observed historically on the extreme right.”

Push to fight antisemitism before all is lost

Bussigny recently joined a group of prominent French Jews and non-Jews in signing a public letter denouncing rampant antisemitism and calling on the French government to make the fight against Jew-hate and racism a major national cause in 2026 and to create a special judiciary office for the prosecution of antisemitism.
Bussigny’s book isn’t just a report of her investigation, as reflected ominously in the introduction’s final sentence — “My concern continues to grow regarding the future marked by the persecution of Jews.” Equally sobering, she titles the book’s last chapter: “This Isn’t a Conclusion But a Cry of Despair in the Face of What’s Happening,” which ends with: “I complete this book by simply saying to you that now that you’ve read what I’ve written, you can no longer say you didn’t know.”
When asked if her perspective has changed since completing the book last spring, Bussigny didn’t hesitate.
“No,” she replied. “Even if I have a bit of hope, it’s so little next to the despair I have. My heart is heavy. I’m very, very afraid for France. I think in the long run, this might be a lost cause, but I’m among those who are going to fight until the end.”
  • number two (with the requisite disclaimer that I don’t trust anything coming from this administration, however I will also not discount the serious concerns and fears of the UK Jewish community):
  • number three - anecdotal, but officially reported on many times previously:

(and another disclaimer, yes, I wish the author of the following tweet had quoted someone else, even if the quote is accurate)

this does not include what we know very well has also been happening in Italy:

Spain:

and the Netherlands:

to name a select few. (none of these are articles are anywhere close to comprehensive in regards to all the incidents that are happening). there is real worry for the future of Jewish life across Europe.

For centuries much of European culture has been built on antisemitism. Until quite recently Jews were literally being hunted for sport across Europe. The United States was the first country in the world to grant Jews equal rights. Long before the Nazis, the treatment of Jews as second class citizens at best and often as slaves ,the regular and systematic stripping of Jewish property, and the rape, torture and murder of Jewish people for entertainment or to let off steam was a regular part of European society.

By 1924 (when the United States introduced immigration laws to prevent more Jewish immigrants from coming) one third of European Jews had already fled to the United States, even though the journey was incredibly difficult and dangerous. That's how bad things were. And more would have come if that 1924 law hadn't gone into effect.

98% of the Jews who were murdered during the Holocaust were not in Germany, but rather in territories that the Nazis conquered. The Nazis were only able to find and round up these Jews because their friends and neighbors turned them in - and often even actively participated in the killing.

Most European countries have not acknowledged this history at all and have made 0 effort to eradicate antisemitism from their societies. And this is the result. Their culture is steeped in antisemitism that they never sought to change.

While the spark that ignited this is probably a sophisticated propaganda campaign being run by Russia and Iran (probably with China and Qatar adding fuel to the fire as well) it could not have caught on so well and been so effective if these societies were not already deeply antisemitic without any education to counter these attitudes.

I had a dream that Joe Biden kept trying to sneak back into the white house to become the president again and he had a variety of silly disguises like in one he was wearing a big moustache and top hat and introduced himself as Job Iden and tried to sell trump snake oil and trump was super interested until his moustache fell off and then JD vance was like "wait a minute.. that's joe biden!!" amd he was like "welp, gotta run, see ya later jack!" and then all the evil white house staff were shaking their heads cus joe biden almost sneaked into the white house and the newest aid was there and she was like "That was a close call, Mr President" and his new aide was actually kamala harris wearing a big cartoon wig and they were all too distracted by joe biden to notice

The thing is, I want to believe that what’s happening is that, the composition of “loud, terminally online leftists” is the thing that’s changed here. I want to believe that it’s not that the same people who were posting non-stop about the murder of Mahsa Amini less than four years ago are now posting things like “acab is a Western framework that you can’t blanket apply to anti colonial forces like those in Iran.” I want to believe that what’s happening is that the people who cared so much about the murder of Mahsa Amini were the ones who dominated the left wing conversation in 2022, and that different people, who saw no problem at all with her death in 2022, are dominating the conversation now.

But the problem is, I’ve seen a few usernames in common, and it’s hard not to draw some inferences from that. As much as I desperately want these to be mostly just two different groups of people… I don’t actually think that they are. I’m beginning to think that the rhetoric in support of Mahsa Amini and the women and girls who took to the streets following her death really was that hollow, all along.

And that’s crushing, in a way that I don’t really know how to put into words.

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I am so sick of random left wing goyim invoking the name Anne Frank as a rhetorical tool in discussing ICE and modern U.S. politics. Yes, ICE sucks. Yes, they’ve been acting viciously and as if they are above the law. It’s fine and good to call that out, and point out that although they seem to believe otherwise, ICE is not a secret police force.

But the Holocaust is not your cudgel to use to make a point. Stop casually comparing ICE to the Gestapo, bringing up Anne Frank, or announcing the U.S. is in 1930s Germany, because all of those comparisons are fucking dumb, tasteless, and incredibly disrespectful to the memories of the millions who died. ICE is tearing apart families, but it is not shepherding millions to be murdered in dedicated killing centers. Immigrants in the U.S. who keep their head down are hiding from having their livelihoods taken and deportation, but they’re not hiding from gas chambers, mass graves, or enslavement under pain of death. And in the U.S., elections are still free and fair, dissident speech is still permitted, and democracy is still present. I study political science and democracy—I know what I’m talking about here.

It weakens the very real horrors what happened to casually compare them to modern political developments you don’t like. Continue calling out ICE’s abuses, the plight of immigrants in the U.S., and the democratic backsliding Trump and his cronies are causing, but stop using real events that happened to real people to win cheap political points. The Holocaust is not your moral parable or tool!

"It’s just..."

It’s just a celebrity on a red carpet wearing a red hand pin. Fashion is subjective.​ It’s just a slogan projected onto Big Ben. It’s free speech.​ It’s just a BBC presenter comparing us to rats. It’s just banter.​

It’s just a rabbi murdered in the UAE. A random tragedy.​ It’s just 50 Jewish kids kicked off a plane in Spain. A diplomatic spat.​ It’s just a girl in France. An isolated incident.​ It’s just a plot to kill us in Manchester, a firebomb in Boulder, a shooting at Bondi Beach. Just one-offs. All of them.​

It’s just... maybe take the kippah off when you leave the synagogue.​ It’s just... maybe put the mezuzah on the inside of the door this time.​ It’s just... maybe have an exit plan.​

But you’re right. It’s probably just me.

(Credit to Jonathan Sacerdoti and his recent Youtube video 'Jews are fine. Don't exaggerate.')

Text: Don’t act like everyone loved my father. He was assassinated. A 1967 poll reflected that he was one of the most hated men in America. Most hated. Many who quote him now and evoke him to deter justice today would likely hate, and may already hate, the authentic King.

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