General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Satire Does Not Always Involve Humor. The Most Powerful Satire Never Does. [View all]teleharmonium
(77 posts)the weak using satire against the mighty is brave and deserving of respect. (And I get that allpeople tend to see their causes as the underdog and their foes as unfairly large and advantaged.)
A large, powerful, entirely government controlling majority "satirizing" an unpopular minority group - one that is, again, the target of frequent violence, as well as these kinds of cartoons, and popular laws such as the bans on religious clothing that are only applicable to Muslims - feels like something else again.
Apologies in advance, but this is an example from a different context:

"This cartoon was published five months after Hitler took power. The title is Revenge. The Nazi who shoves the Jew over the cliff says: Go where you wanted me to go, you evil spirit."
It's weirdly on topic because of the person doing the killing describing it as "revenge" for a supposedly perceived sense of what the person he is killing wanted to do to him. It's one of those pro active reactions...
from here - http://research.calvin.edu/german-propaganda-archive/sturmer.htm