Jewish Hypocrisy
Jews are always foremost amongst leftists in denouncing white Americans and Europeans for racist thoughts, actions and institutions. Indeed, the racism charge has been used by Jewish-run organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center to impugn virtually every non-Jewish American who falls afoul of their ideological dictates. Jewish journalists rail against white racism in every major newspaper and news organization. And Jewish activists like Tim Wise have put together college courses to demonstrate "white privilege" as the racist basis of American society. These same Jewish activists, journalists and intellectuals, simultaneously demand that the United States and Europe provide unqualified political support - and lots and lots of financial support - to Israel.
So what is the state of race relations in Israel?
And, not to worry, no media commentator or American politician will dare mention this case the next time Congress sends billions more American taxpayer dollars (mostly taken from those vile goyim racists) to Israel.
So what is the state of race relations in Israel?
A Palestinian man has been convicted of rape after having consensual sex with a woman who had believed him to be a fellow Jew.But, of course, that's not racist, right?
Sabbar Kashur, 30, was sentenced to 18 months in prison on Monday after the court ruled that he was guilty of rape by deception. According to the complaint filed by the woman with the Jerusalem district court, the two met in downtown Jerusalem in September 2008 where Kashur, an Arab from East Jerusalem, introduced himself as a Jewish bachelor seeking a serious relationship. The two then had consensual sex in a nearby building before Kashur left.
When she later found out that he was not Jewish but an Arab, she filed a criminal complaint for rape and indecent assault.
Although Kashur was initially charged with rape and indecent assault, this was changed to a charge of rape by deception as part of a plea bargain arrangement.
Handing down the verdict, Tzvi Segal, one of three judges on the case, acknowledged that sex had been consensual but said that although not "a classical rape by force," the woman would not have consented if she had not believed Kashur was Jewish.
And, not to worry, no media commentator or American politician will dare mention this case the next time Congress sends billions more American taxpayer dollars (mostly taken from those vile goyim racists) to Israel.
3 Comments:
Here is a copy of a letter-to-the-editor that Tim Wise wrote to the Tennessean newspaper a few months ago. You might get a chuckle out of it if you are aware of Wise's works. Tim lives in Nashville, and probably hangs out in trendy Hillsboro Village.
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20100209/OPINION02/100208029/1053
(cut-and-pasted):
Freedom riders get overdue recognition
February 9, 2010
Comments (6) Recommend (2) Print
As someone who grew up in Nashville, I always wondered why the city and its schools (from which I graduated in 1986) paid such little homage to its civil rights legacy.
As students we took field trips to all kinds of places: The Hermitage (home of the infamous Indian-killer and ethnic “cleanser” Andrew Jackson), the War Memorial Building, where we could commemorate, well, war and even the old Satsuma tea room, because someone thought it was important. But never did we study the local heroes whose sit-ins helped bring down formal apartheid in this city and nation.
That Nashville still fails to honor these brave men and women 50 years later, in any concerted way, is historically obscene. I hope the efforts to remember, teach about and carry on the legacy of these freedom fighters will finally gain the support of this “progressive” city.
During the civil rights struggle, Nashville thought itself quite a bit better than other Southern cities: less racist, more enlightened and intellectual. Yet virtually all the places we considered backward by comparison are years ahead in remembering their roles in the freedom movement.
Time to catch up.
Tim Wise, NASHVILLE 37209
This is the eye of Sauron again: Can you say "Culture of Critique"? The example laid down by the Adorno/Marcuse/Gramasci-bunch was not lost on modern-day-acolytes like Wise. If you complain about someone loud enough and long enough, eventually they will wonder if they have really committed a faux-pas, and begin to attempt to qualify themseles to you (a DLV to themselves and a DHV towards you). Its using someone's goodness against them, and is plainly despicable as a social strategy, but Tim Wise is not above it. I can respect an honest liberal, but Wise isn't one of them.
Here is a copy of a letter-to-the-editor that Tim Wise wrote to the Tennessean newspaper a few months ago. You might get a chuckle out of it if you are aware of Wise's works. Tim lives in Nashville, and probably hangs out in trendy Hillsboro Village.
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20100209/OPINION02/100208029/1053
(cut-and-pasted):
Freedom riders get overdue recognition
February 9, 2010
Comments (6) Recommend (2) Print
As someone who grew up in Nashville, I always wondered why the city and its schools (from which I graduated in 1986) paid such little homage to its civil rights legacy.
As students we took field trips to all kinds of places: The Hermitage (home of the infamous Indian-killer and ethnic “cleanser” Andrew Jackson), the War Memorial Building, where we could commemorate, well, war and even the old Satsuma tea room, because someone thought it was important. But never did we study the local heroes whose sit-ins helped bring down formal apartheid in this city and nation.
That Nashville still fails to honor these brave men and women 50 years later, in any concerted way, is historically obscene. I hope the efforts to remember, teach about and carry on the legacy of these freedom fighters will finally gain the support of this “progressive” city.
During the civil rights struggle, Nashville thought itself quite a bit better than other Southern cities: less racist, more enlightened and intellectual. Yet virtually all the places we considered backward by comparison are years ahead in remembering their roles in the freedom movement.
Time to catch up.
Tim Wise, NASHVILLE 37209
This is the eye of Sauron again: Can you say "Culture of Critique"? The example laid down by the Adorno/Marcuse/Gramasci-bunch was not lost on modern-day-acolytes like Wise. If you complain about someone loud enough and long enough, eventually they will wonder if they have really committed a faux-pas, and begin to attempt to qualify themseles to you (a DLV to themselves and a DHV towards you). Its using someone's goodness against them, and is plainly despicable as a social strategy, but Tim Wise is not above it. I can respect an honest liberal, but Wise isn't one of them.
Here is a copy of a letter-to-the-editor that Tim Wise wrote to the Tennessean newspaper a few months ago. You might get a chuckle out of it if you are aware of Wise's works. Tim lives in Nashville, and probably hangs out in trendy Hillsboro Village.
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20100209/OPINION02/100208029/1053
(cut-and-pasted):
Freedom riders get overdue recognition
February 9, 2010
Comments (6) Recommend (2) Print
As someone who grew up in Nashville, I always wondered why the city and its schools (from which I graduated in 1986) paid such little homage to its civil rights legacy.
As students we took field trips to all kinds of places: The Hermitage (home of the infamous Indian-killer and ethnic “cleanser” Andrew Jackson), the War Memorial Building, where we could commemorate, well, war and even the old Satsuma tea room, because someone thought it was important. But never did we study the local heroes whose sit-ins helped bring down formal apartheid in this city and nation.
That Nashville still fails to honor these brave men and women 50 years later, in any concerted way, is historically obscene. I hope the efforts to remember, teach about and carry on the legacy of these freedom fighters will finally gain the support of this “progressive” city.
During the civil rights struggle, Nashville thought itself quite a bit better than other Southern cities: less racist, more enlightened and intellectual. Yet virtually all the places we considered backward by comparison are years ahead in remembering their roles in the freedom movement.
Time to catch up.
Tim Wise, NASHVILLE 37209
This is the eye of Sauron again: Can you say "Culture of Critique"? The example laid down by the Adorno/Marcuse/Gramasci-bunch was not lost on modern-day-acolytes like Wise. If you complain about someone loud enough and long enough, eventually they will wonder if they have really committed a faux-pas, and begin to attempt to qualify themseles to you (a DLV to themselves and a DHV towards you). Its using someone's goodness against them, and is plainly despicable as a social strategy, but Tim Wise is not above it. I can respect an honest liberal, but Wise isn't one of them.
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