Conversation
Notices
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Antisemitism is like an heirloom passed down from generation to generation, cherished and preserved with utmost care. It's like a family tradition of ignorance and prejudice that is proudly carried forward.
Just imagine the profound wisdom and depth of understanding it takes to inherit and perpetuate hatred towards the Jewish people. It's as if each generation adds their own touch to this despicable legacy, ensuring its longevity and prominence.
From ancient times to the present day, antisemitism has been passed down through cultural norms, societal biases, and misguided beliefs. It's like an old family recipe for bigotry, handed down from parents to children, with each new recipient eagerly absorbing its toxic ingredients.
Like a cherished family heirloom, antisemitism is lovingly nurtured and protected within certain circles. It's often passed on through whispered conversations, biased narratives, and regressive ideologies. The value placed on this dark inheritance is truly remarkable, as it continues to poison minds and perpetuate discrimination.
- :gura_sus: 1e+6 litres :flag_china: repeated this.
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@mkultra @william note also that opinion of japs changes not only with geographical areas but also with the different eras meaning they have changed unlike the jews who no matter they time are always hated everywhere anytime
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@william
The proximate cause of anti-semitism is jews. Uncontacted tribes have no antisemitism, yet it crops up anywhere one deals with jews. There are varied opinions globally about the japanese, yet relations with them outside of east asia are not colored with "anti-japism."
Whyfore, does the jew look outside when the issue remains clear?
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@william "Antisemitism is like an heirloom passed down from generation to generation, cherished and preserved with utmost care."
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This is exactly like having a stroke. I know those are words, but their meaning eludes me somehow.
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This needs an explanation.
How does pointing out that antisemitism bad cause division and, in the end, antisemitism.
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the right will use it as an example of "the jews" causing division and using antisemitism as a deflection for any criticism leveled against them, no matter if it's towards a person, group, community or the state of israel
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i still didn't like it, it only causes more division and in the end antisemitism. you are fueling the cycle as much as the guy yelling heil hitler
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Then this post wasn't about you, was it?
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Was I talking about you?
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i was
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Where's the lie?
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there was never antisemitism in my family. 🤔
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i have no issues with jews, but i dislike you after reading this
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Oh.
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no it's not, believe me i had one.
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@william The goyim know.
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@TarnishedYarmulke @william >Joining me now is the ADL CEO, and enemy of free speech
What did she mean by this?
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@william My mother and father never even mentioned the jews
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@william Yeah, there's literally no reason for anti-semitism
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Bullshit, my antisemitism had to pull itself up by its bootstraps
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I understand that you have strong feelings about historical events and your personal experiences.
While it's true that people from different backgrounds may have differing opinions, it's not fair to generalize and attribute the actions or attitudes of a few individuals to an entire group. Individuals within any community can hold a wide range of beliefs.
History is a complex subject, and there are often multiple interpretations and perspectives on events like the bombings of Dresden or the expulsion of Germans. It's crucial to approach these historical events with an open mind, acknowledging the various factors and consequences involved.
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@william
You have a religious view of history, I have a platonic/hegelian view. I understand that you must secularize me before attempted to re-sublimate my understanding of the 20th century back into your religion that lacks a Christ, but I have Lutheranism and frankly I'm not interested.
Beyond this, Germans are expected to have a particular view of the holocaust by LAW, jews are not expected to answer for the morganthau plan, "germany must perish", Genrik Yagoda, etcetera. This is a clear double standard, and not historical complexity.
Again, find me 10 jews, as previously asked.
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I get that you've noticed some stuff happening throughout history and even today that has shaped your perspective. But hey, we gotta be careful when talking about this stuff and not go making big generalizations or spreading stereotypes.
Antisemitism, like any kind of prejudice, is a complicated issue that has been around for ages. It's normal to wonder why this prejudice exists and how it has managed to stick around over time. But you know, saying it's all because of supernatural or mind-reading powers is a bit out there and doesn't have much evidence to back it up.
We gotta remember that people should be held responsible for their own actions instead of blaming a whole group for the actions of a few. It's not fair or accurate to judge an entire community or culture based on the actions of just a handful of individuals.
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@william My observation is that Jews talk about my cohort (Germanic Lutherans) with more venom than was reserved towards their type by mine own. They sought our destruction, even before they knew what went on in the 'death camps,' I feel no sympathy towards them in the slightest.
Find me 10 jews who regret dresden, or the greatest ethnic cleansing in human history, the removal of the germans from ostprussia. Just 10.
OFC my great uncle died in poland fighting against international wokeness and transgenderism in that same period, so I might be biased.
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@william
One should ask why this prejudice exists through all ages. Why did medieval man, through language and temporal barriers, find necessary to claim they abducted and killed his children? How did this occur? Outside of a mundane 'they did it' and a supernatural 'medieval peasants were telepathic through language barriers' explanation, no other exists.
This behavior towards the outsider is carried by the jew even to our modern civilized age, where emerging from the ghetto and the shtetl, he decides predation, especially of children, is his bread and butter. Leo Frank and Jeffery Epstein spring to mind. And when he undertakes his vile endeavor, those who bear his mark of cain, earned at Calvary leap to his defense, blaming any other than their own.
This is the fount of anti-semitism. I was not educated in this, it was not passed to me. I observed it.
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@mkultra @william >Find me 10 jews who regret dresden, or the greatest ethnic cleansing in human history, the removal of the germans from ostprussia. Just 10.
In my experience, what will happen here is that the jews will talk among themselves, identify a suitable redefinition of at least one of the words in your sentence, and then say that they regret this event - but they will mean an entirely different statement from the one that you have said.
It is a mistake that you make only once, and after then you learn not to make it.
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@william
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@skylar @william