23 May, 2020

Why Are Jews Hated?

Posted by Socrates in 'anti-Semitism', 'hate', 'hate' haters, Degrelle, history, History for newbies, Hitler, Holocaust, holocaust racket, Holocaustianity, Jewish aggression, jewish atrocity fantasies, jewish authors, Jewish brain features, Jewish chosenness, Jewish complaining/whining/kvetching, Jewish deceit, Jewish genetics, jewish hate & hypocrisy, Jewish history, Nazi era, Naziphobia, Nazis, quotations, quotations about jews, Socrates at 9:13 am | Permanent Link

A great quote about the Jews:

“It has been the misfortune of the Jewish race that never could they get on with any other race. It is an unusual historical fact and phenomenon. When one studies the history – and I say this without any passion – of the Jewish people, their evolution across the centuries, one observes that always, at all times, and at all places, they were hated. They were hated in ancient Egypt, they were hated in ancient Greece, they were hated in Roman times to such a degree that 3,000 of them were deported to Sardinia. It was the first Jewish deportation. They were hated in Spain, in France, in England (they were banned from England for centuries), and in Germany. The conscientious Jewish author (Bernard) Lazare wrote a very interesting book on Anti-Semitism, where he asked himself: ‘We Jews should ask ourselves a question: why are we always hated everywhere? It is not because of our persecutors, all of different times and places. It is because there is something within us that is very unlikeable.’ What is unlikeable is that the Jews have always wanted to live as a privileged class divinely-chosen and beyond scrutiny. This attitude has made them unlikeable everywhere. The Jewish race is therefore a unique case. Hitler had no intention of destroying it. He wanted the Jews to find their own identity in their own environment, but not to the detriment of others. The fight – if we can call it that – of National Socialism against the Jews was purely limited to one objective: that the Jews leave Germany in peace. It was planned to give them a country of their own, outside Germany. Madagascar was contemplated, but the plans were dropped when the United States entered the war.”

— Leon Degrelle (1906-1994; a Belgian journalist/politician, the founder of the Rexist Party and a brigadier general in the Belgian Waffen-SS).

Related: [Here].

Related: [Here].


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