The mere fact that in the grand game of intergroup competition one group tends to do really well isn't enough to explain the singular focus that people put on how they think "the jews are behind it".
That's part 1 - part 2 is that the aforementioned Jews, the ones in the halls of power, do not permit in-group preference to go unchallenged for any other group, unless they also benefit from it.
What really drives the point home isn't that they're winning the race, it's that they're winning a race while demanding that no one else who might have a shot at winning even runs.
The members of the Church of Jesus Christ these Latter-Day Suckers hold power in one US state, not globally.
As for the various flavors of actual Christian, between infighting and a global decline in religiosity, you may not realize that this was a concern that people had as recently as the 1960s, in which a significant argument against Kennedy was that he'd owe his allegiance to the Pope instead of to America.
Illustrating a more recent spat in Christianity only illustrates my point that there's nothing fundamentally different about the Jewish from other groups.
You say "globally".
What did I say earlier about conspiracies? You're illustrating my point again. Other groups, larger groups, do the same things they do. So the only way you can argue that the jewish are qualitatively different from other groups is if there's something qualitatively different about WHAT THEY DO.
So we're back to what I said earlier. Every anti-semite believes there is a jewish conspiracy, and when they say they don't believe there is, they're lying. And they're lying because they KNOW how stupid they'd sound if they said they DID believe there's a conspiracy.
Their duplicitousness pisses me off. If they'd just be honest and say they hate them because they choose to hate them, I could comprehend that. I have people I dislike simply because I choose to.
If they boldly and openly proclaimed they believe there's a conspiracy, that's fine too. I'd think they're wrong and stupid, but I could respect their conviction at least.
Now, to clarify... Do I think Soros is involved in a conspiracy? Fuck yeah. Does the fact that he's jewish have anything to do with it? No.
That's part 1 - part 2 is that the aforementioned Jews, the ones in the halls of power, do not permit in-group preference to go unchallenged for any other group, unless they also benefit from it.
What really drives the point home isn't that they're winning the race, it's that they're winning a race while demanding that no one else who might have a shot at winning even runs.
I don't buy it.
In the sense that I don't think they're doing anything different from what the catholics and protestants used to do, or the mormons still do.
Y'ever worked for a company in Salt Lake City?
If you aren't a member of the temple, you're not getting promoted.
The members of the Church of Jesus Christ these Latter-Day Suckers hold power in one US state, not globally.
As for the various flavors of actual Christian, between infighting and a global decline in religiosity, you may not realize that this was a concern that people had as recently as the 1960s, in which a significant argument against Kennedy was that he'd owe his allegiance to the Pope instead of to America.
Yes... and?
Illustrating a more recent spat in Christianity only illustrates my point that there's nothing fundamentally different about the Jewish from other groups.
You say "globally".
What did I say earlier about conspiracies? You're illustrating my point again. Other groups, larger groups, do the same things they do. So the only way you can argue that the jewish are qualitatively different from other groups is if there's something qualitatively different about WHAT THEY DO.
So we're back to what I said earlier. Every anti-semite believes there is a jewish conspiracy, and when they say they don't believe there is, they're lying. And they're lying because they KNOW how stupid they'd sound if they said they DID believe there's a conspiracy.
Their duplicitousness pisses me off. If they'd just be honest and say they hate them because they choose to hate them, I could comprehend that. I have people I dislike simply because I choose to.
If they boldly and openly proclaimed they believe there's a conspiracy, that's fine too. I'd think they're wrong and stupid, but I could respect their conviction at least.
Now, to clarify... Do I think Soros is involved in a conspiracy? Fuck yeah. Does the fact that he's jewish have anything to do with it? No.