10
loubag1997 10 points ago +10 / -0

Even reddit was saying this was ridiculous

12
loubag1997 12 points ago +12 / -0

I mean fair enough but that group is filled with this stuff this one is just what he happened to see today. Should've seen the shit they say around Christmas time...

4
loubag1997 4 points ago +4 / -0

The bride isn’t even white, but one thing I noticed is that the one token “dumb guy” adult was of course a white man.

31
loubag1997 31 points ago +33 / -2

Conservative activists were the ones who outed her as a plagiarizer… Harvard elites would never fire someone based on what conservative activists brought to light. Just look at what happened with James Gunn and Disney… since the people who reported on his disgusting rape jokes happened to be conservative, Disney reinstated him.

You can bet your ass if it wasn’t for the Israel comments she made, she’d still have her job.

27
loubag1997 27 points ago +27 / -0

I am White and Christian

That was her misstep, which sent redditors in a rage against her. If she was Jewish or non-religious or some sort of fake new age pagan, they’d have probably sided with her. The reddit urge to go against anything “White Christian” is too strong.

35
loubag1997 35 points ago +36 / -1

Thought being black and female protected you?

Checkmate. Sincerely, The Jews.

35
loubag1997 35 points ago +35 / -0

And yet they claim it’s Whites that have “all the institutional power”.

The old idiom never fails to summarize the situation, “If you want to know who rules over you, just look for who you are not allowed to criticize

They are “Jews, not White” when it benefits them, and they are just plain ole “white” when it can be used to advance “fellow white” causes.

6
loubag1997 6 points ago +6 / -0

Because white men have failed

Not kidding, we can’t absolve ourselves of this shitshow. They’re our women.

12
loubag1997 12 points ago +14 / -2

Non-religious “Christian” here, I don’t believe but am still staunchly culturally Christian and a firm believer that our society needs to be Christian to thrive and survive. Merry Christmas to all!!

3
loubag1997 3 points ago +3 / -0

They’ve never done any, it’s always the generic PC “Happy Holidays” on Dec. 25.

This isn’t a “doodle”, it’s just a little graphic that shows up when you search for the word Christmas. They do the same for a bunch of other religious holidays.

31
loubag1997 31 points ago +32 / -1

Jews really don’t understand how good they have it in America, yet they still find ways to complain. Everything about Christianity is silenced and eschewed for their comfort, Evangelical Christians all support Israel for religious reasons, and they have a huge space in our national culture despite being a tiny minority.

Now that the younger generations are less religiously Christian they are leaning more toward supporting Palestine, and as the Muslim population grows, the Jews must be realizing how good they had it and soon they are gonna miss the “oppression” of the Evangelical Bible Belt that actually treated them better and placated their every whim more than any other country in history.

19
loubag1997 19 points ago +19 / -0

Tell me about it… I’ve attended a couple of “winter” concerts at elementary schools in the last few years in America, one of the ones I went to actually censored the word Christmas from a Christmas song, and only played these weird artificial-sounding, forced and absolutely awful “winter” songs and none of the classic carols, not even any of the secular Christmas ones. It felt like I was in Communist Russia.

23
loubag1997 23 points ago +24 / -1

My parents told me we were moving to the UK in the summer of 2015, for my fifth grade year, to a diverse, multicultural city so completely different from the Bible Belt town I’d grown up in. I was completely ecstatic – excited to meet people who thought more like I did, and ready to escape the Southern Baptist hegemony I lived in. Yet, I’ve never felt more isolated in being Jewish than I did while living and going to school in England.

Come Christmastime, a season during which I’ve always felt left out, the school announced its plans to have its annual Christmas dinner. The pre-Christmas festive mood was high, but I wasn’t feeling it. Naturally, the school administration decided the best way to celebrate Christmas 2015 was to make all of the students sing Christmas carols. I cried. Nobody understood why I was crying about having to sing Christmas carols. Primary school Christmas dinners are a celebrated tradition in the UK, with the fond memories of Christmas crackers and roast dinner being nostalgic for many Brits. For me, they were just another sign that I was different from everybody else.

In the US, I live in Arkansas – not exactly a pinnacle of religious diversity. I, however, had never been exposed to school-sponsored explicitly religious events like I was when I lived in England. Our Christmas parties were always winter parties, and we would at least talk about Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. Our spring break was always called “spring break” – never Easter break. And, most importantly, there were never any required Christian assemblies. Institutionally, I’ve never felt isolated for being Jewish in the United States. Though I know it’s not everyone’s experience, the feelings of difference that accompanied my Jewishness back home were almost always inflicted by other kids, not by the schools and government itself. In England, where kids tended to be more accepting, I felt different because of the school as an institution – not the student body.

For me, the institutional isolation felt much worse than the interpersonal isolation. In England, I felt as though the people I was supposed to trust to make me feel welcomed in a safe educational environment did not acknowledge my identity. It seemed as though the school itself attempted to marginalize religious minorities, and a place that was supposed to support me instead brushed away my right to practice my religion. The interpersonal isolation stateside was tough, mostly because I couldn’t relate to other students. The school itself always tried to make the voices of religious minorities heard, teaching the kids in my classes about Jewish holidays and keeping many of the winter-themed parties completely secular. I didn’t realize how much more included I felt having secular winter parties instead of Christmas parties until I was in England.

Wow… just wow. They won’t be happy until we completely silence our own cultural celebrations. Imagine an American living in Japan crying and complaining that the Japanese society is celebrating their own traditions in their own schools.

Stay strong ole England, don’t fall for this shit. Christmas has been ruined in public in the U.S. because of this whining.

11
loubag1997 11 points ago +12 / -1

People like you are how we got to this point.

19
loubag1997 19 points ago +20 / -1

Damn straight. Just found another one from the same group...even with everything going on in Palestine, they are still obsessing over hating Christmas and eradicating it from schools in western (Christian) countries that they have been gracefully welcomed into.

https://i.imgur.com/GDq9yCp.jpg

26
loubag1997 26 points ago +27 / -1

Corporations don't even call it "Christmas" anymore, they call it "holiday" purposefully to exclude Christmas. So if you specifically celebrate Christmas you are already going against what they want, which is a Christian-less generic snowflake holiday with no name.

27
loubag1997 27 points ago +28 / -1

Fuck me. They did that to Easter too, it's called Bunny Day in the West and Easter in Japan.

This extends to a lot of things, non-western and non-christian countries like Japan and even Muslim countries talk about "Christmas" more than us, where it's always called "holiday" for the same reasons.

49
loubag1997 49 points ago +50 / -1

4 of the 5 "holiday spirit" days are labeled "holiday" instead of Christmas SPECIFICALLY TO INCLUDE THEM, even though they are less than 2% of the U.S. population and Hanukkah is a minor holiday in Judaism compared to Christmas being a major holiday, but that's not good enough.

They want us to stop celebrating publicly altogether. Notice how when Christmas is talked about publicly, 99% of the time it's called "holiday" as a euphemism. But anytime Hanukkah is specifically talked about publicly, it's called Hanukkah!! Never "holiday candelabra", always "Hanukkah menorah".

Jesus they're so entitled.

9
loubag1997 9 points ago +9 / -0

Get your own holiday bitch, Christmas is ours

Edit: oh of course, it's a "holiday" party nvm. I'm sure they're all celebrating Kwanzaa

17
loubag1997 17 points ago +17 / -0

This bitch has been one of the most batshit crazy cunts on twitter ever, it’s so entertaining

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