Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
June 3, 2016
This is Erin Schrode, a Jew female who is possibly going to be the youngest ever female to serve in congress, and one of the youngest-ever members of congress or either sex.
No wait, sorry – that is some kind of disgusting hissing weasel.
Here’s Erin Schrode.
Not bad for a Jewess, tbh fam.
JTA:
Erin Schrode may not be a household name — yet. But if the 25-year-old Jewish activist lures enough of her millennial peers to the polls for California’s Democratic primary on June 7, she just may become the youngest person in the U.S. House of Representatives — and the youngest woman ever elected to Congress.
The proud millennial — Schrode eschews the characterization of her peers as lazy and entitled — has long been on the fast track to success.
At 13, she founded Turning Green, a national nonprofit that promotes environmental education and advocacy. In 2010, following the catastrophic earthquake in Haiti, Schrode launched The Schoolbag, which provides school supplies to needy students around the world.
Such inspired entrepreneurship has earned her kudos from the Jewish community, including a spot on the Forward’s list of most inspiring Jewish teens and a $36,000 prize from the Helen Diller Family Foundation’s Teen Tikkun Olam program.
Now the Northern California native is facing a major challenge in the primary race against incumbent Jared Huffman in the 2nd District, which stretches from the Oregon border to the Golden Gate Bridge: Huffman has raised some $620,000 to Schrode’s $2,250. Yet the upstart’s candidacy has made headlines across the country.
She did an interview with JTA.
Here’s the best part.
You quoted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s controversial speech to Congress about the Iran nuclear deal in a tweet last year: “The days of when Jewish people stayed passive in the face of genocidal enemies is over. #neveragain” So you’re very pro-Israel?
I’ll start with the “never again” idea. About eight months ago, I saw a picture of a 3-year-old refugee boy washed up dead in Turkey. And that hit me hard. Because we say “never again,” and in my mind “again” is happening on the other side of the Mediterranean. So I went on a plane, I went to Lesbos [in Greece]. I was working with Syrian, Iraqi and Afghan refugees there on the shores.
I fundamentally believe in the right to statehood for our Jewish people. And that has to be the baseline for any peace process. I believe in peace, I believe in a two-state solution. … I’ve spent a lot of time traveling through the Middle East. Amazing, amazing human beings; hospitality the likes I’ve never seen. But engaging in these conversations, you have to begin with the baseline understanding that we as a Jewish people have a right to exist. And when that is in jeopardy, that is a scary thought.
Who’s your favorite Jewish politician?
Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein are here [in California]; they’re the senators who represent my state. I’ve grown up with them. In my mind that is one of my earliest exposures to politics — two female Jewish women. So that’s a powerful statement. Lets put more of us in office, right? I think the world would be a better place.
Yes, ma’am.
It should would be great to have yet another Jew in our government.
Tikkun olam.