I was drinking and used the wrong word. I should have said they're not "true" Hasidic jews. I was saying what one would have said in order to protect these jews.
An appeal to purity is commonly associated with protecting a preferred group. Scottish national pride may be at stake if someone regularly considered to be Scottish commits a heinous crime. To protect people of Scottish heritage from a possible accusation of guilt by association, one may use this fallacy to deny that the group is associated with this undesirable member or action. "No true Scotsman would do something so undesirable"; i.e., the people who would do such a thing are tautologically (definitionally) excluded from being part of our group such that they cannot serve as a counterexample to the group's good nature.[4]
I was drinking and used the wrong word. I should have said they're not "true" Hasidic jews. I was saying what one would have said in order to protect these jews.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_true_Scotsman