Jos
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- Feb 6, 2010
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- #1
Over the last two thousand years, the Jews have been expelled from more than a hundred different countries around the world. It would be obviously absurd to claim that all these evicting rulers and peoples, from all these different cultures and centuries, all decided to expel the Jews because they were “anti-Semites”, but instead it would only be sensible to look toward the Jews themselves for a possible motive for these drastic measures, and in fact, common sense demands it.
First consider that it’s no easy decision or task for any nation to force a segment of their population to pack up and leave, and in the case of the Jewish expulsions, we’re talking about nations who had already accepted their transient and ghettoized presence. If anything resembling “anti-Semitism” were the reason for their expulsion, they never would have been allowed to reside there in the first place. I believe we can logically conclude that the Jews have been thrown out of a hundred different nations as a result of actions taken by themselves, which actions they continually repeat, and that these same actions are among those that the rest of the human race finds intolerably offensive.
If common logic dictates that you accept this without accusing me of being an “anti-Semite”, or a “neo-Nazi”, then we may be able to discover exactly why the Jews have been so expelled, and hopefully find a solution to a problem rather than finding a deeper place to bury it. Naturally, this must begin by identifying the aforementioned offensive behaviors, and from there we’ll look for a cause, and then hopefully find a solution.
The most common reasons for the Jewish expulsions were usury, and ritual murder, or a combination of the two. Usury we’re all familiar with, and are suffering the cruel lessons of right now. Ritual murder (the “blood libel” is well documented in a multitude of records from various courts around the world. It’s not “libel”. It’s history.
So what might cause people to behave in this fashion toward their fellow man? I ask because I’ve never known any desire to fleece anyone of everything they own, or drain the blood of their children, and I believe that most people feel the same way. The force which prevents most of us from ever even considering acts of this nature is our conscience. We feel empathy toward our fellow man, and this makes us loathe to inflict undeserved pain or suffering upon him, and we’re conversely angered when someone inflicts it upon us. The retribution for the commission of such acts is what we call “justice”, which assuages our anger.
That being the case, the next logical question would ask “do Jews lack a conscience which would prevent them inflicting cruelty upon others?”
One place to look for an answer is in who you yourself might inflict wonton cruelty upon without feeling any remorse. Wouldn’t it have to be a being that you felt was your inferior, like a swatted insect, or a trapped mouse? You can kill without remorse as long as you feel no kinship toward the victim. You can enslave dogs to pull sleds, and condition them to be happy for doing it. You can kill an animal for a meal, because that’s how we all survive, but like anything else that lives and kills, the assault is always upon an “inferior” species, and therein lies the reason Jews can so remorselessly attack the rest of humanity, and why they’ve spent ions doing so. They view gentiles as being less than human, much in the way armies train soldiers to view their enemy, which makes them easier to kill.
Never Again? |
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