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Old 05-30-2019, 08:41 AM  
celandina
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 11,408
Quote:
Originally Posted by thommy View Post
nope - there are very few cases of antisemitism from muslim to jews.
near to 90 % of terror against ALL that is not german comes from the right wing extremists.

btw. it is the same with islam terrorists. this people also come from the very extreme right of islam.

right-wing extremism from EVERY CULTURE could also be described as follows: nationalism, supremacism, populism, lack of empathy, readiness to use violence and low educational level
I am sorry, but you are "eating up" the official politically correct statistics. Here is a NY Times recent essay. You follow the first sentence, I tend to believe the rest

NY times article ( excerpt ) May 21 2019:

Police statistics attribute 89 percent of all anti-Semitic crimes to right-wing extremists, but Jewish community leaders dispute that statistic, and many German Jews perceive the nature of the threat to be far more varied. Slightly more than half of Germany’s Jewish respondents to the E.U. survey said they have directly experienced anti-Semitic harassment within the last five years, and of those, the plurality, 41 percent, perceived the perpetrator of the most serious incident to be “someone with a Muslim extremist view.”

Fears within the Jewish community of what some call “imported anti-Semitism” or “Muslim anti-Semitism” brought into the country by immigrants from the Middle East and often entangled with the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians emerged after 2000, when during the Palestinian uprising known as the Second Intifada, a wave of anti-Jewish attacks rippled across parts of Europe. The large-scale influx of refugees into Germany from countries such as Syria and Iraq that began in 2015 further fueled worries. Amid the early wave of pride many Germans felt over the welcoming of refugees, Josef Schuster, the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, the country’s largest umbrella Jewish organization, urged caution. “Many of the refugees are fleeing the terror of the Islamic State and want to live in peace and freedom, but at the same time, they come from cultures in which hatred of Jews and intolerance are an integral part,” he told a reporter from Die Welt
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