There are plenty of antisemitic memes flying around, and some of them are debunked here: Antisemitic Memes: Lies About Israeli Jews. The morons that repeat these do not restrict themselves to lying about Jews.
The accounts that post these may be bots acting from inside or outside the West. These accounts may have few followers, so their direct reach isn;t that great, with perhaps one or two likes per post. However, they drop their memes as replies to popular accounts, and the images are copied and spread by the more gullible.
This page focuses on memes, images, that contain textual claims that can be checked.
Barring Muslims From Office

The claim is false. The McCarran–Walter Act did not forbid Muslims (or any religious group) from holding public office, and no such ban has ever existed in U.S. law. The U.S. Constitution explicitly prohibits religious tests for office, meaning people of any faith can serve. As a result, there was nothing in 1990 that could have been “quietly repealed” to allow Muslims into office. The list of politicians is also misleading—it implies involvement in a hidden policy change that simply did not happen.
The real context is that Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1990, which reformed immigration rules by removing outdated quota systems and some discriminatory exclusions tied to nationality and ideology. This was part of a broader modernization of U.S. immigration policy, not a change to eligibility for political office. The meme distorts this routine legislative update into a conspiracy narrative by inventing a restriction that never existed and then claiming it was secretly lifted.
The Epstein Files
The claim is false. There are no “Epstein files” that state, in black and white, that children were dismembered, had their organs removed, or were eaten. Investigations, court documents, and reporting around Jeffrey Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell concern sexual abuse and trafficking of minors, which are serious crimes—but do not include evidence of organ harvesting or cannibalism. Claims like this are fabricated and resemble long-standing conspiracy tropes rather than anything found in verified records.
The real context is that the Epstein case exposed a network of abuse involving wealthy and well-connected individuals, leading to criminal convictions (including Maxwell) and civil cases. Large sets of documents—often referred to online as “Epstein files”—are mostly court filings, depositions, and contact records, many of which are incomplete, disputed, or lack proof of wrongdoing by those named. These documents have been repeatedly misrepresented online, with false or exaggerated claims layered on top to create sensational narratives that go far beyond what any verified evidence shows.
Despite this, there are countless memes that accuse people from different parts of the political spectrum and buisiness. If there’s a connected person you don’t like, create an Epsteing meme to libel them.
