Andrew Anglin
Daily Stomrer
May 19, 2016
Jews dindu nuffin, goyim.
The Jew Ben Shapiro – a main figure in the almost entirely Jewish #NeverTrump movement – has published yet another essay demanding that people care about the anti-Semitic hatreds of Donald Trump supporters who say mean things to him on the internet.
He’s written countless such essays already, talked about it on his radio show, gone on other people’s radio shows, literally made it the entire focus of his life – and no one has cared so far. Instead, people view him as yet another whining social justice warrior faggot, demanding people care about the childlike feelings he feels when people call him mean names on the internet.
This is because people are just generally fed-up with whiny people complaining about people saying mean things about them on the internet. This “you have to respond emotionally to my plight” mentality of the SJWs has completely burned-out everyone except the feminists, trannies and some of the racial minorities – none of which are the groups Shapiro is appealing to for emotional support.
But maybe his latest piece in the National Review will be the straw that breaks the goy’s back, and people will finally begin to care about these feelings he’s feeling.
He gives it the old college try once again, even devising solid theories as to why Trump supports hate the Jews.
The essay is long, so we’ll just look at the saddest bits – the bits most likely to stir-up your feelings of empathy.
He writes:
Donald Trump’s nomination has drawn anti-Semites from the woodwork.
I’ve experienced more pure, unadulterated anti-Semitism since coming out against Trump’s candidacy than at any other time in my political career. Trump supporters have threatened me and other Jews who hold my viewpoint. They’ve blown up my e-mail inbox with anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. They greeted the birth of my second child by calling for me, my wife, and two children to be thrown into a gas chamber.
Yes, seriously.
I know I should be outraged that someone would say something so mean.
Regrettably, I find myself laughing.
Why has Trump triggered erogenous feelings from the pathetic Hitler devotees at Stormfront? Why do “anudda shoah!” meme-makers turn their lonely eyes to the clownish reality-television star? Why are the droogs of the alt-right desperate for sexual congress with The Combover?
Yes, accuse the Jew-haters of wanting to have gay sex with Trump.
That won’t seem sick, perverted and stereotypical of Jewish psycho-sexual pathology at all.
It will gain you sympathy.
But besides the gay sex thing, why do these people hate Jews so much?
Oh right, because they believe in a conspiracy theory that Mexican immigrants drive down wages and manufacturing jobs were exported to China.
Modern American anti-Semitism springs from conspiratorial soil.
…
Donald Trump attributes manufacturing towns’ going bankrupt in Ohio to foreigners stealing their jobs (China is “raping” us and Mexico is “killing” us). And both Sanders and Trump target the banking industry for particular ire, stating that Wall Street prospers as Main Street suffers because of nefarious insider connections. Those nefarious insider connections — not corrupt government involvement in the financial system, which both Sanders and Trump want to expand — are to blame for suffering in the heartland. Zero-sum politics generates rage against those who are successful — and particularly at those big-city financial wizards and their fancy financial tools.
You see, the goyim are confused. They think that because they became poor at the same time as jobs were shipped to China and massive numbers of immigrants invaded, that there is some connection between these two things.
Stupid goyim and their crazy conspiracy theories.
The real reason they are poor is because they’re stupid and lazy, right?
And what other reason do these crazy Trump supporters have for wanting to gas kikes, Ben?
They don’t want to fight wars for Israel.
Trump, like both Barack Obama and Bernie Sanders, says routinely that we must embrace foreign-policy isolationism, and avers that we must stop our adventurism abroad in order to build at home. When Trump says that he wants an “America first” foreign policy, he means that foreign policy up until now has consisted of warmongers using the American military to achieve ends on behalf of foreign powers. “We will no longer surrender this country, or its people, to the false song of globalism,” said Trump last month. Connect this with his refusal to take moral sides between Israel and the Palestinians, and it’s rather clear where Trump stands.
Yes, of course “America First” means no more wars for Israel.
And yes, of course this is pure anti-Semitism.
The goyim have a duty to stop a new Holocaust.
So, you combine a conspiracy theory that free trade treaties have affected the American economy with an outright refusal to spend trillions of dollars and tens of thousands of American lives fighting endless wars for Israel, and you’ve got a recipe for straight Holocaustism.
Finally, Trump speaks the language of nationalism without any attendant constitutional philosophy. When connected with constitutional philosophy, “America first” means something very different from what it means with reference only to the borders and natives of the nation, as Charles Lindbergh could attest. If you want America to succeed because America is based on a matchless idea of human freedom and the governmental checks and balances that maintain it, that’s one thing; if you want America to succeed because you believe there is some superiority that attaches to those born within our borders, that’s something else entirely. And when you attach Constitution-less “America first” philosophy to zero-sum, conspiratorial economics and politics, all that’s left is to identify an enemy to blame.
Trump’s anti-Semitic supporters believe they’ve identified that enemy, even if Trump won’t say it out loud. The anti-Semites believe that Trump’s zero-sum critique of free markets and foreign policy hawkishness, combined with his “America first” posturing, amounts to a rejection of the supposedly Jewish financial lobby on the one hand and the supposedly all-powerful Israel lobby on the other; they believe that Trump’s nationalism without philosophy amounts to an embrace of the blood-and-soil white supremacism they celebrate.
You finally hit that nail you were looking for, Ben.
Right straight on the head.
Ben’s final conclusion:
Trumpism breeds conspiracism; conspiracism breeds anti-Semitism. Trump is happy to channel the support of anti-Semites to his own ends.
The problem here is that that conclusion isn’t really a conclusion.
It fact, rather than a logical reason to feel sorry for Jews, this entire essay reads like a justification of anti-Semitism.
Did Jewish finance work with American corporations and the government to export jobs to foreign countries and import foreign workers?
Did Jews within the government push for wars in the Middle East which harm our country and benefit Israel?
Obviously, Jews did do these things. It’s just a documented fact.
Sure, there are a few goyim involved, but Jews are so vastly overrepresented that it is pretty much nonsensical to talk about “do Jews run the banks???” or “do Jews lobby for Middle Eastern wars???”
The pro-Israel neocon war-lobby is nigh entirely Jewish
So then, to just say “Trump supporters are mad because Jews destroyed the economy and sent them to fight in wars for Israel” is not an argument against anti-Semitism – it is an argument for anti-Semitism.
What’s going on here, Ben?