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- Embed this noticeYes, jews will regularly express frustration or confusion at being grouped together, but this is inevitable because of how they will defend individuals of their group as a group. The ADL is a perfect example of this. It's been 110 years and they still act like Leo Frank dindu nuffin.
Tucker Carlson is an example of someone who somehow ran afoul of this just by talking about mass migration and the involvement of people like Soros. To the best of my knowledge, he never once mentioned on Fox that Soros is a jew, but being willing to talk about this in terms of "replacement" ultimately cost him his job.
If you generalize about jews and their cultural norms and values as a group, you are labeled an antisemite. But if you speak calmly, rationally and factually about specific individuals and things they have objectively done and said without making mention of their jewish identity at all, some jews will still pop their heads up and accuse you of antisemitism regardless.
Pointing out that not all jews engage in that equally in every circumstance does not obviate this at all. It still happens like clockwork and the examples of this pile up by the day now.