Israel is a pluralistic democratic state, the only functional one in the region.
All citizens are equal in most respects. The main differences between citizens are as follows:
- Immigration: As the LONE safe state for Jews (after millennia of being exiled from their homeland, only to be exciled from or persecuted or murdered in other lands), Israel prioritises immigration for Jews from anywehere in the world. All other people around the world may apply to become Israeli citizens, but must follow a process typical of those anywhere else. This is intentionally discriminatory in favour of Jews around the world, but is not discriminatory against existing Israeli citizens.
- Military: Jewish men and women are required to comply with conscription. Only men of Christians, Druze and other communities are required, but Arab Muslims are not required to comply, though they can and do vulunteer.
- Civic Life: All citizens can take part in civic life, becoming MPs, judges, police, etc. There are few if any legal limits, the most obvious being the ability to serve in senior security ranks, which is consistent with making Israel a safe space for Jews.
Nobody complains about much more extreme restrictions when Muslims implement actual apartheid states. No Jews, no news.
So, while Israel is a ‘Jewish State’, it is far less discriminatory than Muslim states, so when you see libelous memes aimed specifically at Jews in Israel, you know you are dealing with an antisemite.
These are some of the libelous claims, many eminating from medival times, and others more recent:
- Global Jewish Control / Secret Elite Theory
- Jewish Control of Finance / Banks
- Media / Hollywood / Cultural Control
- Blood Libel”/Jews murder non-Jews (especially children) for ritual purposes
- Jews Behind Wars / Crises
- Population Replacement / Immigration Plot
- Holocaust inversion or Nazi analogy
I have no hisitation exposing the creeps that perpetuate this nonsense, especially when the lies are debunked but they still repeat them.
Big Mac Examples
What you will find are outright lies through intentional misquotes. But, that’s not all. Here’s the real mental gymnastics the fools are :
- What these Israelis ACTUALLY said comes nowhere near close the vile and sickening words often used against Jews by Muslims … AND Western “critics of Israel and only Israel” (antisemites).
- What these Jews were purported to have said ALSO doesn’t come close to the many vile and sickening words used by the same “critics of Israel”.

Menachem Begin
The quote attributed to Menachem Begin—“Our race is the Master Race… other races are beasts and animals”—is not authentic. There is no credible primary source (no Knesset transcript, recording, or verified publication) supporting it, and it is widely regarded as a fabricated or misattributed quote that circulates without evidence.
What is documented is that during the 1982 Lebanon War, Begin used harsh, dehumanising language about enemies, including phrases referring to attackers as “beasts” or “two-legged animals.” These remarks were made in the context of wartime rhetoric following attacks on Israeli civilians, and while controversial, they are very different from the “master race” quote. The viral version exaggerates and reshapes real rhetoric into something resembling Nazi-style ideology, which is why historians and reliable sources reject it.
Bezalel Smotrich
The quote attributed to Bezalel Smotrich—“International law does not apply to Jews… that’s the difference between the chosen people and the others”—is not authentic. There is no reliable transcript, speech, or interview where he says this, and it appears to be a fabricated or heavily distorted quote that blends religious language with political claims in a way that cannot be verified.
What is true is that Smotrich has made controversial and hardline statements, including arguments that Israeli policy should not be constrained by international law in certain contexts, particularly regarding security and settlements. These are political and ideological positions, often strongly criticised, but they are not framed as racial supremacy or a claim that laws “do not apply to Jews” in the way the viral quote suggests.
Yoav Kisch
The quote attributed to Yoav Kisch—calling people “animals,” saying they “have no right to exist,” and should be “exterminated” with “no limits” until mass flight from Gaza—is not authentic. There is no credible source, transcript, or recording linking him to this wording, and it appears to be a fabricated or composite quote, likely blending real wartime rhetoric from others with invented escalation.
What is true is that during the Gaza war period, some Israeli officials used very harsh and controversial language, and Kisch himself has taken strong pro-military positions in support of Israel’s actions. However, there is no verified instance of him calling for extermination or using this specific language, and the viral quote exaggerates beyond anything reliably documented.
Nissim Vaturi
The quote attributed to Nissim Vaturi—“Erase Gaza… don’t leave a child there, expel everyone”—is not a single, verifiable quote in that form. It is a distorted composite, combining fragments of reported remarks with added wording (“nothing else will satisfy us,” “expel everyone”) that cannot be traced to a clear primary source or single statement.
What is true is that Vaturi did make genuinely extreme and widely criticised comments during the Gaza war period, including calls reported in media for Gaza to be “erased” and statements interpreted as advocating very broad, indiscriminate action. These remarks were controversial in Israel and internationally, but the viral version intensifies and stitches them together, making it sound more systematic and explicit than the documented statements actually were.
Netenyahu and War Crime Claims
The claims in this meme about Benjamin Netanyahu are partly based on real elements, but heavily framed and exaggerated in a misleading way. The language about “cashing in Holocaust credits” and using Judaism as “camouflage” is not a factual statement but a rhetorical, polemical claim. It generalises about “Zionists” and imputes coordinated bad faith—something that cannot be substantiated and often overlaps with longstanding antisemitic tropes (e.g., manipulation, exploiting victimhood). While critics do argue that accusations of antisemitism are sometimes used in political debate to deflect criticism of Israel, the meme presents this as a blanket, intentional strategy, which is not evidence-based and collapses complex disagreements into a single hostile narrative.
What is true is that the International Criminal Court has taken steps related to alleged war crimes in the Israel–Gaza conflict, and there have been high-profile legal and political disputes involving Netanyahu in that context. However, the situation is legally and politically contested, not a settled judgment of guilt, and the wording “WANTED… for war crimes and crimes against humanity” simplifies a complex process into a definitive claim. More broadly, Israel and its supporters do sometimes invoke antisemitism concerns in response to criticism, while critics argue about where the line lies between legitimate criticism and prejudice. The meme turns these real but nuanced issues into a one-sided, accusatory narrative rather than an accurate summary.
While we’re on this subject, let’s debunk that other meme, that the IJC has ruled on their guilt regarding genocide – the IRJC merely admitted that the racists of South Africa could try to show it – of course they have not..
More Big Mac Examples
You’d think having tried and failed with one set of lies, that might be enough. But, no … Big Mac is back …

What we see in these examples are Zionist Jews that have had enough of the passivity of Jews that seem to accept the vile antisemitism, persecution and violence thrown at them. Many accept that the Holocaust was the last straw – I’m astonished at how long Jews have put up with persecution before being able to re-create a Jewish homeland.
The barbaric Islamic conquest was a threat to Europe itself for centuries (and many see it is again), so that even the Crusades were a minor conflict compared to the expansionist wars of Islam, so it wasn’t until the 20th Century that it became practically possible. Therefore, the ACTUAL views these Zionists expressed were hardly unreasonable.
David Ben-Gurion
The quote attributed to David Ben-Gurion—“Sterile Jewish masses living parasitically off of the body of an alien economic body”—is not a reliably verifiable quotation in that form. The specific wording and citation (“Mimaamad Le’am, page 196”) are frequently repeated online, but there is no clear, widely accepted primary source confirming this exact phrasing in English, and it appears to be a distorted or selectively translated fragment rather than a clean, documented quote.
What is true is that early Zionist thinkers, including Ben-Gurion, sometimes used harsh, critical language about Jewish life in the diaspora, influenced by socialist and nationalist ideas of the time. They argued that historical restrictions had pushed many Jews into economically dependent or unbalanced roles, and that Zionism aimed to create a more “productive” society through agriculture and labour. However, these arguments were internal social and economic critiques within a specific historical context, not a blanket condemnation as the viral quote suggests; the circulated version amplifies and strips context, making it appear more extreme and dehumanising than the underlying discussion.
To this day there are many Jews that reject Judiasm and/or Zionism. Fine, but they have no say over the right of Israeli citizens to form a state. Some are miffed because religiously they think God has driven the Jews out of the land of Israel, and so should stay out. Others, particularly Marxists, are a contingent of Jews that, as they wish, want to integrate into other socities, but of course that has rarely gone well for Jews, as antisemites still reject them and want them to leave. Jews are now blamed for their Judaism in killing Christ and for atheism in inventing Marxism.
This is the dilemma for Jews that made Zionism succeed. Muslims want to remain the colonizers of Israel, and kick out the Jews, and non-Muslims waant to kick them out of their countries and send them back to Palestine … or at least that was once the case, for now, it seems, the same Western antisemites don’t want Jews in Israel either. Israel was the only sensible place for Jews to make a stand for survival AND claim a right to the land where the history is predominantly theirs.
It is fitting that Ben-Gurion gave the speech of independence to a nation that is stronger than ever.
Yosef Haim Brenner
The quote attributed to Yosef Haim Brenner—“If the tables were turned and others were like the Jews, wouldn’t we have good cause to hate them as well?”—is not reliably verifiable in that exact wording. This is a recurring theme with these libelous memes.
Again, it circulates online without a clear primary source, and there is no widely accepted, context-confirmed citation showing Brenner wrote or said this sentence as a standalone statement. As with similar examples, it is likely a paraphrase, mistranslation, or selective extraction that has been sharpened into a provocative “quote.”
What is true is that Brenner was known for intense, often harsh self-criticism of Jewish life in the diaspora, reflecting the intellectual climate of early 20th-century Zionism. He wrote candidly about social weakness, dependency, and how Jews were perceived by others, sometimes in deliberately uncomfortable terms meant to provoke reflection and change. In context, such remarks were introspective and critical, not an endorsement of hatred; the viral version removes that context and reframes it as a blunt, self-condemning statement, which misrepresents his intent and tone.
Vladimir Jabotinsky
The quote attributed to Vladimir Jabotinsky—“The Jewish people are a very nasty people. Its neighbors hate it and they’re right.”—is not a reliable, verifiable quotation in that form. This is becoming necessarily repetative to the point that these memes are not merely nasty, but incredibly stupid.
So, … there is no widely accepted primary source confirming he said or wrote this sentence as presented, and it appears to be a distorted or selectively translated fragment that has been turned into a blunt, provocative standalone quote.
What is true is that Jabotinsky, like some other early Zionist thinkers, wrote frankly and sometimes harshly about Jewish conditions in exile and about how Jews were perceived by surrounding societies.
In essays such as The Iron Wall, he argued that conflict between Jews and Arabs was inevitable in the context of competing national movements, and he rejected sentimental or idealised views of coexistence. He has been vindicated many times over, as the Islamic deaath cult neighbours have attacked again and again.
His tone could be stark and unsparing, but it was analytical and strategic rather than self-denigrating in the way the viral quote suggests; the circulated version strips context and reframes complex argument as a crude condemnation, which misrepresents his views.
Uri Zvi Greenberg
The quote attributed to Uri Zvi Greenberg—“Those loathsome Jews are vomited out by any healthy collective…”—is, you guessed it, … not a reliably verifiable quotation in that exact wording. It circulates online without a clear, traceable primary source, and the phrasing strongly suggests a distorted or selectively translated fragment, likely intensified into a blunt, decontextualised statement rather than a faithful citation.
What is true is that Greenberg was an extreme and highly polemical writer, associated with militant Revisionist Zionism, who used very harsh language in his critique of Jewish life in the diaspora. His writings sometimes expressed anger at what he saw as passivity or failure to embrace national revival, and after the Holocaust he framed it in stark, ideological terms about destiny and warning. However, these views were expressed within a specific ideological and literary context, not as simple blanket denunciations of Jews as a people; the viral quote amplifies and strips context, making it appear as crude self-hatred rather than part of a broader (and controversial) ideological argument.