Jdue rein Europe.

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Some people go their whole lives without seeing a ghost; me, I see them all the time.

Detective Bernie Gunther in Phillip Kerr’s Greeks Bearing Gifts




Last month the German commissioner for “Jewish Life in Germany and the Fight Against Antisemitism” used his impressively titled office to advise German Jews against wearing kipahs in public. The commissioner’s response to a surge of anti-Semitic violence in his country was a sheepish acknowledgment that Germany is once again a dangerous country for Jews. And as Germany goes, so goes Europe. For millennia, following the destruction of the Second Temple and the beginning of the diaspora, Europe was home to the majority of the world’s Jews. That chapter of history is over. The continent is fast becoming a land of Jewish ghost towns and graveyards where the few remaining Jews must either accept an embattled existence or else are preparing to leave.

In his earliest speeches Adolf Hitler made clear that his primary mission was to make Germany, and then all Europe, judenrein—free of Jews. He failed only because of the Allied victory but today, slowly, inexorably and, for the most part, legally and largely unconsciously, Europe is fulfilling the Nazi aspiration. It is not only in Germany but in England, France, Hungary and elsewhere across the continent, that the many forms of European anti-Semitism—far right, left-wing anti-imperialist, and Islamist—are not only multiplying but moving closer toward controlling the official levers of power.

Progressives and the media prefer to blame anti-Semitism primarily on Europe’s deplorables, but the far right does not constitute the only, or even the primary threat, to European Jews. A detailed survey from the University of Oslo found that in Scandinavia, Germany, Britain, and France, most anti-Semitic violence comes from Muslims, including recent immigrants. Similarly a poll of European Jews found the majority of incidents of anti-Semitism came from either Muslims or from the left; barely 13% traced it to right-wingers. Violence against Jews is worst in places like the migrant dominated suburbs of Paris or Malmo in Sweden.
 
The players have sure changed since the 30s and 40s, though, haven't they?

Back then, it was the authoritarian right with a strong sense of nationalism and corporatism. Today, it is the authoritarian left, rooted in globalism, socialism and the support of all things Islamic.
 
The juden have done nothing but cause problems for the citizens of Europe.

I'm sure they will be glad when all the juden move away. ... :cool:


All those Nobel prizes for advancements in science are sure a drag, aren't they?

Too bad they couldn't be more like Muslims who's only notable invention in the last hundred years is the suicide vest.
 
Being Leftist and Anti-Semitic in Germany - Susanne Urban

The Postwar, Pre-1967 Roots
Anti-Semitism was never exclusive to the Right; Communism, for its part, often vilified Jews as capitalists. Communism in East Germany, as elsewhere, denied the right to practice the Jewish religion and sought to eradicate religion in general, including Judaism. East Germany's anti-Semitic policies first became evident in January 1953 when the Stasi - the state security service - confiscated documents of the Jewish communities, searched the homes of Jewish leaders, and spoke of a "Zionist conspiracy." After the Six Day War, East Germany officially adopted an anti-Zionist stance. However, no serious data on East German anti-Semitism is available before the reunification in 1989.

Although West German left-wing anti-Semitism also increased steadily after the Six Day War, before then the West German Left supported Israel generally, and specifically the Wiedergutmachung (Reparations Agreement of 1953) and the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1965. This friendliness was, however, based on an idealization of Israel, kibbutzim, and pioneering and was not on genuinely firm ground.4 Opposition to the conservative government of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer also played a role in this left-wing philo-Semitism.

During the 1960s, the West German Left divided into a more "conservative" wing and a New Left trend. Whereas Chancellor Willy Brandt was said to be a true and unwavering friend of Israel,5 many young leftists took radical positions and opposed Brandt's "establishment" Social Democratic Party. In 1966 they founded the Nonparliamentary Opposition (APO), a popular movement that sought to "renew" German politics from the outside. Many of its members and supporters later showed sympathy for the RAF, a leftist terrorist movement that had ties to the PLO and whose cadres trained in terrorist camps in Lebanon.


Student Radicalization
During the Six Day War, the New Left definitively transformed its hitherto moderate pro-Arab positions into full support for Arab states and the Palestinians, and its fragile pro-Israeli attitudes dissolved into anti-Semitic slogans thinly disguised as "anti-imperialist" criticism of a "fascist state."

After 1967, however, not only the radicals but large parts of the German Left turned their backs on Israel. This went hand in hand with protests against the Vietnam War, against the conservative mainstream in Adenauer's Germany and afterward the "Great Coalition" that was headed from 1966 by Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, a former member of the Nazi Party.6 The New Left also idealized Communist China and Ho Chi Minh, despite their involvement in mass murder against their own people.7

Well-known intellectuals who were more moderate leftists tried to dissuade the New Left from its extreme positions. Ernst Bloch, Jean Amery, Herbert Marcuse, Iring Fetscher, and Jean-Paul Sartre argued with the radicals and discouraged blind solidarity with the PLO, as opposed to legitimate criticism of Israeli policies. They warned that notions of Israel's annihilation were intolerable and linked to National Socialist ideology. However, they were not heeded by the radicals.8


Left wingers are all weak minded fashion victims, which is why Hollywood and media determines their entire shallow 'culture'.
 
For millennia Europe was the center of diaspora life but as Jews continue fleeing the continent, by the end of this century all that’s left will be a Jewish graveyard.



Judenrein Europe


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"Jdue rein Europe."

Seriously? I think someon's posting under the influence, here. :11:

I think they're not.

Can't you read?

Seriously?

Wo! It appears my attempt to inject a bit of light humour has fallen flat it seems, oh well, just goes to prove how humourless fascists tend to be; moving on... but before I do, a few polite words of advice, should you ever find yourself in a situation where you’ve posted gibberish (although I’ve yet to come across any “spell checker” that changes “judenrein” to “jdue rein”), the sensible, nay intelligent thing to do, would be to report your own post and ask a Moderator to edit it for you; no, don’t thank me, happy to be of service.

As for Europe being “Jew Free”, that’s a pity if it’s true. I’ve travelled extensively throughout Europe and enjoyed immersing myself in other cultures, so it would be sad to lose aspects of those cultures that have contributed so much to them. Still, Europe’s loss is America’s gain, given that Jewish Israelis have been emigrating from Israel in large numbers lately.
 
"Jdue rein Europe."

Seriously? I think someon's posting under the influence, here. :11:

I think they're not.

Can't you read?

Seriously?

Wo! It appears my attempt to inject a bit of light humour has fallen flat it seems, oh well, just goes to prove how humourless fascists tend to be; moving on... but before I do, a few polite words of advice, should you ever find yourself in a situation where you’ve posted gibberish (although I’ve yet to come across any “spell checker” that changes “judenrein” to “jdue rein”), the sensible, nay intelligent thing to do, would be to report your own post and ask a Moderator to edit it for you; no, don’t thank me, happy to be of service.

As for Europe being “Jew Free”, that’s a pity if it’s true. I’ve travelled extensively throughout Europe and enjoyed immersing myself in other cultures, so it would be sad to lose aspects of those cultures that have contributed so much to them. Still, Europe’s loss is America’s gain, given that Jewish Israelis have been emigrating from Israel in large numbers lately.

You've travelled? Extensively?

:5_1_12024:

That was not light hearted humour. Just a feeble attempt at arseholery.

If you want to make a big deal out of the spelling, go ahead. Tell the mod yourself if it bothers you that much.
 
You've travelled? Extensively?

Yes, and yes.

That was not light hearted humour. Just a feeble attempt at arseholery.

Only to those lacking a sense of humour.

If you want to make a big deal out of the spelling, go ahead. Tell the mod yourself if it bothers you that much.

Doesn't bother ME at all, you are the one making a big deal out of a passing quip.

No.

You are. You keep coming back.
 

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