The interviewer, James Ball, concludes:
Waters’ live show repeatedly flashes up one particular message that clearly compels him: “Control the narrative, rule the world.”I leave the interview thinking it’s almost the opposite: Waters is an example of how we can construct our own narrative and twist the world to fit in, with no amount of mainstream media, propaganda, or even real-world facts and evidence able to let any light in. It leads us to a nihilistic place, where we are only able to feel compassion for victims that fit our personal narrative, minimising or even actively denying the suffering of others.
We've already shown how Roger Waters is a real antsemite - not just an "anti-Zionist" - because he applied neo-Nazi, fake Talmud translation conspiracy theories about Jews to Sheldon Adelson.
The text of the interview shows that Waters also adheres to the antisemitic Khazar myth.
Ball: Yes, but isn't settler quite offensive when there are Jewish people who have lived there for two millennia?Waters: No, it's not. Those people are not from there.They are not the descendants of indigenous people who've ever lived there. They're all from northern Europe or America or somewhere else.
As with his Adelson ideas, this is muddled in his brain from the original, but the sources for both the Adelson quote and this one are quite clear - Roger Waters reads antisemitic literature and assimilates it into his worldview. He even goes beyond it, saying that even Sephardic Jews are not from the Middle East.
Yes, saying that all Jews are lying about their own origins to steal land from others is antisemitism. By any definition.