Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters
And "why give a shit" is the only question I can think of about it.
I mean, if someone has "Jewish DNA" do they win a prize or something?
What's going to happen is that those who don't have J-DNA are going to be
looked down on by those who do. They will make their DNA a symbol of
pride and purity and thus rank people in society based on that.
Isn't that the kind of society that Hitler wanted to create when he proposed
the "master race"?
|
Historically, two main groups who believed Jews are a distinctive 'race', for their own political reasons, were the Zionists and the Nazis. The Zionists believing in Jewish supremacy, and Nazis believing in Jewish inferiority.
This is why Zionists and Nazis worked together and had close ties, even while Jews were being persecuted and killed.
Quote:
Between 9 September and 9 October 1934 the Nazi Party Berlin newspaper Der Angriff, founded and controlled by Joseph Goebbels, published a series of twelve pro-Zionist articles by Mildenstein under the title A National Socialist Goes to Palestine. In honour of his visit, the newspaper issued a commemorative medal, with the swastika on one side and the Star of David on the other.
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopold_von_Mildenstein
This is the medal:
Yitzhak Shamir, twice PM of Israel in the 80s and early 90s, was a member of the 'Stern Gang', which in 1941 wanted to fight on the side of Adolf Hitler.
This kind of collaboration is just one reason why non-Zionist Jews despise Zionists, for putting the dream of a Zionist state above saving Jewish lives. David Ben Gurion, the first PM of Israel, made it quite clear which came first, when he said:
"If I knew that it would be possible to save all the [Jewish] children in Germany by bringing them over to England and only half of them by transporting them to Eretz Israel [sic], then I opt for the second alternative."
Zionism In The Age Of Dictators, a book written in 1983 by Jewish author Lenni Brenner, is available online free
here and, if you haven't read it before and are interested in a very well suppressed aspect of that period of history, will surprise you.