Exactly Six Million Tears as the Term “Jewish Lobby” is Mentioned on the BBC

Daily Slave
November 15, 2014

bbc
Even the BBC which has Jews in upper management positions can’t escape being accused of promoting “anti-Semitism” by demonic Jews.

Jews are now crying six million tears because apparently using the term “Jewish Lobby” is an “anti-Semitic” slur in their minds.

The term was discussed during a BBC broadcast by a newsreader and an analyst prompting a flood of tears from Jewish community leaders.

Apparently these idiot Jews forgot that the BBC’s management is infested with Jews including Danny Cohen and James Harding.  This is why their complaints about “anti-Semitism” is ridiculous and absurd.

Even on a Jewish friendly entity like the BBC, the Jews will cry “anti-Semitism” if anything remotely negative is perceived to be said about them.  This means if you want to criticize the Jews you should go all the way in your criticism.  Even if you don’t intend to criticize them you might be accused of being a “racist” and an “anti-Semite” on accident.

Jewish News:

The BBC has been accused of peddling a centuries-old anti-Semitic slur after a newsreader and analyst discussed a “Jewish lobby” on-air.

Jewish community leaders from Campaign Against Anti-Semitism (CAA) and Community Security Trust (CST) reacted angrily after Tim Wilcox and his guest Jo Phillips talked about a story in the Independent on Jewish donors.

Under the headline “Jewish Donors Drop Toxic Miliband,” the story referred to a funding crisis after the Labour leader criticised Israel this summer.

“This was not an explicitly or intentionally anti-Semitic piece… but the BBC pre-emptively revealed how it would be understood,” said Gardner.

Referring to a “Jewish lobby,” Phillips, an analyst, said: “When he’s being brave and principled and standing up and saying, you know, ‘this time Israel has gone too far’, people take their money away.”

Wilcox then went a bit further, saying “a lot of these prominent Jewish faces will be very much against the mansion tax”.

The discussion triggered outrage from the community, with CST director Mark Gardner calling it a “stench of toxic assumptions about Jews and money / influence for Israel”.