NY Times: Europe’s Anti-Semitism Comes Out of the Shadows
By JIM YARDLEY
In
the wake of the conflict
in Gaza, three communities became flash points of violence and
began contending with hatred they thought was buried in the
past.
REBUTTAL BY
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.
Strike up the violins and break out the barf bags. The poor little defenseless Jews, (who
own the bloody West - lock, stock, and barrel) are concerned about a rise in European "anti-Semitism". As evidence
of Europe's possible "return to 1939", Sulzberger's Jew York Slimes cites a handful of incidents: a single pro-Gaza
protester in France allegedly yelled "Gas the Jews!", a synagogue in Germany was allegedly hit
by a Molotov Cocktail, and a Swedish Jew was allegedly beaten up for being Jewish.
Assuming that these were actually true stories and not staged events (which Jews are well
known for), this is hardly the equivalanet of 14th - 19th century pogroms, in which angry villagers, reminiscent of those
old Frankenstein movies, would grab their torches, march into the Jewish quarter, and vent their indignation upon the
local well-poisoners, child-sacrificers, and money-lenders. Ah, the good old days when European men were men!
"That shyster charged me 50%
interest and then took my farm!"
An old Polish proverb states: "The Jew cries out in pain as he strikes you."
The Zionists have perfected this technique to an art form. Just
look at what they recently did to the poor people of Gaza.
Bibi Satanyahu murdered 2000 of them; the whole time whining
about the harmless rockets which Hamas was allegedly
firing back.
By constantly evoking pity from the bewildered
specimens known as Boobus Americanus and Boobus Europithicus, the Jewish Supremacist is able to neutralize
his victims as he fleeces and bamboozles them at every turn. This manipulative game of "waaa, waaa, waaa" is quite
a trick, and its been going on for a long, long time. Ask William Shakespeare. He'll tell you!


Shakespeare was on to the age-old 'waaa, waaa, waaa' ritual:
"If you prick us do we not bleed? If you tickle us do we not laugh? If you poison us do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not avenge?" - Shylock the money lender from 'The Merchant of Venice' (now banned in virtually all U.S. High Schools!) pleads his case before a magistrate; passionately explaining why he should be allowed to literally cut out a "pound of flesh" from a bankrupt debtor.
Source
"If you prick us do we not bleed? If you tickle us do we not laugh? If you poison us do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not avenge?" - Shylock the money lender from 'The Merchant of Venice' (now banned in virtually all U.S. High Schools!) pleads his case before a magistrate; passionately explaining why he should be allowed to literally cut out a "pound of flesh" from a bankrupt debtor.
Source
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