No, he hasn't directly accused Holocaust survivor and liberal financier George Soros of killing children to make matsoh with their blood, as Michelle Goldberg writes, Glenn Beck's attack on Soros, "a symphony of anti-Semitic dog-whistles," is familiar to any kid who went to Hebrew School:
Anti-Semitism, like all ideologies, tells a story about the world. It's a story about almost occult Jewish power, about cabals that manipulate world events for their own gain. In classic anti-Semitic narratives, Jews control both the elites and the masses; they're responsible for the communist revolution and the speculative excesses of capitalism. Their goal is to undermine society so that they can take over. Through the lens of anti-Semitism, social division, runaway inflation, and moral breakdown all make sense because they all have the same cause. Nazi propaganda called Jews “Drahtzieher”—wire-pullers. They constitute a power above and beyond ordinary government authority. “There is a super-government which is allied to no government, which is free from them all, and yet which has its hand in them all,” Henry Ford wrote in The International Jew.
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Soros, a billionaire financier and patron of liberal causes, has long been an object of hatred on the right. But Beck went beyond demonizing him; he cast him as the protagonist in an updated Protocols of the Elders of Zion. He described Soros as the most powerful man on earth, the creator of a “shadow government” that manipulates regimes and currencies for its own enrichment. Obama is his “puppet,” Beck says. Soros has even “infiltrated the churches.” He foments social unrest and economic distress so he can bring down governments, all for his own financial gain. “Four times before,” Beck warned. “We’ll be number five.”
Black people as pawns of Jews is, in and of itself, a common white-supremacist trope. Goldberg suggests it may be inadvertent, but that's hard to square with the fact that Beck, as Media Matters points out, has consistently cited anti-Semitic sources without qualification, from "pro-Nazi antisemite" Elizabeth Dilling, "[n]ationally known white supremacist and anti-Semite" Eustace Mullins, and even Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's remarks about Jews trying to destroy the economies of Muslim countries. It defies belief that someone as committed to assembling innocuous details into vast conspiracies would be unaware of the provenance of his research. That's probably why he's accused Soros of being an anti-Semite for posing as a Christian during the Holocaust, in order to inoculate himself while assaulting Soros with the most blatant of anti-Semitic stereotypes.
Someone decide to clue in Abraham Foxman, who offers Beck the benefit of the doubt:
The issue of the Shoah “is so sensitive that I'm not even sure Holocaust survivors themselves are willing to make such judgments,” Foxman went on “For a political commentator or entertainer to have the audacity to say, there's a Jewish boy sending Jews to death camps, that's horrific. It's totally off limits and over the top.”
Beck's comments “were either out of total ignorance or total insensitivity,” he said.
Of course, it's somewhat hard for Foxman to unload both barrels on Beck, given that he just gave Beck's boss, Rupert Murdoch, an award for speaking out against anti-Semitism. Meanwhile Murdoch's channel broadcasts a Henry Ford cover band for an hour every day. The mixed message is that while being anti-Israel is unacceptable, poorly veiled anti-Semitism directed at liberal Jews is, well, kosher.