Ben Shapiro downplays Joe Rogan's alleged antisemitic comments: “I did talk with Joe a little bit about this yesterday”

Shapiro: “There is a difference between make stereotypical comments and having a stereotypical worldview”

Spotify podcaster Joe Rogan is being criticized for recent remarks.

If @joerogan is truly interested in understanding what antisemitism is, how it works, and why statements like this play into it, happy to make myself available to publicly field all his questions. Folks shouldn't be afraid to talk about this stuff, but they should understand it. https://t.co/zzE80uVlOC

— Yair Rosenberg (@Yair_Rosenberg) February 7, 2023

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From the February 9, 2023, edition of The Daily Wire's The Ben Shapiro Show

BEN SHAPIRO (HOST): So, I think jokes are different than than, you know, actual honest observations. I did talk with Joe a little bit about this yesterday, and he was saying what I sort of suggested he was saying yesterday, which is everybody likes money and Jews are good with it. And, you know, again, that is a very different thing than, I think, how it came out on the air when Joe was talking about it.

I will say that there is a difference between making stereotypical comments and having a stereotypical worldview. When you talk about full damaging racism or antisemitism, it is actions that are tied to a full scale worldview that are truly damaging. Now, there can be prominent people who say things that then tie into that worldview or give credence to that worldview unintentionally by saying things. And that's a problem. But the bigger problem is the worldview itself.

So, to take an example, if you make a stereotypical comment about Black people in a joke to a friend, is that good? No, it's not good. It's ugly and it's bad and shouldn't do it. Does that make you a racist for the rest of your life? No. It means you did a bad thing. It means you said a bad, racist thing. Does it mean that you even buy into a full scale racist world? No. And I think we've lost all nuance in this discussion. It's true with antisemitism too. If somebody makes a Jewish joke, is that the same thing as somebody buying into a broad scale program with regard to Jewish conspiracy theory?

The reason why people's radar went up when Joe said that is because when you say Jews love money, this does tie into a broader actual worldview about Jews, which is Jews are greedy and Jews are terrible, and they use their greed and horror in order to control world finance. And because they use their greed and horror to control world finance, they're victimizing surrounding groups. This is, sort of, left-wing view of what Jews are - Jews are evil capitalist, predatory threats who are disproportionately successful because Jews are bad. Right, so, when you say things like Jews love money, it ties into that in one area. It can also tie into old-style religious antisemitism - the whole idea that Jews would sell out Jesus for 30 pieces of silver or stuff like that. You can see how it would tie into broader antisemitic worldviews. But it doesn't necessarily mean that your comment was meant that way or that it does tie into that.

And I don't think that the best way to fight racism or antisemitism is to fight these specific comments all the time. Or – you can mention them, you can point out that they're bad and wrong. But to waste all of your ammo on that, as opposed to the broader worldview I think is a serious problem. It's the broader worldview that needs to tumble down because that broader worldview sometimes allies itself with fellow travelers who believe things like capitalism is indeed bad, disproportionately successful people are bad and greedy, and that crosses streams of the antisemitic conspiracy theory that I suggested before. And now you have a real antisemitic movement. That's really dangerous.