Yeah, they do that. I once witnessed a Jew at work (who was visiting the local office) absolutely lose his shit over a suggestion to meet at <X> church when going out for some kind of non-work activity. He turned red as a goddamn beet and started screeching about how he's not going to any churches and how it's completely out of the question and don't you know I'm Jewish and I'm going to complain... all of that in front of a group of completely bewildered Czechs. Noone suggested actually visiting the church, it was just an easily found landmark to meet near.
Why would a PTA meeting be organized in a religious establishment rather than the school? Why is a PTA meeting something you consider similar to a night out with work mates? Why are you suggesting going inside the religious establishment rather than simply using it as a landmark, like in the anecdote u/ArtemisFoul mentioned?
I just don't understand why you would think that what you suggested is in any way whatsoever similar to the previous poster's story.
Like Fender, I don't know why the school wouldn't just host the PTA meeting, but I don't care.
I don't know if this will boggle your mind, but I get along easily with Jews and like a lot of them individually. I just wish the group, as a whole, would stop taking an axe to this country's way of life.
It really is fascinating to me how some people are incapable of realizing that generalizations aren't absolute, that it's possible to acknowledge exceptions or compartmentalize differing groups within groups
Or that the accuracy of generalizations varies. With a highly insular and tribalist group, - one that also happens to be very relatively small - generalizations have a much higher degree of accuracy.
Because government schools don't teach statistics, so most people don't get how bell curves work. And it goes both ways, not only are there a ton of people who don't understand that statistics have exceptions out on the tails, but there's also a ton who don't understand that those exceptional outliers don't disprove the big bulge in the middle.
What's MLK day have to do with anything, and who said anything about "participating with anything Christian related"?
Speak plainly.
Why does this comment get so many upvotes? Knee-jerk disapproval of the Jew-lovers comments, no doubt.
The comment you reply to attempts to identify the hypocrisy of the posting--as if any rabid Jew-hater would want to go anywhere near a synagogue, except maybe with a torch or a pipe bomb.
It seems to me that the idiotic, evil war pursued by Israel has given really hateful people the balls to belch out their knee-jerk resentment of a group that's demonized and scapegoated during times of political instability..
Yeah, they do that. I once witnessed a Jew at work (who was visiting the local office) absolutely lose his shit over a suggestion to meet at <X> church when going out for some kind of non-work activity. He turned red as a goddamn beet and started screeching about how he's not going to any churches and how it's completely out of the question and don't you know I'm Jewish and I'm going to complain... all of that in front of a group of completely bewildered Czechs. Noone suggested actually visiting the church, it was just an easily found landmark to meet near.
How many of you Jew haters would feel comfortable going to, say, a PTA meeting in a synagogue?
Why would a PTA meeting be organized in a religious establishment rather than the school? Why is a PTA meeting something you consider similar to a night out with work mates? Why are you suggesting going inside the religious establishment rather than simply using it as a landmark, like in the anecdote u/ArtemisFoul mentioned?
I just don't understand why you would think that what you suggested is in any way whatsoever similar to the previous poster's story.
Jidf pilpul
Found ArtemisFoul's coworker. :)
Wryyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy!
So you're saying they hate Christians
Like Fender, I don't know why the school wouldn't just host the PTA meeting, but I don't care.
I don't know if this will boggle your mind, but I get along easily with Jews and like a lot of them individually. I just wish the group, as a whole, would stop taking an axe to this country's way of life.
It really is fascinating to me how some people are incapable of realizing that generalizations aren't absolute, that it's possible to acknowledge exceptions or compartmentalize differing groups within groups
Or that the accuracy of generalizations varies. With a highly insular and tribalist group, - one that also happens to be very relatively small - generalizations have a much higher degree of accuracy.
Because government schools don't teach statistics, so most people don't get how bell curves work. And it goes both ways, not only are there a ton of people who don't understand that statistics have exceptions out on the tails, but there's also a ton who don't understand that those exceptional outliers don't disprove the big bulge in the middle.
A large proportion of Jews actually hate all other Jews
You are ok with participating in MLK day but not with anything Christian related? Interesting
What's MLK day have to do with anything, and who said anything about "participating with anything Christian related"?
Speak plainly.
Why does this comment get so many upvotes? Knee-jerk disapproval of the Jew-lovers comments, no doubt.
The comment you reply to attempts to identify the hypocrisy of the posting--as if any rabid Jew-hater would want to go anywhere near a synagogue, except maybe with a torch or a pipe bomb.
It seems to me that the idiotic, evil war pursued by Israel has given really hateful people the balls to belch out their knee-jerk resentment of a group that's demonized and scapegoated during times of political instability..