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xclowniex · 2 hours
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Goyim, the double standard is glaring. The antisemitism lies in the double standard. Please find a quote from a news article (source at the end) talking about the motivation for the pulse nightclub shooting.
"All of these statements contain numerous, now-standard grievances about U.S. foreign policy that are commonly cited by Muslims who attack Americans: specifically, the use by the U.S. and its allies of widespread violence against Muslim civilians in the Middle East, and the perceived need to bring violence back to U.S. soil as a means of punishing past violence and deterring future aggression.
Many of Mateen’s statements are filled with the sorts of denunciations of U.S. violence in the region that are typically downplayed, if not outright ignored, when U.S. media examine why radical Muslims attack Americans. Mateen’s statements about his shooting spree contain pledges of loyalty to the Islamic State and praise for various radical groups. And some posts and statements professed that he was martyring himself on behalf of Islam. But they exclusively emphasized one cause: the ongoing killing of Muslim civilians by the U.S." (source - the intercept 2018)
If you were upset by deaths at the Pulse nightclub shooting but not by deaths at the Nova Music Festival, you’re an antisemitic hypocrite.
Not that it should matter because people are people, but, oh hey, look, Pulse shooter Omar Mateen said the mass shooting was his retaliation for a U.S. airstrike that killed, among others, IS militant Abu Waheeb.
Don’t like it when radicals hate governments and use that hate to hurt your community?
Then stop your own radicalization process. Stop hating. Everyone.
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xclowniex · 2 hours
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Exactly, Anon. Exactly. This is why the Ivy League Universities being turned into Hamasnik terrorist bases is so horrifying. Especially with Jew-hating students attacking Jewish students and professors on campus, with the Universities' sanction. The Universities could shut these Jew-hate riots down. The fact that they don't shows that they want them to continue. They're trying to chase away the Jewish students and professors from these schools. That's always the first step. That's what the Nazis did first, too.
This article is taken from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum website. I highly recommend that everyone read the whole article. But even if you read the first paragraph, you'll see the parallels to what is happening on Ivy League campuses today:
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After Adolf Hitler was appointed German Chancellor in January 1933, the new Nazi government began an effort to completely reorder public and private life in Germany. 
The Nazi regime quickly targeted German universities—among the most elite in the world at the time—for restructuring according to Nazi principles. While the Nazi Ministry of Education initiated reforms, local Nazi organizations and student activists worked to bring Nazi ideals to German campuses. These forces, along with increasing antisemitism under Nazi rule, transformed everyday life at German universities. Throughout this period, students, faculty, and staff made individual decisions that both upheld and opposed Nazi ideology.
With the passage of the "Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service" in 1933, most Jewish professors in Germany were dismissed from their positions. Others, such as Professor Eugen Mittwoch, were able to keep their posts temporarily only due to the political value of their research. After purging Jewish and "politically undesirable" faculty, the regime then targeted the student body with the "Law Against Overcrowding in Schools and Universities." As German authorities continued to "Aryanize" German universities, Jews increasingly lost the opportunity to teach or study. Many non-Jewish Germans sought to benefit from their persecution. 
The daily business of university life continued in the wake of these new policies, but political concerns increasingly influenced the way professors and students worked and studied. The practice of denunciation, as demonstrated by the "Request for the Investigation of Professor Hans Peters," illustrates the danger posed to both students and faculty if they failed to follow new ideological norms. Those willing to voice support for the new regime—whether out of enthusiasm or practicality—often received promotions or other rewards. Meanwhile, many others quietly accepted the new policies and passively benefited from the persecution of their Jewish peers. Very few, such as the small student group in Munich known as the White Rose, took any significant action to resist the Nazi dictatorship.
The Nazi government and its supporters manipulated several aspects of the country's traditional university system to turn German higher education into a crucial source of support for the new regime. For example, the German student population had been largely male long before the Nazi rise to power, and German campuses were dominated by fraternities.  Those organizations maintained traditional military discipline and dress codes, and their alumni groups exercised significant political power both before and after 1933. Fraternities—often working with the Student Council and Nazi Student League—served  as a powerful and violent force for implementing Nazi principles at universities, often going beyond the party platform in their radicalism. A Report on the Camaraderie House for Female Students of Göttingen shows how Nazi student groups used the format of traditional student organizations to train both men and women to become the next generation of Nazi leaders.
Although the regime could rely on many committed student activists, the Third Reich also sought the support of German professors to lend legitimacy to their policies. Because German universities were state institutions, professors' academic careers became vulnerable to the whims and wishes of the Nazi state. While only a small minority of professors had been Nazi Party members before 1933, several prominent professors quickly voiced their support for the Third Reich. In the new German university, political loyalty was valued over academic ability in the assessment of students and in the selection and promotion of professors. Authorities infused university classrooms with Nazi ideology—as shown in the document, "Foundation of the Advanced School of the German Reich". But prioritizing politics over academics affected the quality of German higher education. 
Nevertheless, professors—even enthusiastic supporters of the new regime—often spoke out against some aspects of Nazi policy. The case of Eduard Kohlrausch shows how his opposition to  student-led book burnings caused his removal from the university administration. Dissent against individual policies, however, did not give rise to any concerted resistance movements. German universities as a whole formed a solid base of support for the Nazi regime, contributing valuable knowledge to the development of technology for the war effort as well as logistical support for the Holocaust.
The Nazification of universities overwhelmed the daily lives of students with new requirements, including mandatory lectures, physical exercises, labor duties, and political assemblies. Many students resented those requirements, even if they supported the Nazi Party. In Heidelberg, for example, where the daily life of students was dominated by political instruction and mandatory physical training, large numbers of students withdrew from the university in search of other educational opportunities. As illustrated in the "Memo Regarding Maria-Elisabeth Koch," students also showed varying degrees of enthusiasm for the labor service that was often required of them in territories occupied by Nazi Germany.
The Nazi government's project of remaking German universities was broadly successful, but it produced unintended consequences. The quality of education suffered significantly as classes were regularly cancelled for political assemblies and students' schedules became filled with ideological and paramilitary training. Moreover, purging Jewish faculty deprived German universities of valuable expertise. Within a few years, many observers in Germany and abroad became deeply skeptical about the quality of German higher education in the Third Reich. Propaganda efforts such as the Carl Schurz tour for American professors and students—documented with a slickly produced video—did not prevent protest. The 550th-anniversary celebration of Heidelberg University met with opposition in Europe, even while prominent American universities such as Harvard accepted invitations.
With the defeat of the Third Reich in 1945, Allied forces occupying Germany began a long-term effort to remove the influence of Nazi ideology in German society. Many German academics who made significant contributions to the Nazi war effort fled to the United States, where they lived comfortable lives and their expertise was highly valued by American universities and the US military. In postwar Germany, many faculty and students who had benefited from the Nazis' discriminatory policies without being especially vocal or enthusiastic supporters of the regime sought to cast their dissent or their silence as forms of political resistance to obscure their own complicity. Although many Germans denied having supported the Nazi regime, antisemitism persisted in postwar Germany. The case of Hermann Budzislawski shows the difficulties encountered by the relatively few German Jews who decided to return to Germany after World War II.
Sources in this collection document the choices facing students and faculty pursuing their everyday lives in the shadow of Nazism and the Holocaust. Over the course of this period, as antisemitic discrimination escalated to mass murder, the higher education system proved to be a source of support—rather than opposition—to the party's project of remaking German society.
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xclowniex · 19 hours
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Reminder: Jewish indigeneity is not a threat to any other ethnic group. It’s just a fact. Acknowledging Jews as indigenous to the levant doesn’t actually harm any Palestinians. Palestinian indigeneity does not actually rely on Jews NOT being indigenous. Multiple peoples can be indigenous to the same place.
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xclowniex · 1 day
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or when posts do breach containment, its just people being even more antisemitic
wistfully remembering how people (pretended they) cared about antisemitism when it was primarily coming from the right. like there are pre-2023 posts with tens of thousands of notes about antisemitism. now any mention of the existence of antisemitism (when its worse than it ever was) doesn’t breach containment outside of jewish circles. its almost funny how quickly people stopped caring when it was inconvenient.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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It's also a federal offense in the US! It's called tampering!
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Plain and simple
Go find a moral backbone if you think this is remotely okay
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xclowniex · 2 days
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new line: i didn't escape egypt to see this shit
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xclowniex · 2 days
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There’s something interesting about this.
I don’t consider myself Roma, despite having Roma blood, considering I grew up far from the culture, but that’s not important here.
I appreciate this post, and post like this, loving on a community that has been historically oppressed, killed, and victimized.
But the tags are the important thing. Most are normal, but why is “free Palestine” there?
It serves no purpose, this is about the Romani people, not Palestinians. So why is it in the tags?
I think this all ties back to the need to have Palestinians at the center of everything, and that ultimately no one can take their eyes off of it. Even if they want to focus on another oppressed group.
Obviously it’s not the main focus of the post, and I still appreciate Romani appreciation at all, but ultimately this wasn’t needed and just felt like something thrown in their that serves no purpose to this one post.
This is just some narcissism in the pro-Palestinian movement.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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Hey man wtf
This is racist and Islamophobic.
It's fine to say fuck hamas as hamas does terrible things and is a political party dictatorship. Like they haven't held an election since 2006.
But saying fuck Palestine and fuck Islam is racist and Islamophobic. Neither of those things are okay.
Keep racism and Islamophobia out of your opinions in the Israeli Palestinian war.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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leftists when white supremacists are virulently antisemitic: if there’s four people sitting at a table with a nazi, there are five nazis.
leftists when islamists, arab supremacists, and leftists are virulently antisemitic: well of course there’s bad actors at every protest, and anyway these are just outside provocateurs, and they didn’t do anything really, but if they did it’s because those jews fucking deserved it
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xclowniex · 2 days
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Dear goyim, part of reading comprehension is knowing the intended audience
Posts which talk about antisemitism, have the intended audience of those wanting to read about antisemitism or to learn.
A post talking about antisemitism, doesn't inherently mean that said person is talking about wanting all Palestinians dead. (Cough cough looking at an anon I was sent recently).
If you lack reading comprehension, that's fine, education systems as a whole aren't catered for every single person. However you do have the power to better your reading comprehension and you should!
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xclowniex · 2 days
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Remember everyone! Rape is not resistance!
It has never been and will never be.
BREAKING: A man kidnapped, raped, and tortured a Jewish woman in Paris to “avenge Palestine”.This is what your protests are encouraging.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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1. Saying you have a Jewish friend doesn't mean a person can't be antisemitic. That's like someone spouting some anti black racist shit and going "I'm not racist! I have a black friend!
2. 99% of the time, when a person is called antisemetic, they genuinely are. You do realize that people who are genuinely antisemitic will use you to justify their genuine antisemitism?
3. Whilst I do not wish it upon you and actively wish against it happening to you, unfortunately there will be a time when the face eating leopards will eat your face
All y'all get my express permission as a jewish person to use me as a reason you're not anti semetic, when you are arguing with zionists.
Just donate $5 to pal action, or jvp, or any other group helping Palestinians everytime you do.
(Lie on my name too, say im your best friend.)
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xclowniex · 2 days
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It's not truly Passover until you have matzah crumbs down your bra.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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leftists when someone tokenizes any other minority: 🤬🤬🤬
leftists when someone tokenizes a jewish person: 🥰😍☺️
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xclowniex · 2 days
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I sat next to the protest today.
I wrote fan-fiction about two gay jewish dads raising children to the play list of the chant- "No peace on stolen land!" on an American college campus. It isn't a name brand one either, nor does it have any legitimate ties to Israel. The anger is just there- it has rotten these future doctors, nurses, teachers, and members of society.
I don't even know what to call their demonstration- it was a tizzy of a Jew hatred affair. At points, there were empathetic statements about Gazans and their suffering. Then outright support of Hamas and violent resistance against all colonizers. Then this bizarre fixation on antisemitism while explaining the globalists are behind everything.
"Antisemitism doesn't exist. Not in the modern day," A professor gloated over a microphone in front of the library. "It's a weaponized concept, that's prevents us from getting actual places- ignore anyone who tells you otherwise."
"How can we be antisemitic?" A pasty white girl wearing a red Jordanian keffiyeh gloats five minutes later. "Palestinians are the actual semites."
"there is only one solution!" The crowd of over 50 students and faculty cried, over and over.
"Been there, done that," I thought, then added a reference to a mezuza in the fourth paragraph.
Two other Jewish students passed where I was parked out, hunching and trying to be as innocuous as possible. We laughed together at my predicament, where I am willingly hearing this bullshit and feeling so amused by this.
"Am I crazy? For sitting here?" I asked them. My friends shook their heads.
"We did the same last week- it's an amazing experience, isn't it?”
We all cackled hysterically again. They left to study for finals. Two minutes later, I learned from the current speaker that “Zionism” is behind everything bad in this world.
Forty-five minutes in, a boy I recognized joined me on my lonely bench. He came from a very secular Jewish family and had joined Hillel recently to learn more about his culture. His first Seder was two nights ago.
He sat next to me, heavy like the weight of the world was on his shoulders. There was just this despondent look on his face. I couldn’t describe it anyone else, but just sheer hopelessness personified.
“They hate us. I can’t believe how much they hate us.” He said in greeting.
And for the first time all day, I had no snarky response or glib. All I could do was stare out into the crowd, and sigh.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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The IDFs actions have nothing to do with antisemitism apart from being an excuse for antisemites to use to justify their antisemitism.
Whilst I wish for the safety of Palestinian civilians, there is zero need for you to bring it up in a conversation about antisemitism unless you are talking about use people use it to justify antisemitism.
This is what you sound like right now.
Jews: antisemitism is bad and scary
You: but what about all the Palestinian civilians dying!!!!
Both are bad and can be talked about. They so not need to be talked about together on every post
I'm done keeping my composure I don't think I owe you civility right now.
I am so fucking tired of every time myself and other jews bring up antisemitism, that people like yourself always bring into the conversation Palestinian deaths.
Yes, their lives matter and it fucking sucks arse what is happening to them!!
But hijacking posts about antisemitism is not the way to go about advocating for them.
All I want to do is be able to talk about antisemitism and how it's bad and effecting me without fucking gore porn and gore smut added onto my fucking posts. Is that too much to ask for?
How would you like it if I went onto all of your posts about the anti Chinese things you experience and go "China is killing uyghur people!!!
It would fucking suck wouldn't it?
Go touch grass and actually listen to jews for once.
"they're taking away our free speech and silencing our peaceful protests on campus!" you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye.
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xclowniex · 2 days
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A jew was killed at a pro Palestine protest. Someone getting bumped was not "the worst of antisemitic violence" (source)
I get called slurs at least once a week by strangers irl. And these strangers do not know me at all. All they see is my star of david necklace. My goy partner is terrified that it's going to escalate to physical violence.
I hope that one day they create a simulation where you can safely experience the fear jews are experiencing as you have no idea what its like.
"they're taking away our free speech and silencing our peaceful protests on campus!" you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye. you stabbed a jewish student in the eye.
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