(Twitter / @Samiyousavzai)

The Taliban offensive in Afghanistan has been the hot topic in U.S. politics for weeks now, and with all hot topics came the inevitable: memes. Photos soon circulated of the Taliban in the evacuated Afghani capital soon circulated on social media, but alongside the photos of destruction came a curious series of photos of the Taliban acting relatively "normal."

One particularly viral image showed a group of Taliban soldiers eating ice cream. Another shows the soldiers working out and laughing in an abandoned gym. One Twitter user claimed to own the Taliban with a ligma joke.


Myriad other videos of Taliban jubilation such as these have spread through social media, which, though they are likely not part of the Taliban's effort to rebrand themselves as compassionate leaders in the eyes of the west, could nevertheless be helping humanize and legitimize the organization.

ISIS researcher Joe Whittaker of Swansea University told Business Insider that the viral videos may be doing more harm than the people sharing them intend.

"I'm minded to think back to a piece of research my colleague was involved in where they looked at ISIS magazines on Twitter," said Whittaker "They found the people trying to deliberately spread propaganda with the intention of radicalizing or recruiting was vastly outweighed by what you might call 'useful idiots' with a negative tagline just spraying it around social media."

Furthermore, memes about the Taliban could be warming them up to the American right. The Daily Beast documented how Gen Z alt-right memers have found themselves reveling in the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan with various Chad memes. Alt-right figurehead Nicholas Fuentes even posted on Gab saying, "The Taliban is going to ban abortion, vaccines, and gay marriage… maybe we were fighting on the wrong side for 20 years."

There is certainly historical precedence for how memeing, even so-called ironic memeing, can play a part in lending a political figure legitimacy, and the memeing of the Taliban has worried those opposed to their rule.

"It's like this willful ignorance of what is going to happen to that country and what is going to happen to those people," said Hussein Kesvani of University College London. Whittaker put it more bluntly:

"People think they're being funny and it may have a humanizing effect."


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Comments 13 total

El Lugubre

The liberals: "The muslims aren't so bad. They are oppressed and misunderstood."
The conservatives: "The muslims aren't so bad. We have a lot of values in common."

I'm not sure what this shape is anymore, but it no longer looks like a horseshoe.

1

HotPotato

All dogs are animals, but not all animals are dogs.

You can't generalize an entire population on the basis of one specific trait.

1

Why My PeePee Hard

Hot take even the most terrible piece of shit is still a human being.

1

No One Is Immune to Bias

"By mocking the Taliban, are people humanizing them?"

Are you supposed to be dehumanizing them? Wtf KYM.

5

Chexwarior

Also, maybe if more people did think of them as human, instead of just "the monsters that did 9/11" we could come to, if not peace, at least something better than the forever war.

1

William The Brit

They didn't even do 9/11, Al-Qaeda did.

0

MIMU

They ARE human. Misguided, evil, but still human.

11

HotPotato

It's actually because someone is human that the possibility exists of them being misguided and evil. This is why free will matters, and how their actions define them.

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