WHY so much Anti-Semitism? Anti-Jewish acts? I don't understand. Why? Why at this time?

Search
Status
Not open for further replies.

Banned
Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
12,115
Tokens
Snowflake alert! Guesser gets dumber everyday. Barry was the biggest Jew hater out there, and was proud of it really. Guesser a big racist as well.

Spot On.

Other Forums use the term: SHILL

to describe people like Vitterd & The Guesser and 919

that only post words to make other posters come back at them.

Engage Them.

But to do so is to agree to Marriage that will end Badly.

For All Involved. Folks like Vitterd & The Guesser and 919 are Pond Scum

Creeping & SUCKING at The Bottom, clinging to the final Last Remnants of a "life"

Evidenced by the fact that they ain't even smart enough to Observe that thing that

even anyone with the intelligence that God gave to a 72 Ounce Steak Observes:


"Don't Mess With Texas"


Moment I saw Vit-Tard go up against BOURN


I knowed The Git was Done.



Matter of Time.


Ye Shall be RELIEVED.

.
 

New member
Joined
Jun 1, 2007
Messages
689
Tokens
I don't see a lot of antisemitism. Matter of fact the antisemitism is like the new "race card" for Afro Americans. I think its over used.
Do I have to say "no offense intended to anybody"?
 

Retired; APRIL 2014 Thank You Gambling
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
12,632
Tokens
ML Dog, you and I are 99% on the same page with polotics. Lol. NORMAL... and Sane.

Lolol
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
I expected Someone would propose this. As The Answer as to "Why".

And could I have Bet on Who that would be, to say this, I would have Cashed.


So You Believe that a Media that has been Focused Completely on Bringing Down Donald Trump

is now making so much of their reporting about: Jew Hate

bcuz people across America have been inspired by Donald Trump to go out and spray paint Nazi Shit on Churches?



or..............................................


Has Your Man at The Spray Tan Shop where you Anti-Trump Whores go to get your Marching Orders

issued you Fuckwads Spray Paint Cans

and a picture of a Nazi Symbol and Ordered You: "Paint This.

on a Jewish Church you Loser."
You sick, LSD addled idiot. Your anti semitic minions continued their garbage. Thank G-d there are good people that unite, and try to fix things. They give me hope that you and your racist ilk won't win.

<header style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: none; font-variant-numeric: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: 10px; line-height: inherit; font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", Times, serif; vertical-align: baseline; color: rgb(51, 51, 51);"><hgroup style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline;">Jewish governor, Muslim activists pitch in to repair vandalized Jewish cemetery

Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens decries ‘despicable act of what appears to be anti-Semitic vandalism’

</hgroup>BY JTA February 22, 2017, 6:18 am
<iframe name="f37baaa2b721578" width="1000px" height="1000px" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" allowfullscreen="true" scrolling="no" title="fb:share_button Facebook Social Plugin" src="https://www.facebook.com/v2.7/plugins/share_button.php?app_id=123142304440875&channel=http%3A%2F%2Fstaticxx.facebook.com%2Fconnect%2Fxd_arbiter%2Fr%2Fao6eUeuGXQq.js%3Fversion%3D42%23cb%3Df150b384996887%26domain%3Dwww.timesofisrael.com%26origin%3Dhttp%253A%252F%252Fwww.timesofisrael.com%252Ff11d9a2bea6ee8c%26relation%3Dparent.parent&container_width=0&href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesofisrael.com%2Fjewish-governor-muslim-activists-pitch-in-to-repair-vandalized-jewish-cemetery%2F&layout=button_count&locale=en_US&sdk=joey" class="" style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border-width: initial; border-style: none; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline; position: absolute; z-index: 999; visibility: visible; width: 76px; height: 20px;"></iframe>

<iframe id="twitter-widget-1" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" class="twitter-share-button twitter-share-button-rendered twitter-tweet-button" title="Twitter Tweet Button" src="http://platform.twitter.com/widgets/tweet_button.a0ec3119d8db2bc5422f2144c89ad7a9.en.html#dnt=false&id=twitter-widget-1&lang=en&original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesofisrael.com%2Fjewish-governor-muslim-activists-pitch-in-to-repair-vandalized-jewish-cemetery%2F&size=m&text=Jewish%20governor%2C%20Muslim%20activists%20pitch%20in%20to%20repair%20vandalized%20Jewish%20cemetery&time=1487739886528&type=share&url=http%3A%2F%2Ftoi.sr%2F2kXqBMK&via=timesofisrael" data-url="http://toi.sr/2kXqBMK" style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border-width: 0px; border-style: initial; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline; position: static; visibility: visible; width: 61px; height: 20px;"></iframe>
<iframe ng-non-bindable="" frameborder="0" hspace="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" scrolling="no" tabindex="0" vspace="0" width="100%" id="I0_1487739886201" name="I0_1487739886201" src="https://apis.google.com/u/0/se/0/_/+1/fastbutton?usegapi=1&size=medium&count=true&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesofisrael.com&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesofisrael.com%2Fjewish-governor-muslim-activists-pitch-in-to-repair-vandalized-jewish-cemetery%2F&gsrc=3p&jsh=m%3B%2F_%2Fscs%2Fapps-static%2F_%2Fjs%2Fk%3Doz.gapi.en.ubXsUQhiuRw.O%2Fm%3D__features__%2Fam%3DAQ%2Frt%3Dj%2Fd%3D1%2Frs%3DAGLTcCNkYfMYLjSk57C7kQIPG5ab-Y4fVg#_methods=onPlusOne%2C_ready%2C_close%2C_open%2C_resizeMe%2C_renderstart%2Concircled%2Cdrefresh%2Cerefresh&id=I0_1487739886201&parent=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesofisrael.com&pfname=&rpctoken=21821178" data-gapiattached="true" title="+1" style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border-width: 0px; border-style: none; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline; position: static; top: 0px; width: 90px; left: 0px; visibility: visible; height: 20px;"></iframe>



</header> Eric Greitens speaking at the Robin Hood Veterans Summit at the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum in New York, May 7, 2012. (Craig Barritt/Getty Images via JTA)

<aside class="writers newsroom" style="margin: 0px 0px 17px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline; clear: both; float: left; width: 140px;">NEWSROOM


</aside><aside class="related-topics" style="margin: 0px 0px 25px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; outline: none; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: inherit; vertical-align: baseline; clear: both; float: left; width: 140px;">RELATED TOPICS


</aside>

The Jewish governor of Missouri, Eric Greitens, said he will volunteer to help repair a St. Louis-area Jewish cemetery where at least 170 gravestones were toppled over the weekend.
Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email
and never miss our top stories
FREE SIGN UP!

Meanwhile, two Muslim activists have launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise $20,000 for repairs. The launchgood drive started by Linda Sarsour and Tarek El-Messidi had brought in $17,750 as of Tuesday afternoon.
They said any remaining funds after the cemetery is restored will go to fixes for other vandalized Jewish centers.
“Through this campaign, we hope to send a united message from the Jewish and Muslim communities that there is no place for this type of hate, desecration, and violence in America,” the activists wrote. “We pray that this restores a sense of security and peace to the Jewish-American community who has undoubtedly been shaken by this event.”
Greitens in a news release Tuesday cited the concept of “tikkun olam,” or repair of the world, and asked helpers to bring rakes, garbage bags, wash rags and more cleaning supplies.
People walk through toppled graves at Chesed Shel Emeth Cemetery in University City, Mo., on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017. Authorities in Missouri are investigating after dozens of headstones were tipped over at the Jewish cemetery near St. Louis. (Robert Cohen /St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)

“My team and I will be there tomorrow, and I’d invite you to join us,” he said.
The governor had previously condemned the vandalism on the Chesed Shel Emeth cemetery in University City and called on people to “fight acts of intolerance and hate.”
“Disgusted to hear about the senseless act of desecration at the cemetery in University City. We must fight acts of intolerance and hate,” Greitens wrote in a tweet Monday evening after the vandalism was discovered.
<twitterwidget class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" id="twitter-widget-3" data-tweet-id="833849229315563525" style="position: static; visibility: visible; display: block; transform: rotate(0deg); max-width: 100%; width: 470px; min-width: 220px; margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;">

Follow

Eric Greitens
@EricGreitens


Disgusted to hear about the senseless act of desecration at the cemetery in University City. We must fight acts of intolerance and hate.
8:22 PM - 20 Feb 2017









</twitterwidget>The attack on the cemetery took place sometime between Friday night and Monday morning, when the damage was discovered.
Chesed Shel Emeth Cemetery Executive Director Anita Feigenbaum told The New York Times that between 170 and 200 headstones were toppled, with some being broken and damaged.
The headstones are in the cemetery’s oldest section, dating from the late 1800s to the mid-1900s, she told the Times.
“I just am quite shocked — it affects so many people, so many families, so many generations,” Feigenbaum told the newspaper. “This cemetery was opened in 1893.”
In an interview with the Huffington Post, Lt. Fredrick Lemons of the University City Police Department declined to classify the vandalism as a hate crime.
“Right now, everything is under investigation,” Lemons said. “We’re looking into all possible leads.” The police are reviewing cemetery surveillance cameras, according to the report.
Greitens, a former Navy SEAL whose military awards include the Bronze Star, was elected the first Jewish governor of Missouri in November.
In a post on Facebook he called the vandalism a “despicable act of what appears to be anti-Semitic vandalism.”
“We do not yet know who is responsible, but we do know this: this vandalism was a cowardly act. And we also know that, together, we can meet cowardice with courage,” he wrote. “Anyone who would seek to divide us through an act of desecration will find instead that they unite us in shared determination. From their pitiful act of ugliness, we can emerge even more powerful in our faith.”
Immediately following the announcement of the vandalism, the Chesed Shel Emeth Society, which owns the cemetery, posted a message on Facebook informing families with relatives buried there that it is “assessing the locations and damage and will post names that are affected as soon as we are able. Many monuments are facing down and we won’t be able to read the names and see if there is any damage until we lift the stones.”
In an update Tuesday afternoon, the society said a local monument company had begun to replace the monuments on their bases. It said it would try to have a comprehensive list of the toppled monuments posted by Wednesday.
A local church, the All Nations Church, launched an appeal to help repair the damage caused by the vandals. The church said on its website that it would match up to $500 in donations to the cemetery.
“Destruction of Jewish headstones is a painful act of anti-Semitism,” said Nancy Lisker, director of the American Jewish Congress in St. Louis. “We feel the pain of the families whose grave sites of loved ones were desecrated and look to the authorities to apprehend and bring to justice those responsible for this heinous act.”

 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
This is rediculous guesser. Come on man... your seriously gonna back that up. Your losing all credibility... he is furthest from antisemitic
Learn the FACTS Tate, and not what the alt right media feeds you. Call it by its name: anti-Semitism


Trump finally condemned violence against Jews in particular. That doesn’t let him off the hook for good.

Updated by Dara Linddara@vox.com <time class="c-byline__item" data-ui="timestamp" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;"> Feb 21, 2017, 1:50pm EST</time>


  • <img srcset="https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/rZNL7V_zf1JGbmV0GnuBm5LvTC8=/0x0:1122x1728/320x213/filters:focal(373x979:551x1157)/cdn1.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/53347201/GettyImages_567392937.0.jpg 320w, <a href=" https:="" cdn0.vox-cdn.com="" thumbor="" nqd4veniaetoovq7nstlxqxikls="/0x0:1122x1728/420x280/filters:focal(373x979:551x1157)/cdn1.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/53347201/GettyImages_567392937.0.jpg"" target="_blank">
President Donald Trump has finally learned how to call anti-Semitism by its name.
Asked on Tuesday about a wave of bomb threats against Jewish community centers — <a href="http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/21/516422832/another-wave-of-bomb-threats-targets-jewish-community-centers" target="_blank">69 of which have occurred in the first weeks of 2017 — and the <a href="http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/up-to-headstones-damaged-at-jewish-cemetery-director-says/article_bafef56a-6ef2-5f90-a327-0ba7fa11e50b.html" target="_blank">desecration of a Jewish cemetery in St. Louis on Monday night, Trump finally acknowledged these as specifically anti-Semitic threats targeting specifically Jewish institutions, and decried them as such.
<twitterwidget class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" id="twitter-widget-0" data-tweet-id="834050526694174720" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 10px auto; padding: 0px; position: static; visibility: visible; display: block; transform: rotate(0deg); width: 500px; max-width: 100%; min-width: 220px;"><article class="MediaCard MediaCard--mediaForward cards-multimedia customisable-border" data-scribe="component:card" data-publisher-id="2836421" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/NBCNews/status/834050526694174720" target="_blank">

cRw4dKFu



</article>
<a href="https://twitter.com/NBCNews" target="_blank">
Follow
<a href="https://twitter.com/NBCNews" target="_blank">
tTocueCd_normal.jpg
NBC News
@NBCNews

“Anti-Semitism is horrible and it’s going to stop,” President Trump tells NBC News’ <a href="https://twitter.com/craigmelvin" target="_blank">@craigmelvin
<a href="https://twitter.com/NBCNews/status/834050526694174720" target="_blank">9:41 AM - 21 Feb 2017

  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=834050526694174720" target="_blank">
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=834050526694174720" target="_blank">
    179179 Retweets
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/like?tweet_id=834050526694174720" target="_blank">
    268268 likes








</twitterwidget>

<twitterwidget class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" id="twitter-widget-1" data-tweet-id="834056715331059714" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 10px auto; padding: 0px; position: static; visibility: visible; display: block; transform: rotate(0deg); width: 500px; max-width: 100%; min-width: 220px;">
<a href="https://twitter.com/PeterAlexander" target="_blank">
Follow
<a href="https://twitter.com/PeterAlexander" target="_blank">
To-wvPwI_normal.jpg
Peter Alexander
@PeterAlexander

NOW: Trump: "The antisemitic threats targeting our Jewish communities and our Jewish Community Centers are horrible, and are painful."
<a href="https://twitter.com/PeterAlexander/status/834056715331059714" target="_blank">10:06 AM - 21 Feb 2017

  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=834056715331059714" target="_blank">
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=834056715331059714" target="_blank">
    6464 Retweets
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/like?tweet_id=834056715331059714" target="_blank">
    119119 likes








</twitterwidget>

It was a fairly rote condemnation of an attack on a minority group, the sort of thing that presidents do all the time. But despite his claim that he denounces anti-Semitism “whenever I get a chance,” until this point, <a href="http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/2/16/14630034/trump-anti-semitism-news-conference-insulting" target="_blank">Trump simply hasn’t.
On Holocaust Remembrance Day, January 27, the White House put out a <a href="http://www.vox.com/2017/1/30/14431216/trump-holocaust-statement-6-million-jews" target="_blank">statement that commemorated “the victims, survivors, and heroes” in a vague and undifferentiated way, but didn’t specifically mention the 6 million Jews killed. Then the White House made matters much worse by defending the decision on the grounds that Jews weren’t the only ones who suffered, which critics called tantamount to Holocaust denial. Making matters worse, the <a href="http://www.politico.com/story/2017/02/white-house-holocaust-jews-234572" target="_blank">White House reportedly vetoed, on dubious grounds, sending out a State Department statement that did mention Jews specifically.
Then, last week, when Trump was asked at a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if his rhetoric contributed to a rise in anti-Semitism, he <a href="http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2017/02/15/watch_president_trump_s_moving_remarks_on_the_scourge_of_anti_semitism.html" target="_blank">bragged about his Electoral College victory instead. The next day, a reporter for a Trump-friendly Orthodox Jewish weekly asked about the bomb threats. Trump didn’t answer the question, but he lashed out at the reporter, telling him to “sit down” and calling his question “very insulting.”
Trump actually calling anti-Semitism by its name is a welcome change of pace. But this isn’t something the president can just say once and point to every time he’s asked about anti-Semitism in future. President Trump had better learn this statement by heart, because it’s going to be imperative on him to say these words, or something like them, relentlessly and zealously.
Hostility toward Jews is growing — both among “anti-globalist” ideologues and among young people who simply think that anti-Semitism is funny. Both of those groups believe that, on some level, President Trump is on their side. If they’re wrong, it’s on him to say so.
The importance of calling things by their names

President Trump and his administration don’t actually need it explained to them why it’s important to call specific phenomena by their names. They care about that a great deal — maybe even too much — when it comes to the term “radical Islamic terrorism” (or extremism).
<twitterwidget class="twitter-tweet twitter-tweet-rendered" id="twitter-widget-2" data-tweet-id="833815607296552960" style="box-sizing: border-box; text-decoration: inherit; vertical-align: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-style: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 10px auto; padding: 0px; position: static; visibility: visible; display: block; transform: rotate(0deg); width: 500px; max-width: 100%; min-width: 220px;">
<a href="https://twitter.com/AmarAmarasingam" target="_blank">
Follow
<a href="https://twitter.com/AmarAmarasingam" target="_blank">
img-author-photo---amarnath-amarasingam_170845795122_normal.jpg
Amarnath Amarasingam
@AmarAmarasingam

Funny how you HAVE TO call it "radical Islamic terrorism", but with Antisemitism, you can't even mention the Jewish community. <a href="https://t.co/UH2pP2jqbU" target="_blank">https://twitter.com/peteralexander/status/833812382174543873
<a href="https://twitter.com/AmarAmarasingam/status/833815607296552960" target="_blank">6:08 PM - 20 Feb 2017

  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=833815607296552960" target="_blank">
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=833815607296552960" target="_blank">
    4,4654,465 Retweets
  • <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/like?tweet_id=833815607296552960" target="_blank">
    7,8597,859 likes








</twitterwidget>

President Trump’s commitment to using those three words is so total that at times, on the campaign trail, he implied it would be the most important thing the US could do in war on terror. It’s so total that <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-extremists-program-exclusiv-idUSKBN15G5VO" target="_blank">his administration is weighing renaming and reorienting a federal anti-extremism initiative to stop monitoring right-wing extremism and focus exclusively on radicalization of Muslims in the US.
Any argument that can be made for the importance of calling it “radical Islamic extremism” — that it’s important to be specific in naming the enemy; that the public should recognize when hatred is grounded in an ideology — applies to “anti-Semitism.” Meanwhile, the problems with caring so much about “radical Islamic extremism” — that it <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/11/16/9745334/obama-radical-islam-isis" target="_blank">plays into the hands of <a href="http://www.vox.com/world/2017/2/13/14559822/trump-islam-muslims-islamophobia-sharia" target="_blank">Islamophobes who believe Islam is inherently radical, and that it’s a <a href="http://www.vox.com/2016/6/28/12046626/phrase-islamic-radicalism-meaningless-counterproductive" target="_blank">strategic blunder when dealing with the Muslim world — don’t apply to “anti-Semitism,” which is a term for an animus rather than a belief system.
Trump’s default response, asked about prejudices against disfavored groups in America — African Americans, Muslims, immigrants, Jews — is to generically condemn “prejudice” or “hate.” That makes it easy for anyone listening to assume he’s not talking about them.
The problem is very few people think of themselves as hateful, and fewer still think of their hatred as a problem that needs to be overcome. Call generically for everyone to overcome prejudice, and you open the doorway for people prejudiced against Jews to conclude that it’s really the Jews’ job to get rid of their prejudice against you.
Using the term “anti-Semitism” might make some Trump supporters uncomfortable. That’s exactly why it’s necessary.

In some respects, this same argument applies to any prejudice — racism, white supremacism, Islamophobia. But there’s something distinct about the way anti-Semitism has manifested itself in the Trump era. The other prejudices have long bubbled under the surface of American life, and are now foaming into the open; anti-Semitism, on the other hand, has become more prevalent and popular than it was before.
Anti-Semitism isn’t tied to government policy, or to the kind of entrenched economic and social discrimination that continues to shape black and Latino life. Jews are fairly well-integrated into the American elite. But that makes the resurgence in anti-Semitic sentiment, while not more imminently dangerous or powerful, more striking because of its novelty.
The old-school populism that many Trump followers gravitated toward isn’t inherently anti-Semitic — although some other influences on Trump’s movement are, such as the “anti-globalist” conspiracies of Alex Jones and the “alt-right” philosophy of Richard Spencer. The gateway to anti-Semitism in the Trump era, though, is more than any particular ideology. It’s the idea that Jews, and sensitivity toward anti-Semitic persecution, exist to be mocked.
The Trump supporters who <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/10/what-its-like-to-be-a-jewish-journalist-in-the-age-of-trump/504635/" target="_blank">respond to Jewish journalists by Photoshopping their faces onto lampshades or sending photos of gas chambers are often young trolls who haven’t read the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. They see their acts as blows against “political correctness” and <a href="http://nymag.com/selectall/2016/09/how-internet-trolls-won-the-2016-presidential-election.html" target="_blank">victories for lulz.
Somewhere down the line, recognition of historical atrocities became seen as some kind of pansy liberal piety. The culture of lulz that gave rise to online alt-right meme culture, in which it’s funny to break any taboo because it will offend other people, sees “don’t make jokes about genocide because genocide is bad” as just another taboo. And this culture sees the descendants of that genocide as just more people who, if you successfully offend, you win.
President Trump sees himself as an anti-PC truth teller, as do many of his closest advisers and allies. The people <a href="http://www.vox.com/2016/9/21/12893656/pepe-frog-donald-trump" target="_blank">who turned Pepe the frog into a white supremacist meme see themselves the same way.
And whilePresident Trump and company may not believe that they and the Pepe brigade are engaged in the same project, the Pepe brigade most certainly does.
If President Trump and company see a distinction there, they are obligated to voice that distinction — to actively kick people out of the tent. This isn’t because they have some abstract obligation to “refudiate” (in the immortal words of Sarah Palin) acts being committed by anyone who shares a label with them. This isn’t about communicating to the general public that they are not on the same team as the extremists. It’s about communicating to the extremists, who do believe that Trump and advisers like Steve Bannon are on their team, that this is not in fact the case.
President Trump gets deeply uncomfortable when asked to do things that people who support him may not like. Instead of saying “I disavow David Duke,” he treated it as an intransitive verb — “I disavow” — rather than singling anyone out. But the reason he’s uncomfortable is exactly the reason it is necessary. These people believe he is on their side. If he doesn’t agree, then he needs to say so, because they certainly won’t believe anyone else.


 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
A Side is going to Have to be Selected,

This is The Line:

1001 Jew + "muslim" people who elect to reject barbaric ways
1002 Those who Believe that Muhammed was a Prophet of The Only True God.

Most of The Seven Abrahimic Religions bring it DOWN to this Single Wager.

Maybe all 7 of them do. I don't personally give even a portion of a fuck what Men Wrote to Gain Power

or what some "god" who would be capable of abiding Brutality like We have on this planet would "Desire."


All Up To You Blanked Wandering Lost Dumbfucks.


The Guesser in for 44 Hundred on: 1002 Those who Believe that Muhammed was a Prophet of The Only True God.


without even knowing The Odds.



The Potential Payout.



GUESSER: Talk just ONE of Your Peaceful Muslim "Friends" that you eat Pizza with (which probably involves Children Screaming same as when Podesta Eats Pizza) to come here to RX and Share with me how Islam is a Religion of Peace.



Just ONE, Liar.

Shill, Just One.


Surely You can locate ONE able to form a fucking thought.

On their own.

No Wait, Fuck That. I want them to Parrot & DEFEND What Muhammed left here.

'splain to me how they put their stanky ass In The Air to Pray like they are an Arabic Ru-Paul under the Influence of too much Sex-Drugz


(what sort of God would WANT THAT? lmfao)


Ask Your Boys to come here and Defend Their Death Cult, Guesser.


Do I have to offer them a Woman to Beat? To Come here and explain their "Religion"?

Do I have to offer them a 9 Year Old Girl?
It's bad enough I'm subjected to your rambling, incoherent, LSD aided, meaningless diatribes of hatred.
I certainly wouldn't ask someone I knew to come here and subject them to it.
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
Ha Ha Ha. That ^^^^^ Slew "The Guesser"


I've Hit Him with 1/10 (One Tenth) the heat that had and The Fucking Pussy never showed up in that Thread Again.


Three (3) different times I Burned his Pansy Ass Down in Viejo Dinosaur's Most Ultimate fail: "Trump Will Fall Hard" Thread

and Pussy Guesser only re-entered that Thread after a minimum 17 days gone


when he 'spected I had simmered down.



Pussy The Guesser won't be back, in this thread.


Witness: Coward.


Fucking Coward who can't even manage to produce even ONE SINGLE MUSLIM who can convince that its a "Religion of Peace".


I am not even a Christian, and don't even really "dig" Organized Religion, but yet I could come up with so much to prove Christianity is desirous of Good.




Guesser Down. Bitch Done took a Hit.

Like Vit gonna Git. Fuck a Troll. Shit.

The day an incoherent LSD addict gets me to leave a thread I don't feel like leaving hasn't arrived yet, fool.
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
We are seeing in increase in faux anti-semitism. First off, to say that Trump is anti-semitic is absolutely ridiculous and completely unfounded in fact. What I keep hearing is CNN, MSNBC, ABC and other liberal media comparing Trump to Hitler and Stalin. The anti-semitism that I am seeing is coming from the Muslim front groups on college campuses. The anti-semitism that I am seeing is coming from the left's attempts to attack Israel and come to the defense of the Palistineans. The same Palistineans that oppress women, kill gays, attack innocent civilians, take the money that the EU and the US give to them for hospitals and education and instead spend the money on bombs and tunnels.
Not quite Kenny. The idiot you supported and voted for is the reason it's happening, and it's all too sadly real.

<header class="" style="box-sizing: border-box;">[h=1]NYPD: Hate crimes rise in 2017, led by anti-Semitic incidents[/h]</header><footer class="meta" style="box-sizing: border-box; margin-top: 0.5em;">By AZI PAYBARAH and BRENDAN CHENEY
02/15/17 01:00 PM EST
</footer>

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

There were 56 hate crimes reported in New York City as of Sunday, Feb. 12, up from just 31 incidents over the same time period last year, according to figures released today by the New York Police Department.
The increase was led by a rise in anti-Semitic crimes, which jumped from 13 to 28. No other category of hate crime was in double digits.
<iframe id="google_ads_iframe_/6326/capitalnewyork/city-hall_3" title="3rd party ad content" name="google_ads_iframe_/6326/capitalnewyork/city-hall_3" width="300" height="250" scrolling="no" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" frameborder="0" style="box-sizing: border-box; border-width: 0px; border-style: initial; vertical-align: bottom; display: block !important; margin: 0px auto !important;"></iframe>


The uptick follows a national trend, in which activists and police are fielding more reports of hate crimes, which began last year. In early November, New York City police officials reported 314 hate crimes to that point in the year, surpassing the 309 that had been reported in all of 2015. (In one incident, an off-duty NYPD officer and Brooklyn native, who is Muslim, was attacked, along with her teenage son.)
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has said that uptick is linked to Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric. Police officials, who generally avoid wading into political debates, have said hate crimes ebb and flow in relation to high profile, national and international events — though they stopped short of connecting this to any particular remark from a specific public figure.
Last week, de Blasio and police officials unveiled figures showing overall crime continued to decline in the first month of 2017. At the event, NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce was asked about the uptick in hate crimes. He told reporters “that has now leveled off.”
Some critics cast doubt on local tallies of hate crimes, preferring the annual figures released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, since they apply one standard definition of a hate crime to incidents that take place throughout the nation’s various police districts.

<aside class="story-related no-border" style="box-sizing: border-box; margin-right: 344.859px; border: 0px; padding: 0px; margin-bottom: 1em; overflow: hidden; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: proxima-nova, "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 16px; background-color: rgb(247, 248, 248);"><figure class="media-item type-photo" style="box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px;">
hatecrimesnycfeb122017.png

</figure>
</aside>This story contains a chart. If you are reading this in your inbox, click on the link in the alert at the bottom of the email to see the story with the graphic
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
[h=3]Hillary Clinton V.P. Tim Kaine Calls Trump’s Remembrance Day Speech ‘Holocaust Denial’[/h]January 30, 2017 By Daniel J. Solomon
<figure class="img full photo-credits-container" style="-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: transparent; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 0px 0px 1.375rem; position: relative;">
timkaineholocaustdenial-1485792108.png
<figcaption style="-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: transparent; box-sizing: inherit;">NBC.comTim Kane called President Donald Trump’s Holocaust Remembrance Day Speech, which omitted any mention of Jews, “Holocaust denial.”
</figcaption></figure>
President Donald Trump’s spokeswoman said his statement on Holocaust Remembrance Day that omitted specific reference to Jews was part of an effort to be inclusive. Tim Kaine saw a more nefarious motive behind the missive: Holocaust denial.
“President Obama, President Bush always talked about the Holocaust in connection with the slaughter of Jews. The final solution was about the slaughter of Jews. We have to remember this. This is what Holocaust denial is,” the former Hillary Clinton running mate said, in remarks Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
He traced the statement, as well as the president’s ‘Muslim ban’ to chief White House strategist Steve Bannon, whom he characterized in stark terms. “… you have the chief political adviser in the White House, Steve Bannon, who is connected with a news organization that traffics in white supremacy and anti-Semitism, and they put out a Holocaust statement that omits any mention of Jews,” Kaine said.
Bannon is the former head of Breitbart News, which he described as a “platform for the alt-right,” a collection of white supremacists, white nationalists and provocateurs who ape those attitudes to upset others.
Trump’s Holocaust Remembrance Day statement drew criticism from Jewish organizations across the spectrum, including the Anti-Defamation League and the Zionist Organization of America.
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
The controversy over the White House Holocaust statement, explained



Updated by Libby Nelson@libbyanelson Jan 30, 2017, 3:16pm EST


President Donald Trump released a brief statement to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day, a small, symbolic step taken by past presidents to mark one of the world’s greatest tragedies. It didn’t take long for many people to notice that a key word was missing: Jews.


“It is with a heavy heart and somber mind that we remember and honor the victims, survivors, heroes of the Holocaust,” Trump’s statement began. “It is impossible to fully fathom the depravity and horror inflicted on innocent people by Nazi terror.”


As critics quickly noted, there was no mention that 6 million Jews died in the Holocaust, or an acknowledgment of the virulent, state-sponsored anti-Semitism that led to their deaths — details that are crucial and commonplace in most discussions of the Holocaust.


Then, on Saturday, the White House said that Jews had been omitted from the statement on purpose because other victims also suffered and died in the Holocaust, an explanation that seemed to minimize the effects of a genocide that killed two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe. Sen. Tim Kaine called it “Holocaust denial.”


The context here matters. Trump’s most fervent supporters included outspoken anti-Semites, online trolls on the “alt-right” who delighted at tormenting Jewish journalists and public figures. His campaign flirted with anti-Semitic tropes, including tweeting an image of a star of David with Hillary Clinton’s face superimposed on a pile of money. His closing ad warned of a shadowy cabal of bankers and international elites. His son casually used the phrase “warming up the gas chambers” to refer to vociferous criticism.


In each case, Trump and his inner circle refused to back down or apologize, and his anti-Semitic fans interpreted those controversies as coded signals in their favor. Now that he’s president, the same dynamic is playing out around his statement on the Holocaust.


Trump’s statement on the Holocaust was incredibly vague
Here’s Trump’s full statement on January 27, the anniversary of the liberation of the largest Nazi concentration camp, Auschwitz, which was designated as International Holocaust Remembrance Day by the United Nations in 2005:


It is with a heavy heart and somber mind that we remember and honor the victims, survivors, heroes of the Holocaust. It is impossible to fully fathom the depravity and horror inflicted on innocent people by Nazi terror.


Yet, we know that in the darkest hours of humanity, light shines the brightest.‎ As we remember those who died, we are deeply grateful to those who risked their lives to save the innocent.


In the name of the perished, I pledge to do everything in my power throughout my Presidency, and my life, to ensure that the forces of evil never again defeat the powers of good. Together, we will make love and tolerance prevalent throughout the world.
Compare that with President Barack Obama’s past statements on the same subject; “Today, with heavy hearts, we remember the six million Jews and the millions of other victims of Nazi brutality who were murdered during the Holocaust,” Obama began his statement on Yom HaShoah, the Israeli Holocaust remembrance day, in 2016. “With their example to guide us, together we must firmly and forcefully condemn the anti-Semitism that is still far too common today.”


Obama’s statement is clear about the hatred and mass murder of Jews. A similar statement from President George W. Bush, in 2007, didn’t mention the death toll but did condemn anti-Semitism specifically. Trump’s statement, on the other hand, is so vague that it could apply to nearly any tragic event. Substitute the name of a terrorist attack or mass shooting for “the Holocaust,” and “terrorism” or “gun violence” for “Nazi terror,” and it wouldn’t seem out of place.


Spokesperson Hope Hicks told CNN that the wording was intentional: “Despite what the media reports, we are an incredibly inclusive group and we took into account all of those who suffered,” Hicks said.


In other words, the Trump administration didn’t include Jews in its statement about the Holocaust to avoid emphasizing their suffering in a genocide that targeted them directly.


Over the weekend, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said he didn’t regret the wording of the statement. “I mean, everyone's suffering in the Holocaust including obviously all of the Jewish people affected, and the miserable genocide that occurred is something that we consider to be extraordinarily sad and something that can never be forgotten,” he said.


Monday, communications director Sean Spicer continued to push back against the criticism, calling it “ridiculous,” “pathetic,” and “nitpicking.” “The president went out of his way to recognize the Holocaust,” he said.


Critics say Trump erased the “specifically Jewish” history of the Holocaust
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Holds Days Of Remembrance Ceremony
Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador, made a speech that was critical of the approach the Trump administration took (though it didn’t mention the statement directly). Allison Shelley/Getty Images
Both Hicks’s explanation and the original White House statement, critics argued, minimized the centrality of anti-Semitism to the Holocaust. “Holocaust denial is alive and well in the highest offices of the United States,” Deborah Lipstadt, a historian and expert on Holocaust denial, wrote for The Atlantic.


Hicks cited a Huffington Post article that counted 5 million additional victims of the Holocaust, naming people with mental illnesses, priests, twins, Roma (gypsies), and gay people.


But those victims, according to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, numbered in the hundreds of thousands, not the millions. It is obviously a tragedy that so many people died at the hands of the Nazi regime, and it is worth remembering those lost. But the Holocaust was the culmination of a systematic, state-sponsored campaign of anti-Semitic persecution that eliminated two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe.


“There were indeed millions of innocent people whom the Nazis killed in many horrific ways, some in the course of the war and some because the Germans perceived them—however deluded their perception—to pose a threat to their rule,” Lipstadt wrote, calling the question a matter of “historical accuracy and not of comparative pain.” “They suffered terribly. But that was not the Holocaust.”


Lipstadt, who has studied and analyzed Holocaust deniers, wrote that she assumed at first the omission was an innocent mistake. But Hicks’s justification, she said, was “classic softcore denial” — not denying that the Holocaust happened but minimizing it, including by implying that Jews are stealing the attention from other victims.


Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, gave a speech Friday at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, and argued against “universalizing” the Holocaust as a symbol of prejudice and intolerance globally rather than anti-Semitism specifically.


“After the Holocaust took away so much from the Jews, we must not take the Holocaust itself away from the Jews,” Dermer said, calling it an “unforgivable betrayal.” “Those victims were murdered not merely because they were different. They were murdered not merely because they were an ‘other.’ They were murdered because they were Jews.”


John Podhoretz, the editor of Commentary magazine, saw the statement as “the culmination of decades of ill feeling that seems to center on the idea that the Jews have somehow made unfair ‘use’ of the Holocaust and it should not ‘belong’ to them. Someone in that nascent White House thought it was time to reflect that view through the omission of the specifically Jewish quality of the Holocaust.”


The Republican Jewish Coalition and the Zionist Organization of America, two Republican Jewish groups that have been generally supportive of Trump, issued statements calling his omission of Jews from the statement regrettable.


“As supporters of President Trump, we know that he holds in his heart the memory of the six million victims of the Holocaust, and is committed not just to their memory, but ensuring it never happens again,” the statement from the Republican Jewish Coalition — heavily financed by the casino magnate and Republican donor Sheldon Adelson, who also donated to Trump — read.


Anti-Semitism controversies keep swirling around Trump


The broader context for the controversy over the Holocaust statement is that Trump’s run for office was greeted enthusiastically by the loose collection of white nationalists and anti-Semites known as the “alt-right.” Throughout the campaign, Trump was often slow to repudiate those supporters and occasionally made gestures that they read as coded messages.


As Priebus noted Saturday, Trump’s daughter Ivanka has converted to Judaism, and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is an Orthodox Jew and crucial White House adviser. From his life before entering politics, there was little evidence that he had personal animus toward Jews. But during the campaign, he was caught in several controversies involving anti-Semitism.


Trump was slow to denounced KKK leader David Duke. He deployed a meme that imposed a Star of David and Hillary Clinton’s face on top of a pile of money and was widely perceived as anti-Semitic — then refused to back down or apologize. He adopted the phrase “America First,” associated strongly with anti-Semitic isolationism in the United States before World War II. His son, Donald Trump Jr., said that if Republicans had behaved like Hillary Clinton, the media “would be warming up the gas chambers” — an odd choice of phrase that neo-Nazi websites celebrated.


The campaign ad Trump employed to make his closing argument against Hillary Clinton was a collection of anti-Semitic stereotypes, featuring image of George Soros, Janet Yellen, and Goldman Sachs chair Lloyd Blankfein — all Jews — while accusing them of being global special interests who “control the levers of power” and “don’t have your interest in mind.”


Meanwhile, Trump’s campaign energized and emboldened anti-Semites, who embarked on a campaign of tweeting Holocaust references at Jewish journalists. After the election, Trump said he’d never intended to do this and that he disavowed “the group,” meaning the alt-right. But he only said that after he’s won.


Now that he’s in the White House, the same groups that cheered the Star of David tweets and Donald Trump Jr.’s “gas chamber” remark are celebrating the White House proclamation. “Jews triggered into mindless rage at Trump Holocaust memorial statement,” the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer wrote, illustrated with an image of Pepe the Frog. They still think they hear a dog whistle — but this time, it’s coming not just from a campaign but from the Oval Office.

http://www.vox.com/2017/1/30/14431216/trump-holocaust-statement-6-million-jews
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
The controversy over the White House Holocaust statement, explained



Updated by Libby Nelson@libbyanelson Jan 30, 2017, 3:16pm EST


President Donald Trump released a brief statement to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day, a small, symbolic step taken by past presidents to mark one of the world’s greatest tragedies. It didn’t take long for many people to notice that a key word was missing: Jews.


“It is with a heavy heart and somber mind that we remember and honor the victims, survivors, heroes of the Holocaust,” Trump’s statement began. “It is impossible to fully fathom the depravity and horror inflicted on innocent people by Nazi terror.”


As critics quickly noted, there was no mention that 6 million Jews died in the Holocaust, or an acknowledgment of the virulent, state-sponsored anti-Semitism that led to their deaths — details that are crucial and commonplace in most discussions of the Holocaust.


Then, on Saturday, the White House said that Jews had been omitted from the statement on purpose because other victims also suffered and died in the Holocaust, an explanation that seemed to minimize the effects of a genocide that killed two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe. Sen. Tim Kaine called it “Holocaust denial.”


The context here matters. Trump’s most fervent supporters included outspoken anti-Semites, online trolls on the “alt-right” who delighted at tormenting Jewish journalists and public figures. His campaign flirted with anti-Semitic tropes, including tweeting an image of a star of David with Hillary Clinton’s face superimposed on a pile of money. His closing ad warned of a shadowy cabal of bankers and international elites. His son casually used the phrase “warming up the gas chambers” to refer to vociferous criticism.


In each case, Trump and his inner circle refused to back down or apologize, and his anti-Semitic fans interpreted those controversies as coded signals in their favor. Now that he’s president, the same dynamic is playing out around his statement on the Holocaust.


Trump’s statement on the Holocaust was incredibly vague
Here’s Trump’s full statement on January 27, the anniversary of the liberation of the largest Nazi concentration camp, Auschwitz, which was designated as International Holocaust Remembrance Day by the United Nations in 2005:


It is with a heavy heart and somber mind that we remember and honor the victims, survivors, heroes of the Holocaust. It is impossible to fully fathom the depravity and horror inflicted on innocent people by Nazi terror.


Yet, we know that in the darkest hours of humanity, light shines the brightest.‎ As we remember those who died, we are deeply grateful to those who risked their lives to save the innocent.


In the name of the perished, I pledge to do everything in my power throughout my Presidency, and my life, to ensure that the forces of evil never again defeat the powers of good. Together, we will make love and tolerance prevalent throughout the world.
Compare that with President Barack Obama’s past statements on the same subject; “Today, with heavy hearts, we remember the six million Jews and the millions of other victims of Nazi brutality who were murdered during the Holocaust,” Obama began his statement on Yom HaShoah, the Israeli Holocaust remembrance day, in 2016. “With their example to guide us, together we must firmly and forcefully condemn the anti-Semitism that is still far too common today.”


Obama’s statement is clear about the hatred and mass murder of Jews. A similar statement from President George W. Bush, in 2007, didn’t mention the death toll but did condemn anti-Semitism specifically. Trump’s statement, on the other hand, is so vague that it could apply to nearly any tragic event. Substitute the name of a terrorist attack or mass shooting for “the Holocaust,” and “terrorism” or “gun violence” for “Nazi terror,” and it wouldn’t seem out of place.


Spokesperson Hope Hicks told CNN that the wording was intentional: “Despite what the media reports, we are an incredibly inclusive group and we took into account all of those who suffered,” Hicks said.


In other words, the Trump administration didn’t include Jews in its statement about the Holocaust to avoid emphasizing their suffering in a genocide that targeted them directly.


Over the weekend, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said he didn’t regret the wording of the statement. “I mean, everyone's suffering in the Holocaust including obviously all of the Jewish people affected, and the miserable genocide that occurred is something that we consider to be extraordinarily sad and something that can never be forgotten,” he said.


Monday, communications director Sean Spicer continued to push back against the criticism, calling it “ridiculous,” “pathetic,” and “nitpicking.” “The president went out of his way to recognize the Holocaust,” he said.


Critics say Trump erased the “specifically Jewish” history of the Holocaust
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Holds Days Of Remembrance Ceremony
Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador, made a speech that was critical of the approach the Trump administration took (though it didn’t mention the statement directly). Allison Shelley/Getty Images
Both Hicks’s explanation and the original White House statement, critics argued, minimized the centrality of anti-Semitism to the Holocaust. “Holocaust denial is alive and well in the highest offices of the United States,” Deborah Lipstadt, a historian and expert on Holocaust denial, wrote for The Atlantic.


Hicks cited a Huffington Post article that counted 5 million additional victims of the Holocaust, naming people with mental illnesses, priests, twins, Roma (gypsies), and gay people.


But those victims, according to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum, numbered in the hundreds of thousands, not the millions. It is obviously a tragedy that so many people died at the hands of the Nazi regime, and it is worth remembering those lost. But the Holocaust was the culmination of a systematic, state-sponsored campaign of anti-Semitic persecution that eliminated two-thirds of the Jewish population of Europe.


“There were indeed millions of innocent people whom the Nazis killed in many horrific ways, some in the course of the war and some because the Germans perceived them—however deluded their perception—to pose a threat to their rule,” Lipstadt wrote, calling the question a matter of “historical accuracy and not of comparative pain.” “They suffered terribly. But that was not the Holocaust.”


Lipstadt, who has studied and analyzed Holocaust deniers, wrote that she assumed at first the omission was an innocent mistake. But Hicks’s justification, she said, was “classic softcore denial” — not denying that the Holocaust happened but minimizing it, including by implying that Jews are stealing the attention from other victims.


Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, gave a speech Friday at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, and argued against “universalizing” the Holocaust as a symbol of prejudice and intolerance globally rather than anti-Semitism specifically.


“After the Holocaust took away so much from the Jews, we must not take the Holocaust itself away from the Jews,” Dermer said, calling it an “unforgivable betrayal.” “Those victims were murdered not merely because they were different. They were murdered not merely because they were an ‘other.’ They were murdered because they were Jews.”


John Podhoretz, the editor of Commentary magazine, saw the statement as “the culmination of decades of ill feeling that seems to center on the idea that the Jews have somehow made unfair ‘use’ of the Holocaust and it should not ‘belong’ to them. Someone in that nascent White House thought it was time to reflect that view through the omission of the specifically Jewish quality of the Holocaust.”


The Republican Jewish Coalition and the Zionist Organization of America, two Republican Jewish groups that have been generally supportive of Trump, issued statements calling his omission of Jews from the statement regrettable.


“As supporters of President Trump, we know that he holds in his heart the memory of the six million victims of the Holocaust, and is committed not just to their memory, but ensuring it never happens again,” the statement from the Republican Jewish Coalition — heavily financed by the casino magnate and Republican donor Sheldon Adelson, who also donated to Trump — read.


Anti-Semitism controversies keep swirling around Trump


The broader context for the controversy over the Holocaust statement is that Trump’s run for office was greeted enthusiastically by the loose collection of white nationalists and anti-Semites known as the “alt-right.” Throughout the campaign, Trump was often slow to repudiate those supporters and occasionally made gestures that they read as coded messages.


As Priebus noted Saturday, Trump’s daughter Ivanka has converted to Judaism, and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is an Orthodox Jew and crucial White House adviser. From his life before entering politics, there was little evidence that he had personal animus toward Jews. But during the campaign, he was caught in several controversies involving anti-Semitism.


Trump was slow to denounced KKK leader David Duke. He deployed a meme that imposed a Star of David and Hillary Clinton’s face on top of a pile of money and was widely perceived as anti-Semitic — then refused to back down or apologize. He adopted the phrase “America First,” associated strongly with anti-Semitic isolationism in the United States before World War II. His son, Donald Trump Jr., said that if Republicans had behaved like Hillary Clinton, the media “would be warming up the gas chambers” — an odd choice of phrase that neo-Nazi websites celebrated.


The campaign ad Trump employed to make his closing argument against Hillary Clinton was a collection of anti-Semitic stereotypes, featuring image of George Soros, Janet Yellen, and Goldman Sachs chair Lloyd Blankfein — all Jews — while accusing them of being global special interests who “control the levers of power” and “don’t have your interest in mind.”


Meanwhile, Trump’s campaign energized and emboldened anti-Semites, who embarked on a campaign of tweeting Holocaust references at Jewish journalists. After the election, Trump said he’d never intended to do this and that he disavowed “the group,” meaning the alt-right. But he only said that after he’s won.


Now that he’s in the White House, the same groups that cheered the Star of David tweets and Donald Trump Jr.’s “gas chamber” remark are celebrating the White House proclamation. “Jews triggered into mindless rage at Trump Holocaust memorial statement,” the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer wrote, illustrated with an image of Pepe the Frog. They still think they hear a dog whistle — but this time, it’s coming not just from a campaign but from the Oval Office.

http://www.vox.com/2017/1/30/14431216/trump-holocaust-statement-6-million-jews
 

Retired; APRIL 2014 Thank You Gambling
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
12,632
Tokens
ok guesser,,, i am going to believe you,,, it took President trump,,, 30 days? 30 days to SAY anti semitisim?? ok thats cool,,, he learned,, and he is pushing a fair and balanced honest movement,,

how long was it for barack (ihatejews) obama to say extreme muslim terrorism? what?? im sorry i cant hear you??

guesser? i think we got disconnected? how long did it take for obama to defend the jews from antisemitism?? what?? never?

hold on,, guesser?? that cant be true? how is that possible? that a man of peace obama,,, can not define muslim terrroists,,, and can hate jews so much?? and be an antisemite? yet not defend them??

i dont understand,,

can you send me links guesser?? so i can understand?
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
You can't point to one thing Trump has done to show he's a racist. Not one.
I've pointed to many, some in this thread. The fact that you don't want to see it, doesn't mean that it's not there, and obvious to those with open eyes and open minds.
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
Snowflake alert! Guesser gets dumber everyday. Barry was the biggest Jew hater out there, and was proud of it really. Guesser a big racist as well.
You self admittedly want Concentration camps in this country. Your words are meaningless to anyone sane, once you affirmed that.
 

Banned
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
15,948
Tokens
ok guesser,,, i am going to believe you,,, it took President trump,,, 30 days? 30 days to SAY anti semitisim?? ok thats cool,,, he learned,, and he is pushing a fair and balanced honest movement,,

how long was it for barack (ihatejews) obama to say extreme muslim terrorism? what?? im sorry i cant hear you??

guesser? i think we got disconnected? how long did it take for obama to defend the jews from antisemitism?? what?? never?

hold on,, guesser?? that cant be true? how is that possible? that a man of peace obama,,, can not define muslim terrroists,,, and can hate jews so much?? and be an antisemite? yet not defend them??

i dont understand,,

can you send me links guesser?? so i can understand?
Tate, show me ONE instance where Obama is shown to have "hated Jews". Unlike the Idiot Drumpf, he noted specifically that Jews were killed in the Holocaust, when he made official statements on it.

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewi...tion-jews-holocaust-remembrance-day-statement

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...n-donald-trump-advisers-soft-holocaust-denial
 

New member
Joined
Dec 19, 2008
Messages
1,205
Tokens
I got about 2 lines into this thread and realized I cannot read another thing ML dog has to write ever again. Could not ignore fast enough.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Forum statistics

Threads
1,119,810
Messages
13,573,519
Members
100,877
Latest member
kiemt5385
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com