Now the social media generation is enamored with HITLER: AI video transposing a 1939 anti-Semitic speech goes viral on was on TikTok

Tens of millions of people on Elon Musk’s social media site

But the videos – in which the genocidal dictator can be heard, via AI-generated English, calling for the “annihilation of the Jewish race” – have generated a number of positive reactions.

“Have the psychopathic globalists wrongly demonized Hitler, as if they were trying to demonize Putin?” one user replied under the video. ‘It seems like.’

The viral moment, powered by Musk’s absolutism on freedom of expression on his platform, follows a recent wave of interest among Gen-Z TikTokers in Osama Bin Laden’s defense of the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Some social theorists have attributed this resurgent public warming to the authoritarian rhetoric of America’s historic enemies of generational change.

Tens of millions of people on Elon Musk’s social media site

Hitler, leader of the Nazi Party, aimed to eliminate Europe's Jews and other perceived enemies of Nazi Germany.  His anti-Semitism led to the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were murdered at the hands of the Nazi regime

Hitler, leader of the Nazi Party, aimed to eliminate Europe’s Jews and other perceived enemies of Nazi Germany. His anti-Semitism led to the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were murdered at the hands of the Nazi regime

‘A few generations pass after an earlier time of trouble. Elites forget that and begin to reconfigure the economy in ways that benefit themselves,” as ecologist and historian Peter Turchin recently said. the Financial Times.

‘The question is whether there will be an outbreak of macro violence.’

“I’m starting to think we may have lost World War II,” a user with a verified X account wrote about the AI-Hitler clip.

“Sounds like these people cared about their country above all else,” wrote another.

Hitler, leader of the Nazi Party, aimed to eliminate Europe’s Jews and other perceived enemies of Nazi Germany.

But the videos – in which the genocidal dictator can be heard, via AI-generated English, calling for the “annihilation of the Jewish race” – have generated a number of positive reactions.

But the videos – in which the genocidal dictator can be heard, via AI-generated English, calling for the “annihilation of the Jewish race” – have generated a number of positive reactions.

The AI ​​software used to generate the incendiary Hitler videos came from voice cloning startup ElevenLabs

The AI ​​software used to generate the incendiary Hitler videos came from voice cloning startup ElevenLabs

His anti-Semitism led to the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were murdered at the hands of the Nazi regime.

Many accounts, whether run by humans or bots, approvingly shared links to the 2017 neo-Nazi film Europe: The Last Battle, in response to the Hitler clips.

The AI ​​software used to generate the incendiary Hitler videos, he said, came from voice-cloning startup ElevenLabs Wireda laboratory that recently came under scrutiny when its technology was used to generate robocalls impersonating President Joe Biden.

The responses to the videos naturally touched on political ideologies, with many

‘The man who said he would never marry Taylor Swift because she’s too old and that makes (Travis) Kelce gay is the same man who promoted Hitler’s AI speech,’ says cybersecurity researcher @SwiftOnSecurity said in one afterreferring to right-wing troll Owen Benjamin.

The video appeared on X, where it received surprising responses from users who said Hitler was a good leader

The video appeared on X, where it received surprising responses from users who said Hitler was a good leader

“This is both fascinating and horrifying and unlocks the minds of history’s monsters,” said another user Posted.

TikTok has criticized users promoting a vile letter from Osama Bin Laden about the September 11 atrocities and vowed to remove any content referencing it.

“Content promoting this letter clearly violates our rules against supporting any form of terrorism,” TikTokPolicy wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

“We are proactively and aggressively removing this content and investigating how it ended up on our platform.”

The video sharing platform claims that the number of videos on TikTok is “small” and “reports that it is popular on the platform are inaccurate.”

It was subsequently deleted, with the outlet explaining to DailyMail.com that it was shared “without its original context.” The letter continued to spread on X, but failed to spread on Reddit.

The Guardian did not explain further how the connection was made between the current conflict in the Middle East and a verbatim letter from bin Laden that was more than 20 years old.

The link to the letter spread, with hundreds of TikTokers posting videos in response to reading it, appearing to mistake the hateful rant for an intellectual think piece.

hThe letter was originally posted with an article explaining that the original version was in Arabic on a website used by Al-Qaeda to “spread messages” and “was sent to hundreds of subscribers to an email list controlled by Mohammed al-Massari, Great Britain. established Saudi Arabian dissident.”

The message added that the US government was on the list.

The various popular videos about the letter provide no context surrounding bin Laden’s life as a jihadist, in which his followers slaughtered thousands of Muslims and non-Muslims, or his support for some of the most oppressive political regimes imaginable.