Buzzfeed Jew Discovers Le Happy Merchant

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 8, 2015

Hm
Hm

A Jew named Bernstein who writes for Buzzfeed has written an entirely crappy article about Le Happy Merchant.  I am continually shocked not so much by the ridiculous content of these mainstream Jew websites, but by the low quality of the writing itself.

Everyone knows it is the best picture ever.
Everyone knows it is the best picture ever.

For whatever reason, the Jew Bernstein does not identify Le Happy Merchant as Le Happy Merchant, but instead calls him “Jew-bwa-ha-ha.gif.”  He also claims “we” (unclear if he means the Jews, the Buzzfeed staff or if he refers to his own person as “we”) found the man who drew it, while in actual physical reality (as opposed to the Jew fantasy world), /pol/ figured out A. Wyatt Mann was Nick Bougas like four years ago.

He begins by mourning the reality of meme culture.

What is most significant about this image isn’t the thing itself — there is far more creative, and far more disturbing, anti-Jewish imagery out there — but its sheer ubiquity. A Google reverse image search for “Jew-bwa-ha-ha.gif,” as the file is most frequently, but not always, named, returns 1,210 matches. It’s unquestionably the most popular anti-Semitic image on the internet, and if one pauses to think about the scope and reach of the internet, it’s easy to make an argument that “Jew-bwa-ha-ha.gif” is the most widely seen anti-Semitic image in history.

So where did it come from, and how is it used?

The drawing has become a mainstay not just of the internet presence of political causes that are sometimes or usually anti-Semitic in their rhetoric, but an established unit in the set of images that comprises the visual language of Reddit, and 4chan, and dozens of other internet fora. And just like every other unit in this set, from photographs and GIFs we find hilarious and adorable to those we find offensive and disgusting, it exists not just as a single image but as a template, a base model for more ornate iterations.

Indeed, the modifications of Jew-bwa-ha-ha.gif are endless.

He does not attempt to explain why so many people hate the Jews and thus desire to mock them with this image. In fact, he spins it that “maybe they don’t really hate us” and “it’s just for shock value.”

Then the dumb Jew has to call up USHMM to find out if the picture was personally drawn by Adolf Hitler himself.

According to Judith Cohen, the chief photo archivist for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the image isn’t a Nazi Party caricature at all, though it does clearly bear the influence of Philipp Ruprecht, the Stürmer cartoonist who was sentenced to six years of hard labor after World War II for his work.

The rest of the stupid and boring article is just him going through making know-nothings think he is the World’s Greatest Jew Detective for having discovered Nick Bougas drew the Merchant, when the only detective work he would have had to do is go on /pol/ and ask someone, since everyone there has known this for years.

Funnily enough, he makes a point to go into Bougas’ motivations, deciding that most likely he was just a counter-culture guy opposed to political correctness, who didn’t really hate the Jews and want to see them rounded up and shipped to some gigantic concentration camp somewhere in Africa or Antarctica.

Nick Bougas, Patton Oswalt and Jim Goad
Nick Bougas, Patton Oswalt and Jim Goad

This is a theme I’m seeing more and more with these Jews.  Instead of pushing this “oy vey, we’re victims, everyone hates us and is trying to turn us into lampshades” business, they are opting instead for a “nah, people don’t really hate us, they just give us a hard time for laughs” approach.

If I had to guess, I would assert that we are witnessing the Jewish hive-mind catch on to the reality that when people hear of others hating the Jews they are no longer saying “oh you poor dear!  I’ll help you stop them from making you into a lampshade!”  And instead saying “yeah, all of these people do hate you, merchant.  I’m thinking that with so many people across the planet hating you, they probably have a reason.  What did you do?”