Jewish Groups to Stop Posting on X Over Musk Conduct, Antisemitism on Platform
X/Twitter owner Elon Musk. Photo: Reuters/Jaap Arriens
A coalition of Jewish organizations has announced plans to cease engagement on the social media platform X following owner Elon Musk’s apparent use of a Nazi salute-style gesture at a Jan. 20 rally following the inauguration of US President Donald Trump.
“In Jewish tradition, the prohibition on ‘lashon hara,’ or ‘evil speech,’ reminds us of words’ power to harm. The great sage Maimonides taught that even when true, speaking disparagingly of others is ‘the evil tongue.’ (Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Deot 7:2.),” the groups wrote. “Speech, whether spoken or written, can cause pain, shame, and instigate action to devastating effect. Words can also uplift and heal. They must always be chosen with care, designed to call in rather than call out, to lift up rather than tear down.”
The statement continued, “That is why, after careful consideration, we are choosing to stop actively posting on X, formerly known as Twitter, which has become rife with toxic speech. We will transition away from active engagement on X in the first quarter of 2025.”
Signatories of the statement included the Union for Reform Judaism, ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal, American Conference of Cantors, Avodah, Central Conference of American Rabbis, Jewish Women’s Archive, Keshet, MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger, PEP-RJ (Programming and Engagement Professionals of Reform Judaism), Reconstructing Judaism, Reform Jewish Community of Canada, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights, The Shalom Center, and The Workers Circle.
“In study after study, as well as our lived experiences, X has become a platform that promotes hate, antisemitism, and societal division,” the statement read. “Under the leadership of Elon Musk, X has reduced content moderation, promoted white supremacists, and re-platformed purveyors of conspiracy theories. Musk himself has re-posted content that is antisemitic and xenophobic, promoting it to his millions of followers.”
The coalition also noted that following Hurricane Helene, which caused widespread damage across the southeastern United States in late September 2024, “elected officials and disaster response officials who happen to be Jewish were attacked in posts on X that used virulent antisemitic terms and tropes, undermining efforts to help all individuals impacted by the hurricane and diminishing trust in civic institutions.”
The statement called X “the largest purveyor of antisemitic content among the major social media platforms post-Oct. 7,” adding that “the hateful posts on X are harmful to Jews and people of all faiths and no faiths.”
Some Jewish groups signing the statement may keep their X account active rather than deleting it, in order to “ensure our handles are not assumed by other entities with values contrary to our own. But rather than contribute to the coarsening of discourse that is so pervasive on X, going forward, we will post content elsewhere.”
After receiving criticism for his alleged Nazi gesture, Musk made a series of jokes about the Holocaust in a post on his platform. “Don’t say Hess to Nazi accusations! Some people will Goebbels anything down! Stop Gőring your enemies! His pronouns would’ve been He/Himmler! Bet you did nazi that coming,” Musk wrote, concluding with a laughing emoji.
This brought a rebuke from the Anti-Defamation League, which had previously defended the billionaire and disputed that his gesture was a Nazi salute, calling it “an awkward gesture in a moment of enthusiasm.”
“Making inappropriate and highly offensive jokes that trivialize the Holocaust only serve to minimize the evil and inhumanity of Nazi crimes, denigrate the suffering of both victims and survivors, and insult the memory of the six million Jews murdered in the Shoah,” the ADL said in a subsequent statement.
Musk also received scrutiny for a video address he delivered on Saturday at an event organized by the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which, the ADL noted, includes officials who “have made antisemitic, anti-Muslim, and anti-democratic statements.”
In his speech, Musk said “there is too much focus on past guilt, and we need to move beyond that.” He also declared that “it’s good to be proud of German culture, German values, and not to lose that in some sort of multiculturalism that dilutes everything.”
Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, responded to the address on X competitor BlueSky, writing, “Musk is a shameless and unrepentant antisemite, and those who defend him only further embolden him and the neo-Nazis he so inspires.”
Halie Soifer, executive director of the Jewish Democratic Council of America (JDCA), said that “speaking as a deeply concerned American Jew, I am deeply concerned about the security of American Jews, of Jews worldwide, given our president’s clear alignment with dangerous right-wing extremists.”
Soifer said that “the salute, the message to the AfD, the fact that he is willing to joke about the criticism he is getting, it all demonstrates that [those around Trump] are unwilling to recognize how dangerous their words and actions are. They don’t deserve the benefit of the doubt when it comes to this alignment. It has been a steady stream of signaling to right-wing extremists that they have an ally now in the White House.”
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