Libels about the Talmud are almost as old as the Talmud itself, and have been used as a justification for centuries of Jew-hate. Misquoting Talmudic texts or taking them out of context is an age-old method used to incite antisemitism.
In fact, most people do not even know what the Talmud is: the textual record of generations of rabbinic debate about law, philosophy, and biblical interpretation, compiled between the 3rd and 8th centuries and structured as commentary on the Mishnah with stories interwoven.
The libels continue to this very day and are being disseminated online by the worst of the worst.
The supposed quotes and meaning behind them that we are seeing these days come from a Third Reich book: Unmoral im Talmud (translation: Immorality In The Talmud) By Nazi Alfred Rosenberg.
I have decided to publish this new series as an online, easy-to-find record for fighting these libels. The responses are primarily based on those given by Rabbi Yisrael M. Eliashiv, who goes by the name Shevereshtus on Twtter/X, but in some cases also other sources. Each post will deal with one of the libels.
Tosfot Yevamot 84b: If you eat with a Goy is the same as eating with a dog
There is nothing even remotely related to anything resembling this on that page. See for yourselves.
The only connection to a dog in Tosfot Yevamot is an allusion in 84a, and is in a completely different context:
Incidentally, in Matthew 15:26, Jesus seems to be comparing a Gentile woman to a dog, but Christian commentators have an explanation for this that does not paint him in a bad light. I am of course not Christian and do not believe in Jesus or the Christian scriptures, but am mentioning this to prove an obvious point about taking scriptures out of context.