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This ISIS karaoke Twitter account shows why mocking ISIS matters

Zack Beauchamp
Zack Beauchamp is a senior correspondent at Vox, where he covers ideology and challenges to democracy, both at home and abroad. His book on democracy, The Reactionary Spirit, was published 0n July 16. You can purchase it here.

I have found my new favorite account on Twitter. It is @ISIS_karaoke.

The account has only been running for a short time and currently has only 30-odd tweets, but has already won a bunch of fans in the media (BuzzFeed ran a short profile). The premise is simple and delightful: Each tweet shows a photo of ISIS fighters or maybe an extremist rally, adds a few lyrics from a karaoke classic, and makes you imagine the murderous buffoons singing.

The idea is pretty clearly to belittle and mock ISIS militants. BuzzFeed's Hussein Kesvani reached out to the man behind the account (he goes by the pseudonym "Jimmy"), who told him, "Mel Brooks once said something about laughing at the barbaric (in his case the nazis) and I guess that's all I'm doing really." That's a mission pretty much anyone can get on board with.

So here are the musical stylings of Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi:

There’s actually something meaningful happening here. We have a tendency to mythologize ISIS, to see them as they wish to be seen: as powerful and terrifying beyond anything the world has seen before. In reality, while they have managed to exploit the circumstances in the Middle East to do things that are indeed unusual, deep down they are really not that different from other militant groups; their fighters are not 7-foot-tall superwarriors.

ISIS’s propaganda wants you to think of them as unstoppable warriors of destiny instead of the fallible group that they actually are. That’s a key part of their recruiting pitch. We should deny them that image — and one way to do it is by pointing out that their fighters are actual humans who, with the right song lyrics, can look utterly ridiculous.

Laughing at these tweets, then, isn’t just amusing — it’s a small way of eroding ISIS’s power:

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