“The first major law to curtail the rights of Jewish citizens was the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service of April 7, 1933, which excluded Jews and the “politically unreliable” from civil service.”

The second major law to
Curtail Jewish rights was passed later in 1933, and limited the number of Jews would could be admitted to German schools and University.

(Sound familiar?)

By the way, but this time, the term “Jew” had been re-interpreted to mean a racial group. Not merely a religion.
Soon, there were laws to decrease Jewish activity in the fields of medicine and law. Then Jewish doctors couldnt receive payment from the nationalized health system.

Then Jewish doctors weren’t allowed to see any patients who weren’t Jews.

Through all of this, people at every
Level of German society took part in the slow, sometimes not so slow, and very deliberate effort to remove Jews from German public life.

These days, we’d call it “cancelling” them.
In early 1934, in Germany, Jewish actors were forbidden to perform on stage or screen.

This was an early form of cancelling.

They were being disappeared from sight.

Germany even revoked licenses from Jewish accountants.
Jews were required to register their domestic and foreign property and assets.

You can imagine why.

Not hard to picture it, in retrospect.

But the real question is, why did the jews ever do it? Why did they go along?
“German court judges could not cite legal commentaries or opinions written by Jewish authors,”

Funny. Sounds like “cancelling,” doesnt it?

You can’t refer back to anything done by the wrong people. Those wicked jews. Those dead, white men. Those people we have to cancel.
My point is: only 5 years passed between the time when Germany enacted its first laws aimed to restrict the influence of Jews on German society and Kristallnacht.

And the same year as Kristallnacht, they only just started to truly persecute Jews in the way we associate w WWII.
Between 1933 and 1938, Germany slowly stripped its Jewish citizens of rights.

And just about everyone went along with it.

Why?

1. Because plenty of people thought Jews were actually bad.
2. Because those who disagreed were intimidated into silence.
What people don’t understand is that in 1933, many, MANY thought Jews were actually bad people. (And not just in Germany.)

Nowadays, people paint “white people” with exactly the same brush.’

They openly call for the removal of whiteness from public life. Or at the very least,
The removal of Trump supporters from public life.

And yet no one sees the parallels.

No one recognizes that by cancelling those with wrong ideas, or setting quotas for how many white kids can go to a school, they are enacting (largely racial) oppression.
The question remains: why did Jews put up with it?

Why didnt they flee when the writing perhaps should have been on the wall?

Well—it’s the same reason why we’ve put up with COVID lockdowns this year.

The same reason nobody stands up when their co-worker is fired.
Every time someone is “cancelled,” everyone around them

1. Breathes a sigh of relief it wasnt them.
2. Wonders if they can benefit from the other person’s destruction.

It’s a very ugly side of human nature.
Sadly, many who would later be sent to the ghetto or the concentration camp...originally benefitted from the cancellings.

It was only the communist jews, they thought. Or the annoyingly outspoken ones.

And after all, the mobilization of Germany was good for business!
And I don’t say this to in any way denigrate Jews.

They just got slowly boiled, like a frog in a pot.

But I see the same thing happening now.

Racial hatred is so high & so accepted. Even by the people the hatred is aimed at.

White people DESPISE loudmouth whites who argue.
Everyone always wants to go along to get along.

Even if it means marching to your own demise.

Anyway...I’m a bad, wicked person for pointing this out.

How DARE I compare my experience to someone with real problems?

My ethnic group doesnt exist.

We are, after all, cancelled.
Oh, another reason the Jews didnt stand up:

Most German Jews in 1933 didnt think of themselves as “Jewish.”

Which reminds me of the first time I told my husband that I was scared by anti-white rhetoric.

He looked straight at me, and said, “You’re not that white.” >.<
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