Everything in Rugrats or connected was overtly Jewish if you were not 5 and had no idea what you were watching.
Captain Planet, Fraggle Rock, Smuffs, looney toons, Sesame Street, Pinwheel, the Muppets, and so many fucking more. It wasn't until I had kids and I was wanting them to watch the cartoons I watched as a kid because I thought it wasn't as jewy as what on TV now. But once I started watching then again after 25 years of not seeing that shit I realized I was just one of the lucky ones that never bought in to the jewy bullshit.
Dexter's Lab, CatDog, Ren & Stimpy, Animaniacs off the top of my head
Smuffs? The antagonist is basically a caricature of a jew.
Look up the real origins of the 'smurfs' then get back with me.
You're referring to the theory that the smurfs represent the 7 deadly sins?
So the children are manipulated into being sympathetic to the sins based on the personification at face value. Interesting take.. I know jews and coincidences are very common, the idea seems more than plausible.
I have to wonder though.. why does gargamel the priest appear so Jewish? Why is the name of his only companion so similar to 'israel?'
So few have made it that I’ll flip the answer and instead mention the handful of shows that still survive the cut from my youth.
Surprisingly, Eisner Disney didn’t jew the brand as hard as the others might have, and a lot came from the Disney tv of the late 80s and early 90s.
I’ll admit I haven’t done a deep dive rewatch recently, but top of my head survivors:
DuckTales (1987) - Scrooge bootstraps from boyhood as a shoeshine boy into the richest duck in the world on account of his Scottish thrift and tenacity.
TaleSpin (1990) - Baloo as the a blue collar pilot who lives the dream of running his own shipping business his way until it gets bought by a chick who attempts to “improve” it, but she only ever really manages to keep the bills paid. Most episodes are about the freedom of the skies, and the best don’t involve the skirt.
Goof Troop (1992) - Goofy is a good father after being widowed, trying to teach his kid about how to be honest, and usually succeeding despite being, well, Goofy.
The Adventures of the Gummi Bears (1985) - White people everywhere in medieval Europe? In a Disney show? Hard to believe, but yes. The King wasn’t a fool, the male lead human was clever, the Gummi Bears weren’t pozzed. Nice show with a fun lore build. Glad they haven’t opted to resurrect and sodomize this series like the did the DuckTales reboot.
Batman the Animated Series (1993) - Didn’t find out until after he died that Kevin Conroy (Batman voice) was a faggot. He never intimated such. Men were strong. Chicks were slim and attractive. Joker was funny, and could even be seen as a take on the subversive jew.
Mysterious Cities of Gold (1982) - History, mythology, and magical adventure about the conquistadors. A lot of fun and serial storytelling in a time when it wasn’t common. Anime adapted for American audiences and included some cool historical live action infotainment segments in each episode.
Edit: flow of TaleSpin description
Roadrunner and coyote. You see the beak on that bird?
lol
Luckily, we had no TV until I was a pimply youth.
Not a cartoon, but PeeWee's Playhouse
I liked Captain Carl and Jhambee
I'm on the fringe, but I always thought the Penny cartoons, the giant ball of tinfoil, and the ending were really awesome. Growing up I wanted his bike. When I was told that wasn't possible, I wanted the scooter instead
i grew up watching scooby doo, teen titans, dragonball z, avatar the last airbender, samurai jack, zoids, the land before time... im sure many others but thats what i remember at the moment.
mostly jew free except maybe teen titans.
i kinda watched other stuff less often but my memory of these shows are fragmented.. justice league, static shock, a few different batman shows, i saw all the disney animated movies, arthur, rolie polie olie, hamtaro,
the boomerang cartoons like the jetsons, the flinstones, tom and jerry, the cyote and the roadrunner.
im not including anything i watched after sayyy... age 14?
You're definitely younger than me but probably not by much.
I was talking about Samurai Jack yesterday. It's so good!
In answer to OP though, Stephen Universe. Not from when I was growing up but it's the biggest offender I can think of.
yeah its unfortunate though the second episode is in a strip club. if it wasnt for this one scene i wouldnt have any reservations about reccommending it to my friend with young children
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCxuH9CxHiU&t=169s&ab_channel=theVennu
It's been so long since I watched it, I forgot that scene. I'll never forget the Scotsman and his wee Bonney lass though
Josie and the Pussycats, Captain Caveman, Flintstones
I'll start with the "forever wars" - He-Man, GI Joe, Transformers, Thundercats, and Voltron; moving on to Looney Toons (cross dressing), Gummy Bears (drinking), Duck Tales (greed), Goofy has always been socialist (his early song is "Oh the world owes me a living...")
I knew from the beginning that Captain Planet was propaganda, probably the earliest push for diversity is our strength nonsense I can remember.
I'd say about 99% of the cartoons had something in it that was kike degeneracy.
I'll start with the "forever wars" - He-Man, GI Joe, Transformers, Thundercats, and Voltron
Never heard it described like that. Indeed, they love forever wars.
I thought it was weird that they never tired of fighting the same people. When I asked about it, I was told it was battles that happened over years and years that they weren't always fighting all the time. Looking back at when they became popular, it feels like we were being prepped for forever wars. Which is really sinister since GI Joe and Transformers were meant to help sell toys.
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