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Jews Whine Over Rabbi Caricature

February 13th, 2008 · Post your comment (No Comments)

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by Jeff Davis

Stereotypical Jew 1930s

We really need to look at Europe to see what life would be like if the Politically Correct ever got their way in this country. As problematic as our existence as European-Americans is over here, we do still have some faint remnants of freedom of speech. In Europe, Western Europe anyway, they don’t have even that. Of all the Western European nations, Germany is by far the worst as far as oppressive and petty censorship goes.

The British Daily Telegraph reports: “The German government is considering whether to ban a children’s book in which Jews are portrayed in a way likened to anti-Semitic caricatures from the Nazi era.”

What exactly were the Jews complaining about? Did the Jewish caricature have a big nose, a hunched over profile and dark, swarthy features? If so, then how is this inaccurate? More people need to tell the Jews to shut the hell up and quit trying to censor anything truthful and unflattering about them.

Almost sixty-three years since the death of Adolf Hitler and the end of National Socialist Germany, the powers that be are still afraid of him. No other enemy of the Jews has ever come close; the Tsars of Russia are now derided and denigrated, while the Crusaders are simply something from a history book of the kind no one reads any more. But Hitler–Hitler they still fear.

The Telegraph goes on: “The book, which has been described as being Richard Dawkins’s The God Delusion for children, conducts a highly critical tour of Christianity, Islam and Judaism. Not one of the priest, imam or rabbi emerges creditably from the story, called How Do I Get to God, Asked the Small Piglet, by Michael Schmidt-Salomon, with illustrations by Helge Nyncke.”

Apparently, it’s okay to poke fun at Christianity and Islam but not at Judaism, According to the Telegraph, “The drawings of the rabbi, in particular, have drawn fire for their similarities to Nazi slurs and hate propaganda. The author has fiercely denied that the book is anti-Semitic, insisting that the story is a much needed antidote to religious dogma routinely forced on children.”

In this country, of course, we have “Heather Has Two Mommies” and other such filth being aimed at children in public schools, decadent books that need censoring.

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