Maybe. It could be that it became popular during the Bolshevik Revolution, or was weaponized at that time.
Case in point, the term "conspiracy theory" dates back to the late 1800s. (I was looking for my link to the evidence for that (search results of old newspapers) but I can't find it right now. If I find it I will edit this post.) However, it was weaponized in around 1970 from a the C_A propaganda release Countering Criticisms of the Warren Report. (I also have evidence of that from search results of old newspapers but that's in the same paper I wrote, and I can't find it atm.)
I had heard it was due to the Bolshevik Revolution. Looking it up now I find both as origins. Perhaps both are true; one coined it, the other weaponized it to eliminate otherwise valid criticisms.
Let us know what you find. I have read of this site the term “conspiracy theorist” is only since the JFK assassination theories. Would be interesting to see if there is earlier usage documented somewhere.
As for anti-semitism it was originally used as a way to justify hating Jews for their ethnicity and not for their religion.
It was at a time when semites were a lower or non-European race (racism was okay).
But hating someone for their religion is different. The term anti-Jewish would be too unclear if it meant anti-Jewish religion or anti-Jewish race.
Many come up with the same date and coiner when you use DuckDuckGo.
The one I pasted was Encyclopedia Britannica.
Wikipedia also dates it back to the 1800s, but different. Though used as the same purpose.
The origin of "antisemitic" terminologies is found in the responses of Moritz Steinschneider to the views of Ernest Renan. As Alex Bein writes: "The compound anti-Semitism appears to have been used first by Steinschneider, who challenged Renan on account of his 'anti-Semitic prejudices' [i.e., his derogation of the "Semites" as a race]."[15] Avner Falk similarly writes: "The German word antisemitisch was first used in 1860 by the Austrian Jewish scholar Moritz Steinschneider (1816–1907) in the phrase antisemitische Vorurteile (antisemitic prejudices). Steinschneider used this phrase to characterise the French philosopher Ernest Renan's false ideas about how 'Semitic races' were inferior to 'Aryan races'".[16]
Looking at the term "conspiracy theorist" (not theory, but theorist) the first newspaper that used that phrase was in 1973. HOWEVER, the source I used (wish I could find it) didn't have that many total clippings. It was like 8 data points in 73, 8(ish) in 74, 10(ish) in 75, and increased from there.
"conspiracy theory" went back further, with basically no instances in the 40s/50s but some in the 30s, and after the Fed, then again after JFK, etc. Looking at older instances though it wasn't a weapon, but rather a statement of an actual theory of a conspiracy (from the papers I looked at). I will find it damnit. It was really interesting data.
"conspiracy theory" went back further, with basically no instances in the 40s/50s but some in the 30s, and after the Fed, then again after JFK, etc.
1967 rings a bell. That was when CIA issued a "suggestion" to Mockingbird Media.
If it was used in the 1930's, I wonder if there were rumblings about either the Federal Reserve/Income Tax/Titanic, or if it was WWI or gold confiscation.
It was 1967 when that report I linked to was released, but the phrase "conspiracy theorist" didn't show up in the media (according to the small dataset I looked at) until 1973. It is "conspiracy theory" that showed up before that. Note the difference. One is a theory, about a conspiracy. The other is targeted at a person. YOU can be a conspiracy theorist but you can't be a conspiracy theory.
In the old newspapers I looked at it wasn't a weapon, it was just a term like you would use now, like "cooking recipe" or whatever. As for the specific conspiracies I don't remember. If I think about it tomorrow I will make an effort to find the links.
Both wrong. The Jews (actually Canaanites, then Phoenicians and Carthaginians) were enemies of Shem (the son of Noah). The Shemsu Hor of Egypt, namely tall and fair creators of civilizations were warned of the Canaanites who would suck dry the civilizations through deceit and usury. The Canaanites were the anti-shemites. So of course they reversed it (think mirror) and as usual projected this term on the followers of Shem. Some Frog posted this earlier this month:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/jGzpkUigTyOo/
Maybe. It could be that it became popular during the Bolshevik Revolution, or was weaponized at that time.
Case in point, the term "conspiracy theory" dates back to the late 1800s. (I was looking for my link to the evidence for that (search results of old newspapers) but I can't find it right now. If I find it I will edit this post.) However, it was weaponized in around 1970 from a the C_A propaganda release Countering Criticisms of the Warren Report. (I also have evidence of that from search results of old newspapers but that's in the same paper I wrote, and I can't find it atm.)
I had heard it was due to the Bolshevik Revolution. Looking it up now I find both as origins. Perhaps both are true; one coined it, the other weaponized it to eliminate otherwise valid criticisms.
Let us know what you find. I have read of this site the term “conspiracy theorist” is only since the JFK assassination theories. Would be interesting to see if there is earlier usage documented somewhere.
As for anti-semitism it was originally used as a way to justify hating Jews for their ethnicity and not for their religion. It was at a time when semites were a lower or non-European race (racism was okay). But hating someone for their religion is different. The term anti-Jewish would be too unclear if it meant anti-Jewish religion or anti-Jewish race.
You have any source for this origin of the term ?
Many come up with the same date and coiner when you use DuckDuckGo. The one I pasted was Encyclopedia Britannica.
Wikipedia also dates it back to the 1800s, but different. Though used as the same purpose.
Looking at the term "conspiracy theorist" (not theory, but theorist) the first newspaper that used that phrase was in 1973. HOWEVER, the source I used (wish I could find it) didn't have that many total clippings. It was like 8 data points in 73, 8(ish) in 74, 10(ish) in 75, and increased from there.
"conspiracy theory" went back further, with basically no instances in the 40s/50s but some in the 30s, and after the Fed, then again after JFK, etc. Looking at older instances though it wasn't a weapon, but rather a statement of an actual theory of a conspiracy (from the papers I looked at). I will find it damnit. It was really interesting data.
1967 rings a bell. That was when CIA issued a "suggestion" to Mockingbird Media.
If it was used in the 1930's, I wonder if there were rumblings about either the Federal Reserve/Income Tax/Titanic, or if it was WWI or gold confiscation.
It was 1967 when that report I linked to was released, but the phrase "conspiracy theorist" didn't show up in the media (according to the small dataset I looked at) until 1973. It is "conspiracy theory" that showed up before that. Note the difference. One is a theory, about a conspiracy. The other is targeted at a person. YOU can be a conspiracy theorist but you can't be a conspiracy theory.
In the old newspapers I looked at it wasn't a weapon, it was just a term like you would use now, like "cooking recipe" or whatever. As for the specific conspiracies I don't remember. If I think about it tomorrow I will make an effort to find the links.
Both wrong. The Jews (actually Canaanites, then Phoenicians and Carthaginians) were enemies of Shem (the son of Noah). The Shemsu Hor of Egypt, namely tall and fair creators of civilizations were warned of the Canaanites who would suck dry the civilizations through deceit and usury. The Canaanites were the anti-shemites. So of course they reversed it (think mirror) and as usual projected this term on the followers of Shem. Some Frog posted this earlier this month: https://www.bitchute.com/video/jGzpkUigTyOo/
I thought usury was practiced in the Middle Ages. Was it in Egypt too, done by the slave class?
Sumerian debt control system - pre Egypt. Taxation was the same origins.