Ejemplo de articulo sionista sarama en los medios controlados durante estos días.

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Why, as a British Jew, I'm terrified by the anti-Semitism sweeping UK says HILARY FREEMAN | Mail Online

Ejemplo de propaganda y manipulación de los colonos Judíos en Europa a través de los medios controlados El articulo de esta lechona altamente gaseable solo es un ejemplo, estoy harto de toparme con varios artículos por todas partes con la misma ponzoña judía una y otra vez. Parecen clones todos y me toca mucho los bemoles.

El 99% es trabajo manual y embustes el primero, decir que es 'britanica' cuando en realidad es una Judía muy bien informada siguiendo al dedillo el manual de su departamento de propaganda de buen CM del Mossad y el resto para derretir cerebros de despistados goyim apelando a los "sentimientos". Lo importante es el resto donde se entrevé la autentica idiosincrasia y hostilidad del enemigo Judío y los dogmas que siempre tratan de imponer sin ser cuestionados: "para vosotros, antisemitas a los que hay que diluir, más tolerancia y multiculturalidad a ver si os curáis; y para nosotros más sionismo y protección porquesomoselpuebloelegido; y también para mí, que para eso soy alubia*.... grrrr, antisemitas!!! Ah, y yo también soy britanica!!! aunque todos los britanicos quieran matarme por alguna razon!!!!" :roto2:

Por cierto, la nueva moda de victimismo Judío es utilizar a los jovenlandeses como el nuevo "antisemitismo" europeo (¿y si prueban de dejar de bombardearlos, expandirse cual colonos y de provocar conflictos?), que para eso se les trajo aquí, pero cargando el muerto a los ya de por sí fustigados y atormentados europeos gracias a decadas de hijos bastardos de la escuela de frankfurt, ingenieria social, propaganda eurofobica, holocuentos y ahora multicultihezzzz y cuentito-racismo de cosa. En fín, la típicia PORQUERIA JUDÍA que tras*miten a los demás como veneno camuflado, recetas para los demás menos para ellos que se convierten en nuevas enfermedades para los demás. Les causa placer. :tragatochos:

Why, as a British Jew, I'm terrified by the anti-Semitism sweeping UK says HILARY FREEMAN | Mail Online

Last week, one of my oldest friends was walking with her young daughter in a north London suburb when she was approached by four Asian youths.

Guessing that she was Jewish — they saw her leave a bagel bakery and, like me, she has a mop of dark, curly hair — they began to make Hitler salutes at her.

When she crossed the road to get away, they ***owed her up the street, shouting the nancy salute ‘Sieg Heil’ and mimicking the sound of hissing gas canisters, like those used in concentration camps. She was, not surprisingly, petrified.

While it was the first time that she had experienced such overt anti-semitism, this was not, unfortunately, an isolated incident. Only yesterday, another friend, also a North London resident, awoke to find a swastika painted on her front door.

Until recently I would not have believed such shocking events could happen here in Britain, in our tolerant, multicultural society. (¿de qué habla esta judía, "nuestra"? jamás hemos pedido ser minorizados en nuestros paises salvo los alubio*s y las elites corruptas. Da igual, otra vez más se ve la conexión que hacen los judíos entre "multiculturalidad" y "seguridad". Es una confesión en toda regla, que repiten una y otra vez por todas partes. Además es opuesto a lo que siente de forma natural cualquier autóctono verdaderamente británico o de cualquier nacionalidad a los que la ****ocracia ha amordazado, de hecho es igual en cualquier parte del mundo incluido Israel. ¿hasta cuando les vamos a tolerar que se rían en nuestra cara?).

In all 43 years of my life, most of which have been spent in London, I have witnessed or heard of only a handful of examples of anti-Semitism.
My only personal experience — an assault by a neo-nancy who told me ‘Hitler didn’t finish his job properly’ — occurred in the south of France, where the far-Right exerts a much greater influence.

But in the past month, since Israel began its bombardment of Gaza — a conflict which the UN believes has killed 1,814 Palestinians and 67 Israelis — I and many of my friends have begun to question whether, as Jews, we are really as safe and accepted in this country as we previously believed.

Anti-Semitism, in the form both of acts of violence against Jews and their property and, more insidiously, vile comments on social media, has begun to leak through the cracks of respectable British society. We are scared.
During recent discussions on Facebook, I have been called a ‘tribal b*****d’, told that ‘the problem with you Jews is that you believe you are the chosen people and you should learn to act like everyone else’, and ‘the Jews in Israel should all go back to where they came from’. ("que va, los Judíos podemos tener todas las nacionalidades, definirnos como nacionales y lo contrario en todas partes. Lo decidimos así los Judíos y con eso es bastante ¿como se atreve esa sarama de goyim antisemita a contradecirnos? De hecho, somos nosotros los que le decimos a todos los pueblos cómo tienen que ser gracias al dinero fiat y los medios controlados, incluso en el lugar más recondito de guatemala. cuidado eh! que ya no sale gratis apiolar alubio*s, grrrrrr")

These comments came not from members of far-Right organisations but from friends of friends: supposedly educated, rational people who pride themselves on being politically correct and claim to fight against ‘injustice’. (claro que sí alubia*, y tu supuestamente eres britanica y supuestamente nadie puede oponerse a vuestras chorradas alubia*s)

They have left me reeling: shocked, angry, sad and afraid. I have found myself doubting several friends, questioning their attitudes and beliefs, wondering if they are secretly judging me for being a Jew. (¿Y qué shishi nos importa? Eso no es ni la milesima de lo que vosotros habeis provocado a los europeos con vuestra cosa judía enfermiza. Time to make Aliya, La Solución Final.)


In July this year more than 100 anti-Semitic hate incidents were recorded by police and community groups — more than double the usual number.
Windows were smashed at a synagogue in Belfast, a rabbi was attacked in Gateshead, and a group of men drove through a Jewish area of Greater Manchester shouting ‘Heil Hitler’ and throwing missiles at pedestrians.
On Pro-Palestinian marches, a small minority of protesters carried placards proclaiming ‘Hitler, you were right’, among other anti-Semitic slogans. Swastikas have been daubed on synagogues, shops and even gravestones in Jewish cemeteries.

This is tame compared with what is going on in mainland Europe, where Jewish businesses have been firebombed and Jews, terrified for their lives, have been barricaded into synagogues by baying mobs.
On social media sites, anti-Semitism is widespread.

The hashtag ‘Hitler was right’ recently trended on Twitter and more and more groups with titles such as ‘Kill Zionists’ have sprung up on Facebook. They are difficult to remove, despite repeated reports to the site moderators. One Twitter user suggested going to bomb Stamford Hill, an area of London with a large ultra-orthodox Jewish community, ‘so Jews would understand the pain suffered by the Palestinians in Gaza’.

And what is the reason for this explosion of anti-Semitic sentiment towards British Jews? :XX: The actions of the Israeli government in a conflict taking place 2,000 miles away. :XX:

For some reason — I cannot grasp why :XX:— people seem unable and unwilling to distinguish between Jew and Israeli. (vaya ¿y por qué será? deberían encerrarlos por antisemitas!!!!) The terms now seem interchangeable. Being Israeli is a nationality, a stamp in a passport. (En Israel la nacionalidad Judía y la ciudadanía Israelí son conceptos separados, y cualquier Judío del mundo puede adquirirla automáticamente. Los "britanicos" no pueden.)

Being Jewish is a cultural identity, an ethnicity, a religion. (identidad, etnia, religión, pueblo, nación, VOLK.... pues eso. Pero son los demás que se confunden y no distinguen entre alubio*s e "israelíes" :XX:)

I speak a few words of Hebrew. I have some extended family in Israel — the ones who, escaping from Hitler’s Germany, got a visa for Palestine, not Britain, in the refugee lottery of the late Thirties.

But I am not Israeli, nor do I want to be. I am a British Jew. (si lo repites 200 veces igual acabas convenciendote, o tal vez es un concepto geográfico? :bla:.)

For centuries, Britain has been one of the best and safest places in the world to be Jewish. This country saved my father’s ancestors from the Polish massacres in the 19th century, and my mother’s parents fled here from the Nazis in 1939. (y ahora lo estais destruyendo en agradecimiento, como el resto de europa, eeuu, australia, etc.... cortesana Judía)

Most of their relatives perished in the death camps. I grew up haunted by their ghosts :XX: (así quedaste, fruta judía "britanica") and with a strong sense of ‘there but for the grace of God go I’. I have always been aware how lucky I was to have been born in Seventies Britain.

Unlike my German Jewish grandparents, who were forced to wear yellow stars and banned from going to school, I went to a Jewish primary school :XX: and happily wore a Jewish symbol on my blazer.

Although I am no longer religious, and both my ex-husband and my current other half are gentiles, I still have a strong sense of my Jewish identity. I like eating traditional noodle pudding and gefilte fish balls. I use the occasional Yiddish phrase and discuss methods of taming my ‘Jewfro’ with fellow curly-haired Jewish friends.

People know I’m Jewish because I choose to tell them. Strangers usually think I come from Turkey or Greece.

Yet I come from Britain, and as a diasporan (meaning ‘scattered’) Jew, I have never felt at home in Israel. Never mind the political situation, it’s too hot, too frantic, too Middle Eastern for my European sensibilities. Visiting Israel is fascinating, in the same way that a trip to the British Museum is fascinating. It’s a history lesson.

And, despite what many appear to think, not all Israeli citizens are Jews. Its population and electorate are made up of Jews, Jovenlandeses, Christians and smaller sects, such as the Druze. It’s a secular state, not a religious one.
While I may not be Israeli, I am a Zionist — an ideology so misunderstood of late that it has become akin to a four-letter word. Used as a term of abuse for Jews by jihadis, alongside ‘crusaders’ for Christians, ‘Zionist’ has found its way into popular parlance.

Being a Zionist simply means that you believe the Jews have the right to a homeland, a safe haven (claro que sí wapisimos, vosotros sí que podeis no como los "nazis") . It does not miccionan that you support Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s policies, or that you want to destroy Gaza or wipe out the Palestinians. (claro, y este panfleto para qué es?)

The other day, a friend said to me: ‘I have no problem with Jews, just Zionists.’ She couldn’t understand why this might be perceived as anti-Semitic.

Let me state for the record that I — and almost every other Jewish person I know — think what’s happening in Gaza is awful.
I don’t like Netanyahu or his methods, I want a peaceful solution and I believe the Palestinian people should have their own state. I do not wish to see anyone, least of all innocent children, killed.

But I also believe in Israel’s right to defend itself from years of rocket attacks by Hamas, a terrorist group which uses Palestinian civilians as human shields, deliberately stores its weapons in schools and hospitals and has stated many times that it wants to see the outright destruction of Israel. :XX: (¿donde hemos leido todo este cumulo de fantochadas antes? sus 0.20 shekels bien merecidos tiene)

Seeing the suffering of a Palestinian child injured in an Israeli bomb attack is heartbreaking. But is it any more heartbreaking than the suffering or death of a child in Syria or Iraq?
Yet everyone, from Facebook friends to Hollywood stars such as Penelope Cruz, seems to think that what’s happening in Gaza merits special attention — and that the Israelis deserve special condemnation.
Why? I can only think it’s because Israelis are mostly Jewish, and the world is only comfortable when Jews are victims, underdogs, kept in our place. It’s no coincidence that, for centuries, anti-Semites have perpetuated the myth that a international conspiracy of Jews runs the world.
The difference now is that criticising Israel is seen as the politically correct thing to do. Facebook friends whom I’ve never seen make a political statement, or discuss any topical issue, now post link after link to articles and videos that decry what the Israelis are doing in Gaza.
Often their posts betray ignorance about the facts and history of a very complicated, very old conflict. Some posted links are years out of date, others inaccurate or fabricated propaganda, like an oft-shared video purporting to show an Israeli child beating a captured Palestinian child which, in fact, turned out to be film of a Lebanese child beating a Syrian child.
These posts do little but spread confusion and stir up hatred. People who would never dream of writing anti-Muslim sentiments — because it’s not politically correct and, perhaps, because they would be scared to — quite happily post anti-Jewish ones, thinking they have the jovenlandesal high ground.
In their criticisms of Jews they betray old prejudices: Jews are too rich, too successful, too clever for our own good, we have a ‘superiority complex’.
If you dare to respond negatively, you face a barrage of criticism and, worse, the accusation that you are supporting ‘genocide’.


As a Jew, I find this particularly offensive. It’s taking the Holocaust — the greatest tragedy in the history of the Jewish people — and using it as a stick to beat us with.
Genocide is the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, religious or ethnic group. It’s what happened in nancy Germany, in Rwanda and in the former Yugoslavia; it has nothing to do with what is happening in Gaza.
Those who use the word play, perhaps unknowingly, into the hands of the extremists. But if you mention that you feel victimised by such language, as I have done, people respond with: ‘You Jews are paranoid, you say any criticism is anti-Semitic.’ We can’t win.
Jews are a tiny minority in Britain. There are fewer than 270,000 of us, mostly in London. Is it any wonder that we are worried about the growing anti-Semitic feeling?
I am horrified that my grandma, now 96, might live to see the country that gave her sanctuary over 70 years ago become a place that is no longer safe for Jews.
But the terrifying truth is that once the genie of anti-Semitism has been released from the bottle, it is almost impossible to put it back.

Largate a tu país, fruta. Y llevate contigo a tus queridos "multiculturales" ya que tantos os hacen falta para sentiros seguros. A los britanicos de verdad no les hace ni pizca de gracia.

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Una cuestión ¿en qué momento exacto de la historia europea se auto-otorgaron los Judíos la potestad de decidir como tienen que ser los paises de los demás, cómo se define la "nacionalidad" y señalar a sus pueblos cómo deben considerar a los aloctonos, hasta el punto de que sólo con su palabra basta? ¿no tendrá que ver con el Holocuento verdad? otra particularidad de los judiitos de las narices y las "elites" corruptas que les chupan el glande es que pocas veces demuestran o se analiza lo que fomentan porque les beneficia a ellos, o lo que afirman o desmienten, simplemente dan por hecho que los "estupidos goyim" debemos seguirles.

Este es otro problema de "invitar" y conceder la "ciudadania" a gente que no tiene nada que ver contigo. Al final son tantos que los "sentimientos" de toda clase de etnias (etnianos, jovenlandeses, alubio*s, jovenlandeses, etc...) están por encima del bienestar de la nuestra propia
 
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